Cruise Ports › Northern Europe & Baltic

Most cruise brochures lump the Baltic in with “Northern Europe” and leave you to figure out the rest. This guide cuts through that. Below you’ll find every country that features on Baltic and Northern Europe cruise itineraries, with a dedicated port guide for each one. Whether your ship calls at one port or ten, start here.

What counts as a Baltic or Northern Europe cruise?

Cruise lines use “Northern Europe” and “Baltic” interchangeably, but they’re not quite the same thing. The Baltic Sea is an enclosed body of water bordered by Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Germany and Denmark. Norway sits to the west, facing the North Atlantic and the Norwegian Sea — technically not Baltic at all, but it appears on the same itineraries and departs from the same UK ports, so it belongs in this guide.

Baltic and Northern Europe cruise ports by country

Denmark

Denmark is the gateway country for Baltic cruises — Copenhagen is one of the most common turnaround ports for sailings from the UK and the starting point for many first-time Baltic itineraries. Beyond the capital, Denmark offers a quieter, less-visited side of Scandinavian cruising on Bornholm, the Jutland coast and the straits between Denmark and Sweden.

Denmark cruise ports guide →

PortWhat it’s known for
CopenhagenMajor Baltic turnaround port; Nyhavn, Tivoli, cycling city
AarhusDenmark’s second city; ARoS art museum, Old Town
Rønne, BornholmBaltic Sea island; smoked herring, round churches, cyclists everywhere
Helsingør (Elsinore)Kronborg Castle, the setting for Shakespeare’s Hamlet; five-minute ferry to Sweden
SkagenNorthernmost tip of Denmark; two seas meet; artist colony history
FredericiaFortified town on the Little Belt strait
KalundborgMedieval five-towered church; industrial symbiosis hub
NyborgGateway to Funen; one of Denmark’s oldest royal castles
HundestedSmall fishing harbour north of Copenhagen; Knud Rasmussen connection
SønderborgBorder town with German-Danish history; Sønderborg Castle

Sweden

Sweden punches above its weight on Baltic itineraries. Stockholm is a genuine rival to Copenhagen as the standout port of any sailing, and the archipelago city built across fourteen islands rewards multiple visits. Visby on Gotland is one of the best-preserved medieval walled cities in Europe and a regular on smaller ship itineraries. Several lines now offer overnight stays in Stockholm, which is worth seeking out.

Sweden cruise ports guide →

PortWhat it’s known for
StockholmCity on 14 islands; Gamla Stan, Vasa Museum, ABBA Museum; overnight stays available on some sailings
Visby, GotlandUNESCO medieval walled city; roses climbing ruined churches; tender port
GothenburgSweden’s second city; fish market, Liseberg, canal tours
MalmöConnected to Copenhagen by bridge; Turning Torso, multicultural food scene
HelsingborgFaces Helsingør across the narrowest point of the Øresund
KalmarKalmar Castle; historically strategic city on the Baltic coast
KarlskronaUNESCO naval port; Sweden’s only baroque planned city
YstadWallander country; medieval centre, ferry gateway to Bornholm
LysekilWest coast granite landscapes; marine research station

Finland

Finland is underrated on Baltic itineraries, and that’s exactly why it’s worth paying attention to. Helsinki’s compact centre delivers design museums, market halls and one of the best harbour squares in Europe within easy walking distance of the ship. The archipelago ports of Turku and Mariehamn reward passengers who skip the capital dash and explore at a slower pace.

Finland cruise ports guide →

PortWhat it’s known for
HelsinkiDesign capital; Market Square, Temppeliaukio rock church, sauna culture
TurkuFormer capital; Turku Castle, riverside restaurants, Archipelago Sea
KotkaMaritime museum city; Langinkoski Imperial Fishing Lodge nearby
Mariehamn, Åland IslandsAutonomous archipelago between Finland and Sweden; Viking heritage
OuluNorthern Finland’s tech hub; market hall, outdoor culture
VaasaBilingual city; Kvarken Archipelago UNESCO site offshore
KemiGateway to Finnish Lapland; icebreaker cruises in winter season
HankoFinland’s southernmost town; Art Nouveau villas, regatta heritage

Germany

Germany’s Baltic coast is the least-visited stretch of the country by cruise passengers, and that works in your favour. Warnemünde handles the most traffic as the jumping-off point for Berlin, but Kiel, Wismar and Sassnitz offer a very different Germany — unhurried, coastal, and genuinely interesting in their own right. Kiel and Hamburg are both active turnaround ports in 2026. Hamburg sits on the Elbe rather than the Baltic proper, but features on enough Northern Europe itineraries to belong here.

Germany cruise ports guide →

PortWhat it’s known for
WarnemündeBusiest German Baltic port; gateway to Berlin (3hrs by train) or Rostock (20 mins)
KielActive 2026 turnaround port; Kiel Fjord, Kiel Week sailing regatta
HamburgActive 2026 turnaround port; Speicherstadt, Elbphilharmonie, port atmosphere
WismarUNESCO Hanseatic old town; Swedish-influenced architecture
SassnitzGateway to Rügen island; chalk cliffs of Jasmund National Park
TravemündeElegant beach resort; gateway to Lübeck and its marzipan
Binz, RügenGermany’s largest island; white sand beaches, grand spa architecture
BremerhavenMajor turnaround port; German Emigration Centre, Climate House
CuxhavenNorth Sea port at the mouth of the Elbe; mudflat walks
HeligolandRemote North Sea island; duty-free, red sandstone cliffs, gannets

Norway

Norway isn’t a Baltic country — its coastline faces the North Sea and the Norwegian Sea — but it appears on the same itineraries and attracts the same passengers. Bergen is the classic inclusion on any combined Norway and Baltic sailing. Oslo features as a turnaround port on several 2026 itineraries, with some lines offering overnight stays. Note that the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo is currently undergoing renovation; check before you visit for current exhibition arrangements.

Norway cruise ports guide →

PortWhat it’s known for
BergenGateway to the fjords; Bryggen wharf, fish market, funicular
OsloNorwegian capital; Vigeland Sculpture Park, Aker Brygge waterfront; Viking Ship Museum currently under renovation
ÅlesundArt Nouveau city rebuilt after 1904 fire; gateway to Geirangerfjord
OldenFjordside village; Briksdal glacier day trips, dramatic valley scenery

Estonia

Tallinn is one of the standout ports of any Baltic sailing. Its medieval old town is the best-preserved in Northern Europe and compact enough to cover on foot in a day without a tour. Several cruise lines now include overnight stays in Tallinn — worth choosing if your schedule allows it. The KGB Museum, housed in a Soviet-era hotel, is one of the more sobering and memorable experiences in the region.

PortWhat it’s known for
TallinnUNESCO medieval old town; KGB Museum; overnight stays available on some 2026 sailings
PärnuEstonia’s summer capital; spa resort town, sandy beaches

Latvia

Riga rewards passengers who do their homework. The Art Nouveau architecture in the quiet streets away from the old town is extraordinary — more concentrated here than almost anywhere in Europe — and most cruise passengers miss it entirely because they follow the tourist trail to the obvious sights. Riga features on MSC and other mainstream Baltic itineraries in 2026.

PortWhat it’s known for
RigaArt Nouveau capital of Europe; Central Market, medieval old town; active on 2026 itineraries

Lithuania

Klaipėda is Lithuania’s only significant cruise port and the gateway to the Curonian Spit — a UNESCO-listed sand dune peninsula shared with Russia that is one of the most unusual landscapes in the Baltic. It features on MSC and other mainstream sailings in 2026 and is no longer the obscure add-on it once was.

PortWhat it’s known for
KlaipėdaGateway to the Curonian Spit UNESCO dunes; historic German-influenced old town; active on 2026 itineraries

Poland

Poland’s Baltic ports are almost always overlooked in favour of Berlin day trips from Warnemünde, which is a genuine mistake. Gdańsk has one of the most dramatic and historically significant old towns in Europe — rebuilt entirely after wartime destruction, yet somehow more authentic-feeling than many cities that survived intact. Gdynia is the actual cruise port; Gdańsk is a short transfer away. Both Gdynia and Sopot feature on 2026 Baltic itineraries.

PortWhat it’s known for
Gdańsk / GdyniaSolidarity movement birthplace; Long Market, amber capital of the world; active on 2026 itineraries
SopotBaltic beach resort; Monte Cassino promenade, pier, spa heritage
SzczecinHistoric Hanseatic city; gateway port for western Poland

Russia

St Petersburg featured on virtually every Baltic itinerary until sailings were suspended following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. No mainstream cruise lines are including the port in 2026 and this is unlikely to change in the near future. The page remains available for reference.

PortStatus
St PetersburgSailings currently suspended; not included on 2026 itineraries

Practical notes for Baltic and Northern Europe cruises

  • Season: May to September. June and July bring the white nights phenomenon in Stockholm and Helsinki — the sun barely sets and your body clock will be confused by midnight light. Pack an eye mask. September sailings get noticeably quieter and cooler but offer far better value.
  • Currency: Denmark, Norway and Sweden all use their own currencies (Danish krone, Norwegian krone, Swedish krona). Finland and Germany use the Euro. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania also use the Euro. Poland uses the Polish zloty. Card payments are accepted almost universally across the region, but carry a small amount of local currency for markets and smaller vendors.
  • Visa requirements for UK passengers: No visa required for any of the countries listed above for short stays. This has not changed post-Brexit for tourism visits.
  • Tender vs dock: Most major ports in this region are dock ports. Visby on Gotland is the main exception — ships typically anchor and tender passengers ashore. Check your itinerary in advance if mobility is a consideration.
  • Time zones: Denmark, Germany, Norway, Sweden and Poland are Central European Time (UTC+1, or UTC+2 in summer). Finland, Estonia and Latvia are Eastern European Time (UTC+2, or UTC+3 in summer) — one hour ahead of your ship if it’s registered in a western European country. Worth knowing when you’re calculating how long you actually have ashore.

  Last Updated: 10 June 2026