Following an executive shakeup and delivery delay, Four Seasons Yachts’ Four Seasons I vessel is now on track to launch in January 2026. The luxury cruise product will be familiar to brand loyalists while departing from the segment’s usual all-inclusive fare structure. Here’s a compilation of what clients can expect onboard.
Editor’s note: This article will be updated as more details are revealed.
Four Seasons I: An Unorthodox Luxury Cruise Format
Unlike other luxury cruise lines, Four Seasons Yachts will not be all-inclusive. Fares will not include meals, room service, alcoholic beverages, spa treatments, shore excursions nor laundry service.
Champagne & Caviar doles out views, too.
Credit: 2025 Four Seasons Yachts
What will be included extends only to breakfast in specific dining venues and light snacks for adults; breakfast, lunch and dinner for children (ages 5 and under); certain non-alcoholic beverages; Wi-Fi internet access; marina water sports; exercise classes; gratuities; taxes and port fees.
The value proposition will also take a different path regarding published fares. Prices will not be listed per person but rather per suite, and suites will accommodate up to seven guests. What’s more, Suites with Studios — separate bonus cabins for personal staff or other family members — will be bundled into the total price of the main suite.
Dining Venues Onboard Four Seasons I
The onboard culinary experience will include 11 onboard dining and drinking venues, according to the line.
Miuna is an omakase restaurant that can only accommodate 16 cruisers at a time.
Credit: 2025 Four Seasons Yachts"Our restaurants and bars are the heartbeat of our hotels, and when we set sail in 2026, the same will be true aboard Four Seasons I, creating moments of connection, celebration and culinary excellence at sea," said Alejandro Reynal, president and CEO of Four Seasons. “Each offering has been thoughtfully designed to create a highly personalized experience, building on the success of our more than 600 restaurants and bars around the world, while introducing something entirely new.”
The main trio of restaurants on Four Seasons I will be Sedna, Terrasse and Miuna. The emerald green-adorned Sedna will showcase “rotating master chefs-in-residence;” when not highlighting talent from Four Seasons’ international restaurants, a modern French menu will be available for lunch and dinner. A private room will also be on hand to host up to 10 guests.
Sedna is one of the main restaurants.
Credit: 2025 Four Seasons YachtsMeanwhile, the al fresco Terrasse will be a Mediterranean dining room inspired by the Cote d’Azur and offering breakfast, lunch and dinner. Light and seasonal dishes will be made with locally sourced ingredients and will often feature seafood. An open kitchen and live culinary stations will engage guests.
Guests can also opt to dine at intimate sushi restaurant Miuna, which will offer an omakase experience accommodating only 16 guests at a time during lunch and dinner.
At Pistachio, a cafe situated next to the lobby, guests can enjoy a light breakfast and sweet treats such as croissants, petite gateaux, gelato and more. Artisanal coffee and teas will also percolate here.
Pistachio will serve specialty coffees and French treats.
Credit: 2025 Four Seasons YachtsOtherwise, bars and lounges will extend to the Salon, the ship’s “living room” for social gatherings, which will offer a la carte breakfast. Then, as its name implies, Bar Piscine will serve drinks and Mediterranean poolside.
The venue dubbed Champagne & Caviar will serve its namesake indulgences, and the adults-only Horizon Lounge will act as a Moroccan-inspired retreat with a central plunge pool and a menu of Levantine dishes.
The Marina Bar will service guests participating in watersports activities (it will boast sun loungers, dining tables and light bites) and Bar O will take its design cues from 1960s jet-set Europe. The Cigar Lounge will welcome cigar aficionados.
Rounding out onboard dining options will be 24-hour-a-day room service in suites.