- Cruise Passenger‘s Editor-in-Chief Peter Lynch met with Carnival Cruise Line chiefs aboard Carnival Adventure at the end of 2025.
- The closure of P&O Australia and the absorption of two of its ships is now behind the company.
- And Assistant Vice President Anton Loeb is optimistic, saying Carnival wears its badge as Australia’s affordable line with pride.
Carnival Adventure was buzzing with holiday energy when Cruise Passenger sat down for lunch with Anton Loeb, Carnival Cruise Line Australiaโs AVP of Sales and Marketing.
A choir of schoolchildren filled the atrium. Below decks, crew members prepared gifts destined for children in Vanuatu and other Pacific ports. And all around the ship, families in matching festive outfits boarded for a South Pacific Christmas cruise that, for many, would be the holiday they could afford โ and the one they would remember for some time to come.
It was a fitting backdrop for a conversation about value, accessibility and Carnivalโs unapologetic role as Australiaโs most unpretentious cruise line.
โSheโs not the most modern ship,โ Loeb admits of Carnival Adventure. โBut for thousands of Australian families, sheโs the holiday they can have.โ That, he says, is something Carnival wears with pride
At a time when cruise prices across the industry have crept steadily upward, Carnivalโs position in the Australian market is increasingly clear. It is the value leader โ and Loeb has no intention of apologising for that.
โIf being budget means making holidays affordable, then yes, Iโll wear that with pride,โ he says. โIf it means more Australians can take a break from the pressure and stress of life, then absolutely.โ
Carnivalโs pricing, Loeb explains, remains dynamic, as it does across the industry, but the philosophy behind it is unwavering.
โWe will always strive to be affordable and represent great value,โ he says. โEven when prices look different to what they did a year ago, you still have to look at whatโs included. Accommodation, meals, entertainment, kidsโ clubs โ itโs incredibly hard to find better value than cruising.โ
In Cruise Passengerโs recent market analysis, Carnival emerged as the clear leader in the budget segment, a position Loeb believes is critical to the health of the wider cruise industry.
โOur biggest success โ and our biggest opportunity โ is bringing more people into cruising,โ he says. โCarnival is often that first step. People experience cruising for the first time with us, and then many move on through the wider Carnival Corporation family.โ

Unpretentious by design
Loeb is careful with labels. He resists terms like โbudgetโ or โmid-marketโ if they create the wrong expectations.
โFor me, Carnival represents an easy, affordable, value-for-money holiday,โ he says. โWhat you call that is less important than putting the right person on the right ship.โ
Expectation, he believes, is everything.
He recently told a trade journal how important it was that travel agents didnโt oversell what Carnival is. โWe have to be make sure that our marketing is on point, our training is on point, our travel agent partners understand โwhat are the qualifying questions I need to ask?โ,โ he said.
He told Cruise Passenger: โOur goal is always positive surprise. We want to meet โ and exceed โ expectations. If you come onboard thinking, โIโll get my meals, my accommodation, my kids are happy,โ youโre going to walk off saying it was the best holiday youโve ever had.โ
Oversell it as luxury, he warns, and disappointment follows.
โThatโs why itโs on us โ and our travel partners โ to ask the right questions and set the right expectations.โ

Multigenerational cruising
Carnivalโs greatest strength may be its ability to appeal across generations โ often on the same sailing.ย
Carnival Cruise Line was “highly Commended” in the 2025 Reader’s Choice Awards Best Family Cruise Line category.
Itโs been a big year โ the closure of P&O Australia early in 2025 cause a rift in both Carnival cruises and former P&O fans, a very vocal bunch. Cruise Passenger’s audience was emotional about the demise of a 92-year-old institution.
But time and cruises of great value is a good healer. Today, our readers debate Carnivalโs lack of new ships and polish, but concede the price is unbeatable.
โWeโre not going to say weโre for everyone,โ Loeb says. โBut our core is families, groups of friends, couples โ people looking to reconnect.โ
That means grandparents, parents and children all sharing the same holiday, something Loeb sees daily onboard.
โThereโs something incredibly powerful about watching a father dance with his daughter for the first time โ not at a wedding, but just because theyโre having dinner,โ he says. โYou canโt bottle that.โ
Itโs also why Carnival continues to attract younger demographics, including millennials.
โThey love the themed cruises, the social atmosphere, the sense of connection,โ he says. โItโs not about formality โ itโs about fun.โ
‘Four ships year round and fully committed to Australia’
By 2026, Carnival Australia will be operating four ships year-round โ the largest and only continuous cruise operation in the country.
โThis is our first full year as a complete fleet,โ Loeb says. โFour ships, each with its own identity and personality, sailing from Sydney and Brisbane, with over 200 sailings a year.โ
That commitment, he stresses, is long-term.
โWe are absolutely committed to Australia and to year-round cruising,โ he says. โThatโs not changing.โ
Nor is Carnivalโs push into regional ports. New deployments include Auckland from 2027, a return to Melbourne in 2027 and 2028, and an Adelaide season beginning in 2028.
โTaking ships out of Sydney and Brisbane creates excitement,โ he says. โAdelaide, in particular, the reaction was massive. People want cruising closer to home.โ
‘Delivering what we promise’
Asked about new ships, Loeb is pragmatic. โEveryone loves shiny new ships,โ he says. โBut you donโt always need more ships to do better. Sometimes you do better with what you have.โ
Instead, Carnival is investing heavily in refits and enhancements to its existing fleet, ensuring ships remain relevant, fresh and appealing to Australian guests.
โOur focus is on delivering what we promise โ and doing it well,โ he says.
As our conversation ends, the symbolism of the sailing around us is hard to ignore.
Families heading to the Pacific. Children receiving gifts. Choirs singing. Crew preparing for a holiday season at sea.
โThis is cruising for people who may never have cruised before,โ Loeb says. โThey donโt compare it to anything else. They just know theyโre here, theyโre enjoying it, and it feels special.โ
For Carnival โ and for Australian cruising โ that may be the most powerful position of all.
โPositive surprise,โ Loeb repeats, watching another family step onboard. โThatโs what weโre here to deliver.โ
For more: http://carnival.com.au






