Queen Mary 2 returns to Sydney and reclaims her harbour

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Cruise Passenger was onboard the Queen Mary 2 in Sydney Harbour yesterday as the Queen of the Seas re-aquanted herself with the city she once brought to a halt.

  • Many vessels lay claim to the crown: Queen of the Seas.
  • But despite Royal Caribbean’s bigger ships, Queen Mary 2 still reigns the monarch of the oceans.
  • Peter Lynch explains why after visiting her in Sydney Harbour.

In a world of astonishing size and amazing technology, one ship still commands the reverence and respect of the maritime world: Queen Mary 2, Cunardโ€™s legendary flagship and the last true ocean liner afloat.

As she sailed through the Heads and into Circular Quay, berthing at the Overseas Passenger Terminal, she reminded Australia why the Cunard name still commands attention.

Last year Cunard sadly ended its Australian home-porting program when Queen Elizabeth departed, leaving loyal Australian guests without a local ship for the first time in years, and there appears little chance of a return in the near future.

But the brandโ€™s connection with Australia remains remarkably strong, according to the line.

As she waited to begin her 65-day journey to New York this week, there were 11 Aussies among the 2450 passengers on board.

โ€œWeโ€™re still a very strong market,โ€ says Liz Fettes, Cunardโ€™s Senior Vice President for North America and Australasia. โ€œGuests are incredibly loyal and we still see very strong demand from Australia, particularly for the World Voyages and for Europe.โ€

Queen Mary 2 in Sydney 2026 (Peter Lynch)

The ship that stopped Sydney

Sydney has seen this spectacle before. Nineteen years ago, the harbour famously came to a near standstill when Queen Mary 2 and the QE2 sailed into the city together, passing each other in one of the most memorable maritime moments in Australian cruise history.

Hundreds of thousands of Sydneysiders lined the harbour foreshores to watch the two Cunard queens glide past each other.

Back then Queen Mary 2 was too long to berth at the Overseas Passenger Terminal, forcing the liner to dock at the Garden Island Naval Base โ€” something almost unheard of for a passenger ship. It’s still unheard of today. But that’s another story.

Today, the terminal has a special extension allowing the 345-metre vessel to berth directly at Circular Quay, placing the last great ocean liner squarely between the Opera House and Harbour Bridge.

She looked entirely at home.

Queen Mary 2 in Sydney 2026 (Peter Lynch)

Last true ocean liner

Queen Mary 2 is no ordinary cruise ship. She is the worldโ€™s last purpose-built ocean liner, designed to cross the Atlantic rather than simply cruise calmer seas.

Her hull contains 20 tonnes of additional steel reinforcement, helping stabilise the ship against the powerful swells of the North Atlantic.

By the numbers she remains one of the most impressive vessels afloat.

  • Length: 345 metres
  • Gross tonnage: 151,400 tonnes
  • Guests: Up to 3,090
  • Crew: 1,253

But statistics alone cannot explain the shipโ€™s enduring appeal. Queen Mary 2 carries something more intangible: the sense of occasion that once defined ocean travel.


Personal memory

In the interests of disclosure, my own connection with the ship goes back to her very first voyage. I sailed on Queen Mary 2โ€™s inaugural Atlantic crossing 22 years ago, my fatherโ€™s tuxedo carefully packed in my suitcase.

As an awestruck newcomer to cruising, I remember walking into the Grill Class dining room and thinking it was the epitome of ocean-going elegance. The suites โ€” some with grand pianos and sweeping staircases โ€” seemed impossibly glamorous.

And alongside us sailed the legendary QE2 as we crossed the Atlantic to New York.

Returning to the ship today, I wondered whether that magic would still be there. The answer is: Yes!

Queen Mary 2 remains beautiful, stately and effortlessly stylish, a floating monument to the golden age of liners.

Peter Lynch at the QM2 inaugural


Grandeur at sea

Passengers entering the ship step into one of the most impressive interiors afloat. The Grand Lobby rises six decks high, framed by marble pillars and sweeping staircases.

It sets the tone for a ship that still values tradition.

Nearly 16,000 meals are served aboard every day, spread across four main restaurants, including the famous Grill Class dining rooms.

Entertainment is equally grand. The Royal Court Theatre, seating 1,100 guests, hosts two Broadway-style productions every night.

And then there is Illuminations, a planetarium at sea, where passengers sit beneath a domed ceiling watching stars and galaxies swirl above them.

Five pools and multiple jacuzzis line the upper decks, often accompanied by live music drifting across the ship.


Cunardโ€™s enduring Australian connection

Despite the absence of home-ported ships, Cunard continues to see strong demand from Australian travellers.

โ€œItโ€™s one of our top sourcing markets,โ€ Fettes says. โ€œThereโ€™s incredible guest loyalty in Australia and we see that particularly with our longer voyages and world cruises.โ€

The booking patterns may be changing, but the interest has not.

โ€œTo be honest, the lack of home-porting hasnโ€™t really impacted bookings,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s more about where Australians are choosing to sail. Theyโ€™re still travelling โ€” often to Europe or on the World Voyages.โ€

Cunard is increasingly designing itineraries that suit Australian travellers willing to fly further for longer holidays.

โ€œWeโ€™re looking at longer connected voyages,โ€ Fettes explains. โ€œInstead of just seven nights in the Mediterranean, weโ€™re offering 14, 21 or even 28-night voyages – something that makes the travel worthwhile for Australians.โ€

The company also works closely with Australian partners to curate special sailings.

โ€œIf thereโ€™s a specific event voyage where we can put a group on board with Australian chefs, writers or speakers, we absolutely look at that,โ€ she says.

Queen Mary 2 in Sydney 2026 (James Morgan)

A uniquely Cunard moment in Sydney

Queen Mary 2โ€™s visit to Sydney was also marked by a uniquely Cunard cultural event.

Acclaimed Australian author Anna Funder unveiled โ€œA Letter from Australia to the Worldโ€ on board the ship as she arrived in the harbour.

The piece, revealed on deck against the backdrop of the Harbour Bridge and Opera House, draws together reflections from more than 500 Australians who submitted letters describing life in the country today.

Those letters will now travel with Queen Mary 2 as she continues her 108-night world voyage, inviting guests to read and respond as part of a modern-day Cunard Pen Pal Exchange.

For Funder, the project captured something deeply Australian. โ€œReading what more than five hundred Australians have written has been a moving experience,โ€ she said. โ€œThese letters speak of nature, community and the small rituals that shape daily life here.โ€

The initiative reflects Cunardโ€™s 185-year heritage of carrying not just passengers but also stories, letters and ideas between continents.

Still the Queen

Ships may be larger today, but few command the same presence as Queen Mary 2. Standing on deck as she arrived in Sydney Harbour this morning, it was clear that the worldโ€™s last ocean liner still holds a special place in cruising.

She is not just another ship. She is a legend.

Cunard special offer

In the spirit of timeless luxury, Cunard is offering triple on board credit on select 2026 and 2027 voyages.

Travellers can sail on Queen Anneโ€™s maiden South America Discovery, join segments of Queen Victoriaโ€™s World Voyage, or experience Queen Elizabethโ€™s final Alaska season from May to September 2026.

For Australians who have long loved the Cunard style of travel, it may be the perfect moment to step aboard once more.


Why Queen Mary 2 is different

Sheโ€™s an ocean liner, not a cruise ship.
Queen Mary 2 is the last purpose-built ocean liner in service โ€” designed for the demands of the North Atlantic, not just warm-water cruising.

Built to handle heavy seas.
Her structure includes major reinforcement to cope with ocean swells, giving her the stability and โ€œsolidโ€ feel that cruise-ship regulars notice immediately.

A different hull shape โ€” and a different ride.
Ocean liners are engineered to slice through rough conditions at speed, rather than prioritising the wide, resort-style hull forms common in modern cruise ships. She can travel at 30 knots – try doing that on Royal Caribbean’s Icon of the Seas.

A sense of occasion thatโ€™s uniquely Cunard.
From the six-deck Grand Lobby to Gala Evenings, White Star Service and Grill Class exclusivity, QM2 delivers a transatlantic-era formality that most contemporary ships have moved away from.

Entertainment you simply donโ€™t see elsewhere.
The Royal Court Theatre (about 1,100 seats) and Illuminations โ€” a planetarium at sea โ€” underline QM2โ€™s focus on culture and enrichment, not just attractions.

For more, see Cunard.

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