MSC Cruises is introducing a new digital remote check-in process for guests embarking in Seattle, with the goal of making the beginning of an MSC cruise faster and more convenient.
The cruise line announced the new service on July 8, 2026, describing it as a way to streamline the guest embarkation experience in Seattle. The announcement is currently tied specifically to the Seattle cruise terminal rather than being presented as a fleetwide change.
A New Embarkation Option for MSC’s First Alaska Season
The timing makes sense. MSC Cruises began its first Alaska season from Seattle in May 2026, with MSC Poesia operating weekly cruises from the Smith Cove Cruise Terminal.
The ship is sailing round-trip Alaska itineraries throughout the summer, giving MSC an opportunity to introduce the remote check-in process at a homeport that handles a large number of passengers within a relatively short seasonal window.
While MSC has not yet provided enough publicly accessible detail for us to confirm every step included in the remote check-in process, the basic idea is to move more of the routine embarkation work away from the cruise terminal.
Instead of completing every part of the process after arriving at the port, eligible guests may be able to handle more of their check-in requirements digitally before reaching the terminal. That could allow cruise terminal employees to focus on document verification, security and passengers who need additional assistance.
Why Remote Check-In Could Be a Meaningful Improvement
Embarkation day is exciting, but it can also involve some of the least enjoyable parts of a cruise vacation.
Guests may need to wait in multiple lines for security, travel document checks, cruise card processing and other boarding procedures. Even when the overall process is efficient, a sudden rush of passengers can create bottlenecks.
A successful remote check-in system could help spread out some of that work. It may also reduce the amount of information guests need to enter or verify after arriving at the terminal.
This does not necessarily mean passengers will be able to walk directly onto the ship. Cruise guests will still need to comply with security procedures and present the original passports or other travel documents required for their itinerary.
However, eliminating even one or two steps from the terminal process could make embarkation feel noticeably smoother.
What Seattle Cruisers Should Do
Guests sailing aboard MSC Poesia from Seattle should watch their MSC for Me app, booking information and pre-cruise emails for instructions about the new remote check-in option.
Until the feature appears in a guest’s reservation, passengers should continue following MSC’s standard check-in process. That includes completing online check-in, reviewing the arrival time shown on the cruise documents and bringing all required identification and travel documents to the port.
Cruisers should also avoid assuming that remote check-in will automatically provide priority boarding. The primary purpose of the new system appears to be improving the overall embarkation process, not creating a separate priority benefit.
Will MSC Expand Remote Check-In to Other Ports?
For now, MSC is promoting the new digital check-in process specifically for Seattle.
Guests sailing from Miami, Port Canaveral, Galveston, New York or another MSC homeport should not assume the same option will be available for their cruise unless it appears in their booking.
Seattle could serve as a useful testing ground before MSC considers introducing the technology elsewhere. The cruise line can evaluate how many guests use the service, whether it reduces terminal wait times and how well it integrates with existing embarkation procedures.
MSC has not confirmed a broader rollout schedule in the public information we were able to verify.
The Bottom Line
Digital remote check-in may not be as exciting as a new restaurant, water park or onboard attraction, but it could have a meaningful effect on the guest experience.
The first few hours of a cruise can set the tone for the entire vacation. Spending less time waiting in a terminal and more time exploring the ship would be a welcome improvement for most MSC cruisers.
Seattle passengers should pay close attention to their pre-cruise communications as MSC introduces the new system during MSC Poesia’s inaugural Alaska season. If the program delivers a noticeably smoother embarkation experience, it would not be surprising to see MSC consider expanding it to additional homeports.

