If you were eyeing an MSC Euribia winter cruise out of Dubai, Doha, or Abu Dhabi, the last few days have been a whole lot of “refresh your inbox” energy.
MSC Cruises has now officially canceled the remaining three cruises of MSC Euribia’s winter season in the region, citing the evolving security situation and following guidance from regional military authorities.
Here’s what’s changing, who’s impacted, and the most practical next steps.
What’s Changing?
In an update posted March 3, 2026 (16:00 CET), MSC said its top priority is the safety and wellbeing of guests and crew, and that it is continuing to follow guidance for MSC Euribia to remain in the port of Dubai. MSC also noted that the onboard situation is calm and guests still have access to onboard services and facilities while the ship remains in port.
Most importantly for future cruisers, MSC states that the remaining three cruises scheduled for this winter season from Dubai are now officially cancelled:
- MSC Euribia on March 14 (March 15 from Doha, March 18 from Abu Dhabi)
- MSC Euribia on March 21 (March 22 from Doha, March 25 from Abu Dhabi)
- MSC Euribia on March 28 (March 29 from Doha, April 1 from Abu Dhabi)
And this is not happening in a vacuum. Multiple cruise operators have been dealing with major regional disruption, including ships remaining in port and itinerary changes due to escalating conflict, airspace impacts, and safety considerations.
Which Guests Are Impacted?
If you were booked on one of the sailings listed above, MSC says you are part of the group that will be contacted and refunded.
In addition, industry reporting indicates that earlier departures were also canceled as the situation escalated, including late February and early March sailings.
If you’re thinking, “Wait, my cruise was supposed to depart from Doha (or Abu Dhabi) and not Dubai,” you’re not crazy. The Euribia’s itineraries in the region often offered multiple embarkation options across Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi, which is why MSC lists the linked dates in the update.
What Is MSC Offering?
MSC’s update says impacted guests will be offered a full refund, and that guests are being contacted through the channel used to book (either directly via MSC or through a travel agent).
A few practical implications:
- If you booked with a travel agent, expect the communication and refund process to run through them first.
- If you booked directly, MSC should contact you, but it’s still smart to check your spam folder and your MSC account for messages.
MSC also mentions that, following a limited resumption of flights, it is working with airlines to facilitate onward travel for guests and that airline backlogs mean the process may take time.
What You Should Do Right Now
Here’s the immediate action checklist:
- Confirm your sailing status using official MSC channels first.
MSC is updating its public advisory page as the situation evolves. Screenshot it for your records if you’re mid-trip planning. - Check how you booked and start there.
- Travel agent: contact them now and ask what they need from you to initiate the refund.
- Direct booking: call MSC and also monitor your email for instructions.
- Do not cancel your flights or hotels until you know your refund and insurance options.
If you have travel insurance, read your policy language around “trip cancellation,” “trip interruption,” and “force majeure.” Some policies behave very differently depending on who cancels what first. - If you used points or miles, contact the airline to understand redeposit rules and whether fees are waived given the regional disruption. (This varies wildly by carrier and ticket type.)
- If you’re already in the region, lean on official guidance.
Broader reporting has described ships remaining in port and challenges with airspace closures, so follow MSC instructions and local authority guidance closely.
Looking Ahead
The frustrating truth is that the timeline is driven by safety, airspace access, and regional authority guidance, not cruise line preference. MSC’s public messaging is consistent: the ship remains in Dubai, and the rest of the winter season sailings are canceled.
If you were hoping to cruise the Arabian Gulf this season, your best “Plan B” is usually one of these:
- Rebook to a different region and date (Caribbean, Med, Northern Europe) if your schedule is flexible.
- Shift to later in the year if you specifically want the Middle East itinerary and can wait for stability to return.
- Take the refund and regroup if you’re juggling flights, hotels, kids’ schedules, and you’re already exhausted from the last three days of news alerts.
