Alaska Season Pass Offers Monthlong Cruises 2026

Key points
- Virgin Voyages is selling a 2026 Alaska cruise season pass that keeps two adults onboard Brilliant Lady for about 30 days at a time
- The pass includes a Central Sea Terrace cabin for two, upgraded Work From Sea WiFi, daily drink credits, thermal spa access, and monthlong laundry service
- Passholders get complimentary shore excursion credits up to $250.00 (USD) per person, a dedicated glacier discovery tour, and early access to book Shore Things and dining
- Four departure windows in 2026 are priced at $26,000.00, $38,000.00, $35,000.00, and $36,000.00 (USD) depending on dates
- All Alaska Summer Season Pass sailings are adults only, roundtrip from Seattle aboard Brilliant Lady, with repeated visits to ports like Ketchikan, Sitka, and Icy Strait Point
- Inventory is limited and buyers must sail every segment, with bookings open now and added savings for reservations made by January 29, 2026
Impact
- Where Impacts Are Most Likely
- The Alaska cruise season pass 2026 mainly affects travelers who want long stays at sea, repeat port visits, or a work from ship base in Alaska rather than a single seven night cruise
- Best Times To Travel
- Early season in late May and June offers lower pricing and more snow capped scenery, while late August into September brings better value than peak July but cooler, wetter conditions
- Onward Travel And Changes
- All voyages are roundtrip from Seattle, so travelers should build in flight buffer on embarkation and final return dates and remember that the primary sailor must stay on every leg even if the second sailor rotates
- Work And Connectivity
- The upgraded Work From Sea WiFi is designed for remote work, but travelers who rely on video calls should still plan for occasional slow periods or schedule flexibility given Alaska’s geography
- What Travelers Should Do Now
- Cruisers considering a month in Alaska should compare the pass cost against four separate weeklong cruises, check whether the all adult Virgin Voyages style fits, and speak with a travel advisor soon while inventory is limited
Virgin Voyages is turning its 2026 Alaska cruise season into something closer to a floating residency, offering an Alaska cruise season pass 2026 that keeps two adults in a Central Sea Terrace cabin aboard Brilliant Lady for about a month at a time, with the first departure window running from May 28 to June 23, 2026. All sailings are adults only, roundtrip from Seattle, Washington, with repeated calls at core Alaska ports and glacier viewing areas. For travelers, the tradeoff is paying a single lump sum, starting at $26,000.00 (USD) per cabin, in exchange for four back to back voyages, bundled WiFi and spa access, excursion credits, and a month of not packing or unpacking.
The new Alaska Summer Season Pass effectively turns Brilliant Lady into a short term home at sea, and that will appeal most to repeat cruisers, remote workers, and travelers who want to go deeper in a single region instead of sampling several in one trip. It also gives travel advisors a way to package a more immersive Alaska stay without piecing together separate hotel and rail segments.
How The Alaska Summer Season Pass Works
The 2026 program is built around back to back Alaska itineraries that are normally sold as one week cruises. Season pass holders keep the same Central Sea Terrace cabin throughout their roughly 30 days on board, while non pass guests embark and disembark each week in Seattle. The ship repeats key ports such as Ketchikan, Icy Strait Point, Sitka, and Prince Rupert, and sails to glacier areas including Tracy Arm and Hubbard Glacier, so passholders can revisit favorite stops or try different excursions the second or third time around.
Virgin Voyages requires that the primary sailor, listed as Sailor One on the booking, sail every leg of the monthlong sequence, and there are no refunds if part of the itinerary is missed. However, Sailor Two can change from week to week, which means one person can treat the pass as their base while inviting different friends, relatives, or a partner to join for individual segments.
What The Pass Includes
Core pricing includes Virgin Voyages' premium fare and service gratuities for two people in a Central Sea Terrace cabin, which already bundles most dining venues, onboard entertainment, and basic WiFi. The Alaska Summer Season Pass upgrades that baseline with Work From Sea WiFi for faster, multi device connectivity, voyage long laundry service, thermal spa passes, and daily drink credits that can be used across bars and lounges.
Onshore, the pass sets aside complimentary "Shore Things" excursion credits up to $250.00 (USD) per person, plus a dedicated glacier discovery excursion that is included once during the month. Passholders also receive early access to book excursions and dining, priority boarding, and hosted welcome receptions, making it easier to secure scarce glacier viewing tours or small group wildlife trips in peak weeks.
Each cabin comes with an "Alaska Pack" designed for a long stay in cooler weather, including a Canon G7X camera, binoculars for whale watching, a portable power bank, refillable water bottle, backpack, limited edition Season Pass jacket, and a collectible band that identifies the 2026 pass cohort. That bundle will not replace serious cold weather gear for glacier hikes or extended outdoor time, but it reduces the amount of small equipment travelers need to buy in advance.
Dates, Pricing, And How The Value Compares
Virgin Voyages has published four departure windows for the 2026 Alaska Summer Season Pass, all aboard Brilliant Lady and all roundtrip from Seattle.
The windows and starting prices are:
May 28 to June 23, 2026 priced at $26,000.00 (USD) for two adults in a Central Sea Terrace cabin.
June 23 to July 23, 2026 priced at $38,000.00 (USD).
July 30 to August 27, 2026 priced at $35,000.00 (USD).
August 27 to September 26, 2026 priced at $36,000.00 (USD).
The lowest priced window falls in late May and June, when snow on higher peaks is still common and daylight is increasing. The highest priced block covers late June through late July, which is peak demand for Alaska cruises and often the warmest stretch of the season.
If you treat the pass as roughly 30 nights at sea, the entry level window works out to around the mid hundreds of dollars per cabin per night before factoring in the bundled WiFi, spa, shore credit, laundry, and gratuities. That is not a budget product, but for travelers who would have bought premium cabins and multiple glacier or wildlife excursions anyway, the overall economics may compare reasonably to four separate seven night sailings across different brands, especially once adult only policies and WiFi upgrades are considered.
Virgin is also layering a broader promotion on top of the pass. Travelers who book by January 29, 2026 can buy one sailor and get the second at 80 percent off, plus receive up to $400.00 (USD) in drink credits per cabin, though details will depend on final offer terms and may change.
Who This Makes Sense For
The pass will mostly appeal to guests who already know they enjoy Virgin Voyages' adults only, party forward but premium leaning style, and who are comfortable spending an entire month in the Alaska and Pacific Northwest region rather than using a cruise as one piece of a longer land itinerary. It fits naturally for remote workers and digital nomads who can relocate for a month, so long as their job does not hinge on guaranteed high definition video calls at all times, since Alaska's mountains and remote passages will still influence connectivity even with an upgraded plan.
Seasoned Alaska cruisers who have already done the classic one week loop might also find value in revisiting ports like Ketchikan or Sitka multiple times, with the freedom to pick different shore excursions each week or simply stay on board when they feel like treating the ship as a resort. However, travelers who want to combine Alaska with extended time in Denali National Park, rail journeys, or independent road trips may be better served by a single cruise paired with land arrangements rather than locking into 30 days at sea.
Because every pass starts and ends in Seattle, there is no built in one way positioning value to or from Alaska itself. Travelers will still need to purchase roundtrip flights to Seattle and should give themselves a generous buffer on the inbound leg and at least one night in the city after disembarkation, especially during the high priced late June to July window when flight loads are heavy.
Booking Mechanics And Fine Print To Watch
Virgin is selling the Alaska Summer Season Pass in limited numbers, and the booking path runs through the line's Sailor Services team or through travel advisors, not a simple online cart checkout. Standard cruise contract terms and cancellation policies apply, but travelers should pay close attention to the clause that requires sailing every leg with no refunds for missed segments, as well as any additional deposit or payment schedule requirements for the pass product.
Advisors should be prepared to walk clients through whether the pass format genuinely fits their work and vacation patterns. Someone who is likely to cut a month short if work gets hectic, or who is unsure they will enjoy the brand for that long, may be better off booking a single Alaska voyage to test the waters first.
For cruisers used to more traditional lines, it is also worth comparing this offer with other long stay concepts, such as segmenting a world cruise or stringing together two or three separate Alaska sailings in a season. Those alternatives may not come with gear packs or a month of spa and WiFi perks, but they might offer more flexibility on cabin category and brand style.
If you are tracking cruise deals more broadly, you may also want to compare this concept with evolving loyalty and status match programs at other premium lines, such as the recent PONANT Explorations and Aqua Expeditions status match offer covered in our separate report. For some travelers, stacking loyalty benefits on multiple brands will be more attractive than committing to one month on a single ship. See our coverage of the PONANT and Aqua Expeditions status match at Adept Traveler's dedicated news page and, for Alaska specific planning, review our evergreen guide to itineraries and seasons in How To Plan An Alaska Cruise.
Sources
- Alaska Summer Season Pass, Virgin Voyages official product page
- Work From Sea Alaska Summer Season Pass FAQ, Virgin Voyages
- Virgin Voyages Offers Month Long Alaska Pass, Travel Market Report
- Virgin Launches 2026 Alaska Summer Season Pass, Cruise Industry News
- Virgin Voyages Launches Alaska Season Pass, Cruise Critic
- Virgin Voyages Brings The Summer Season Pass To Alaska For 2026, VV Insider