Antarctica Explorer | December 2027

It is a profound experience to set eyes upon Antarctica for the first time. Breathtaking vistas, otherworldly wildlife and the journey itself leave an indelible mark on visitors. Here is a land of paradoxes: the world's biggest desert that is also the world's largest ice sheet, nearly two miles thick. Virtually unexplored just 150 years ago, this continent belongs to no nation, and is protected by an international treaty for peaceful scientific pursuit. In the footsteps of explorers such as Shackleton, Amundsen, and Scott, you will be one of the few to discover the world’s last truly wild frontier. Each day brings new surprises and the opportunity to change plans to maximize adventure opportunities and wildlife sightings, by adapting to ever-changing weather.

Viking Polaris

The Ship

First, we invented modern river cruising. Then, we redefined ocean cruising. Now, experience all the comfort and elegance of our award-winning fleet with an expedition ship built specifically to explore the world's most remote destinations and allow you to immerse yourself in these regions.

Ship Facts

  • Launch Year: 2022

  • Language: en

  • Gross Tonnage: 30150

  • Length: 205

  • Width: 21

  • Currency: EUR

  • Speed: 18

  • Capacity: 378

  • Crew Count: 260

  • Deck Count: 6

Accommodations

Sweeping views are yours from your outside retreat. The staterooms and suites on Viking Octantis and Viking Polaris are the most spacious and elegant of any expedition ship afloat, offering you an unparalleled level of comfort as you experience the world’s most remote locations.

Warm, Dry & Expedition Ready

Every stateroom and suite includes a floor-to-ceiling drying closet that circulates warm air to dry and store all your Viking Expedition Kit, from your keepsake Viking Expedition Jacket and waterproof pants and boots, and Viking Excursion Gear, so suiting up is always pleasant and you will always be ready for the next discovery.

Viking Suites

Nordic Junior Suites include our Nordic Balcony and more storage and seating than our Nordic Balcony staterooms, plus an expanded bathroom with extended shower and double sinks. Explorer Suites are 80% larger than junior suites, with two separate rooms, a Nordic Balcony and private veranda, spacious bathroom and private access to our Explorer Suites Garden. All suites include welcome champagne, a fully stocked mini-bar, complimentary laundry, priority restaurant reservations and all the amenities of our regular Nordic Balcony staterooms.

Nordic Balcony Staterooms

Our Nordic Balcony is the optimal wildlife observatory at sea. Floor-to-ceiling, distortion-free glass at the very edge of your ship lets you take in the views while keeping the elements out. Should you wish to feel even closer to nature, the top of your panoramic glass lowers to transform your stateroom into a sheltered al fresco lookout, with an observation shelf at elbow level to stabilize binocular viewing or photography. Each stateroom features our king-size Viking Explorer Bed with luxury linens, our floor-to-ceiling drying closet for your Viking Expedition Kit, and elegant bathroom with a spacious shower, heated floor and premium amenities.

Email us to learn more about each accommodation option and what life on board is really like—from dining and enrichment programming to entertainment, wellness, fitness, and other helpful details to know before you book.

DEPOSIT + INCLUSIONS + MAP

NON-REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT: $4000 per person

FINAL BALANCE DUE: December 27, 2026  (This can be paid in installments before the due date--we'll create a schedule together.)

SINGLE SUPPLEMENT: not available

TRIP INCLUSIONS:

  • One complimentary landing or shore excursion in every port of call

  • Free Wi-Fi (connection speed may vary)

  • Beer, wine & soft drinks with onboard lunch & dinner

  • 24-hour specialty coffees, teas & bottled water

  • Port taxes & fees

  • Ground transfers with Viking Air purchase

  • Visits to UNESCO Sites

  • Enrichment lectures & Destination Performances

  • Complimentary access to The Nordic Spa & Fitness Center.

  • Self-service launderettes

  • Alternative restaurant dining at no extra charge

  • 24-hour room service

  • Kayaks, Zodiacs & Special Operations Boats — A Viking Expedition Kit with a variety of equipment to explore at no extra charge

  • Keepsake Viking expedition jacket (on polar itineraries)

  • All Viking excursion gear needed for any relevant excursions

STATEROOM INCLUSIONS/AMMENITIES:

  • 24-hour room service

  • King-size bed (optional twin-bed configuration) with luxury linens & pillows

  • 55" OLED flat-screen TV featuring CNN, CBC, MBC2, beIN Sports

  • Interactive TV with complimentary movies and documentaries, as well as Viking.TV proprietary content, lectures and expert interviews

  • Mini-bar

  • Personal coffee machine with premium coffee & tea selections

  • Floor-to-ceiling heated drying closets for expeditions gear

  • Spacious glass-enclosed shower

  • Heated bathroom floor

  • Anti-fog mirrors

  • Premium Freyja® toiletries

  • Hair dryer

  • Free Wi-Fi (connection speed may vary)

  • 110/220 volt outlets & USB ports

  • Meopta Optika MeoPro 8x42 binoculars

Tuesday December 28

Buenos Aires, Argentina

Arrival day, when we check into our hotel. Buenos Aires, Argentina’s cosmopolitan capital, is an eclectic combination of Latin and European influences. The tree-lined streets and postcolonial architecture draw on the city’s Spanish, French and Italian heritage, while the many cafés and bodegas and vibrant nightlife are decidedly Argentine. Its barrios, or neighborhoods, exude an intimate atmosphere that belies the city’s size. Full of bohemian flair, historic San Telmo’s cobblestone streets and Belle Époque–style buildings reverberate with the mesmerizing melodies of the tango.

Wednesday December 29

Ushuaia, Argentina

After breakfast, we'll check out of our hotel and board our charter flight to our embarkation city. Ushuaia is the southernmost city in the world. Its splendid setting, tucked between the Beagle Channel and the southernmost slopes of the Andes, lends it an outpost atmosphere, as do the Antarctic explorers readying for the expeditions that depart from here. Ushuaia is the capital of and gateway to the celebrated Tierra del Fuego, the “Land of Fire,” named by Spaniards upon seeing the constant flames burned by the indigenous Yámana to keep warm. This largely unspoiled region comprises the large island of Tierra del Fuego and countless Chilean and Argentine islands.

5:00 Pm Departure

Embark on Antarctic Explorer

At 55 degrees latitude south, Ushuaia (pronounced oo-swy-ah) is closer to the South Pole than to Argentina's northern border with Bolivia. It is the capital and tourism base for Tierra del Fuego, the island at the southernmost tip of Argentina. 

Although its stark physical beauty is striking, Tierra del Fuego's historical allure is based more on its mythical past than on rugged reality. The island was inhabited for 6,000 years by Yámana, Haush, Selk'nam, and Alakaluf Indians. But in 1902 Argentina, eager to populate Patagonia to bolster its territorial claims, moved to initiate an Ushuaian penal colony, establishing the permanent settlement of its most southern territories and, by implication, everything in between. 

When the prison closed in 1947, Ushuaia had a population of about 3,000, made up mainly of former inmates and prison staff. Today the Indians of Darwin's "missing link" theory are long gone—wiped out by diseases brought by settlers and by indifference to their plight—and the 60,000 residents of Ushuaia are hitching their star to tourism. The city rightly (if perhaps too loudly) promotes itself as the southernmost city in the world (Puerto Williams, a few miles south on the Chilean side of the Beagle Channel, is a small town). You can make your way to the tourism office to get your clichéd, but oh-so-necessary, "Southernmost City in the World" passport stamp. Ushuaia feels like a frontier boomtown, at heart still a rugged, weather-beaten fishing village, but exhibiting the frayed edges of a city that quadrupled in size in the '70s and '80s and just keeps growing. 

Unpaved portions of Ruta 3, the last stretch of the Pan-American Highway, which connects Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, are finally being paved. The summer months (December through March) draw more than 120,000 visitors, and dozens of cruise ships. The city is trying to extend those visits with events like March's Marathon at the End of the World and by increasing the gamut of winter activities buoyed by the excellent snow conditions. A terrific trail winds through the town up to the Martial Glacier, where a ski lift can help cut down a steep kilometer of your journey. 

The chaotic and contradictory urban landscape includes a handful of luxury hotels amid the concrete of public housing projects. Scores of "sled houses" (wooden shacks) sit precariously on upright piers, ready for speedy displacement to a different site. But there are also many small, picturesque homes with tiny, carefully tended gardens. Many of the newer homes are built in a Swiss-chalet style, reinforcing the idea that this is a town into which tourism has breathed new life. At the same time, the weather-worn pastel colors that dominate the town's landscape remind you that Ushuaia was once just a tiny fishing village, snuggled at the end of the Earth. 

As you stand on the banks of the Canal Beagle (Beagle Channel) near Ushuaia, the spirit of the farthest corner of the world takes hold. What stands out is the light: at sundown the landscape is cast in a subdued, sensual tone; everything feels closer, softer, and more human in dimension despite the vastness of the setting. The snowcapped mountains reflect the setting sun back onto a stream rolling into the channel, as nearby peaks echo their image—on a windless day—in the still waters.Above the city rise the last mountains of the Andean Cordillera, and just south and west of Ushuaia they finally vanish into the often-stormy sea. Snow whitens the peaks well into summer. Nature is the principal attraction here, with trekking, fishing, horseback riding, wildlife spotting, and sailing among the most rewarding activities, especially in the Parque Nacional Tierra del Fuego (Tierra del Fuego National Park).

Thursday December 30

Sail the Drake Passage

Named for 16th-century English privateer Sir Francis Drake, the frigid waters of the Drake Passage stretch for some 600 miles between Cape Horn and Livingston Island in the South Shetland archipelago. As we sail today, we can attend an informative lecture or watch a film on the 8k laser-projected panoramic screen in The Aula, one of the world's most advanced venues for learning at sea. This indoor-outdoor experience allows nature to take center stage with its retractable floor-to-ceiling windows that unveil 270° views.

Friday December 31

Explore Antarctica, Days 4-10

At once ethereal and majestic, Antarctica has inspired explorers and adventurers for centuries. In this icy wilderness, marvel at icebergs glimmering in serene bays and mountains cloaked in white rising from the mainland basalt cliffs. These stunning landscapes evoke both utter tranquility as fur seals lounge on a floating sheet of ice, and breathtaking drama as glaciers thunderously calve into the sea. In these cold and nutrient-rich waters, humpback, fin and giant blue whales have been known to greet expedition ships that venture into their habitat.

3:00 pm Arrival

11:59 pm departure

Saturday January 1

Explore Antarctica, Days 4-10

About our ship (length of videos in parentheses); copy and paste each link into your browser:

A Comprehensive Overview: (4:54)

A Closer Look: (1:30) All Viking ships are carefully designed to enable exploration. Understated, elegant interiors feature their signature Scandinavian design that never upstages the destination, and thoughtful details throughout are chosen specifically with comfort in mind. This video provides a closer look at the design of the state-of-the-art expedition vessels, which are built specifically to navigate some of the world’s most remote areas.

The Multi-Craft Hangar: (0:35) An industry first, The Hangar brings true comfort to expedition cruising. This enclosed, in-ship marina permits the launch of small excursion craft through the ship’s multiple shell doors. The Hangar’s most innovative feature is an 85 ft. slipway that allows guests to embark on Special Operations Boats from a flat, stable surface inside the ship, shielded from wind and waves.

The Aula & Finse Terrace: (1:22) The world’s most advanced venue for learning at sea, The Aula is a stunning panoramic auditorium. Inspired by the University of Oslo’s famed ceremonial hall where the Nobel Peace Prize was historically awarded, The Aula will offer a dynamic venue for lectures and entertainment, with floor-to-ceiling windows and 270-degree views. Adjacent to The Aula through sliding glass walls is the Finse Terrace, an outdoor lounge area with comfortable couches and warming lava rock “firepits”—perfect for panoramic views of the surroundings. Together the two spaces can be combined to create an unmatched indoor-outdoor al fresco experience for guests to be immersed in nature.

6:00 am Arrival

3:00 pm departure

Sunday January 2 to THursday January 6

Explore Antarctica, Days 4 - 10

ACTIVITIES (some cost extra)

Special Operations Boats: The two military grade, 12-seater ice strengthened aluminum, ocean-going Special Operations Boats are built for exploration. With twin water jet propulsion (2 x 450 horsepower onboard engines), individually suspended seats and the unique ability to convert the open seating into an enclosed cabin.

Submarines: The uniquely designed submarines comfortably accommodate 6 guests and a pilot for an incomparable undersea experience. The revolving seats plus nearly 270° spherical windows offer an undistorted view in all directions for every guest.

Kayaks: The nine traditional tandem paddle kayaks offer superb stability and a large, open cockpit for easy accessibility. Built of durable rotomolded polyethylene, these kayaks are equally at home on the Great Lakes and in the Arctic or Antarctica.

Zodiacs: Designed for professional use in the harshest of environments, the fleet of seventeen Zodiacs with fuel-efficient Yanmar Dtorque 111 engines are reinforced throughout, yet stable and comfortable for a day of exploration.

SPA TIME!

The ship's wellness complex consists of Fitness Center and Nordic Spa. The Spa complex has Nordic Spa Badestamp (Hot Tub Room), unisex Sauna, Treatment Rooms (for massages), Thermal Suite, Hydrotherapy Pool, 2x Therapy Showers (including a cold-water bucket shower), changing rooms (male/female lockers with bathrobes and slippers). Each of the changing rooms has its own sauna room, showers, and relaxation area (with floor-ceiling windows, cushioned chairs, water dispenser).

The free-of-charge Thermal Suite has 4x heated ceramic loungers and a cold-water Thalasso pool with a separate hot tub portion. At the Treatment Rooms are offered professional massages, facials, body scrubs. The Nordic Spa promotes the repetition of cold and hot therapies which practice boosts blood circulation, body detoxification, and muscle relaxation. Viking Expeditions' Spa facilities are designed and operated via partnership with the LivNordic - wellness brand of Raison d'Etre Spas (London-based spa management company).

The Fitness Center is adjacent to the Salon (Coffee Bar / Relaxation Lounge). The Gym Room has floor-ceiling windows (portside views) and modern TechnoGym equipment - treadmills, elliptical trainers, stationary bikes, free weights, resistance machines, TRX trainers, Kinesis machines. Personal training is available at extra charge.

Beauty Salon is served by certified beauty therapists and hairdressers. It offers hairdresser and nail services for women (manicures, pedicures, haircuts, coloring, styling), There is a separate barbershop.

The Shop (adjacent to the Salon) sells handmade gifts and souvenirs, as well as Viking Cruise-logoed merchandise and spa products (soaps, lotions, scrubs, oils, bath soaks, gift baskets).

First Class Eatery Choices:

The Restaurant: An elegant dining venue, The Restaurant, offers daily-changing menus, including regional specialties made with fresh, local ingredients.

Manfredi’s® Italian Restaurant: Inspired by Italy’s beloved trattorias, Manfredi’s offers the best of Italian cuisine, as well as a private dining room.

World Café: With live cooking, an open kitchen, premium seafood/sushi choices and a grill, the casual World Café provides a vibrant interactive experience and a wide range of international flavors.

Mamsen’s®: Named for “Mamsen,” the Hagen family matriarch, this venue offers Norwegian specialties including waffles according to Mamsen’s original recipe, open-faced sandwiches and split pea soup.

Aquavit Terrace®: Offering mulled wine, hot chocolate or ship-matured aquavit, the Aquavit Bar is an ideal place to relax with new friends in this Viking-inspired, light-filled space while taking in the stunning beauty that surrounds you.

24-Hour Options: The bakery offers a variety of delicious breads and pastries at any hour. Or you can enjoy many of the signature dishes in the comfort of your stateroom with 24-hour room service.

Friday January 7

Sail the Drake Passage

The Drake Passage has a notorious reputation for being the roughest seas on Earth. Traversing it required braving massive waves, hurricane-force winds and icy conditions that tested the mettle of both sailor and ship. Soak up the views from the Finse Terrace, a unique outdoor lounge area named after a famous mountain plateau in south-central Norway. Relax amid your surroundings in comfort, with heated couches and lava rock “firepits,” allowing you to enjoy the outdoors no matter the temperature, as you admire the dramatic scenery or expansive ocean vistas.

Saturday January 8

Scenic Sailing: Cape Horn

Rising above the point where the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans converge, Cape Horn, named for the Dutch city of Hoorn in The Netherlands, is part of the Hermite Islands archipelago. This remote, stark and treeless place is often considered the continent’s southernmost point. Soaring from Hornos Island is an enormous prehistoric-looking massif of Jurassic volcanic rock. Atop, stands its historic lighthouse near the water’s edge. A beacon of assurance and safety for countless sailors since 1991, it is the world’s southernmost traditional-style lighthouse.

Sunday January 9

Ushuaia, Argentina

We'll disembark our ship. For those of you who bought your flights through Viking, you'll be transferred to the airport for your flight home--or on to your next adventure! 

Email us to learn more about post-trip extension options!