Carnival’s Dry Dock Schedule Now Runs Through Fall 2028

Carnival Cruise Line’s shipyard calendar now runs all the way into late 2028, with more than a dozen ships booked for dry dock across the next two and a half years. The dates were confirmed with Carnival and tracked by cruise news outlets through spring 2026, and they cover everything from quick two-week tune-ups to renovation stretches that pull a ship out of service for more than a month.

The spring 2026 round is already done. Carnival Magic and Carnival Legend are both back in service after work that wrapped in May. From here, most of the remaining projects land between this fall and 2028, and a few of them hit popular ships during peak travel months.

What Carnival’s Dry Dock Schedule Actually Covers

Carnival doesn’t put out a splashy press release for this kind of thing. The schedule comes together from the line’s internal planning, gets confirmed with Carnival, and then shifts as shipyard availability and operational needs change. So treat every date here as firm-but-movable.

By the current count, 16 Carnival ships are slated for shipyard time across the 2026 to 2028 window. Most are standard dry docks. One, Carnival Adventure in early 2027, is a wet dock, which means the ship stays in the water for a shorter, lighter round of work rather than being lifted out entirely.

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A handful of ships already had their turn earlier this year. Carnival Conquest, Carnival Dream, Carnival Encounter, and Carnival Pride all cycled through the shipyard in the first few months of 2026, so they’re off the upcoming list even though older schedules still showed them.

The Carnival Ships Heading To Dry Dock Through 2028

Here’s every confirmed dry dock still ahead, in order. Find your ship, check the window against your sail dates, and you’ll know right away whether there’s anything to watch.

Ship Dry Dock Window
Carnival Freedom Sept 1 – Oct 8, 2026
Carnival Radiance Sept 12 – Oct 2, 2026
Carnival Luminosa Oct 23 – Nov 29, 2026
Carnival Glory Jan 4 – 19, 2027
Carnival Sunrise Jan 9 – 26, 2027
Carnival Adventure Feb 10 – 26, 2027 (wet dock)
Carnival Paradise Feb 12 – Mar 5, 2027
Carnival Breeze Feb 26 – Mar 16, 2027
Carnival Celebration Apr 5 – 23, 2027
Carnival Horizon Apr 25 – May 16, 2027
Carnival Sunshine Oct 30 – Nov 11, 2027
Carnival Elation Jan 17 – 31, 2028
Carnival Jubilee Oct 7 – 28, 2028
Carnival Splendor 2028 (dates TBD)

Two names stand out. Carnival Celebration heads in during April 2027 and Carnival Jubilee follows in October 2028, and both are among the newest ships in the fleet. These are early, mostly routine visits for Excel-class ships that haven’t needed major work yet, not the kind of top-to-bottom overhaul the older hulls get.

Carnival Splendor is on the books for 2028, but firm dates haven’t landed yet. Carnival Firenze and Carnival Venezia don’t have confirmed windows at all right now, and you’ll see conflicting dates floating around for Venezia in particular, so I’d hold off trusting any specific Venezia date until Carnival locks it in.

What Carnival Does During A Dry Dock

Dry dock isn’t just a ship sitting idle. It’s a concentrated burst of maintenance and upgrades, and on older ships it’s often where the most visible changes happen.

The technical side covers the unglamorous but essential work: hull inspections, propulsion and steel repairs, and safety systems like lifeboats and fire suppression. The guest-facing side is what cruisers actually notice afterward, things like new carpet and lighting, refreshed tile and public spaces, and cabin updates such as added outlets and new finishes.

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Older ships tend to get the bigger swings. Carnival sometimes uses these windows to add or rework dining venues and bars, or to reconfigure spaces for better flow and accessibility, which helps bring aging vessels closer to the feel of the newer fleet. As a rule of thumb, older ships head to dry dock roughly every three years and newer ones about every five.

Heads up: A ship coming out of dry dock isn’t a guarantee of dramatic new features. Plenty of these visits are routine maintenance, and the ship simply returns looking cleaner and better kept rather than visibly redesigned.

What This Means If You’re Booked Near A Shipyard Window

For the vast majority of cruisers, a dry dock on the calendar changes nothing. Your ship goes in, comes out, and your later sailing runs as planned, often on a slightly fresher ship.

The thing to watch is the edge cases. When a ship is pulled from service, Carnival occasionally adjusts itineraries, swaps a ship onto a different route, or shifts a homeport to keep deployments working. Dates can also move, which matters most if your sailing sits right up against the start or end of a shipyard window.

If that’s you, check your booking now and keep an eye on it as the date approaches. Carnival typically reworks affected bookings rather than canceling outright, but the details, including any compensation or rebooking options, are worth confirming directly. We get into the kind of surprises that catch cruisers off guard in our rundown of hidden cruise costs. And if a dry dock does reshuffle deployment, it’s part of a broader pattern of Carnival moving ships around lately, including its first scheduled Africa sailings in 2027.

I wouldn’t lose sleep over it. But I would check, especially if you’re sailing in one of the 2027 spring windows when several popular ships overlap.

What To Watch Next

Expect more dates to fill in. Carnival Firenze and Carnival Venezia still need confirmed windows, Carnival Splendor’s 2028 slot should firm up, and the line tends to add visits as ships approach their required maintenance intervals.

The more interesting thread is what the newer ships get. Celebration and Jubilee are the first Excel-class ships to enter the dry dock rotation, and whether Carnival uses those visits for anything beyond routine upkeep will hint at how it plans to keep its flagship class current.

For now, the takeaway is simple. Carnival’s shipyard plans run through fall 2028, the spring 2026 work is already behind us, and the next big cluster starts this September with Carnival Freedom and Carnival Radiance. Check your dates if you’re sailing close to any of them, and you’ll avoid the only real headache here, which is being surprised.

Is your Carnival ship on the list, and are you booked anywhere near its shipyard window?

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