Hobart cruise port guide
Mount Wellington's looming, cloud-wisped form is an ever-present sight as you explore booming Hobart, the cosmopolitan capital of Australia's most southerly state. A former British penal colony, nowadays Australia’s second-oldest city is a place to live the free and easy life. Encircled by dramatic cliffs, landscaped gardens and rolling vineyards, Hobart is also well stacked with cultural pursuits including museums, and respected - if controversial - galleries plastering new and old art to their walls. View less With fresh sea breezes and a fabulous location, Hobart is a creative place, where you can browse the produce of local artisans in Saturday's massive Salamanca Market - which draws visitors from all across Tasmania and beyond. Eat at waterfront restaurants, or rise up Mount Wellington's slopes to appreciate the remoteness of Hobart's location. From this elevated platform, you can look down across views of flowing forests, undulating mountains and endless ocean swallowing up the city. Further away, animal sanctuaries introduce you to the island's famous inhabitants, including the famous Tasmanian devil. Thirsty? Hobart has a long brewing tradition - so enjoy a refreshing ale poured from the country's oldest brewery. The climate's blend of generous sunshine and cool Antarctic breezes helps Hobart to produce its acclaimed wines, and thick clumps of pinot noir grapes hang from vineyards dotted along the valleys nearby. Taste the wines, accompanied by a platter of artisan cheese and sausage. Whiskey aficionados aren't left in the cold either, with international award-winning distilleries close by.
About Hobart
Hobart is the capital of Tasmania and Australia's second-oldest city, set on the estuary of the River Derwent and home to what is described as the second-deepest natural port in the world. Large cruise ships dock directly at Macquarie Wharf in the heart of the historic Salamanca precinct, placing passengers within immediate walking distance of convict-era sandstone buildings, Constitution Dock, and the waterfront museum and shopping district. The city is also one of five recognised gateway cities to Antarctica and home to MONA, the Southern Hemisphere's largest private museum.
The waterfront around Macquarie Wharf encompasses Constitution and Victoria Docks, where fishing vessels, a yacht basin, the maritime museum, and craft and souvenir shops are all within easy walking distance. Salamanca Place, the convict-era sandstone row that is Hobart's most photographed streetscape, is immediately adjacent. MONA—the Southern Hemisphere's largest private museum—sits further up the Derwent and is accessible by sightseeing cruises and water taxis from Brooke Street Pier. The Red Decker Hop-on Hop-off Bus extends the day-trip reach to kunanyi / Mount Wellington (1,271 m) and Richmond village, the two most popular out-of-city options for cruise visitors.
Quick facts
Cruises visiting Hobart
Prices per person · incl. taxes & fees.
Sailing soonest
Canada To New Zealand Grand Voyage
Azamara Pursuit · Australia · 114 nights
Call for price
Grand Pacific Explorer from Vancouver
Viking Venus · Worldwide · 92 nights
Call for price
Japan To New Zealand Grand Voyage
Azamara Pursuit · New Zealand · 78 nights
from $31,729
$406 / night
69-Day South Pacific Crossing & Australia Circumnavigation
Noordam · Hawaii · 69 nights
from $18,329
$265 / night
10 Night Australia Wine & Tasmania
Celebrity Solstice · Oceania · 10 nights
from $2,854
$285 / night
Australia, New Zealand & Indonesia Bali (Benoa) to Auckland
Viking Venus · Oceania · 30 nights
Call for price
Showing the 20 least-expensive of 177 sailings.
Showing 177 Hobart cruises
Open in full search