Lerwick, Scotland cruise port guide
Lerwick, the port where your MSC cruise ship awaits your return, is very much the focus of Shetland’s commercial life. All year, its sheltered harbour is busy with ferries and fishing boats, as well as specialized craft including oil-rig supply, seismic survey and naval vessels from all round the North Sea. In summer, the quayside comes alive with visiting yachts, cruise liners, historic vessels such as the restored Swan and the occasional tall ship. Behind the old harbour is the compact town centre, made up of one long main street, flagstone-clad Commercial Street, whose narrow, winding form, set back one block from the Esplanade, provides shelter from the elements even on the worst days. From here, narrow lanes, known as closses, rise westwards to the late Victorian new town. The northern end of Commercial Street is marked by the towering walls of Fort Charlotte, begun for Charles II in 1665, burnt down by the Dutch fleet in August 1673, and repaired and named in honour of George III’s queen in the 1780s. Exhibits at the Shetland Museum, in a wonderful purpose-built waterfront building, include replicas of a hoard of Pictish silver found locally, the Monks Stone, thought to show the arrival of Christianity in Shetland, and a block of butter, tax payment for the King of Norway, found preserved in a peat bog. MSC Northern Europe cruises also offer excursions to Scalloway, once the capital of Shetland, which however waned in importance throughout the eighteenth century as Lerwick grew. Nowadays, Scalloway is fairly sleepy, though its harbour is busy enough. The town is dominated by the imposing shell of Scalloway Castle, a classic fortified tower house built with forced labour in 1600 by the infamous Earl Patrick Stewart, who held court in the castle and gained a reputation for cruelty and corruption.
About Lerwick, Scotland
Lerwick is the capital and primary seaport of Scotland's Shetland Islands, located on Mainland Shetland and holding the distinction of being the UK's northernmost port. With a population of around 7,000 and deep Viking heritage, it features 17th-century stone buildings along its waterfront and serves as a regular call on British Isles and northern Europe cruise itineraries. A purpose-built £16.5 million cruise pier at Holmsgarth North, opened in June 2017, has enabled the port to welcome progressively larger vessels and achieve record passenger volumes.
Lerwick rewards passengers with a compact, walkable town centre where 17th-century gray stone buildings line the waterfront streets — a cityscape shaped equally by Scottish and Norse influences. Viking heritage is a recurring theme throughout the islands, and the Shetland Museum anchors the cultural offer for visitors. The port's remote northerly position, approximately 210 miles northeast of Aberdeen and 220 miles west of Bergen, lends it an otherworldly atmosphere that distinguishes it sharply from more southerly British Isles ports. No named shore excursion products were described in the available sources.
Quick facts
Cruises visiting Lerwick, Scotland
Prices per person · incl. taxes & fees.
Sailing soonest
Lisbon to Lisbon
Crystal Serenity · Mediterranean · 48 nights
from $35,100
$731 / night
Grand Arctic Adventure New York to Barcelona
Seven Seas Mariner · North America · 81 nights
Call for price
London to Stockholm
Sirena · Europe · 24 nights
from $8,899
$370 / night
London to Oslo
Sirena · Europe · 13 nights
from $4,480
$344 / night
Scandinavia & the British Isles from Stockholm
Viking Sky · Scandinavia · 28 nights
from $20,098
$717 / night
British Isles Explorer - Bergen to London
Viking Jupiter · United Kingdom · 14 nights
from $9,999
$714 / night
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