Baltic Short Trips
Below are four short Baltic trips. Bookings for these trips can be made by emailing us: Sales at SeaEurope.com (replace "at" with "@" with your departure date, class of service, passenger name(s), passport number(s) and if necessary a visa number. Rates shown in EURO will be converted to dollars at the time of payment. Once a confirmation is issued, payment may be made via a credit card on our SECURE SERVER.
 Visa free cruise packages to St. Petersburg
A new ferry connection has been opened between Helsinki and St. Petersburg three times a week. M/S Princess Maria is a modern passenger ferry built in Finland and can accommodate up to 1638 passengers and 395 vehicles. Passengers of all nationalities traveling on Princess Maria can enjoy St. Petersburg for 72 hours without Russian visa. The ferry line operator is St. Peterline.
For more information, rates and timetable use the "Contact Us" link on the left. |
 Baltic Sea Capitals Cruise Round Trip Cruise
Three Cities in Three days?! Yes, it's possible! Or stay over in one of our hotels to extend your trip and save up to 40%. The choice is yours!
Our cruise ships are like mobile entertainment centers with a lot of things to offer, for example a show bar, pub, disco, a variety of restaurants, and many other possibilities. Enjoy the soothing seas and get ready to discover the adventure in the new port that is waiting for you!
Our modern ship Victoria I and the newest addition to the fleet, cruise liner Baltic Queen connect Stockholm and Tallinn with daily departures.
The Stockholm-Helsinki route is operated by two of the most luxurious cruise ships in the world, the sister ships Silja Serenade and Silja Symphony.
Modern Tallink shuttles Star and Superstar cross the Baltic Sea between Helsinki and Tallinn in only 2 hours.
For more information, click here |
 The Tallink Shuttle Helsinki-Tallinn
Ticket prices, Helsinki-Tallinn-Helsinki route, vary in four categories. The ticket prices for each day and route are available by clicking here.
Tallinn: Twisting cobblestone lanes and iron street lamps. Gothic spires and medieval markets. Cappuccino and Wi-Fi. This is the city's famous Old Town. If you're looking for that mix of historic ambience and cutting-edge culture that defines Tallinn, you'll find it here.
Built up from the 13th to 16th centuries, when Tallinn – or Reval as it was known then – was a thriving member of the Hanseatic trade league, this enclosed neighborhood of colorful, gabled houses, half-hidden courtyards and grandiose churches is, quite rightly, the city's biggest tourist draw. And the fact that it's all neatly packaged within a mostly-intact city wall and dotted with guard towers gives it an extra dose of fairytale charm.
A variety of guided and self-guided tours are available in Tallinn, everything from ghost walks to pub crawls. |  St. Petersburg - Helsinki Fast Allegro trains
Starting Dec. 12, 2010, the new high-speed Allegro Train from Helsinki, Finland, to St. Petersburg, Russia will take travelers to the old imperial capital in three and a half hours. The new Allegro train will cut travel time between the two cities by a third. Amenities include a restaurant carriage, a conference compartment and a playroom for children. Services such as currency exchange and tax-free refunds onboard are available.
A single-journey ticket from Helsinki to St. Petersburg costs 84 euros ($110) in second class. A first class fare costs 134 euros ($177) and includes a snack, daily newspapers and coffee or tea from a self-service counter. The Allegro departs daily from Helsinki to St. Petersburg at 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.; and from St. Petersburg to Helsinki at 6.40 a.m. and 3.25 p.m.
By summer 2011 the number of daily return services is expected to increase from two to four. |