Diamond Princess was built in
Japan by
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the first
Princess Cruises ship to be
built in a Japanese shipyard. Her only
sister ship is , with whom she swapped names during construction. She and her sister ship were the largest cruise ships to be built by Mitsubishi since the
Crystal Harmony in 1991. The ship was originally intended to be christened
Sapphire Princess. However, construction of another ship – the one intended to be
Diamond Princess (currently sailing as ) – was delayed when fire swept through her decks during construction. Because completion of the damaged ship would be delayed for some time, her
sister ship, which was also under construction, was renamed
Diamond Princess. The name swap helped keep the delivery of
Diamond Princess on time. Due to the fire and name swap, both vessels would be the last Carnival Corporation & plc vessels built by Mitsubishi until the completion of
AIDAprima in 2016. She was the first
Princess Cruises ship to be built in a Japanese shipyard, and the first to forego the controversial "wing" or "shopping cart handle" structure overhanging the stern, which houses the Skywalkers Nightclub on , and , and which was originally also a feature of prior to her 2011 refit. Prior to 2014,
Diamond Princess alternated sailing north and southbound voyages of the glacier cruises during the northern summer months and in the southern summer, she sailed from Australia and New Zealand. Starting in 2014, she undertook cruises from
Yokohama for
Tokyo or
Kobe in the northern summer season. For the 2016–17 season, she sailed round-trip cruises in the northern winter months from
Singapore.
Kota Kinabalu was added as part of her destination along with Vietnamese port of
Nha Trang in December 2016. She resumed voyaging from
Sydney for the 2017–18 season. After the 2018 Australia and New Zealand cruises,
Diamond Princess was re-positioned into South-East Asia for most of 2018, varying between Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Vietnam, Taiwan and Malaysia.
2016 gastroenteritis cases In February 2016,
Diamond Princess experienced a
gastroenteritis outbreak, caused by
norovirus sickening 158 passengers and crew on board, as confirmed after arrival in Sydney by
NSW Health.
Coronavirus disease 2019 On 20 January 2020, an 80-year-old passenger from Hong Kong embarked in Yokohama, sailed one segment of the itinerary, and disembarked in Hong Kong on 25 January. He visited a local Hong Kong hospital, six days after leaving the ship, where he later tested positive for
COVID-19 on 1 February. On its next voyage, 4 February, the ship was in Japanese waters when 10 passengers were diagnosed with COVID-19 during the early stages of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The ship was
quarantined on 4 February The infected included at least 138 from India (including 132 crew and 6 passengers), 35 Filipinos, 32 Canadians, 24 Australians, 13 Americans, 4 Indonesians, 4 Malaysians, and 2 Britons. Home countries arranged to evacuate their citizens and quarantine them further in their own countries. As of 1 March, all on board including the crew and the Italian captain
Gennaro Arma had disembarked. As of 16 March, at least 712 out of the 3,711 passengers and crew had tested positive for the virus. As of 14 April, fourteen of those who were on board had died from the disease. On 16 May,
Diamond Princess departed from the Port of Yokohama. Japan ended up paying 94% of the medical expenses incurred by the Diamond Princess passengers. All cruises throughout 2020 remained cancelled and as of March 2021 the ship was bunkering in Malaysia and the outer port limit (OPL) area of Singapore Port.
Quarantine!, a book written by passenger
Gay Courter on her experience on board the quarantined vessel, was released in November 2020. The
HBO documentary
The Last Cruise tells the story of the voyage.
Post-pandemic return to service After the lay-up induced by the COVID-19,
Diamond Princess was announced as returning to service in August 2022. However, the first three months of scheduled cruises had to be cancelled due to staffing issues.
Diamond Princess officially returned to service in November 2022. ==References==