Iona has 17 different eateries, including eight restaurants designated as 'select dining', and 12 different bars.[4] She also has 16 whirlpools and 4 swimming pools, one of which is housed under SkyDome, an entertainment venue topped by a 105-ton, 340-pane, 970-square-metre glass dome with a retractable stage for shows.[5] The ship's centre also includes a three-deck atrium flanked by triple-deck glass panels projecting outwards.
Iona has 19 total decks, a length of 344.5m (1,130.2feet), and a beam of 42m (138feet). Maximum power is rated at 61.7MW. Total propulsion power is rated at 37MW. Together, the power system gives the vessel a service speed of 17kn. Iona will have a passenger capacity of 5,206 guests and 1,762 crew. Powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG), Iona is designed to not emit sulphur dioxide emissions and soot particles.
On 6 September 2016, Carnival Corporation announced that it had signed an agreement with Meyer Werft for a 5,200-passenger vessel for P&O, scheduled for a 2020 debut.[6] The vessel, planned to be the largest in P&O's history, at approximately, would also be powered by LNG, making her the first LNG-powered ship dedicated for the British market. It was later reported that the engine room unit for the LNG tanks for Iona was constructed separately at Meyer Werft's sister yard, Neptun Werft, in Rostock.[7] On 27 October 2016, P&O announced that the public would be invited to name the new ship.[8] On 24 May 2018, it was announced that the name Iona, after the Scottish island of Iona, had been chosen from 30,000 submissions.[9]
On 25 April 2018, construction for the ship began with the steel-cutting ceremony in Papenburg.[10] On 29 May 2019, the ship's keel was laid to mark the official assembly of the hull.[11] At the ceremony, a bronze coin from Iona Abbey and a piece of green marble from Iona was laid under a keel block that measured 21.5m (70.5feet) long, 19.4m (63.6feet) wide, and 9.8m (32.2feet) high, and weighed 461t. The block was then lowered into the building dock.[12] In August 2019, the 105-ton, 340-pane glass dome set to become the "Skydome" was raised onto the ship.[13] By the end of the month, the bow and midsections were joined together.[14]
Iona was floated out of the dry dock on 14 February 2020.[15] She went through final outfitting in wet dock before her River Ems conveyance to Eemshaven on 18 March 2020 and her sea trials in the North Sea were set to follow shortly after.[16] [17] However, on 20 March 2020, Meyer Werft announced that the ship had been moored in Bremerhaven and all interior work and trials would be halted, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[18] Later, on 26 March 2020, following discussions with Bremerhaven port and medical authorities, Meyer Werft explained that work would resume, but at a reduced pace, given the reduction in crew and resources.[19] On 30 May 2020, Iona departed from Bremerhaven for Rotterdam for a sea trial and entered dry dock at Damen's Rotterdam shipyard on 2 June for continued inspection work.[20] [21] A second round of sea trials was later performed along the Norwegian coast following the dry dock.[22] Originally scheduled for spring 2020, the delivery date was further postponed to June 2020[23] and August 2020 before Iona was ultimately delivered on 9 October 2020.[24]
Iona was originally scheduled to perform her maiden voyage on 14 May 2020.[25] The nine-night round-trip voyage from Southampton was to sail to the Norwegian fjords, calling in Stavanger, Olden, Hellesylt, Geiranger, and Bergen. The ship was scheduled to be christened on 4 July 2020 in Southampton before inaugurating a week-long celebration on the ship.[26] However, on 23 April 2020, P&O announced that the pandemic forced the suspension of its operations and postponed the ship's debut and inaugural festivities.[27] A year later, Iona was christened by Dame Irene Hays on 16 May 2021 in Southampton at a ceremony led by Gary Barlow and Jo Whiley.[28]
Iona was originally scheduled to sail cruises to the Norwegian fjords from Southampton for her maiden season.[29] In March 2021, P&O announced that the ship's maiden voyage would be 7 August 2021 along the Inner Hebrides before operating week-long voyages through September.[30] [31] Due to the United Kingdom's pandemic travel restrictions, all voyages during the inaugural season were exclusive to UK residents. Iona later spent her maiden winter months in the Canary Islands and Northern Europe before transitioning to the Norwegian fjords during the following summer and subsequent summers.[32] [33]
In October 2023, following the Heligoland ship collision, P&O Cruises confirmed that had been in the area, and was involved in the subsequent search.
In January 2025, she will make her inaugural visit to the Caribbean from Southampton, in between her regular winter deployment to the Canary Islands and Northern Europe.[34]