River Cruise Girl

Amadeus Diamond Review: My First River Cruise Through the Netherlands and Belgium

amadeus riva

After a busy river cruise conference in Amsterdam, stepping onto the Amadeus Diamond felt like a genuine exhale. I had spent the previous days listening to travel advisors rave about this line — and I needed to find out for myself whether the praise was warranted.

It was.

Amadeus is something of a hidden gem in the river cruising world, and that is partly by design. The Austrian Lüftner family has operated the line for over 30 years, and many travel advisors quietly fill their group departures before the sailings ever reach the general public. If you have been wondering whether Amadeus belongs in the same conversation as Viking or AmaWaterways — and whether it can deliver a gourmet experience without a luxury price tag — this post answers both questions.

What Makes Amadeus Different from the Major Corporate Lines

Amadeus operates with what I would describe as a boutique hotel mindset — the kind of thoughtfulness you feel the moment you step onboard, in the lounge design, in the service, in the menu. The Lüftner family is based in Innsbruck, Austria, and their deep European heritage shows in the details. This is not a line built around spreadsheets and standardization.

A few things that set Amadeus apart from larger corporate competitors:

  •   Flexible excursions — you can book a package or reserve individual excursions. If you want a quiet afternoon with your book on the sun deck, no one pressures you otherwise.
  •   Exceptional value — even with the highest excursion package added, Amadeus pricing on a French balcony stateroom came in approximately $1,400 less per person than comparable options on other major river cruise lines.
  •   Sustainable travel leadership — Amadeus has been a pioneer in environmentally responsible river cruising, which matters increasingly to the travelers I work with.
  •   ‘Space and light’ design philosophy — panoramic windows, airy layouts, and a ship that feels twice as large as its footprint.

Embarkation: Smooth from the First Moment

Our embarkation in Amsterdam was seamless. The crew had everything running precisely: staterooms were ready at 3:00 p.m., which gave us time to settle in and explore the ship before the evening began. If you have cruised before, you know embarkation day can sometimes feel chaotic. This was the opposite.

Before heading to my cabin, I spent time in the Panorama Lounge, and I could already tell this sailing was going to be something special. The lounge is elegant without being stiff — the kind of space where you can actually hear the person next to you, which, after a week of conference noise, I appreciated enormously.

The Stateroom: Spacious, Bright, and Smartly Designed

I was genuinely surprised by how spacious my stateroom felt. River cruise cabins have a reputation for being tight, and while that is fair for some lines, it does not describe the Amadeus Diamond.

My French balcony stateroom was modern, bright, and well thought through. The walk-in closet offers real storage — no living out of a suitcase for the week. The bathroom is large by river cruise standards, with a full-sized sink and a shower that does not feel cramped.

The French balcony itself is a clever design: a panoramic window that drops halfway down at the touch of a button. You get the fresh air, the view, and the sound of the river — without losing any floor space to a traditional balcony cutout. On a sailing through the Dutch and Belgian waterways, where the scenery changes constantly, this feature matters more than I expected.

Gourmet Dining on Night One: Four Courses and a Choir

Dinner on the first evening set the tone for the entire sailing. Four courses, two choices per course, and a quality level that genuinely surprised even the experienced travel advisors at my table. Amadeus is ranked in the top two for food out of all 11 major river cruise lines — a claim I heard repeatedly at the conference, and one I now have firsthand evidence to support.

What made dinner remarkable was the consistency. Every single plate at our table was praised. When you have eight people ordering different things and nobody is disappointed, that says something real about the kitchen.

A few specifics from the first evening:

    •   Choice and quality: Two options per course, with genuine variety between them — not two versions of the same thing. From appetizers through dessert, every plate was a success.
    •   Generous inclusions: Soda, beer, and wine are all included with dinner. The service was attentive enough that my wine glass was quietly refreshed before I noticed it needed filling.
    •   The Shanty Men Choir: After dinner, a local men’s choir performed traditional sailors’ songs. It was a genuine cultural experience — not staged tourism, but a group of men clearly proud to share their heritage. My toes were tapping the entire time.

The Value Question: What Does Amadeus Actually Cost?

I want to address this directly because it comes up in every conversation I have about this line. Amadeus is not positioned as a luxury line, but it delivers a luxury experience in the areas that matter most — the dining, the stateroom design, the service quality, and the cultural programming. Their pricing on a French balcony stateroom came in roughly $1,400 less per person than comparable sailings on lines offering a similar itinerary. With excursion packages added, the gap remains significant.

For travelers who appreciate quality but do not want to pay for a brand name, Amadeus is one of the most compelling options on European rivers.

Sailing the Dutch and Belgian Waterways

This particular sailing routes through the Netherlands and Belgium — a region that rewards river travel beautifully. From the canals of Amsterdam at embarkation, through the working port of Rotterdam, and into the medieval streets of Bruges and Ghent, the itinerary moves through some of the most visually distinctive waterways in Europe.

The Amadeus Diamond’s panoramic windows mean you experience all of it from the comfort of the lounge or your stateroom. The ship’s low profile allows access to waterways that larger ocean liners cannot reach.

FAQ: Amadeus River Cruise Review

Is Amadeus a good river cruise line?

Yes — particularly for travelers who prioritize dining quality, stateroom design, and value. Amadeus is family-owned and operated by the Austrian Lüftner family, with over 30 years of European river cruising experience. Among travel advisors who have sailed multiple lines, Amadeus consistently ranks in the top two for food quality out of the 11 major river cruise lines, and their pricing runs approximately $1,400 less per person than comparable options on other lines.

What is the Amadeus Diamond like?

The Amadeus Diamond is a modern river cruise ship with a ‘space and light’ design philosophy — panoramic windows, airy public spaces, and staterooms that feel genuinely spacious by river cruise standards. French balcony rooms feature a panoramic window that drops halfway down, giving guests fresh air and river views without a traditional balcony. The dining is four-course, with two options per course, and includes beer, wine, and soda.

How does Amadeus compare to Viking river cruises?

The primary difference is ownership philosophy. Viking is a large corporate line built for consistency and scale. Amadeus is a family-owned boutique line built around European heritage and fresh, scratch-made food. Guests who have sailed both typically describe Amadeus as more personal, more culinarily ambitious, and meaningfully less expensive — without sacrificing the quality that matters on a river cruise.

What rivers does Amadeus sail?

Amadeus operates on the major European river systems, including the Rhine, Danube, Seine, Moselle, and Dutch/Belgian waterways. The Amadeus Diamond sails Netherlands and Belgium routes, while other ships in the fleet cover Central European and French itineraries.

Ready to Sail with Amadeus?

I am currently organizing group departures for 2027, including a Paris to Normandy sailing along the Seine and a Christmas Markets itinerary. Both trips are filling quickly — Christmas Markets sailings on this ship tend to disappear before they are ever widely advertised.

If you would like to talk through which itinerary fits your travel style, I offer a complimentary consultation and handle every booking and planning detail. You simply show up ready to experience Europe from the water.

I cannot wait to see which of these paths we share on the river.

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