Carnival Corporation CEO Josh Weinstein used the company’s first quarter 2026 earnings call to point out the case for fleet revitalization over newbuild growth: pointing to the AIDA Evolution program as proof of concept and said that a second Carnival Corporation brand will announce its own modernization initiative next month.

Addressing analyst questions about fleet age, Weinstein said: “An 18-year-old ship can look and feel like a one-year-old ship,” he said, citing a vessel that had recently completed the AIDA Evolution program, “and be maintained in that condition.”

He said that fleet age is not a meaningful constraint on Carnival’s revenue strategy.

“Some of the best yields and some of the best NPS we get are on some of our oldest ships,” Weinstein said.

The comments come as Carnival announced its new “Propel” framework which is its strategic plan through 2029.

In his prepared remarks, Weinstein referenced the AIDA Evolution program by name as an early success, and said a second cruise line will announce a similar revitalization program in April. He did not identify the brand.

On the newbuild side, Carnival is keeping capacity growth deliberately constrained.

Only three ships are scheduled to enter service during the entire Propel period, roughly one per year.

Orders for the 2030s, he said,, are still to come.

Weinstein said that with 96 ships in the fleet, incremental new capacity is not the primary lever for improving the business.

“Newbuilds are great,” he said, “but we’ve got 96 ships. A couple of new ships in any few-year period is not going to be the thing that lifts us up. What’s going to lift us up is those 96 ships.”