90-Second Read: Hantavirus-ridden MV Hondius will set sail again — and much sooner than you may expect
Editorial voice
Sofia Ramirez
Published
Published May 27, 2026

The Hantavirus-ridden MV Hondius is preparing to welcome a fresh batch of passengers on June 13. Roughly 140 passengers and crew disembarked in Spain's Canary Islands on May 10, after a weeks-long voyage descended into chaos when an elderly Dutch couple unknowingly brought aboard the rare and highly lethal Andes strain of Hantavirus after contracting it in Argentina. Unlike all other Hantaviruses, the Andes strain can spread from person to person and carries a 40% mortality rate. The Dutch couple and a German passenger died during the outbreak, while many others became infected or spent the remainder of the voyage in isolation.
Though the company initially estimated sanitizing the ship would take just three to four days, Rotterdam public health inspectors later "advised additional cleaning," Oceanwide said Monday. On Monday, a Spanish cruise passenger became the latest former Hondius traveler to test positive for the virus, which can lie dormant for up to eight weeks. That case was detected while the infected traveler was quarantining under clinical surveillance at Gómez Ulla Hospital in Madrid, alongside 13 other Spaniards who had been aboard the ship, according to the Spanish Health Ministry. Oceanwide said remaining crew members from the voyage were transferred to quarantine facilities on Saturday, while captain Jan Dobrogowski was transported to Poland.
The doomed vessel, which is currently undergoing an intensive deep clean, is slated to set sail June 13 on a week-long Arctic voyage through Norway's remote Svalbard archipelago. Oceanwide Expeditions, the vessel's operating company, has already axed two scheduled departures, one on May 29 and the other on June 5, to allow an "in-depth cleaning process to be completed" after the nightmare outbreak erupted during a transatlantic cruise last month. Meanwhile, new infections linked to the outbreak on board continue to surface. Officials stressed that the case poses no risk to the public.
Still, the company insists, the ship will be ready to return to service, and all sailings from June 13 onwards will "proceed as scheduled," it announced. Eighteen Americans, including three New Yorkers, on the ill-fated vessel were flown back to the US and quarantined earlier this month, including one who tested positive.
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Original reporting
Based on reporting from New York Post. Read the original source for full details.
Source published May 27, 2:33 PM EDT. Hantavirus Now reviewed reporting from New York Post and summarized the key points below.
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