• expired

Qantas to Offer Double FF Points on Credit Used by December, Travel Credit Expiry Extended Indefinitely @ Qantas

3514

Just posted this on my site and then realised it's a useful bargain to those of us who actually wished we could use the credit in 2025 for a trip, given I have a newborn and won't be travelling much for a bit, so sharing deal here.

Anyway, here is the detail:

The Qantas Group will remove the expiry date on COVID travel credits1 that were due to run out at the end of this year.

Following this decision, Qantas customers with COVID credits can request a cash refund2, and Jetstar customers can use their COVID vouchers for flights, indefinitely.

Today’s announcement makes Qantas’ COVID credit policy one of the most flexible of any airline in the world, and it follows three prior deadline extensions. Some airlines have already expired their travel credits and many more run out completely at the end of this year.

To encourage more people to reconnect with their credits, from 4 September 2023 Qantas is offering double the standard number of Frequent Flyer Points for any flights booked with a Qantas COVID credit before 31 December 2023. Due to system limitations, Qantas COVID credit can’t be converted into a travel booking after this date, but can be taken as a refund at any time.

The Qantas Group will continue its regular reminders to those customers who still hold COVID credits, including emails, text messages, phone calls and advertisements. Qantas is also working with travel agents to coordinate refunds for travel not booked directly through the airline3.

ADVICE FOR CUSTOMERS

Qantas

Find your travel credit – Use the ‘Find My Credit’ tool on qantas.com
Request a refund – Call 1300 668 885
Use your travel credit – Visit qantas.com/travelcredit for specific advice based on your type of travel credit (most credits can be used online at qantas.com)
For more help – Speak to our Travel Credit Concierge team on 1300 171 505. If your original booking was made through a travel agent or third party website, contact them directly.

Jetstar

Find your voucher – Contact us by Live Chat
Use your voucher – Visit Jetstar.com to book using your voucher (vouchers can be redeemed on all Jetstar fares, including sale and Club Jetstar fares, and on domestic or international trips)
Check your available balance – Use the Voucher Balance Checker on Jetstar.com
Extend your voucher – Jetstar customers can extend their vouchers indefinitely by contacting LiveChat or the contact centre after the voucher has expired.

If you’ve already booked travel with a Qantas COVID credit or Jetstar COVID voucher, you don’t need to do anything and there’s no change to your trip.

FAQ

Can you automatically refund people’s credit card rather than following a process through Qantas?

Given bookings that have been converted into COVID credits date back to 2019, most credit cards used have expired by now, meaning the funds will bounce back if we attempt to refund onto them.

Why can’t Qantas post a cheque?

Aside from cheques being outmoded, people aren’t asked for their postal address when they book a flight. While we have postal addresses for some Frequent Flyers, these aren’t regularly updated.


  1. For Qantas customers, a ‘COVID Credit’ refers to travel credits for bookings up to and including 30 September 2021. For Jetstar customers, a ‘COVID Voucher’ refers to all Jetstar Airways vouchers that have an expiry date of 31 December 2023 (which will be extended on request). 

  2. Beyond 31 December 2023, Qantas COVID credits won’t be directly convertible into travel and can only be refunded, due to system limitations. At any point Qantas travel can be booked up to a maximum of 353 days in advance, which reflects system range. On 31 December 2023, this will mean travel can be booked up to 19 December 2024. 

  3. Customers seeking a refund of a Qantas COVID credit after 31 Dec 2023 from a booking made through a travel agent, may only be paid the amount that Qantas received from the Agent for that booking. 

Related Stores

Qantas
Qantas

closed Comments

  • +64

    govvy propped up scum airline

      • +31

        thank you, i think so too

        • +1

          When a gift is not a gift? Seems when consumers have expectations, we are setting ourselves up for disappointment.

      • +3

        National Carrier 49% foreign owned. Nice.

        • +5

          Maybe you didn't phrase that properly

          From their 1H23 statement: "As at 1 December 2022, Qantas Airways Limited’s foreign ownership level was 24.37 per cent." 49% however is the cap on foreign ownership.

        • Its a ASX company. And it doesn't matter if a quarter of the shares are owned by foreign interests, there is no alternative flag carrier after Ansett left.

      • +7

        Blind patriotism is not a good quality

    • wait till you find about News Corp is a welfare queen.

  • +49

    Crazy conicidence its the same day as the legal action was announced right?

    • +14

      Selling flights that was already cancelled, and now generously extending the life of flight credit?

      That's the Australian way.

      Qatar, piss off!

      • +20

        qatar > qantas any day of the week, an absolute shame they can't operate more flights into Australia.

        • +8

          I'm glad this is coming to public light now, because it seems super dodgy.

          • +4

            @jaygee: not to mention the 500-800m in estimated economic activity as a result of extra seats into Australia.

            • +3

              @adam7070: Honestly I would believe the justifcation if Qatar had the same number of flights in Australia as Emirates, but Emirates has 2-3x more flights. Not a bigsurprise they are the biggest Qantas partner.

          • +4

            @jaygee: So dodgy! govt pockets full of qantas money obviously. "Protecting national interest" - f*** off, the customer interest is low fares through more competition, not less.

            • @itslittfam: I mean, Qatar is a pretty dodgy place, and I'm not sure we really want to be super close with their corrupt government. But if that's the argument we wouldn't do business with 3/4 of the planet, so honestly… wtf Aus government?

              • +1

                @Dalryk: UAE is Dodgy too, yet see how many Emirates and Etihad have to Australia.

    • +9

      Don't worry, any fines handed down will be graciously funded by the Australian taxpayer whilst that midget leprechaun banks his next bonus cheque …

      • +4

        That's offensive…

        To midgets and leprechauns.

      • +3

        Mosman and Double Bay mansions don't buy themselves for the Joyce-Lloyd clan.

  • +3

    They had to succumb to all that pressure eventually, didn't they?

    • They had to succumb to all that pressure eventually

      What pressure?

      Removing the expiration date is still a plane-load (excuse the pun) cheaper than to have a better airline, like Qatar, expand in Australia.

      And Qatar cannot "retaliate reciprocate" because QF does not fly into Qatar to refuel.

  • +27

    As per the government -Its in the national interest to scam customers, pay extraordinary bonuses to executives and keep airfares high..

    • +15

      Albo has come out today to defend the governments decision. He's simply digging his heals in. Why not? His son got access to the Chairman's lounge and Joyce painted YES on 3 aircraft. Nothing to see here. No conflict of interest.

      • +7

        Would it make any difference if the government is Liberal, Greens, Independent, One Nation, etc? Peter Costello (Liberal Party) admits Qantas is one of the most powerful lobby group.

        I do not remember exactly where I read it but Qantas actively lobbied the John Howard government not to give Singapore Airlines 5th Freedom Flight access.

        Regardless what political party holds office in Canberra, Qantas is one company "too big to fail".

        • +1

          Why cannot it be divided into 2 or 3 airlines? We need more competition

        • +1

          The difference is that the news doesn't bring it up when it's the libs who do it.

          Or the ABC brings it up for a day, and because they don't make big kerfuffles about anything, it's out of the news cycle in a day.

      • +4

        heals? this isnt BG3 champ

        either way chairman's lounge is worth nothing compared to the $2+ billion scomo handed out with no assurances of jobs or even any fcking equity at a time when their valuation was half the amount they got - we could have bought the entire airline and run it publicly

        • +1

          Yup what a waste pf tax payers' money.

    • ThE mOrE wE eArN tHe MoRe TaXeS wE pAy. Stfu Joyce, everyone knows you haven't paid much taxes in years.

      • +2

        during joyce's entire tenure qantas has claimed back more money than paid in tax

  • +15

    Acting like they are doing us all a favour after relying on Australians to give them an interest free loan to keep them afloat during covid.

    • It seems it’s Australia politics best interest to squeeze Australians hard earned dollars to be qantas billions profit

  • +7

    Accesing your money affected by inflation is a.. bargain?

    Look how things are overseas:

    https://europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/travel/passenger-right…

    If you were informed of the cancellation less than 14 days prior to the scheduled departure date, you have a right to compensation. The airline has the obligation to prove if and when you were personally informed that the flight was cancelled. If this is not the case you can contact your national authorityPDF document for further assistance.

    However, compensation is not due if the carrier can prove that the cancellation is caused by extraordinary circumstances which could not have been avoided even if all reasonable measures had been taken. The airline has to prove this by providing, for example, extracts from logbooks or incident reports. The air carrier should give this evidence to the relevant national enforcement body as well as to the passengers concerned in line with national provisions on access to documents.

    Compensation - cancellation

    Amount in EUR - Distance

    250 - 1 500 km or less

    400 - More than 1 500 km within the EU and all other flights between 1 500 and 3 500 km

    600- More than 3 500 km

  • +1

    Now when will Virgin match this…?

    • Probably not since they're at 100 million left, so shouldn't take long to get on top of that

  • +3

    Alan Joyce deserves another payrise, change my mind…

    • For sure. He can sock me

    • -2

      Yea, Qantas stock has rebounded to near pre-covid levels. This is good for my portfolio and as CEO his job is to maximise shareholder value.

      • +4

        as CEO his job is to maximise shareholder value.

        Why doesn't he just destroy the competitors planes then if ethics aren't a concern?

        • -2

          let's see the ethics of burning fossil fuels for selfish frivolous travel

    • +2

      If his salary indicates he owns the success of the airline, then he should also own its failures. Million$$ for the good, jail time for the bad. Give him both.

    • Sure ill give him a payrise in the form of a sock full of pennies

  • Is this just Qantas or Jetstar too?

    • Jetstar will be happen soon enough if not already

  • +6

    Not going to neg this but it's hardly a 'deal' to be able to receive a refund at the time of my choosing rather than QF's pathetic deadline. They should also be forced to pay the interest that they've made by holding onto other peoples money after never having provided the service that folks paid for.

  • grabs popcorn

  • +8

    Put that Leprechaun under the guillotine

  • -3

    realised it's a useful bargain

    This is not a bargain.

    It belongs in the forums

    • Double frequent flyer points is always a bargain for those of us who chase them

      • -1

        is always a bargain

        If it is a bargain, how can I redeem it?

        • +4

          Use your credit by December. Earn double FF points. It's in the description.

          • +1

            @beatthatflight:

            Use your credit by December.

            How do I get the credit to redeem this?

            • +3

              @jv: Much like deals on alcohol are only applicable to those over 18, not everyone presumably has travel credit. If you don't, scroll on.

              • +1

                @beatthatflight:

                Much like deals on alcohol are only applicable to those over 18

                Not really… Anyone can get those.

            • +1

              @jv: Needs Targeted in the title clearly

              • +1

                @cook99: Clearly targeted.

            • +1

              @jv: Easy, book yourself a cancelled flight.

    • or just scroll past if its not helpful to you?

      • +4

        or just follow the posting rules…

        • fair point

        • +2

          Upvoting you for a non-bold answer that's bound by logic.

    • +1

      Buddy calm down. Nobody cares as much as you do, not even close.

  • +8

    Absolute scum of an airline. This is essentially a bribe.

    • +6

      How is this even a “deal”. Qantas and the Australian Government have redefined Legalised Corruption.

  • +1

    Feel sorry for everyone who has suffered, for example

    "Melbourne man’s $21,000 Qantas booking nightmare"
    https://www.news.com.au/travel/travel-updates/incidents/melb…

    "My $20,000 trip into Qantas hell"
    https://www.afr.com/companies/transport/my-20-000-trip-into-…

    And legal action by ACCC this week with details exposing.
    Because some or all of their stories feel can not be made up for these credits.

    • +3

      cancelled a reward flight on qantas 3ish weeks ago & still waiting for a refund on points and cash…how hard is it to automate something like this lmao (given the mammoth size of qantas). As a point of comparison, cancelled a reward flight on united mileageplus and miles were redeposited instantly.

      • Would welcome all grievances to personally resolve today,

        at: [email protected]

        (but no eggs on my house please)

      • +1

        I was in a similar situation. My cancelled rewards flight points were refunded promptly but the taxes weren't. I cancelled my credit card after bolling the trip and before cancellation. Qantas said they refunded the money but my bank said they can't see any transaction at their end. After hours of phone calls over 3 months to get the ARN of the transaction from Qantas they simply asked for my new card details and refunded the amount. No sorry, no explanation why they didn't refund in the first place. But by that time I was too tired to fight for an apology.

  • +15

    Selling cancelled flights and not even returning the money…. Propped up by tax payers when times are tough… Using government to squash competition … Millions in bonuses….What a great time to be the CEO.

    • -1

      I’ll say this, the only cancelled flights are MEL-SYD which has 25 passenger services a day.
      Is a 30 min delay really an inconvenience?

      • +6

        Hi Alan

        • -1

          I wish I had a $115m payday this year

      • +1

        Wrong. It's not just Mel-Syd. e.g. QF 93 MEL-LAX, QF81 SYD-SIN, QF649 SYD-PER, and so on.

        • -2

          Well funny enough QF93 and QF81 were full. Most likely mechanical issues as it seems like an A330-300 and B787-9 are grounded

      • That will be news to Canberra Airport baron Stephen Byron and thousands of travellers.

    • +1

      You would be forgiven to think Qantas is an orphan crushing machine style company in the land of the free (USA) not one of customer service and laws in Australia

  • Imo QF should have a system like for us QF Corporate clients.
    If you cancel a booking that’s fully paid for, regardless of the fare type it goes into a QF travel bank for future use later.

  • +3

    Taking the piss they are

    • Indeed. And it's normally hard for the ACCC to get off its proverbial. Let's see if not just piss happens.

  • +4

    I had a $495 credit from 2020 that I thought was destined to dissolve into nothing.

    Had cancelled the flights myself so Qantas weren't at fault for that part. When trying to use them though there was a $300 change fee ($100 per person on the booking) that applied to any booking I tried. Called them up yesterday and they instantly offered to refund it to my credit card instead. Great result

    • No doubt that Qantas ensure that your delayed refund is adjusted for inflation…

      • It's $495 I didn't think i'd see so i'm happy particularly given it was a change of mind cancellation by us

  • +4

    This is not a deal, they literally scammed customers by selling cancelled flights, then not returning the money and giving credit that has a time pressure to spend while flights are heavily inflated aka double your profits. If that was a stock it would be insider trading because they clearly knew what they were doing. Or even better by tomatoes from woolies online for $5 order cancelled here is a credit that runs out in 2 week price of tomatoes is now $10 better buy quick before your credit expires. Gotta love qantas we'll take your money and cancel it and if you do use it before its cancelled we'll provide crap service and charge you double, sooner that prick falls out of a plane the better.

    • +1

      If proven all-around, it's so unethical to take money for poor quality performance.

  • +7

    I loved watching Joyce at Senates estimate explaining how prices will come down eventually when more seats become available, at the same time arguing that stopping Qatar providing more seats was actually in Australia's best interests. Such a lovely bloke looking out for Australians, maybe his next job will be a politician. This deal only came about due to public pressure.

    • +1

      …maybe his next job will be a politician

      I'm not sure he would get elected.

    • +2

      Seems some company CEO's just need a high-five
      in the face
      with a chair.

  • +10

    Sell a seat on a flight you know is cancelled, refuse to offer a refund, then extending the 'expiring' of credit for the money they dishonestly charged you in the first place?

    Not a deal.

    • And then shocked Pikachu face when they made insane profits.

  • No deal. I've got $110 Jetstar credit that after the (well several) debacles of cancellations and rude staff, I said I would never fly with them again. If they would allow me to convert to a QANTAS credit I might ever so slightly begin to be satisfied.

  • +2

    Jebus, from worlds safest airline to mud. I wouldn't be buying shares for the long term. I actively avoid Cantus and their subsidiaries when booking flights these days.

  • +5

    Qantas is in deep doo doo. I think the Federal Government might have another look at letting Qatar have more flights.

    https://www.theage.com.au/business/companies/qantas-ghost-fl…

Login or Join to leave a comment