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Fly Away from mid-November: Qantas brings international restart forward

Qantas will bring forward the restart of its international flights to 14 November 2021, following the Federal Government’s announcement today that Australia’s borders will open in November.

Qantas will bring forward the restart of its international flights to 14 November 2021, following the Federal Government’s announcement today that Australia’s borders will open in November.

Ready to finally Fly Away?

Now the reunion tears can really begin to flow. Because after more than 18 months of being shuttered, PM Scott Morrison has confirmed today that Australia’s border will lift to inbound and outbound international travel from mid-November.

The national carrier has since announced it will operate three weekly return flights from November 14 between Sydney and London and three weekly return flights between Sydney and Los Angeles with its 787-9 Dreamliners.

The airline said that these two destinations have been the most searched on qantas.com in recent weeks. More flights will be added to meet demand if needed.

Fares are now on sale for Australian citizens, permanent residents and their immediate families and some visa holders starting from $1662 return for Sydney-Los Angeles and $1869 return for Sydney-London.

All flights on both routes for the first week will be ‘Points Planes’, meaning frequent flyers can access uncapped Classic Flight Reward seats across all cabins.

Seats on these flights will also be available as regular flight bookings.

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Qantas Fly Away campaign

Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce said: “The early reopening of Australia’s international borders will mean so much to so many people and it’s made possible by the amazing ramp-up of the vaccine rollout.

“We know Australians can’t wait to travel overseas and be reunited with their loved ones, and literally thousands are waiting to come back home, so this faster restart is fantastic news. It also means we can get more of our people back to work, sooner.

Once the Federal Government announces the exact date that Australia’s international borders will reopen in November, the commencement dates for these two routes may need to be updated.

Flights will be brought forward if it is earlier than 14 November or moved to later in the month if necessary. Customers booked on these flights will have the flexibility to make ‘fee free’ date changes for travel until 31 December 2022 (a fare difference may apply).

If flights are cancelled customers may also be eligible for a refund or credit voucher.

As previously indicated, all passengers on Qantas’ international flights will be required to be fully vaccinated with a TGA-approved or recognised vaccine (some exemptions for medical reasons and children).

They will also be required to return a negative PCR COVID test 72 hours prior to departure.

Customers on these flights will be required to home quarantine for seven days on arrival into Australia, in accordance with the requirements from the Federal and New South Wales governments.

At this stage, all other international routes that were scheduled to resume from 18 December 2021 will continue as planned, although the Group has the flexibility to add additional routes if other states and territories decide to open their borders earlier and reduce quarantine requirements to seven days at home, or less.

Qantas will continue to operate government-sponsored repatriation services as required, helping to bring Australians home from around the world, including home quarantine trial flights.

“We’d already sold out some of our international flights for December and seen strong demand on flights to and from London and Los Angeles, so we’re confident there will be a lot of interest in these earlier services.

“Beyond the initial rush, the ongoing demand for international flights will hinge largely on what the quarantine requirements are. The shift to seven day home quarantine for fully vaccinated Australians with a negative test is a great step towards reducing this closer to what is becoming standard in many countries overseas, which is a test and release program,” said Mr Joyce.