Article: The Sad History of Virgin Australia’s Long-Haul Network

AFF Editor

Established Member
Editor
Joined
Mar 25, 2010
Posts
1,285
The Sad History of Virgin Australia’s Long-Haul Network is an article written by the AFF editorial team:


You can leave a comment or discuss this topic below.
 
I wouldn't consider Bali and coughet as "Long Haul International", they were considered as Short Haul International internally by Virgin Blue (and later Virgin Australia).

IATA may consider 6 hours as "long haul", but they were really "Medium Haul" at best with 7.5hrs being the extremes of Medium Haul.

Long Haul IMO would be 8 hours to 16 hours, with 16 hours+ (using IATA definition) as Ultra Long Haul.
 
Australia's highest-earning Velocity Frequent Flyer credit card: Offer expires: 30 Apr 2025
- Earn 100,000 bonus Velocity Points
- Get unlimited Virgin Australia Lounge access
- Enjoy a complimentary return Virgin Australia domestic flight each year

AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements

A complete list of Virgin Australia long-haul routes​


To sum up, here’s a complete history of all changes to Virgin Australia’s long-haul and Southeast Asian network until now:

  • February 2025: Cairns-Tokyo cancelled
  • April 2024: Adelaide-Denpasar suspended
  • June 2023: Cairns-Tokyo launched
  • March 2023: Gold Coast-Denpasar launched
  • December 2022: Adelaide-Denpasar relaunched
  • June 2022: Flights from Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane to Denpasar resume
  • Late March 2020: Sydney-Los Angeles, Brisbane-Los Angeles, Melbourne-Los Angeles suspended; planned launches of Brisbane-Tokyo & Melbourne-Denpasar cancelled
  • Early March 2020: Sydney-Hong Kong cancelled
  • Feb 2020 – Melbourne-Hong Kong cancelled
  • April 2019 – Seasonal Darwin-Denpasar route operates for six months and does not return
  • July 2018 – Sydney-Hong Kong launched
  • July 2017 – Melbourne-Hong Kong launched
  • June 2017 – Perth-Abu Dhabi flights were supposed to launch, but the route was axed before the first flight departed (Etihad also withdrew from the Perth-Abu Dhabi route in October 2018)
  • April 2017 – Melbourne-Los Angeles reinstated
  • February 2017 – Sydney-Abu Dhabi cancelled
  • January 2017 – Tigerair gets banned from operating to Indonesia and permanently axes all flights to Denpasar the following month
  • March 2016 – Perth-Denpasar, Adelaide-Denpasar and Melbourne-Denpasar cancelled with routes given to Tigerair
  • January 2016 – Perth-coughet cancelled
  • April 2015 – Port Hedland-Denpasar launched
  • October 2014 – Melbourne-Los Angeles cancelled
  • December 2013 – Sydney-Denpasar and Melbourne-Denpasar launched
  • February 2011 – Sydney-Abu Dhabi launched (V Australia); Melbourne-Johannesburg, Melbourne-coughet and Brisbane-coughet cancelled
  • March 2010 – Melbourne-Johannesburg launched (V Australia)
  • December 2009 – Melbourne-coughet launched (V Australia)
  • November 2009 – Brisbane-coughet (V Australia) and Perth-coughet (Pacific Blue) launched
  • September 2009 – Melbourne-Los Angeles launched (V Australia)
  • April 2009 – Brisbane-Los Angeles launched (V Australia)
  • February 2009 – Sydney-Los Angeles launched (under V Australia brand)
  • December 2008 – Adelaide-Denpasar, Brisbane-Denpasar and Perth-Denpasar launched (under Pacific Blue brand)

A pretty sad and sorry tale of ambition vastly exceeding capability, and fleet, and demand. :D

And now losing large swathes of long rusted on loyal flyers starting now, after heavily screwing with the Velocity program. Dumber than dirt.

With an IPO in the wings, actively herding gobs of passengers over to Jetstar and Qantas defies logic, and any common sense and any business sense. Made them ZERO extra bucks, but have lost, and will lose, them heaps. Messing with NOTHING dear to the loyal clients was the sane game in IPO year. Buyers want stability and loyalty.

And at this time, appointing another AMERICAN to run things, is tone-deaf to the mood locally. ❗
 

Become an AFF member!

Join Australian Frequent Flyer (AFF) for free and unlock insider tips, exclusive deals, and global meetups with 65,000+ frequent flyers.

AFF members can also access our Frequent Flyer Training courses, and upgrade to Fast-track your way to expert traveller status and unlock even more exclusive discounts!

AFF forum abbreviations

Wondering about Y, J or any of the other abbreviations used on our forum?

Check out our guide to common AFF acronyms & abbreviations.
Back
Top