FlyingKangaroo
Active Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2020
- Posts
- 537
- Qantas
- Gold
- Virgin
- Platinum
- SkyTeam
- Elite Plus
- Star Alliance
- Gold
\start cathartic rant
I can safely say I've never started a whinge thread, but there's a first time for everything.
Recently on one of many SYD-LAX-SYD return trips in J, I was impacted by a schedule change when QF consolidated its SYD-LAX schedule, resulting in my being moved to the earlier (and under the new schedule, only) flight back to SYD. The earlier time wasn't workable for me. I offered to re-route LAX-MEL-SYD on the same day as the MEL flight left LAX at the original time, but was told that wasn't possible. Instead, I was given the option to fly LAX-SYD the next day and advised by QF customer support to submit hotel and expenses for reimbursement.
Relying on that advice, I accepted the change to the next day but my eventual hotel claim (I hadn't even bothered to submit taxi or meals as I was at my destination anyway and would have had to get back to the airport anyway, so I didn't think it reasonable to ask Qantas to cop that) was denied.
This form letter denial resulted in several back and forth messages, with me referencing the exact date, time and person I spoke with who advised me I was eligible for reimbursement and advising me how to submit that expense.
Long story short: Qantas conceded in writing that their agent had given me "confusing" (read: inaccurate at best, false and misleading at worst) information that they acknowledged "may" have resulted in a "discrepancy" (read: misrepresentation) regarding their policy, but steadfastly refused the claim --- including again even after a polite, unemotional but firm restatement and reminder of their obligations under the Australian Consumer Law and a warning I'd consider both an ACCC complaint and NCAT action if they refused to compensate me for what they admitted was their own mistake.
Yesterday QF again denied the claim. I've already submitted the ACCC complaint, and am genuinely considering a NCAT claim simply on principle. If I don't, who will?
It's simply astounding to me that Qantas continues to operate this way. I'm a mere SG, but maintaining that status still costs several thousand per year, and I just find it wild that Qantas would dig in like this over a measly $200 hotel claim when they've admitted their own mistake. The difference in service standard hits even harder as this final denial also comes just a week after Delta sent me a personalised, substantive apology and dumped 15,000 miles into my account after I completed an automatic survey in which my only negative feedback was that the premium economy meal and service from cabin crew on a LAX-SYD sector felt a bit lacklustre in comparison to competitors.
I've put up with a lot from QF over the years and am one of those weirdos who wants to love them even when I hate them, and stuck in there the last few years through and post-Covid despite all the issues they've had and promises they've made to do better. But at this point, after this one, I suppose I finally hit my breaking point. My membership year starts again in June, and for the first time, I won't just not be trying to maintain status, I'm actively booking away from Qantas on principle --- and they fly virtually nowhere that someone else can't take me.
They don't care, and the irony is, that $200 wasn't material to me --- but the principle is. So, stubborn or not, whether they care or not, I'm out for the foreseeable future, and I've got the (literal) receipts of multiple upcoming trips on other carriers to prove it.
/end cathartic rant
I can safely say I've never started a whinge thread, but there's a first time for everything.
Recently on one of many SYD-LAX-SYD return trips in J, I was impacted by a schedule change when QF consolidated its SYD-LAX schedule, resulting in my being moved to the earlier (and under the new schedule, only) flight back to SYD. The earlier time wasn't workable for me. I offered to re-route LAX-MEL-SYD on the same day as the MEL flight left LAX at the original time, but was told that wasn't possible. Instead, I was given the option to fly LAX-SYD the next day and advised by QF customer support to submit hotel and expenses for reimbursement.
Relying on that advice, I accepted the change to the next day but my eventual hotel claim (I hadn't even bothered to submit taxi or meals as I was at my destination anyway and would have had to get back to the airport anyway, so I didn't think it reasonable to ask Qantas to cop that) was denied.
This form letter denial resulted in several back and forth messages, with me referencing the exact date, time and person I spoke with who advised me I was eligible for reimbursement and advising me how to submit that expense.
Long story short: Qantas conceded in writing that their agent had given me "confusing" (read: inaccurate at best, false and misleading at worst) information that they acknowledged "may" have resulted in a "discrepancy" (read: misrepresentation) regarding their policy, but steadfastly refused the claim --- including again even after a polite, unemotional but firm restatement and reminder of their obligations under the Australian Consumer Law and a warning I'd consider both an ACCC complaint and NCAT action if they refused to compensate me for what they admitted was their own mistake.
Yesterday QF again denied the claim. I've already submitted the ACCC complaint, and am genuinely considering a NCAT claim simply on principle. If I don't, who will?
It's simply astounding to me that Qantas continues to operate this way. I'm a mere SG, but maintaining that status still costs several thousand per year, and I just find it wild that Qantas would dig in like this over a measly $200 hotel claim when they've admitted their own mistake. The difference in service standard hits even harder as this final denial also comes just a week after Delta sent me a personalised, substantive apology and dumped 15,000 miles into my account after I completed an automatic survey in which my only negative feedback was that the premium economy meal and service from cabin crew on a LAX-SYD sector felt a bit lacklustre in comparison to competitors.
I've put up with a lot from QF over the years and am one of those weirdos who wants to love them even when I hate them, and stuck in there the last few years through and post-Covid despite all the issues they've had and promises they've made to do better. But at this point, after this one, I suppose I finally hit my breaking point. My membership year starts again in June, and for the first time, I won't just not be trying to maintain status, I'm actively booking away from Qantas on principle --- and they fly virtually nowhere that someone else can't take me.
They don't care, and the irony is, that $200 wasn't material to me --- but the principle is. So, stubborn or not, whether they care or not, I'm out for the foreseeable future, and I've got the (literal) receipts of multiple upcoming trips on other carriers to prove it.
/end cathartic rant