Most use the phrases interchangebly. Ie a reward seat is booked with points.What is the difference between booking a flight (Qantas) on points or booking reward seats?
Looking to book flights to Europe in Jan 25 once the flights/seats are opened up….
Thank you for that clarification. I’ve noticed Qantas only seem to release reward seats within 3-4 months of flying, which does my head in a little (like to be booked in weeeeelll in advance so I can work out other internal details) Is this observation correct? Also is there any advantage over booking multi city ticket vs individual return flights (other than different points of arrival/departure?)Most use the phrases interchangebly. Ie a reward seat is booked with points.
However technically there are "Classic Rewards" with set point values, and much harder to find. More generally one can "use points" to pay for a revenue seat, but at highly inflated values.
Many people not familiar with the game can confuse the two.
Thank you for that clarification. I’ve noticed Qantas only seem to release reward seats within 3-4 months of flying, which does my head in a little (like to be booked in weeeeelll in advance so I can work out other internal details) Is this observation correct? Also is there any advantage over booking multi city ticket vs individual return flights (other than different points of arrival/departure?)
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Thank you for this detailed explanation, I will try to be much more savvy with my points spending now!Welcome to AFF, NarelleB! Hopefully your travels are smooth and you find the forum valuable.
If you want to distinguish the different ways to pay for your booking, I've outlined them below for future reference.
1) The most common is paying the full fare with money, a "cash fare" or "revenue booking". In the image below, pick your choice from the first three options (sale / saver / flex).
2) A reward booking. This is what RichardMEL referred to as those which QF occasionally releases for booking at a reasonable amount of points. In the image below, it'd be 31,500 QF points plus AUD $122 for taxes & fees.
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3) Another way is to use points instead of money to pay for any ticket. In this case, you'd take the sale / saver / flex fare and decide to pay for them in full using points. As you can see, that's a lot more points than a reward booking and most times poor value (in terms of what you get per point).
You may have heard of complaints in social media and some mainstream news that "Qantas has jacked up the amount of points needed to astronomical levels. What used to be 200,000 point to London is now over a million points...". This comment confuses two things: rewards and choosing to pay using points. The same logic applies to any of the flights where a reward is available. QF just has made is much easier to see the full cost in points and this trips people over when they see the "a million points to London."
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4) An added nuance is the 'points plus pay' option where you choose the split between the points and $. This is done by choosing a normal cash fare and when you advance to the payment page, you can choose to replace some of the money with points. This, again, is usually poor use of your points (you get low value from them) but the choice is there.
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This isn't true.I’ve noticed Qantas only seem to release reward seats within 3-4 months of flying,
Are you searching for more than one seat? Sometimes only one will be available (so the indicator will show), but if you are searching for more than one it won't have anything to actually show you.So, any clues?
Maybe click the "reward seats" filter button. In a regular search, only flights purchasable by cash are displayed. However, there are often partner award seats only purchaseable as a reward seat, which only show if that filter is engaged.Just one seat.
4) An added nuance is the 'points plus pay' option where you choose the split between the points and $. This is done by choosing a normal cash fare and when you advance to the payment page, you can choose to replace some of the money with points. This, again, is usually poor use of your points (you get low value from them) but the choice is there.
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Occurs often. It's called Phantom availability, more than likely related to partner awards that show as available but unable to be booked.But, when searching with "flexible with dates" enabled, the CR rosette comes up (OK, rarely, but it does appear ) for a particular date - but then no equivalent flight shows in the list.
This has not been an isolated incident, and it is not explained by someone else nabbing the seat at the same time, as if I go back and search again, the CR emblem still shows but no flight in that category.
So, any clues? What silly mistake am I making?
I have often found the same.the CR rosette comes up (OK, rarely, but it does appear ) for a particular date - but then no equivalent flight shows in the list.
Thank you for sharing your experience.I have often found the same.
What I usually discover, maybe not in your case, is that as I scroll down looking for that flagged reward seat, it's often on an undesirable flight, such as dodgy time or a flight with 1 or 2 stopovers, perhaps with a partner carrier. Else, yeah its just some phantom flight as @JohnK says.
So let's say I'm wanting to SYD-HND (Tokyo fyi!) and it flags a date with the rosette. Click in but there are no direct flights. As I keep looking I find it - it's on China Airways going to Shanghai, stop for 5 hours, then onwards to Haneda. Instead of 9 hours direct, it's a 17 hour flight.
Else, yeah its just some phantom flight as @JohnK says.
Quite normal.I’m a lowly bronze member sitting on over 900000 points. Spent yesterday trying to find prem Y seats SYD SIN SYD in Oct or Nov this year. Nothing available. I’m new to this. Is this normal?