FWIW I went back to a 2009 e-ticket, which is an older style, and it doesn't have the fare class either.
Interesting to see Qantas has had this long tradition of not being transparent about what fare you are booked into. Presumably this tradition began before Uncle Alan became CEO of QF?
However manually issued, courier text e-tickets do have classes.
For those curious, those are the emails you might receive after booking from a call centre, they look something like this:
QANTAS ITINERARY
ABN 16 009 661 901
QANTAS AIRWAYS CONTACT CENTRES 11NOVEMBER23
10 BOURKE ROAD
MASCOT
SYDNEY NSW 2020
PH 13 13 13
TRAVEL DETAILS FOR :
CUSTOMER NAME: MR KANGAROO FLYER(ADT)
BOOKING REF:
MEMBERSHIP NO:
YOUR ITINERARY AND TRAVEL DETAILS:
QANTAS AIRWAYS QF478 ECONOMY CLASS (X) CONFIRMED
DEPART 23DEC23 MELBOURNE/MELBOURNE AIRPORT 1800
ARRIVE 23DEC23 SYDNEY/KINGSFORD SMITH 1925
OPERATED BY QF QANTAS AIRWAYS
DEPARTS FROM TERMINAL 1
ARRIVES AT TERMINAL 3 1:25 DURATION
AIRCRAFT : BOEING 737-800 (WINGLETS) NON SMOKING
Was this subject of the airlines trying to hide their fare classes from the customers and then relying on the fare-classes for calculation of change fares, refunds etc all put into the AFF submission to the Federal Government? Its a longstanding bugbear that all these tricky T&Cs that airlines rely upon are not made easily available to customers to see.
Not knowing what fare code you hold causes a number of headaches to travellers and is one of the reason why airlines who value their customers always publish this information during booking and in the email confirmation. Looking at flights I have booked with other airlines including Virgin, Air Canada, Lufthansa, United, Singapore, etc., they always show that fare code. The only airline I could see which didn't show it (aside from Qantas) was British Airways.
Oh and for those curious, here's why the fare bucket matters:
- It tells you how many points / status credits you'll earn when crediting the flight to one of their partners (i.e. British Airways Executive Club)
- It tells you what you can and cannot do with the ticket. For instance, Economy N,E,O, or Q fares aren't eligible for upgrades for international flights (easy to remember by the acronym Not Enough On Qantas) whereas Economy V or H fares are. Relatedly, lower bucket fares are less likely to secure an upgrade all else being equal (i.e. a Platinum holding a full Y economy fare is more like to clear the upgrade waitlist than something holding a V fare)
- When Qantas moves to unbundled fares (i.e. Basic Economy) the distinction will matter even more since you could be seated in Economy but have next to no rights attached to your ticket (i.e. no baggage, no elite earning, no seat selection, etc.)
- As others have pointed out, things like changes and refunds are impacted by what fare bucket you are in. Simply seeing "Economy" doesn't tell you much. Similarly during IRROPs what you are entitled to may vary. For instance, prior to the passenger right's legislation in Canada, Air Canada would notoriously only let impacted passengers booked on a standard (i.e. K fare code) fare rebooking onto a flight that showed M (flex) availability. However, those who held a Flex or full fare Y ticket could rebook into any flight that had availability in the economy cabin. I'm unsure how QF's IRROPs policy works but this can make a huge difference if you are on one of the many impacted QF flights.
Absolutely ridiculous that you have to use a Malaysian Website to find your fare class so that a consumer can then look up their fare class so find out whats in their mystery bag "bundle of rights". If any other industry tried, that they would be hauled off to the ACCC or State Fair Trading offices for failing to take reasonable steps that the customer is aware of their rights etc etc or "Unfair contract terms" or even systematic misleading and deceptive conduct.
Not entirely true. If you visit the manage my booking on the QFF website it will show you not only the fare code but the fare rules for your flight:
With that being said, this is of little benefit for the traveller looking to book a QF flight who needs to know what fare they are actually booking into. Then again you could always book with a third party like Expedia (which does show those details) since there are few benefits of booking direct with Qantas when you hold status with them.