goosewacker
Newbie
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2023
- Posts
- 9
- Qantas
- Gold
- Virgin
- Gold
Hi team,
Long time lurker, first time poster. QF gold, about 12,000 SC's in the bank. Thought I was pretty conversant with QF procedures but got pinged twice today with "fine print" restrictions, sharing them here so there's hopefully some learnings for others. I am guessing these have been posted before but lost in the murk below.
Learning 1: Fare Class Y bookings on MH earn at Discount Economy for QF to and from Australia
We recently travelled to and from KUL in Y (Fully Flexible), booked and paid extra for Y to accumulate more status credits in order to have a run at QF Platinum / OW Emerald this year. Flights were credited to QF account at Discount Economy rates so called to have it reviewed. Denied and told we had been credited all points due.
Turns out that all Malaysia Airlines economy bookings regardless of fare class are only credited at Discount Economy rates and premium eco/business bookings are credited at Flexible Economy rates for "Flights between Australia and Malaysia, UK or Europe*; New Zealand and Malaysia, UK or Europe*; and Malaysia and UK, Europe* or Middle East"
This arrangement seems unique to MH and QF and all other Fare Class Y bookings on any other airline earn the normal Flexible Economy rate. This is a bit annoying as they do their best to refer you the points calculator rather than the earn tables to calculate your flights - which have no mention of this arrangement, just the earn categories. Don't consider MH if you're doing a QF status run and flying outside of Asia, I think is the learning here.
Earn Tables
Learning 2: Combined Bookings (Classic Reward & Paid Fare) are a bad idea
We had booked a PER-SYD return some time ago but because we weren't sure about the departure date, booked the outbound leg as a Classic Reward flight, return as a Red e-Deal paid fare. Thinking was that we would be able to change or cancel the Classic Reward flight as required for the normal Classic Reward fare rules, (5k points change, 6k points cancel) but at least had a flight locked in.
Unable to do a change online so called the Service Centre . Turns out that when combining Classic Reward fares and paid "Commercial" fares, the most restrictive conditions of the commercial fares apply to the whole booking.
After about an hour on the phone and escalating with the agent we managed to get the first flight "credited" with points - meaning that the points didn't get refunded, but would be held under that PNR for a future flight. I'm guessing this will be a nightmare to re-book with later as it sounds like a really unusual arrangement.
If we had booked the itinerary as two separate one way bookings, one reward and one cash, then this restriction would not apply. I would suggest that anyone looking at a combined booking like this separate your bookings to optimise your fare conditions for any changes.
So there you go - in both cases I was wrong and Qantas was within their advertised Terms and Conditions, however I don't feel like either case passes the pub test and would catch others out. In both cases the overseas call centre phone agent I spoke to was apologetic but professional.
Long time lurker, first time poster. QF gold, about 12,000 SC's in the bank. Thought I was pretty conversant with QF procedures but got pinged twice today with "fine print" restrictions, sharing them here so there's hopefully some learnings for others. I am guessing these have been posted before but lost in the murk below.
Learning 1: Fare Class Y bookings on MH earn at Discount Economy for QF to and from Australia
We recently travelled to and from KUL in Y (Fully Flexible), booked and paid extra for Y to accumulate more status credits in order to have a run at QF Platinum / OW Emerald this year. Flights were credited to QF account at Discount Economy rates so called to have it reviewed. Denied and told we had been credited all points due.
Turns out that all Malaysia Airlines economy bookings regardless of fare class are only credited at Discount Economy rates and premium eco/business bookings are credited at Flexible Economy rates for "Flights between Australia and Malaysia, UK or Europe*; New Zealand and Malaysia, UK or Europe*; and Malaysia and UK, Europe* or Middle East"
This arrangement seems unique to MH and QF and all other Fare Class Y bookings on any other airline earn the normal Flexible Economy rate. This is a bit annoying as they do their best to refer you the points calculator rather than the earn tables to calculate your flights - which have no mention of this arrangement, just the earn categories. Don't consider MH if you're doing a QF status run and flying outside of Asia, I think is the learning here.
Earn Tables
Learning 2: Combined Bookings (Classic Reward & Paid Fare) are a bad idea
We had booked a PER-SYD return some time ago but because we weren't sure about the departure date, booked the outbound leg as a Classic Reward flight, return as a Red e-Deal paid fare. Thinking was that we would be able to change or cancel the Classic Reward flight as required for the normal Classic Reward fare rules, (5k points change, 6k points cancel) but at least had a flight locked in.
Unable to do a change online so called the Service Centre . Turns out that when combining Classic Reward fares and paid "Commercial" fares, the most restrictive conditions of the commercial fares apply to the whole booking.
- If you combine Classic Flight Rewards with non-Classic Flight Reward fares ("Commercial Fares"), the most restrictive fare condition of those Commercial Fares apply to the segments booked as Classic Flight Rewards for booking changes. Refer to the Commercial Fare conditions.
After about an hour on the phone and escalating with the agent we managed to get the first flight "credited" with points - meaning that the points didn't get refunded, but would be held under that PNR for a future flight. I'm guessing this will be a nightmare to re-book with later as it sounds like a really unusual arrangement.
If we had booked the itinerary as two separate one way bookings, one reward and one cash, then this restriction would not apply. I would suggest that anyone looking at a combined booking like this separate your bookings to optimise your fare conditions for any changes.
So there you go - in both cases I was wrong and Qantas was within their advertised Terms and Conditions, however I don't feel like either case passes the pub test and would catch others out. In both cases the overseas call centre phone agent I spoke to was apologetic but professional.