Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
australian aviation logo

Qantas returns to Dallas, ramps up international flights from Brisbane

written by Hannah Dowling | February 14, 2022

Qantas 787 Dreamliner in flight. (Qantas)

Qantas has quietly revealed that it will resume flights to six overseas destinations, as Australia’s international border restrictions finally fall, including a number of additional services from Brisbane.

It comes after Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced that Australia’s borders are set to finally reopen to fully vaccinated tourists and visa holders from 21 February, marking the first time the country has fully eased its international border restrictions since these were introduced in March 2020.

This content is available exclusively to Australian Aviation members.
Login
Become a Member
To continue reading the rest of this article, please login.

or

To unlock all Australian Aviation magazine content and again unlimited access to our daily news and features, become a member today!
A monthly membership is only $5.99 or save with our annual plans.
PRINT
$49.95 for 1 year Become a Member
See benefits
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
PRINT + DIGITAL
$99.95 for 1 year Become a Member
$179.95 for 2 years Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin
DIGITAL
$5.99 Monthly Become a Member
$59.95 Annual Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin

Beginning this week, from 16 February, the Flying Kangaroo will return to its Sydney-Dallas Fort Worth route as QF7, along with the return leg QF8, both operated by its Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner aircraft.

According to FlightAware, the last time Qantas operated QF7 was 25 March 2020, while QF8 operated for the last time the following day.

Then from 27 March, Qantas will reinstate its Brisbane-Singapore, Sydney-Manila and Sydney-Jakarta routes, and the following day resume Sydney-Denpasar (Bali) flights – as previously suggested.

==
==

Qantas is also gearing up to restart daily flights connecting Brisbane and Los Angeles on its Airbus A330 aircraft from 1 April.

The news comes as Qantas Domestic and International CEO Andrew David revealed that bookings for inbound flights to Australia doubled within one day of the Prime Minister’s border announcement.

“Bookings are strongest out of the US and UK, and we’ve also seen spikes from South Africa, India and Canada, with March, April and May the most popular months for travel,” he said.

“This shows how much people want to come to Australia.”

It comes after Dubai-based carrier Emirates announced it will double its capacity on its Dubai-Sydney route, increasing to two return services per day on its iconic Airbus A380 aircraft, from 1 March.

The new additional flights mean Emirates can fly over 1,000 people into the NSW capital per day.

Earlier this month, Emirates announced it had also resumed A380 services to and from Melbourne, replacing its Boeing 777-300ER on daily flights between Melbourne and Dubai, after first reinstating its daily A380 services to Sydney in December.

Meanwhile, British Airways also announced this week it will be kickstarting its Sydney to London route again in March, after a two-year pause due to the pandemic.

The first flight, BA15, is scheduled to land in Sydney on 29 March, and will continue to operate five times per week from then.

Services will then increase to daily from 1 April, the airline said.

All services will be operated on a Boeing 787-9 aircraft, or a Boeing 777-300(ER), according to the schedule.

You need to be a member to post comments. Become a member today!

Comments (6)

  • reeves35

    says:

    Whilst Jakarta is scheduled to resume on 27/3, if the Indonesia government persists with current requirement for 5 days self-quarantine in hotel on arrival, it is unlikely that QF41/42 will resume as there just won’t be enough demand.

  • Steven

    says:

    I am keen to get to DFW as many friends and a relative are living it up in Texas.

    I also hope to see the A380 back for this Service.

    Plied this route several times before the hoax.

    But I’m stuck in the Western Australian Gulag!

  • Saz

    says:

    SFO next please……….July seems too far away.

  • Chris Wong

    says:

    A350??? You mean 787?

  • James R

    says:

    Go to the Qantas Facebook site and check comments. You can’t book, can’t pay for flight, had to use an agent and paid $110 for booking. Now I have to pay $45 for each seat selection. Can’t book my lounge invitations. I am a QFF and was not using points. Cannot contact call centre – hours on hold but I called American Airlines in US and was answered within minutes. Not sure how they are going to go with extra flights!

  • Christina

    says:

    Before Covid changed everything, Qantas was looking at having direct flights from Brisbane to Dallas-Fort Worth. Does anyone know if this non-stop route will ever happen?

Comments are closed.

Momentum Media Logo
Most Innovative Company
Copyright © 2007-2025 MOMENTUMMEDIA