Qantas Reward Bookings on Emirates Getting Harder & More Expensive

Emirates First Class suite 1A on the Boeing 777-300ER
Emirates Boeing 777-300ER First Class. Photo: Matt Graham.

You’ll soon have to pay more Qantas Points to book Classic Reward seats on Emirates.

It comes as Emirates also makes it harder for Qantas Frequent Flyer members to access Classic Reward seats in First Class. Effective immediately, you can no longer redeem Qantas Points for Emirates First Class bookings for children under 9 years old. And from next month, only Qantas members with Silver or higher elite status will have access to Emirates First Class rewards.

New restrictions on Emirates First Class reward bookings with Qantas Points

In May 2025, Emirates placed new restrictions on First Class redemptions made through its own Skywards loyalty program, with just a couple of days’ notice. At that time, it began limiting Skywards reward bookings in First Class to members with Silver or higher Emirates Skywards status, and to passengers aged at least nine years old.

When Emirates quietly announced that change on a weekend, just two days before it was due to take effect, there was initially some panic that Qantas Frequent Flyer members could lose access to Emirates First Class reward seats completely. This is a very popular redemption, so it would have been a big blow for people saving up their Qantas Points.

In the end, those changes didn’t impact members of Qantas Frequent Flyer or Air Canada Aeroplan (at the time). These are the only partner airlines of Emirates whose members get access to Emirates First Class reward seats. But it was only a matter of time until Emirates closed that “loophole”.

New age restriction on Emirates First Class redemptions

Effective immediately – and with no notice given – Qantas Frequent Flyer no longer allows Emirates First Class reward bookings for passengers aged under 9 years old.

Screenshot of an Emirates First Class Reward on the Qantas website with age restriction shown

As it happens, Air Canada Aeroplan has also just introduced the same policy. I haven’t seen this reported elsewhere yet, but sure enough, Air Canada has quietly added the following fine print to the information on its website about its partnership with Emirates:

You can redeem Aeroplan points for flights across the airline’s network. Please note, however, that infants and children under the age of 9 are not eligible to travel in the First Class cabin on a redemption ticket and accordingly, such redemptions are not permitted.

Screenshot showing age restriction for Emirates First Class redemptions on Aeroplan
Screenshot from the Emirates partnership tab on the Air Canada website.

This change only affects redemption bookings. Emirates still allows young children in its First cabin – but only on cash fares or upgrades.

Elite status requirement

From 18 February 2026, Qantas Frequent Flyer Bronze members will no longer be eligible to redeem Qantas Points for Emirates First Class. You’ll need to hold at least Qantas Silver status to gain access to these reward seats.

I suspect that Emirates is trying to stop people who’ve never flown with the airline before from simply transferring credit card points into Qantas Frequent Flyer, and accessing its First Class reward seats that way.

Qantas says that existing bookings won’t be impacted by this or the new age restriction. But changes made to existing bookings will be subject to the new restrictions.

I haven’t yet seen Aeroplan announce a similar elite status requirement to book Emirates First with Aeroplan points, but I suspect it’s on the way.

While it’s unusual for frequent flyer programs to restrict certain redemptions to frequent flyers with status, it’s not unheard of. Air France doesn’t allow anyone except Flying Blue members with elite status to redeem points in its La Première (First Class) cabin.

While this change was almost certainly forced upon Qantas Frequent Flyer by Emirates, it has the unintended consequence of actually making Qantas Silver status slightly more valuable. Hopefully, it will also increase the number of seats available to those frequent flyers who are still eligible to book them!

New Qantas Classic Reward pricing for Emirates flights

From 31 March 2026, Qantas Frequent Flyer will also increase the number of points you need to book Emirates flights in all cabins – not just First Class.

Last year, Qantas Frequent Flyer moved Emirates from its partner reward table to the Qantas reward table. This meant that Emirates flights would cost the same number of points as Qantas flights, resulting in a small price reduction for some redemptions. It also meant that you wouldn’t be penalised for combining Qantas and Emirates flights onto a single Classic Reward ticket.

An Emirates A380 and Qantas A330 at Auckland Airport
Qantas and Emirates have been partner airlines since 2013. Photo: Matt Graham.

Well, that didn’t last very long. Qantas is now moving Emirates redemptions to their own, separate pricing table. This means that, from 31 March 2026, Qantas Frequent Flyer will have five different Classic Flight Reward pricing tables:

  1. Redemptions on Qantas, Jetstar, Fiji Airways and/or American Airlines
  2. Redemptions on Jetstar (only)
  3. Partner Classic Flight Rewards (except on Qantas, Jetstar, Fiji Airways, American Airlines or Emirates)
  4. Oneworld Classic Flight Rewards
  5. Redemptions on Emirates

This is the new Emirates Classic Flight Reward table, as published on the Qantas website:

Qantas' New Emirates Classic Flight Reward table
The new Emirates Classic Flight Reward table on the Qantas website.

How bad are these changes?

Once the Emirates Classic Flight Reward table takes effect on 31 March 2026, you’ll need more Qantas Points to book Emirates flights. The increase depends on the cabin class you’re booking:

  • Economy redemptions increase by ~10%
  • Premium Economy redemptions increase by ~30%
  • Business redemptions increase by ~6-10%
  • First redemptions increase by 20%

Compared to current Classic Reward pricing on other Qantas partner airlines, Emirates Economy redemptions will still be a bit cheaper – and Business Class redemptions will be the same price. But Emirates Premium Economy (once it goes live) and First Class redemptions will be more expensive than equivalent rewards on other partner airlines.

In fact, if you look closely at the Emirates Class Flight Reward table, the number of points you’ll need for a Premium Economy reward is only slightly less than a Business Class reward. However, the carrier charges are significantly lower on Emirates Premium Economy rewards.

At this stage, the only way to book Emirates Premium Economy rewards is with Emirates Skywards miles. But Qantas Frequent Flyer members should soon get access to them. Call me cynical, but I suspect this will happen soon after the new, much higher Qantas Points pricing comes into effect. 😉

Emirates A350-900 Premium Economy seats
Emirates A350-900 Premium Economy seats. Photo: Wilson McTaggart.

Another blow to the value of Qantas Points

The average value of a Qantas Point dropped in Australian Frequent Flyer’s most recent point valuations, after Qantas increased Classic Flight Reward pricing, upgrade pricing and its carrier charges in August 2025.

One of the factors that led to Qantas’ poor showing was the poor value that members are now getting when redeeming points to fly to Europe in Business Class. With Emirates’ eye-watering carrier charges adding around $4,000 per person to the cost of round-trip Business Class redemptions from Australia to Europe, we calculated that you’d be getting just 1.57 cents of value per Qantas Point on this “reward”.

With Classic Reward seats on Emirates soon set to cost even more points – and no word about any reduction in the carrier charges – it could soon make even more sense just to use your points for domestic flights instead.

Book now to get in before the devaluation

Want to use your Qantas Points to fly Emirates?

If you want to cash in your points for Emirates First Class, and don’t hold any status with Qantas Frequent Flyer, you can still book until 17 February 2026.

And you can continue to access the current, lower pricing for Classic Reward seats on Emirates until 30 March 2026.

Great Credit Cards for Earning Qantas Points

Qantas Money Platinum – Up to 100,000 Qantas Points
Earn
1

Qantas Point on everyday purchases

Signup Bonus

Up to 100,000 bonus Qantas Points*

Annual Fee
$349 for the first year and $399 p.a. ongoing
View Offer
Qantas American Express Ultimate – Up to 90,000 bonus Qantas Points
Earn
1.25

Qantas Points on everyday purchases

Signup Bonus

Up to 100,000 bonus Qantas Points¹

Apply by 5th May 2026

Annual Fee
$450 p.a.
View Offer

Qantas Frequent Flyer’s own terms & conditions state that it will give at least 90 days’ notice before making changes within its control. Sadly, that doesn’t seem to have happened here. But at least you do still have some time to book before the price increase takes effect.


________________________

Related Articles

Community Comments

Loading new replies...

This new points pricing combined with the huge fees/charges makes EK rewards pretty poor value.

Reply 7 Likes

I guess that will put most of the scraping sites out of being able to find EK awards

Reply 2 Likes

Comparing the new EK rewards table against the Partner reward table:

Y costs 8% less
PE costs 15% more
J is the same as Partner
F costs 15% more

Reply 2 Likes

New award table. (The time EK spent as at the same rate as QF awards has been vanishingly small.)

The big plus of restricting F to PS and above is less competition for awards, meaning they'll be there if I want them. But now it's going to cost even more points in F, and there's still no guarantee QFF will get access to the same awards as Skywards.

I price QFF points at a notional 1cpp. When combined with taxes and charges in the $2k-$2.5k ballpark, this means a return trip to Europe in EK F will cost somewhere in the ballpark of $11k. This is objectively speaking a lot of money to spend on airfares when decent J options start around $6k.

I'm guessing Y, PE and J value will continue to be ruined by the taxes and EK charges

Reply 2 Likes

click to expand...

I wondered when the <9yo restriction would flow on to bookings via QF (I assumed it had when they announced it originally).

We had booked to fly QF F BNE>SYD>LHR then on to ARN with BA. There tyuy rewards last minute for EK F BNE>DXB>ARN which would've been ideal - but didn't want to leave it to chance we'd be denied the seat with flettyJnr...

Myself and MrsF have done EK F before so no loss anyway.

Reply Like

View image at the forums

They've marked this now

Reply 3 Likes

Just saw a report that the number of Qantas points required for First Class awards on Emirates will jump by 20% for silver or higher members on February 18. Business class is also affected. And if you’re bronze you’re out of luck on being able to book any F award seats.. 😕

Reply Like

If you try and select a flight with an infant then it prevents you from proceeding.

Reply Like

Can anyone with Silver or above see any F from MEL-DXB between April and December ?

Reply Like

Can anyone with Silver or above see any F from MEL-DXB between April and December ?

On seats.aero I can only see July 13 and July 19. No other dates.

Reply 1 Like