justinbrett
Enthusiast
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2006
- Posts
- 10,688
- Qantas
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- Oneworld
- Emerald
I've just returned from a US trip where I did a lot of domestic flights in AA domestic First (about 600 SCs worth). A lot of people told me "haha - US first class is worse than Australian economy" but these people have not been following the recent improvements in US air travel following the post 9/11 bankruptcy recovery.
Price
QF J is usually far more expensive than AA F (DFW-JFK is as cheap as A$588 where as MEL-PER (similar distance) is $2318 - even SYD-MEL (much shorter flight) is $903. Across the board you can pick up AA First seats for fairly reasonable prices.
Winner: AA
Check-in / Lounge
Both airlines offer priority check in for J/F with no significant differences.
QF offer J lounge access at almost every port in the domestic network.
AA doesn't offer lounge access on the basis of flying F. What's worse, even if you are OW S/E, there's major airports in its network where it doesn't have a lounge (eg SEA, LAS).
Winner: QF
Boarding
Both airlines offer "priority" boarding for J/F, however with QF you're likely to be in the queue with all SG/WP which on some flights can be longer than the standard queue. AA's ridiculous boarding group strategy will let you board in Group 1 (after Concierge Key members) meaning if you're at the gate at the start you should get on in the first 20 or so group of people.
Winner: AA (marginal)
Pre-departure Beverage
QF has got quite stingy in this area, with choices now limited to sparkling or still water.
AA will make you any drink from the bar (ie G&T, Rum & Coke, wine etc) and serve it to you in a plastic cup. Whilst that's not as fancy as drinking water from a glass, it's much more enjoyable. There is a caveat that not all crews are offering this feature (despite it apparently being AA policy) and in my experience this was only withheld when the flight was late and the crew were busy trying to turn the aircraft around.
Winner: AA
Seats
There is no major difference in the hard product between QF & AA. The AA A321 seats are probably a little bit nicer (and more comfortable) than QF's B738 seats, but both are slightly nicer than AA's B738 seats.
I do like the separate mini drink tables on AA.
Both airlines have aircraft with and without personal entertainment units.
Winner: Tie
Onboard Dining
The beverage options once in the air were comparable, although AA will serve drinks with warm mixed nuts, which is slightly fancier than the bagged pretzels you get with QF. Some AA flights didn't carry sparkling wine so if you're in to that you might be disappointed.
Food is a hard one to compare. I think QF has fairly high quality food but is often lacking in quantity. They usually have at least 1-2 "safe" options so it's not usually difficult to get a good meal.
AA, in true American style, has fairly large meals that are of a similar quality to QF. Where they fail is they usually only have 2 options, and often one of the options is vegetarian. If the meat option is something you're not into, you might be going hungry. (Eg, flying LAX-HNL last week the choices were steamed Sea Bass or vegetarian zucchini meatballs. Neither sounded good).
Winner: QF (marginal)
Service
AA narrow body F is usually 16 seat (4x 2-2) vs QF 12 (3x 2-2). Both usually just have one dedicated FA to the cabin, which means the AA FA is serving 33% more people. I don't feel like this affected my ability to get a drink on demand or wait any longer for a meal, but I did feel like the service wasn't as personal and AA staff don't often refer to you by name.
Winner: QF (marginal).
Baggage
The baggage allowance is the same for both airlines and both priority services were hit & miss.
One feature from AA, granted its not exclusive to F is the bag tracker feature on their app. It gives you a courier like feed of where you bags are throughout your journey (check in, loaded to aircraft, unloaded, loaded again, unloaded again, arrived). This is a great feature when you have a tight connection - the peace of mind to know whether your bags have made the trip. I had some really tight connections (less than 20 minutes actual - not planned) and my bags made it. I've had QF bags miss connections with well over an hour available.
Plus, AA has no weight limit for carry on.
Winner: AA
Flight Changes
AA F is actually really popular, on most of my flights, there were no other AA F seats available on the same routes I was flying on the same day. This meant although I had a top tier ticket, it was effectively non-flex as I had no ability to change to an earlier or later flight (despite AA having the system to do this, usually for free via their app). Had I missed a flight or connection, I would have been downgraded or left stranded for days.
This is all because AA F is too popular.
We can't compare upgrades because the airline only upgrades their own FF program, but the AA seems to be harder - on my DFW-LAS flight there were 53 people on the requested upgrade list (and it was sold out so nobody got upgraded).
Winner: QF (hands down)
Overall
I would say the overall service is pretty much equivalent, noting the pros and cons detailed above. In the end I'd say they end up the same. However, as you can usually get the AA flights for much cheaper than what you can on Qantas, I'd say AA has a far better value product. I would pay for AA first class with cash - I'd rarely pay for QF J with my own money (but happy to use points).
I'd really love to see Qantas introduce the pre-departure bar service, and also the tracked baggage service.
Price
QF J is usually far more expensive than AA F (DFW-JFK is as cheap as A$588 where as MEL-PER (similar distance) is $2318 - even SYD-MEL (much shorter flight) is $903. Across the board you can pick up AA First seats for fairly reasonable prices.
Winner: AA
Check-in / Lounge
Both airlines offer priority check in for J/F with no significant differences.
QF offer J lounge access at almost every port in the domestic network.
AA doesn't offer lounge access on the basis of flying F. What's worse, even if you are OW S/E, there's major airports in its network where it doesn't have a lounge (eg SEA, LAS).
Winner: QF
Boarding
Both airlines offer "priority" boarding for J/F, however with QF you're likely to be in the queue with all SG/WP which on some flights can be longer than the standard queue. AA's ridiculous boarding group strategy will let you board in Group 1 (after Concierge Key members) meaning if you're at the gate at the start you should get on in the first 20 or so group of people.
Winner: AA (marginal)
Pre-departure Beverage
QF has got quite stingy in this area, with choices now limited to sparkling or still water.
AA will make you any drink from the bar (ie G&T, Rum & Coke, wine etc) and serve it to you in a plastic cup. Whilst that's not as fancy as drinking water from a glass, it's much more enjoyable. There is a caveat that not all crews are offering this feature (despite it apparently being AA policy) and in my experience this was only withheld when the flight was late and the crew were busy trying to turn the aircraft around.
Winner: AA
Seats
There is no major difference in the hard product between QF & AA. The AA A321 seats are probably a little bit nicer (and more comfortable) than QF's B738 seats, but both are slightly nicer than AA's B738 seats.
I do like the separate mini drink tables on AA.
Both airlines have aircraft with and without personal entertainment units.
Winner: Tie
Onboard Dining
The beverage options once in the air were comparable, although AA will serve drinks with warm mixed nuts, which is slightly fancier than the bagged pretzels you get with QF. Some AA flights didn't carry sparkling wine so if you're in to that you might be disappointed.
Food is a hard one to compare. I think QF has fairly high quality food but is often lacking in quantity. They usually have at least 1-2 "safe" options so it's not usually difficult to get a good meal.
AA, in true American style, has fairly large meals that are of a similar quality to QF. Where they fail is they usually only have 2 options, and often one of the options is vegetarian. If the meat option is something you're not into, you might be going hungry. (Eg, flying LAX-HNL last week the choices were steamed Sea Bass or vegetarian zucchini meatballs. Neither sounded good).
Winner: QF (marginal)
Service
AA narrow body F is usually 16 seat (4x 2-2) vs QF 12 (3x 2-2). Both usually just have one dedicated FA to the cabin, which means the AA FA is serving 33% more people. I don't feel like this affected my ability to get a drink on demand or wait any longer for a meal, but I did feel like the service wasn't as personal and AA staff don't often refer to you by name.
Winner: QF (marginal).
Baggage
The baggage allowance is the same for both airlines and both priority services were hit & miss.
One feature from AA, granted its not exclusive to F is the bag tracker feature on their app. It gives you a courier like feed of where you bags are throughout your journey (check in, loaded to aircraft, unloaded, loaded again, unloaded again, arrived). This is a great feature when you have a tight connection - the peace of mind to know whether your bags have made the trip. I had some really tight connections (less than 20 minutes actual - not planned) and my bags made it. I've had QF bags miss connections with well over an hour available.
Plus, AA has no weight limit for carry on.
Winner: AA
Flight Changes
AA F is actually really popular, on most of my flights, there were no other AA F seats available on the same routes I was flying on the same day. This meant although I had a top tier ticket, it was effectively non-flex as I had no ability to change to an earlier or later flight (despite AA having the system to do this, usually for free via their app). Had I missed a flight or connection, I would have been downgraded or left stranded for days.
This is all because AA F is too popular.
We can't compare upgrades because the airline only upgrades their own FF program, but the AA seems to be harder - on my DFW-LAS flight there were 53 people on the requested upgrade list (and it was sold out so nobody got upgraded).
Winner: QF (hands down)
Overall
I would say the overall service is pretty much equivalent, noting the pros and cons detailed above. In the end I'd say they end up the same. However, as you can usually get the AA flights for much cheaper than what you can on Qantas, I'd say AA has a far better value product. I would pay for AA first class with cash - I'd rarely pay for QF J with my own money (but happy to use points).
I'd really love to see Qantas introduce the pre-departure bar service, and also the tracked baggage service.
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