Completely agree. The number of seats assigned to US carriers for direct flights is ridiculous given Aussies in other countries cannot transit in the US unless they have entry rights (the overwhelming majority do not)
You still need to remember the United States has the 2nd highest number of Aussies living abroad. Those coming from Canada are also able to transit via the US meaning the number in Canada+US is quite high.
So I've just done a bit of digging:
Weekly Passenger Cap (
as reported on AFF)
490 passengers in South Australia
500 passengers in Queensland (a 50% reduction)
512 passengers in Western Australia (a 50% reduction)
1,120 passengers in Victoria
1,505 passengers in NSW (a 50% reduction)
Ignoring the QF flights that's a total of 4127 people per week right now until 15 Feb.
So I've then had a look at the United and have figured out the following based on seat maps. It could be inaccurate but I'm going to assume that it's close given they'd likely be filling to the cap.
LAX - SYD - 5x per week - Average of 18 people per flight - 90 per week or ~2.18% of total cap.
UA839 - 31 Jan - 16 seats
UA839 - 30 Jan - 15 seats
UA839 - 2 Feb - 23 seats
SFO - SYD - 7x per week - Average of 21 people per flight - 147 per week or ~3.56% of total cap.
UA863 - 30 jan - 15 seats
UA863 - 31 jan - 23 seats
UA863 - 1 feb - 28 seats
UA863 - 2 feb - 18 steats
So this means that just United alone has ~5.74% of the total cap bringing in around 237 people per week. Both United and Delta said they can't disclose what their allocation is which is just crazy and adds to the whole mystery of the caps.
Mind you that's nothing given the QF110 LHR-DRW flight in the air right now has 161 people on board (according to the J+Y seat maps) + 140 people on the last flight.