Dan MacKinlay
Newbie
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2026
- Posts
- 2
Posting this now because I think it's useful context for the community given what's happening with the Doha disruption. This is a February experience, filed before the Iran conflict, so it reflects the normal operating state of the codeshare rather than crisis conditions.
Background: Velocity since ~2008. 47 flights with VA/partners since 2023. Three SYD/MEL-LHR returns in the past nine months. Was approaching Gold.
Latest trip:
Flew SYD-LHR return in February, not yet knowing I'd need an extra bag on the return. Before return departure I tried:
I paid £435 at Heathrow for one bag. Base airfare: AUD 633. The excess charge was roughly AUD 870 — 137% of the base fare. No way to have known that in advance.
For comparison: according to the bloke at check-in, Qantas Silver gets an additional bag on international itineraries at no cost.
Off the QR-operated VA 2 at Sydney, I went to oversized baggage to pick up my $800 parcel. Bag didn't arrive. VA app: no tracking (works fine on VA-operated flights).
Sent to three separate counters; none were clear on who handles VA bags on Qatar-operated services. Had to call customer service before finding a fourth counter. Total time: over an hour. Missed my connecting domestic VA flight and was rebooked at no cost — but my partner was waiting and the afternoon was gone.
The issue isn't the inconvenience per se. It's that ground staff genuinely didn't know whose problem it was. The operational seam between Virgin and Qatar is rough.
Complaint response was lukewarm. Two formal letters, detailed breakdown of travel history and planned 2026 bookings. Final offer: 10,000 Velocity Points (~AUD $50). Sydney baggage referred to Qatar Airways. Implicit position: the terms disclose the codeshare limitations, so caveat emptor.
I have a trip coming up in April. Given current conditions in the middle east, I'm rerouting regardless — most likely via Singapore or a Chinese carrier. What the February experience told me, though, is that the integration gaps were already there before the crisis. The systems, the ground handling coordination, and the complaint infrastructure all showed the same pattern of the QR code-shares being under-supported
I hope the route eventually works as advertised — the Qatar flights themselves are genuinely excellent. But for anyone planning Australia-Europe travel right now and evaluating when to rebook, it's worth knowing that "when things go wrong" on the VA-QR codeshare was already a weak point before the missiles started flying.
Happy to answer questions. Reservation NVDPTW if Virgin's team is reading.
Background: Velocity since ~2008. 47 flights with VA/partners since 2023. Three SYD/MEL-LHR returns in the past nine months. Was approaching Gold.
Latest trip:
Flew SYD-LHR return in February, not yet knowing I'd need an extra bag on the return. Before return departure I tried:
- Manage My Booking: no option for additional baggage on codeshare sectors
- Virgin app: same
- Called the Guest Contact Centre: agent couldn't add baggage, couldn't process apurchase, and couldn't quote an airport price
I paid £435 at Heathrow for one bag. Base airfare: AUD 633. The excess charge was roughly AUD 870 — 137% of the base fare. No way to have known that in advance.
For comparison: according to the bloke at check-in, Qantas Silver gets an additional bag on international itineraries at no cost.
Off the QR-operated VA 2 at Sydney, I went to oversized baggage to pick up my $800 parcel. Bag didn't arrive. VA app: no tracking (works fine on VA-operated flights).
Sent to three separate counters; none were clear on who handles VA bags on Qatar-operated services. Had to call customer service before finding a fourth counter. Total time: over an hour. Missed my connecting domestic VA flight and was rebooked at no cost — but my partner was waiting and the afternoon was gone.
The issue isn't the inconvenience per se. It's that ground staff genuinely didn't know whose problem it was. The operational seam between Virgin and Qatar is rough.
Complaint response was lukewarm. Two formal letters, detailed breakdown of travel history and planned 2026 bookings. Final offer: 10,000 Velocity Points (~AUD $50). Sydney baggage referred to Qatar Airways. Implicit position: the terms disclose the codeshare limitations, so caveat emptor.
I have a trip coming up in April. Given current conditions in the middle east, I'm rerouting regardless — most likely via Singapore or a Chinese carrier. What the February experience told me, though, is that the integration gaps were already there before the crisis. The systems, the ground handling coordination, and the complaint infrastructure all showed the same pattern of the QR code-shares being under-supported
I hope the route eventually works as advertised — the Qatar flights themselves are genuinely excellent. But for anyone planning Australia-Europe travel right now and evaluating when to rebook, it's worth knowing that "when things go wrong" on the VA-QR codeshare was already a weak point before the missiles started flying.
Happy to answer questions. Reservation NVDPTW if Virgin's team is reading.
