buzz62
Newbie
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2026
- Posts
- 4
- Qantas
- Gold
- Virgin
- Red
- Oneworld
- Sapphire
- SkyTeam
- Elite
- Star Alliance
- Silver
After decades of loyalty, I have officially reached my limit with Qantas and have begun shifting my business and personal transcontinental spend to the Virgin Australia and Singapore Airlines ecosystems.
This decision wasn't a knee-jerk reaction to a single delayed flight. It is the culmination of a steady, systemic erosion of value for top-tier flyers. As a Lifetime Gold member, I have watched core program benefits completely evaporate. Forward-cabin seating access is routinely restricted, priority boarding is rarely enforced on the ground, and securing a Classic Flight Reward or a Business upgrade has become a near-impossible lottery. Furthermore, the administrative customer service is in a shocking state. I was flat-out ignored by a manager who promised a direct call back to discuss these ongoing issues, leaving me to constantly chase them down for basic account updates.
The final straw occurred on a transcontinental Perth to Melbourne return trip. I intentionally booked wide-body A330 aircraft for both legs specifically to ensure product consistency and cabin comfort—booking Economy outbound to utilize upgrade capacity, and redeeming a large chunk of points for a Business Class seat on the return leg to secure the premium international-standard lie-flat suites.
Instead, Qantas substituted both aircraft to outdated, regional 767 configurations:
Qantas has made it perfectly clear that they view their frequent flyer program as a massive profit engine to sell credit cards, rather than a mechanism to protect and recognize the long-term premium customers who built their business.
My new American Express Velocity Business Card arrived this week. I gave Qantas management every opportunity to retain my business, and they chose to reply with a PR script. Silence and a massive drop in account activity will be my final response.
Curious to hear if other long-term high-tier elites are seeing the exact same corporate apathy when dealing with executive escalations?
This decision wasn't a knee-jerk reaction to a single delayed flight. It is the culmination of a steady, systemic erosion of value for top-tier flyers. As a Lifetime Gold member, I have watched core program benefits completely evaporate. Forward-cabin seating access is routinely restricted, priority boarding is rarely enforced on the ground, and securing a Classic Flight Reward or a Business upgrade has become a near-impossible lottery. Furthermore, the administrative customer service is in a shocking state. I was flat-out ignored by a manager who promised a direct call back to discuss these ongoing issues, leaving me to constantly chase them down for basic account updates.
The final straw occurred on a transcontinental Perth to Melbourne return trip. I intentionally booked wide-body A330 aircraft for both legs specifically to ensure product consistency and cabin comfort—booking Economy outbound to utilize upgrade capacity, and redeeming a large chunk of points for a Business Class seat on the return leg to secure the premium international-standard lie-flat suites.
Instead, Qantas substituted both aircraft to outdated, regional 767 configurations:
- Perth to Melbourne: The aircraft swap completely decimated the available Business Class upgrade capacity, trapping me in the back. Compounding this, the ground infrastructure failed entirely. The baggage system at Perth Airport was down, forcing me into a massive manual queue to get handwritten physical tags, followed by a second queue to load my own luggage, and culminating in tarmac boarding via stairs in the elements instead of using an aerobridge.
- Melbourne to Perth Return: My return leg points-redemption was completely degraded. Instead of the premium private capsule and flatbed comfort I explicitly selected and booked, I was forced into a standard, outdated regional Business Class seat. To top it off, the aircraft lacked basic modern features, including non-functional inflight entertainment and a complete absence of seatback screens. Qantas effectively devalued the purchasing power of my loyalty points in real-time.
Qantas has made it perfectly clear that they view their frequent flyer program as a massive profit engine to sell credit cards, rather than a mechanism to protect and recognize the long-term premium customers who built their business.
My new American Express Velocity Business Card arrived this week. I gave Qantas management every opportunity to retain my business, and they chose to reply with a PR script. Silence and a massive drop in account activity will be my final response.
Curious to hear if other long-term high-tier elites are seeing the exact same corporate apathy when dealing with executive escalations?
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