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- Jun 1, 2014
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Incorrect.So not able to go back to an airport you have already gone through right? Even if its just a segment and not there for more than 24 hours?
The rules are spelled out in the article in post #1 of the thread.
Incorrect.So not able to go back to an airport you have already gone through right? Even if its just a segment and not there for more than 24 hours?
But if I just transit SIN on the way back? it’s not a stop? And hmmm on Cairns. I will have a think.Can't return to Singapore mid trip and I'm not sure you can book Fiji Airways as yet. Also, can't have two stopovers in Cairns
You are not permitted to return to your original country of departure.But if I just transit SIN on the way back? it’s not a stop? And hmmm on Cairns. I will have a think.
Are there any set dates yet for FJ I thought I read June? If so that would work for my booking dates
Still no.But if I just transit SIN on the way back?
It’s a return to your point of departure and will terminate the award.it’s not a stop? And
Incorrect.You are not permitted to return to your original country of departure.
We will just have to agree to disagree however take note of the second last bullet point from page 1 of this thread.Still no.
It’s a return to your point of departure and will terminate the award.
Post automatically merged:
Incorrect.
You are not allowed to depart your country of origin a second time.
Hmmm thank you! Glad I asked! I already know this will be hard work to book based on the feedback on this forum with the call centre!Still no.
It’s a return to your point of departure and will terminate the award.
Post automatically merged:
Incorrect.
You are not allowed to depart your country of origin a second time.
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So based on that any surface sectors are an extra stop??? I was aware that the distance between were added to the total km. but didn’t realise if we departed from a different airport than what we landed we got penalised also as a stop.We will just have to agree to disagree however take note of the second last bullet point from page 1 of this thread.
"Oneworld Classic Flight Reward routing requirements
These are the basic criteria for any Oneworld Classic Flight Reward itinerary:
There are a few other rules that you also need to follow:
- Up to 5 stopovers
- Up to 35,000 total miles flown
- Up to 16 total flight sectors (maximum 10 if you want to book on the Qantas website)
- Maximum of 1 stopover (over 24 hours) and two transits (up to 24 hours) per city
- You cannot stop over in the country where you start your trip mid-way through the itinerary (only at the start or end)
- Surface sectors are allowed, and count as one stopover, but the distance between the two airports counts towards your total limit. Although there is no published limit, Qantas seems to allow up to 2 surface sectors per itinerary."
It’s unclear to me what part of my post you disagree with.We will just have to agree to disagree however take note of the second last bullet point from page 1 of this thread.
"Oneworld Classic Flight Reward routing requirements
These are the basic criteria for any Oneworld Classic Flight Reward itinerary:
There are a few other rules that you also need to follow:
- Up to 5 stopovers
- Up to 35,000 total miles flown
- Up to 16 total flight sectors (maximum 10 if you want to book on the Qantas website)
- Maximum of 1 stopover (over 24 hours) and two transits (up to 24 hours) per city
- You cannot stop over in the country where you start your trip mid-way through the itinerary (only at the start or end)
- Surface sectors are allowed, and count as one stopover, but the distance between the two airports counts towards your total limit. Although there is no published limit, Qantas seems to allow up to 2 surface sectors per itinerary."
Well, to be pedantic, you actually said ...We will just have to agree to disagree ...
Of course you are permitted to return to your original country of departure. Most people end their OWA in this wayYou are not permitted to return to your original country of departure.
So based on that any surface sectors are an extra stop??? I was aware that the distance between were added to the total km. but didn’t realise if we departed from a different airport than what we landed we got penalised also as a stop.
Yes I am wrong but we were discussing mid trip with the OP, not the end of journey.Well, to be pedantic, you actually said ...
Of course you are permitted to return to your original country of departure. Most people end their OWA in this way.
Not wrong, just not precise. (Problematic for people reading things out of context when scanning back over the 851+ pages of the thread.)Yes I am wrong but we were discussing mid trip with the OP, not the end of journey.
Can't return to Singapore on your return from rome > Helsinki. .
SIN to Helsinki then Rome- stop one
Rome back to Helsinki then Singapore then onto Darwin and Cairns stop two
Cairns to Fiji stop 3
Fiji to Vancouver stop 4
San fran to fiji and to cairns stop 5 and end.
It a logical workaround that has been done before.What if you added a MH KUL-SIN leg to start? I wonder if that would work for the itinerary.
Paris would be stop three.Would the above be counted as 4 stop overs of the 5 or 3?
In terms of stops it would be 3. But you're playing with fire in terms of stops and transits. In theory, it's fine (2 transits and one stop) but sometimes the computer might not be able to correctly get it because it's a surface sector too.Hi All / Experts
First time trying to book the classic rewards ticket, however confused about surface sectors.
In their rules it states that the distance counts between airports, however no mention that it counts as an additional stop over. So apologies if this has been clarified before but is counting surface sectors as stop overs definitive?
As an example I have tickets already booked:
Mel to Hanoi, transit tokyo - 1 stop
Hanoi to Tokyo - 2 stops
Sapporo to Paris, transit tokyo - 3 or 4 stops?
Surface sector of Tokyo to Sapporo.
Would the above be counted as 4 stop overs of the 5 or 3?
Thanks
ThanksIn terms of stops it would be 3. But you're playing with fire in terms of stops and transits. In theory, it's fine (2 transits and one stop) but sometimes the computer might not be able to correctly get it because it's a surface sector too.
You can have the Sapporo to Paris via Tokyo but be ready to drop the Sapporo to Tokyo leg if its causing issues in getting it ticketed.
The problem here is anything can be ticketed but until the whole itinerary is pieced together, it may or may not qualify for OWA. When many agent say they can't ticket it what they're actually saying is they can't get it ticketed with 318k cap. They CAN ticket it, but if its 400 or 500k points, that's not what the customer is after.Thanks
I already have all those legs ticketed with the remainder being:
London to Hk
Hk returning to Mel
These tickets are not yet available, but will be soon.
it should be fine to do Sapporo > London (Stopover) then Paris > HK > Mel.I am just trying to figure out if I can do London to Hk and then Hk to Mel and be within the rules, or if I have to make my way back to Paris given I have already landed there and counted it as a stop over to facilitate Hk to Mel.
Ah I was afraid of that. Often the case that Tokyo > xx_ city is not available but an extra Domestic leg in Japan makes it possible.Just to add the Sapporo to Tokyo leg was required in order to get Business from Tokyo to Paris. From what I have read it is some sort of married leg? So therefore we will arrange for our own transport from Tokyo to Sapporo as a surface sector
