defurax
Established Member
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2012
- Posts
- 3,176
- Qantas
- Platinum 1
I used to see the fact that QF hides fare class on their website as something annoying, but today I realised just how stupid that decision is. So I tried to book a Flex Y ticket MEL-SYD-DFW-ATL, YYZ-ORD-LAX-SYD-MEL and I made sure to select only QF codeshare on the AA domestic segments. Using the QF calculator this itinerary should give 310 SC, but the website said 270 SC. So I called QF and they told me that the fare basis HLX0A books in H class for QF operated flights but in the lowest available fare class on codeshare flights. In my case the QF codeshares on AA booked in O and Q instead of Y, B or H.
I asked the agent why Qantas would advertise a Flex fare that books in discount economy and he told me that if the AA flights were almost full, it would then book in a higher fare class. So basically, when buying a QF Flex Y fare to the US it's better to look at the loading of the QF codeshare and only pick flights that are full.
What a coughpy system. The agent also told me that I would earn SC at the Flex Y rate even if booked in O...they really have no clue how QFF works!
I asked the agent why Qantas would advertise a Flex fare that books in discount economy and he told me that if the AA flights were almost full, it would then book in a higher fare class. So basically, when buying a QF Flex Y fare to the US it's better to look at the loading of the QF codeshare and only pick flights that are full.
What a coughpy system. The agent also told me that I would earn SC at the Flex Y rate even if booked in O...they really have no clue how QFF works!