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Its also interesting to compare the two FF programs' OneWorld awards. They may look similar at first glace, but there are some big differences:
1. QF measures the mileage per sector towards the total miles permitted, so an indirect routing between stopovers eats up more miles. AA measures mileage as the direct distance between stopover points. This can be a big saver and result in an AA OneWorld award being measured considerably less miles than a QF OneWorld award on the same routing.
2. Max mileage on QF is 35,000 miles while on AA its 50,000 miles.
3. No fuel fines on AA award, saving anywhere from a few to many hundreds of dollars.
4. AA OneWorld Award can include Jetstar flights of desired, QF OneWorld award cannot.
5. QF limits to 5 stopovers. AA has no limit to the number of stopovers. Note that each airline's definition of a stopover is different. QF is next-day for AU domestic and 24 hours for international. AA is 4 hours US domestic and 6 hours international.
6. QF allows multiple Open-Jaws in the itinerary, AA only allows one. But as AA does not have a stopover restriction, the need to include open-jaws is greatly reduced.
7. The only time QF OneWorld Award costs less points/miles than on AA is if the total itinerary distance is between 4001 and 4800 miles in economy. At all other points up to 35,000 miles, AA costs the same or less points/miles for a Y OneWorld award. Of course the requirements different is really significant of booking J or F awards. The biggest differential in favour of AA is around the 20,000 miles mar, which could work for some USA and Europe return trips, but is not going to make an ATW itinerary. An ATW itinerary will start at 120,000 AA miles or 142,500 QF FF points.
So for someone looking to burn on OneWorld awards, the earn rate on QF would need to be somewhat better than on AA to compensate for the worse burn rate, fuel fines to be paid, and reduced flexibility (routing, stopovers etc) to make up the difference. For some people the QF earn rate will be higher, so some people it will not.
1. QF measures the mileage per sector towards the total miles permitted, so an indirect routing between stopovers eats up more miles. AA measures mileage as the direct distance between stopover points. This can be a big saver and result in an AA OneWorld award being measured considerably less miles than a QF OneWorld award on the same routing.
2. Max mileage on QF is 35,000 miles while on AA its 50,000 miles.
3. No fuel fines on AA award, saving anywhere from a few to many hundreds of dollars.
4. AA OneWorld Award can include Jetstar flights of desired, QF OneWorld award cannot.
5. QF limits to 5 stopovers. AA has no limit to the number of stopovers. Note that each airline's definition of a stopover is different. QF is next-day for AU domestic and 24 hours for international. AA is 4 hours US domestic and 6 hours international.
6. QF allows multiple Open-Jaws in the itinerary, AA only allows one. But as AA does not have a stopover restriction, the need to include open-jaws is greatly reduced.
7. The only time QF OneWorld Award costs less points/miles than on AA is if the total itinerary distance is between 4001 and 4800 miles in economy. At all other points up to 35,000 miles, AA costs the same or less points/miles for a Y OneWorld award. Of course the requirements different is really significant of booking J or F awards. The biggest differential in favour of AA is around the 20,000 miles mar, which could work for some USA and Europe return trips, but is not going to make an ATW itinerary. An ATW itinerary will start at 120,000 AA miles or 142,500 QF FF points.
So for someone looking to burn on OneWorld awards, the earn rate on QF would need to be somewhat better than on AA to compensate for the worse burn rate, fuel fines to be paid, and reduced flexibility (routing, stopovers etc) to make up the difference. For some people the QF earn rate will be higher, so some people it will not.