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How you can do what I did and book a £205 Economy return flight to Sydney at noon today

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Qantas turned 99 last weekend and, to celebrate its 100th year, is running a special promotion.  A select few can fly to Sydney for £205 return.

20 tickets will be sold at noon each day from Monday to Friday this week.

There is also a broader sale running although we now know it is limited to only economy fares – more on that below.

At least 50% of the seats on Monday went to Head for Points readers.  Two went to me.  I expect stiffer competition now as word will have got out.

100 London – Sydney ‘Golden Tickets’ will be sold for peanuts

The biggest discount is to be had on 100 Qantas Golden Tickets.  These are extremely discounted economy fares between London and Sydney.

20 Golden Tickets are being released at 12 noon (UK time) every day this week, Monday to Friday. They are for travel on certain Qantas flights only between London and Sydney, with different outbound dates available each day. 

On Monday, tickets were not available for booking until 12:15, so don’t give up if you see nothing at 12 on the dot.  As the week has gone, however, Qantas seems to have got more punctual.

The Golden Tickets are in theory being sold for £205 although they are actually showing up at £195.  Qantas is essentially reducing the fare component to zero, with the remaining the usual Air Passenger Duty for economy flights. £195 to Sydney return, even in economy, is obviously a steal if your body can handle the direct flight – note that there is no option to add a stopover in Singapore.

The tickets are fairly inflexible, as you would expect:

  • They are valid only on flights QF1 and QF2 from London to Sydney (these are the A380 flights via Singapore).
  • No stopover permitted
  • No changes permitted
  • Non-refundable
  • No name changes permitted
  • Qantas.com only

Interestingly, the tickets DO accrue Qantas miles and status. You will earn 140 Status Credits and 12,400 Qantas Points in fare class E. Unfortunately, it looks like you will earn ZERO Avios and tier points if you use a BA Executive Club number, so it’s best to just open a Qantas account. A quick search on wheretocredit.com suggests no other oneworld airline programs credit for ‘E’ class either.

Booking information and travel dates will be announced at noon each day on the Centenary Sale page, together with the complete terms and conditions.

The tickets aren’t as difficult to get as you might think, although word will probably have around by Tuesday.  We know a few readers picked up tickets, and I myself got two.  Signing up for the Qantas frequent flyer program speeds up the booking process and makes it less likely that someone else grabs your seat before you can click ‘Pay’.  Make sure you are logged in at noon and that your credit card details are in your profile.

Economy Sale

The accompanying Centenary Sale is economy-only, which is a bit of a bummer!  Let’s hope there will be a separate premium fare sale during the centenary year.

The lead in prices are £699+ for flights to Sydney, Perth and Melbourne. Unlike the Golden Tickets the fare rules are a little more relaxed, since you’ll be able to take one stopover in each direction. You must stay a Saturday or at least 3 days.

You will be able to see all the terms and conditions on the Centenary Sale page here.

Conclusion

Whilst flying economy for 22+ hours is not something I actively look forward to, for the exceptional price of £195 it was too tempting to miss!  Look out for my trip review in March.

The bookable dates vary every day, so if today’s outbound dates don’t suit you, you can try again another day. The best way to bag your tickets is to check the sale page here at midday and check the dates applicable for that day.  Go to the booking engine and make your date choices and keep refreshing. Qantas have said it can take up to 30 minutes for the tickets to appear in the system, although experience shows that it was more like 15 minutes on Monday and on the dot of noon on Wednesday.

You can book here.  Good luck.

Comments (290)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Chris says:

    Well first 2 days managed to select price but once I put in details the system crashed as went to next page. Signed up yesterday for frequent flyer which def helped and today managed to nab one! – Big thanks to HfP for the heads up on the offer!

    • Rhys says:

      Well done!

    • Aerotec says:

      Good to hear there is still hope for us! On my first search prices hadn’t updated. Refreshed and price came up. Selected the outbound date then got an error message so that scuppered my attempt.

      I’ll try again tomorrow. I had 2 screens open. One on booking page with LHR to SYD, 2 Pax etc. Then CTRL F5 on offer screen until dates came up. 2 more chances left!

      • Chris says:

        I had that approach as well – but just going as one so not sure if that helped.

        Also was at work and had a customer at 11.57 – who received the worlds best and quickest service…

  • GlasgowBr says:

    OT – has anyone had difficulty booking Iberia flights via their UK site? I am trying to book flights from Madrid to Santiago (Chile) but appears they are “blocking” or pretending their is an issue. If I use a Spanish proxy I can see the flights but if I merely change to the Spanish site without the proxy I get the same “error” message.

    Interestingly, the BA site shows massively different prices for the flights when I try to book via this route. Deliberate obfuscation is my sad assumption but I will find a way. In short, flying premium economy via Madrid works out about £2.5k cheaper even with flights to Madrid from Glasgow (out on air miles for hee haw, and direct back to Edinburgh on Easyjet).

  • avstar says:

    i’ve tried getting flights everyday, getting through to payment page on mon & tues (before opting not to transact due to dates initally chosen ) and eventually buying today..

    here some useful info to anyone trying in future:
    – create an qantas FF account, i did at 11.58 today and made the whole process seamless
    – if you get through to the payment page where you have to enter your credit card number, I am pretty sure your flights are held for some time period – I completed the transaction at 12.15, whereas flights were sold out well before then
    – the reason i waited to transact was to check the 24h refund policy and stopover options
    – subsequently rang qantas, who said the flights are non-refundable even within 24hr, and stopovers cannot be extended
    – qantas CS agents via phone add 0 value and a lot of hold time
    – getting these tickets were a doddle compared to glastonbury and burning man
    – i predict tomorrow will be first week of june departures (last day of sale given 100h approx 4 days??)

    • Rhys says:

      100/20 = 5 days 🙂

      • avstar says:

        100/24 closer to 4 🙂

        • avstar says:

          ah for some reason i though this sale was only lastin 100hrs, whereas they are def dropping 100 tickets?

          • Rhys says:

            I think the ‘normal’ sale is 100 hours, but Golden Tickets are 20/day for 5 days. The messaging, I admit, is a little confusing…

    • Chris says:

      Def agree on once you get to card payment page bit (after entering details – which was easy having signed up for FF) then that’s when the seats are actually ‘held’. As when I got through to payment page I twice had issues with my virgin mastercard saying wrong CCV number so switched to BA Amex and it then went through – but it wasn’t timing out or throwing up error messages like it did when trying to enter details after selecting price)

      Main issue I had yesterday was actually signing up to FF programme as initially I was going from a link from an email from their mailing list – but it just links to an Australian promo code which gets rejected as it was a UK application. Once I worked out that I just had to apply directly from UK website then I could actually join. But that def seems to be the key to getting to payment page.

      • Lady London says:

        Made no difference here sorry. Would only make a diffeence if the website would actually stay up without falling over on the search so that you can actually click to go to the payment page. Once you can get to the payment page, then of course it would help. Sadly the inadequacies precede that step so no use at all the way the site’s been performing.

  • James says:

    Managed to snatch a single ticket for 196GBP.

    Would highly recommend registering with Qantas FF program, and sign-in before 12:00 so there’s no need to enter details and you reach the payment page quickly. Also save your payment details to google chrome so they are auto filled. I had my ticket by 12:02:08, no page crashes, no refreshing necessary etc. Was all very painless

    • aisling Scott says:

      James any chance you could get me tickets tomorrow please using your magic touch?!

  • babyg says:

    this feels like a booby prize.. where are the prem sale deals…

  • Robert says:

    ‘500 – that’s an error at our end’
    To be fair to Qantas at least they’ve made there error page more appealing.

  • Tina says:

    Well using a Qantas FF account didn’t seem to make any difference today…

    • Ben says:

      What were today’s dates?

      • Tina says:

        Doesn’t matter now, they’re all sold out. Seems only those with connections to the travel industry stood a chance.

        • aisling Scott says:

          got to the basket once – then timed out
          beginning to wonder if it is rigged

        • Rhys says:

          This really isn’t true – just luck of the draw.

          • pigeon says:

            What’s more likely is that someone has managed to get a bot working on this…roughly 40% of online tickets to really popular events are hoovered by them.

            Using a bot just isn’t cricket, and if anything means its more frustrating for those who’ve lost out.

        • Lady London says:

          I’m sure that’s not true, Tina. Early birds did better because the website wasn’t swamped to the same extent as it is now. But other than a timely heads up about the existence of the promotion, which they shared, everyone was searching on the same poorly managed platform

        • Harry T says:

          I bought two tickets on the first day. I didn’t have a Qantas Frequent Flyer account and I didn’t have saved or pre filled card details. I certainly don’t have any connections to the travel industry.

        • AndyGWP says:

          You’ve made this comment a few times Tina, but the fact is there isn’t a lot of tickets each day, and a few people other than Rhys have also posted on here that they have been successful (and presumably they don’t all work in the travel industry)

          When you start to think about all the non-HFP community (it’s also been posted on HUKD, Flyertalk, Points Guy UK as a minimum) that are also trying to buy these tickets, do you really think the odds are stacked in anyones favour?

          • Tina says:

            Rubbish. I have said *once* that those with connections to the travel industry are best placed to get these offers, if you opened your eyes you’ll see I’m not the only one to make such a comment. Other than that I replied to a earlier comment asking how to get these tickets and flippantly replied “Work for HfP”, as the author of this article got tickets without issue. Now get back in your box troll.

          • Rob says:

            Let’s put some perspective on this. Our two articles on this deal have been read 28,000 times between them. The two emails we sent out on it recorded 16,000 ‘opens’. And that’s just us.

            Had Qantas not published the dates then Rhys would have had an advantage, because we know the dates. However, the dates are being put on the website at noon for all to see. On Monday due to IT issues the seats did not appear until 12.15, giving everyone a fair crack.

          • AndyGWP says:

            Tina – so you have mentioned it twice (ie. a couple) of times then? I actually thought I was trying to help you understand why the demand is so high versus supply. Not sure how that is trolling? Thanks for the bitter response though *shrugs*

          • Bazza says:

            Tina is on one! I mean if you REALLY wanna go to OZ buy a ticket! It ain’t that expensive!

  • Lady London says:

    S****** waste of time. Totally incompetent platform set up. Quite apart from no apparent strategy on traffic control to the website at network level….

    Unless someone at Qantas knew how database retrieval works internally without intervention, and thus was corralling thousands of attempted searches each day onto one very narrow piece of the website by making 5 adjacent dates (the outward date choice) the same target for every searcher, then if these things were accidental then they need to make the link between their marketing promotions and giving users – even those who aren’t successful – an impression that Qantas is managing things competently. On the other hand, If the website was working like this on purpose, then it could just be genius.

    Particularly irritating were the rosettes all over most of the so- called centenary fares which mostly exceeded regularly offered prices of several other airlines.

    If I didn’t know that Qantas has the best safety record of any airline in the world I’d be wary of their competence after this.

    I have computer problems at the mo that give me only about 30min online at a time and I simply cannot afford to give my rare computer time to this incompetently platformed promotion tomorrow.

    • Paul Pogba says:

      Is it worth designing a ticketing system for the once-every-few-years promotion when it handles run of the mill purchasing fine? BA have had ANOTHER operational IT failure today affecting hundreds if not thousands of peoples actual travel plans – this is small beer in the grand scheme of things.

    • Rooster says:

      Seems like your the one with bigger computer issues if you can only go online for 30mins!

      • Lady London says:

        @Rooster put it this way. A serious chunk of my career was spent as a specialist computer performance specialist for one of the major manufacturers. I usually know what;s (not) going on on a website when I use it. Particularly with regard to anything concerning performance.

        The number of people reporting having got flights into their basket several times (with login and credit card setup) and the app failed and send them back to the beginning, is one of the many indicators that no one is managing traffic to this site during the promotion., There were several other indicators.

        So yes, I do professionally know what I;m talking about, and no 30mins of available time on my computer has been more than enough for me to know what was not being managed in terms of the platfoirm setup.

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