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Qatar Airways ‘Travel with Confidence’ policy lets you change destination within 5,000 miles – FREE

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Qatar Airways has extended and updated its travel advisory, offering one of the most flexible rebooking options in the industry.  In fact, it is arguably TOO generous.

You can see the ‘Travel with Confidence’ policy on the Qatar Airways site here.

Anyone with a Qatar Airways booking now has a ream of options if their flight is cancelled or they want to change their travel plans.

EDIT:  Qatar Airways has made two tweaks to the rules since we published this article.  First, you cannot change your ticket until at least 14 days after booking it.  Secondly, the same sub-fare class needs to be available – which is trickier to spot.  If you bought a very heavily discounted ticket, you are unlikely to be able to change it unless there are very heavily discounted tickets for sale on the new route.  Check for any other changes to the rules before booking.

Qatar Airways A350 Doha

Once you have booked a Qatar Airways flight for travel in 2020, the following options are available to you.  For clarity, you do NOT need to have a cancelled flight to take up these options.  They are available to everyone with a Qatar Airways booking.

Keep your ticket:

You can keep your ticket ‘open’ for up to two years, allowing you to rebook at your convenience.  You don’t need to select a new date at the moment.  (To be honest, I wouldn’t select this option if your flight is cancelled and you have the option of a cash refund.)

Unlimited date changes:

Date changes are free and there is NO fare difference if travel is completed before 31st December 2020.  This is very attractive.  It would allow you to move your trip to a peak period, such as over Christmas, without paying a penny extra.

Take a travel voucher for the value of the booking, plus 10%:

This option was first announced several weeks ago and has since been implemented by various other airlines such as Aer Lingus.  Any voucher claimed prior to 31st December 2020 is valid for two years.

If you choose not to fly, this is a better option than taking a cash refund because of the 10% uplift.  Of course, there is no indication that flights will remain at pre-Covid prices so you are taking a gamble on Qatar Airways still offering excellent value fares at the time you rebook.

Exchange your booking value for Qmiles

This is a new and interesting option. Instead of cashing out or getting a future travel voucher, Qatar Airways is offering the opportunity to exchange the value of your booking for Qmiles.

For every $1 of ticket value you will receive 100 Qmiles.  In effect, you are buying Qmiles for 1 cent each.

Qatar Privilege Club and Qmiles have never had a lot of traction in the UK because, not surprisingly, most people who fly Qatar Airways prefer to credit their flights to British Airways Executive Club.  There is no Qmiles credit card partner in the UK and few ways of topping up.  However, let’s take a look at the numbers.

In normal circumstances, you can buy 1000 Qmiles for $30, or 3 cents per Qmile. On the face of it, the ‘Travel with Confidence’ offer is good value as you are paying 1 cent per Qmile – 66% less than normal.

In reality, whether this is good value or not depends on the redemption.  Let’s take a look at a simple return flight between London and Doha in business class. This would normally set you back 116,000 Qmiles plus a $50 fee per one-way sector booked plus taxes.

Based on ‘buying’ 100 Qmiles for every $1, this isn’t particularly compelling.  In general, Qmiles redemptions are poorer value than using Avios for the same flight.  However, it is worth doing a quick calculation based on your preferred destination and comparing it to the average fare price using the Qmiles calculator.

Unlimited destination changes before 31st December:

On the face of it this is the most compelling of the options, and with good reason. Qatar Airways is offering unlimited destination changes within 5,000 miles of your original destination for FREE.

There is no change fee and no fare difference charged.  The only condition is that you complete travel before 31st December.

This is – clearly – huge. 5,000 miles is a long way! It is further than flying from London to Seattle. Take a look at this map from the Great Circle Mapper which shows all areas within 5,000 miles of Hong Kong:

Qatar Airways book with confidence policy

Under the new policy, you are able to re-book your flight to virtually all of Australia and Asia.  You can check the 5,000 mile radius for any airport using gcmap.com.

Some people have seen this as offering potential for abuse, but if you live in the UK this isn’t really the case.  Qatar Airways fares are relatively similar to most parts of Asia.  The only potential way to substantially abuse (or ‘game’, depending on your perspective!) the situation would be to swap an Asia flght to Australia or, from those destinations close enough, New Zealand.

However, where you fly will most likely be dictated by any country’s entry policy. There’s no point flying for a three week holiday to, say, Australia if it still requires a 14 day quarantine period later this year.  Remember that this option is only available until the end of the year and there’s no guarantee that Australia or New Zealand will have opened up.  Nonetheless, the ability to change your destination does offer an exceptional amount of flexibility.

Why is Qatar Airways being so generous?

With the majority of flights grounded, every airline is struggling to maintain its cash flow. Bookings are massively down but airlines still have (expensive) bills to pay.

This problem is compounded by the fact that they are often legally required to give refunds in cases where flights have been cancelled. British Airways, for example, has already paid out more than €1 billion in flight refunds since March.

Airlines are trying their very best to encourage you to maintain your bookings or exchange them for future travel vouchers.  Qatar Airways is no different, except it is offering a genuinely compelling reason not to claim a refund.  Letting people change their destination for no additional fee or fare difference is a sure-fire way to motivate such behaviour!

At the end of the day, Qatar Airways still gets your business.  Even if someone does buy a c£1,200 business class ticket from Stockholm to Asia and switches the destination to Sydney, Qatar Airways is still ‘up’ if the plane was not going to be full – and that is unlikely to happen for a while.

You can read the full terms and conditions of the new Qatar Airways ‘travel with confidence’ policy here.

PS.  Remember that Qatar Airways flights earn Avios and British Airways Executive Club tier points too.  In most cases, you earn MORE tier points than you would earn flying the same route on British Airways. A return Business Class trip to Asia would earn 560 tier points for example.  We wrote a long explanation of how it works in this article on a Qatar Airways fare sale earlier in the year.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

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There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

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You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios.

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You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus.

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There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

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Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (79)

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

  • Shane says:

    I’m looking at Google flights and prices seem to be all over the place. Prices I mentioned above were for departue on September 30th; however changing departure date, brings most fares back, more or less to where they were for at least one day most weeks. Anyone know what’s ging on?

  • marcw says:

    This looks a marketing strategy to me. Make sure all blogs write about them. Then increase the fares. After 3 weeks, remove the offer and reduce fares again.

    • Callum says:

      Because people who seek out specialist travel blogs are notorious for not being able to work out whether a fare is a good deal or not?

      I think it’s easy to forget that the vast majority of people simply do not care – which is why no “normal” media will cover this with anything more than a quick mention at the end of a story (if at all – I haven’t personally seen it reported outside of travel blogs).

      My money is on Qatar reacting to the people buying the ultra cheap fares and then immediately calling to change it to an expensive route for free. They’ll find the correct middle ground soon enough.

  • Aston100 says:

    I’ve got flights to South East Asia this summer.
    Call centre confirmed these are still going ahead.
    I want to push them back a year to roughly same day & month. Call centre can’t handle that far ahead.
    What should I do? Not confident the voucher (even with an extra ten percent) will cover any fare increases in 2021. I paid a rather good price ex CDG.

    Thanks.

    • Rob says:

      Doesn’t the ‘pause your ticket for 2 years’ option guarantee you a new ticket without any extra to pay? Genuine question but that was my interpretation.

      • Dave says:

        I was wondering that, have flights from OSL to BkK at Xmas. If I can’t get to Oslo I was wondering if I could shift it a year. Any chance you could confirm with your Qatar contacts that’s what it means?

        • Vit says:

          I read an article at OMAAT. A reader called Ryan changed not only his destination from Kiev to Hong Kong but also his departure point from Philadelphia to Chicago. I assume you might be able to do the same for Oslo to UK airports?

          • Aston100 says:

            No. You are only allowed to change your departure point to an airport in the same country.

      • Aston100 says:

        Alas this was not an option brought up by the otherwise very helpful agent.
        I did ask them for options and they mentioned the voucher and also changing dates & destinations (within 5k miles) but must be departing Doha by the 31st of December.
        They didn’t mention a refund (not my preferred option anyway given it was such a good price) not anything else.

        To be honest, I wasn’t aware of the ability to pause tickets until I read this article.

      • Colin says:

        Rob. That was my initial interpretation also. I have a return July 20 flight DUB/DOH/SEZ (not officially cancelled but a schedule change of `only` 23hrs 50mins) and was hoping to change to same thing next July. The cynic in me tells me that the fares will increase well in excess of the 10% voucher value. When you look at the travel trade guidelines published on 13 May (available on `the other` blog!!) under option 1, it suggests that the 2yr `hold option` is still liable for fare difference after 01/01/21.

        • Polly says:

          Yes but there might be sale prices it could cover…

          • Aston100 says:

            Which isn’t helpful if you have specific dates you must travel on.

  • SC says:

    Does anyone know if you can change the outbound destination if your flight leaves in December and leave the inbound as the original destination if it is in the new year??

    • Rob says:

      This may be a case of having to call a number of times and waiting until you get an agent who will do it.

      • EJH says:

        If inbound dep DOH after 31 Dec 20 you become liable for change fees (not clear if it’s just on the inbound leg or the entire ticket – didn’t get that far with agent as that killed it for me)

      • SC says:

        Thanks very much – will try my luck

  • BS says:

    This has worked exceptionally well for me.
    I had a ticket HRE – JNB – DOH – LON, returning from DUB to avoid taxes, but with a very long wait in DOH, all chosen for cheapness rather than convenience, but I felt worth it for my 2 yearly trip to get BA Silver.
    QR allowed me to move to convenient flights, move the return to london from DUB, and cancellation penalty is the same as the original ticket if I change my mind.
    Initially they said no because the itinerary involves 3rd party airlines: I hung up and called again and was successful

  • Charlieface says:

    Anyone know if you can do it twice? So book something cheap, change it to Far East then change it again to ANZ?

  • Letsfly says:

    Just to say seems you now need to wait 14 days before making any changes and also keep the same total duration…

    • Aaron says:

      not sure about the duration, but for voluntary changes, the new flights now needs to be booked into the same fare class (ie, R/ I/ etc) as well. But the policy hasn’t changed for involuntary changes

  • Alan says:

    Unsurprisingly they’ve now tweaked the rules a little bit…

    https://onemileatatime.com/qatar-airways-modifies-generous-rebooking-policy/

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