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Qatar Airways A380 business class review – how is it seven years later?

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This is my review of Business Class on a Qatar Airways A380, from London to Doha.

I was in Doha two weeks ago as the guest of the airline to discuss various Avios initiatives and take a look at the new facilities at Hamad International Airport. Qatar Airways provided my flight and hotel for two nights.

It was the future once

The last time I flew on a Qatar Airways A380 was 2016. Since then, Qsuite has become the dominant Qatar Airways business class seat. As with many airlines – including British Airways – the A380 fleet has previous generation seating and I was intrigued to see how it stood up.

Qatar A380 business class review

Qatar Airways is currently flying a mix of Boeing 777-300ER (Qsuite) and A380 (non-Qsuite) aircraft between London Heathrow and Doha, with a Boeing 787-8 operating on the London Gatwick route. We may soon see the A350 fleet making a comeback to London now that Airbus and the airline have settled their differences.

I was on the 14.15 service which gets into Doha at midnight local time. This worked well in terms of being able to spend some time seeing the new Qatar Airways Frequent Flyer lounge (review here) and, slightly cheekily, revisiting the Plaza Premium departure lounge (review here).

Boarding the Qatar Airways A380

The Qatar Airways and Plaza Premium lounge complex at Heathrow Terminal 4 is by Gate 1 which, oddly, is not at the far end but about a third of the way down. Most Qatar Airways flights seem to use Gate 5 which is virtually opposite the lounge.

I’m not sure how this works with other aircraft types, but Business and First Class on the A380 use Gate 5B which feeds directly onto the upper deck. This wasn’t entirely clear when approaching the gate – I had to be sent down to 5B by a member of staff after accidentally trying to use the priority line for status cardholders flying in Economy.

Business Class seating on the Qatar Airways A380

The Boeing 787-8 and A380 aircraft use the same 1-2-1 seating layout which is very similar to British Airways Club Suite, albeit without a door.

There are 48 Business Class seats on the A380, all on the upper deck.

This is how the Boeing 787-8 cabin looks using a professional photographer and studio lighting (I can’t find a similar staged photo of the A380 cabin):

Qatar Airways Boeing 787-8 business class

…. and this is what the A380 version looks like in ‘real life’:

Qatar Airways A380 business class seat review

I had a solo window seat.  Whilst it is not a ‘suite’ (ie there is no door) this seat is still light years ahead of the offering in the old style British Airways Club World seat, especially if you are travelling on your own. Apart from the door, it is similar to British Airways Club Suite.

The flat area by the window is big enough to hold your newspapers, magazines and, erm, pre-flight Joseph Perrier Esprit de Victoria 2006 rose champagne.

Qatar Airways A380 business class seat review

The 1-2-1 layout, whilst still not universal when I first flew this seat seven years ago, has now been copied by virtually every other major airline. Your feat disappear into a cubby hole under the seat in front and you are angled in a herringbone pattern.  Neither of these were, in any way, inconvenient – especially if you are in a window seat as you will be facing the window.

The only thing I did not like is that the TV is fixed in position.  It does not fold away.  Even if you don’t plan to watch it (and I rarely do) you are forced to look directly at it for the whole flight.

Qatar Airways A380 TV

The armrest on the aisle side of your seat contains your headphones. Long-term readers will know that I don’t really ‘do’ IFE these days so you’ll need to go back to old Qatar Airways reviews from Rhys to get a feel for them!

It appeared that you could lift up this armrest to provide support at the same level as the armrest on the window side, but for the life of me I couldn’t work out how to do it. I had assumed it wasn’t possible until I saw another seat with it raised towards the end of the flight. It turns out that the control to raise and lower the armrest is in the same panel as the control for turning the seat into a bed.

Storage is excellent. As well as a storage unit under the console table:

Qatar Airways a380 business class storage

…. there is an extra feature on the A380. Because of the way the fuselage curves, there is space for a huge bin between the seat and the cabin wall:

Qatar Airways a380 business class storage

It’s just like having a huge waste bin at your seat. As you work through your magazines, or you unpack your blanket or headphones or you finish with your menu, you can just drop it in here. It allows you to keep the area around your seat perfectly tidy.

When made into a bed, which I didn’t do as it was a day flight, the bed length is quoted as 80 inches (2m) with a width of 30 inches (76cm).

Qatar Airways A380 amenity kit

The current toiletry bag – more of a box actually – is from Diptyque. It contains a body lotion, a generous 10ml EdT spray, face cream and lip balm.

Toothbrushes, razors etc are available from a drawer in the toilets, although if you didn’t know this I doubt you would find them.

Qatar Airways business class Diptyque amenity kit

Food and drink

The food and drink on Qatar Airways is generally of very high quality – I rank it above Emirates and Etihad in Business Class, and there is no comparison with British Airways, even with recent Do&Co upgrade.

The table is stored under the TV and comes forward when released. If you need to nip out during your meal to visit the loo or calm a small child, it is easy to release the latch and push it forward,

One benefit of the 14.15 departure is that you are guaranteed lunch. My last few Middle East flights were early morning departures which means that your main meal is breakfast – and, let’s be honest, with the best will in the world you can’t do much that is ‘special’ with an airline breakfast.

The menu was:

Soup:

  • Wild mushroom

Appetisers:

  • Classic arabic mezze, or
  • Trio of seafood – balik salmon, seared pepper tuna and crab meat salad (see below)

The salmon was excellent, as was the bread trio that came with it. An amuse bouche came first:

Qatar Airways A380 lunch

…. and then the salmon:

Qatar Airways A380 business class lunch

The choice of mains was:

  • Duo of beef – grilled angus beef fillet and braised beef cheek
  • Seared Atlantic halibut with parsley barley risotto
  • Gulf style chicken biryani (see below)
  • Butternut squash ravioli

The biryani seemed a little low on chicken but I am prepared to put this down to a ‘quality over quantity’ approach. Perhaps I’m being soft, because if this was British Airways I would probably be accusing them of penny pinching ….

Qatar Airways a380 lunch

The dessert choice was:

  • Cheese plate, plus
  • Baked plum tart (see below), or
  • Gourmet ice cream, or
  • Fresh berries with orange syrup

I have a soft spot for proper puddings and the plum tart went down well.

Qatar Airways A380 business class lunch

Lighter options (afternoon tea, steak sandwich) were also on offer. In theory it is ‘dine on demand’ although virtually everyone, including myself, seemed to eat immediately after take-off.

The afternoon tea is similar to the British Airways version, with a slight tweak in that the exposed edges of the outer sandwiches were not dried out. I’ve no idea how they do this but if someone could email BA with the secret ….

Qatar Airways afternoon tea

Alongside the rose I had before take-off, the other champagne on offer was Laurent Perrier Brut.  Wine options included an Albert Bichot Montagny Premier Cru 2018 and a Casa Silva Cool Coast sauvignon blanc (2021).  Dessert options were a Nittnaus Trockenbeerenauslese Exquisit 2018 and a Niepoort 20 year old tawny port.

I try to avoid commenting on the crew in my reviews because you can never tell if what you had is average, better or worse than the norm.  However, the Qatar Airways crew were excellent and I never felt, as I do with Emirates at times, that I may get the wrong thing due to the lack of English skills.  They did, however, insist on putting my knife and fork the wrong way round, eg fork to the right! Looking back at my 2016 A380 review, they were doing the same thing then.

In the Qatar Airways A380 bar

There is also the A380 business class and First Class bar towards the back of the aircraft on the upper deck.  This is a ‘proper’ bar unlike the small ‘table’ found on the Boeing 787 fleet.

Having also flown Emirates and Etihad on the A380 multiple times, I have to say that I prefer the Qatar Airways bar layout due to the curving seats:

Qatar Airways a380 bar

…. which gives you more privacy.  Emirates and Etihad make you sit in a semi-circle or full circle respectively.

Qatar Airways A380 bar

In-flight entertainment

Luckily I don’t need to run through the Qatar Airways Oryx IFE system, because the airline does it for you! You can see the full list of what will be available on your flight on the airline website here.

It claims there are over 6,000 ‘entertainment options’ available, including 1,100 movies – albeit not all of them in English, of course. You really won’t struggle to find something.

Business Class gets a 17 inch screen – if you want the a full screen experience then you need to head to First Class (yes, the A380 has an 8-seat First Class cabin) where there is a 26 inch screen.

I need to have a moan about the internet. I’m not complaining about the price, which is reasonable as airline wi-fi pricing goes – $10 for three hours or $20 for the full flight.

The issue is that these are subject to ‘fair use’ limits of 100mb and 200mb respectively.

Frankly, this is a joke. I did little more than draft this review (without uploading images) and replying to emails and got very close to the cap. Heaven knows how little streaming you would get from 200mb.

To put this in perspective, we work very hard at HfP to keep the site speedy but our home page is still 1.2mb. I tested another frequent flyer website and the home page was 7.2mb. A typical HfP flight review article is about 4mb. 200mb doesn’t cut it these days.

In terms of connectivity, there is a plug socket which takes an English 3-pin plug and looks like it would also take various other combinations. There is a USB-A socket below it.

You’re not going to get USB-C, Bluetooth or anything similar given the age of the A380 business class cabins.

Conclusion

The first time I flew Qatar Airways was when the A380 / 787 seat was the latest thing, and the Qatar Airways PR team in London – after putting me on an ageing 777 for one leg – reminded me that the crew, food, drink and service were no different even though the 777 seat wasn’t the best.

Seven years later, it is now the A380 / 787 seat which is somewhat ‘old hat’ with Qsuite (either the 777 original or the hybrid used on the new A350 fleet) being the seat to aim for.

As someone who never uses the door on a suite, I still find the Qatar Airways A380 package to be excellent. Whilst it isn’t the latest seat, you get the benefit of being on the Upper Deck of an incredibly quiet A380 (even after all these years, I still find it bizarre when you take off and feel absolutely nothing) and the bar. The food, drink and amenity kit are literally the same as you’d get on a Qsuite flight, as of course are the lounges on the ground.

If you’ve never flown Qsuite and you’re flexible with flight times then, of course, I recommend choosing a flight which has it. You might as well try the best when you get the chance. You certainly shouldn’t be too disappointed to do an A380 business class leg however and if you are transiting to a long-haul connection in Doha it is likely that you’d get Qsuite for your onward journey anyway.

If you want to find out more about the Qatar A380 service, there is a special page on the Qatar Airways website here.


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Comments (87)

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

  • No longer Entitled says:

    You flew form LHR yet spent the time to reference LGW. Why not MAN and EDI to complete the set?

    • The Original David says:

      Cos LGW and LHR serve the same market, but nobody’s going to trek out to the regions to start a journey to Doha.

      • Rob says:

        That was my mental reasoning at the time but I probably should have added it in.

      • TimM says:

        No but plenty of people in the MAN catchment area choose to trek to London to avoid the ‘Manchester airport experience’.

        • mvcvz says:

          Absolutely+++ I live about 30mins from MAN and always drive directly to LHR rather than connect from MAN.

          • No Longer Entitled says:

            I wouldn’t connect MAN-LHR-DOH-Other either because it massively elongates the flight time but with Qatar I would, and do, fly MAN-DOH-other.

            Given MAN have 18 flights a week and EDI 10 flights I suspect there are a good few thousand people who feel the same on a regular basis.

  • Matthias says:

    I flew both on a recent BKK-DOH-LHR flight and I actually preferred the A380 seat precisely because it doesn’t have the door – I found that to be quite claustrophobic and preferred the openness of the A380.

    • SamG says:

      I agree. We did the 787 connecting to the Q suite A350-1000 and we had a lovely flight on the 787 and really didn’t enjoy the Q suite – stiflingly hot and the doors really impede the natural flow of the service I found, lots of call bell usage required ! I did find out afterwards that the windows have vents so we’d probably just do those if/when we do it again

  • Andrew. says:

    Quote:- “The afternoon tea is similar to the British Airways version, with a slight tweak in that the exposed edges of the outer sandwiches were not dried out. I’ve no idea how they do this but if someone could email BA with the secret”

    Isn’t that simply the benefit of a greater level of humidity in the A380?

    Our old boardroom had air conditioning where you could literally watch an M&S sandwich platter dry out and curl up in 20 minutes.

  • James says:

    Whats the Qsuite availability like in DUB, as its mentioned QR often switch aircrafts at short notice.

    • Ali B says:

      I’ve only been on a 787 out of Dublin with no q-suite. I doubt you will have much luck

  • Lauren says:

    I’d love to see a review /comparison of how each airlines cope with vegan options.

    For example I’ve travelled business in:
    Air France – they would not provide me a vegan meal, instead they served me a creamy pasta with cheese, and told me “veganism doesn’t exist, it’s impossible”. Terrible experience.

    Etihad airways – only received vegan food 2/4 times travelled. They “forgot” our requests.

    British airways – not the greatest, but 100% success rate in requesting a vegan option

    It’s so hit and miss. I hope to travel with Qatar soon and hope it is better than Etihad

    • astra19 says:

      Air France doesn’t seem to think there are any options for vegan protein. Both times I’ve flown with them the meal was boiled rice and veg, with salad as a starter and a fruit salad as dessert. I’m not sure I’ve ever been hungrier on a plane.

      • Charles Martel says:

        As a vegetarian I kinda resent being fed the abomination that is unsatisfying vegan food but in the grand scheme of things, we’re fussy eaters. Is it realistic for an airline to carry a full range of halal/kosher, pork-free, beef-free, vegetarian, vegan, lactose free, nut free, gluten free, etc.. meals?

        • RussellH says:

          I read a restaurant review by Stuart Maconie a few days ago. He observed that many of his close family and other relatives were vegetarian, but NOT vegan, and was bemoaning the increasing trend in many restaurants to only provide vegan options for vegetarians, who really enjoy and want egg and dairy based cuisine.

          • astra19 says:

            Very true. It’s especially true in the US which wasn’t great for vegetarians but they’ve skipped over that and gone for completely vegan instead.
            Worst is when cauliflower is used as a protein substitute. I love cauliflower (so I’m at home on BA, clearly), but it’s not very filling or nutritious.

          • Novice says:

            I’m pescatarian. I resent the fact this can’t be chosen as special meal option but what do is once I’m onboard and see what I have been served for my vegetarian meal I ask to get something from the menu which usually has fish as a main option.

            Having said that I think special meals taste better than the menu meals.

          • Charles Martel says:

            To me its one of those tyranny of the minority issues; there are more vegetarians than vegans so you might think there would be more vegetarian options than vegan, but vegetarians (and even herbivores) will eat vegan food but not the other way around. Ditto halal, most secular people will eat halal meat (with occasional grumbling about animal welfare during slaughter) but strict/devout muslims won’t eat meat killed by penetrating captive bolt, electrocution or gassing.

            Rory Sutherland calls it asymmetrical tolerance: https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-5-per-cent-of-people-who-get-to-decide-everything/

    • mnlbay says:

      I would recommend watching nonstopdan on YouTube – some of his videos are a little annoying but always orders vegan food options so could be useful for your information.

  • Super Nan says:

    I would be well chuffed if my cutlery was placed the “wrong way”, like my dad, daughter and one of my granddaughters I eat using the knife in the “wrong” hand. Funny thing is we all do everything else right handed! We’re a strange bunch lol.

    • Rob says:

      My son does that. Need to get him out of it before the school expel him 🙂 So does Rhys actually.

    • SamG says:

      Same ! My dad is left handed and we all eat the “wrong” way – drives my mother nuts! The only thing we seem to have picked up from him

    • Stanley says:

      I am a knife lefty to eat too. My grandmother was horrified.
      I never got the issue – if you were picking at something with just a fork, would people not normally use their right hand for the fork ? As they would with a spoon for soup ? Why do they switch it when they pick a knife up.

  • Mikeact says:

    ‘to discuss various Avios initiatives’ ?

  • Michele Zinopoulos says:

    Rob has summed up Qatar flight to Doha so well, I’m not sure I can add much to his review. I’d never been business class before so was delighted to see they almost held my hand through check in, and made my way to the business lounge. I had the cheese and grapes as a snack before boarding. Everything on the flight was super, and the staff were excellent and calmness personified – important for a traveller who doesn’t like flying! The 2nd leg was Doha to Clark Manila and I managed to sleep for most of it.
    On my return flight I flew to Doha then took a BA flight to Gatwick – never again not a good experience. Double the No of seats in business and the staff were under pressure from start to finish.
    I was a bit disappointed with the lounge in Doha – it was heaving at midnight, but realise for Middle East midnight until 3 or 4am seems to be the busiest times for them. The lounge did not seem to have AC working, very few seats, so I decided to have a shower which was spotless with nice attendants. Qatar really know how to look after their passengers.

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

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