QANTAS Group Posts First Full Year Profit Since COVID
The Qantas Group has posted its first full year statutory profit since FY19
Empowering Business Travellers
The Qantas Group has posted its first full year statutory profit since FY19
Qantas is embarking on another push to remind Australians to use around $400 million[1] in remaining COVID-era travel credits held by the airline.
Qantas has notched up 10 months in a row of being the most on-time major domestic airline, despite the challenges of severe weather in June.
Qantas trade partners are set to benefit from an extension to the airline’s lower pricing initiative when booking fares through Qantas’ next-generation distribution platform.
The Qantas Group is renewing calls for customers with COVID-era travel credits to use them towards booking a trip before the deadline of 31 December 2023.
Qantas will boost its international network with extra flights, more aircraft and new routes as it restores capacity in line with strong travel demand and the broader recovery of the aviation industry.
Research findings by Australian airline Qantas and the University of Sydney’s Charles Perkins Centre released today show it is possible to reduce the impacts of jetlag by reshaping the inflight travel experience.
Qantas will today resume flights to New York, with services from Sydney taking off to the Big Apple for the first time in more than three years.
Continued strong travel demand and completion of its three-year recovery program are expected to drive the Qantas Group to a FY23 Underlying Profit Before Tax of between $2,425 million and $2,475 million[1].
More than 1600 Australian community groups submitted applications for the national carrier’s Regional Grants program, almost 40 per cent more than when the program first launched.