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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 here.

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 points from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (December 2021)

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

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

British Airways BA Amex American Express card

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up, no annual fee and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending ….. Read our full review

British Airways BA Premium Plus American Express Amex credit card

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the UK’s most valuable credit card perk – the 2-4-1 companion voucher Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points, such as:

Nectar American Express

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & two airport lounge passes Read our full review

American Express Platinum card Amex

The Platinum Card from American Express

30,000 points and an unbeatable set of travel benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

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:

Capital On Tap Business Rewards Visa

The most generous Avios Visa or Mastercard for a limited company Read our full review

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:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express card

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

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

(Want to earn more Avios?  Click here to visit our home page for our latest articles on earning and spending your Avios points and click here to see how to earn more Avios this month from offers and promotions.)

Comments (79)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • mr_jetlag says:

    I love QR hard product but their call centres are like the third circle of hell. Simple refund took me 5+ hours on phone to sort and it sounds like everyone is getting the same issues with rebooking under this policy.

    • Polly says:

      12 year olds, sadly. Sticking to a script. But HUACA and there are a couple of bright sparks. Got one good one in their polish cc.

    • Martyn Ford says:

      I rang up, got through and was refunded within 20 minutes yesterday morning.

  • Andrew says:

    But surely the chances of any of us travelling before the end of the year are pretty slim anyway?

    • Jenny says:

      Might need an immunity passport. Forced vaccination

      • Andrew says:

        Sorry to break it to you but there won’t be a vaccine by the end of the year.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Nor any proof of immunity meaning anything as no one yet knows how long immunity lasts.

    • Rob says:

      By the end of May most of the EU will let you in – only the UK will make it tricky for you to come back.

      You also need to remember that CV is almost done in London, only 49 hospital admissions yesterday out of 8 million people. Small households, general lack of sociability with neighbours and little family nearby has benefits.

      • Andrew says:

        #secondpeak

      • Alan says:

        I’d say that’s a bit of a gross oversimplification, Rob. Numbers were already starting to creep up again as some lockdown measures eased. Antibody testing in NY (which arguably will have experienced more spread than London) only showed 25% prior exposure so still a massive number uninfected, not to mention we don’t know how long any immunity lasts for (and it’s generally pretty short with coronaviruses).

  • Andrew says:

    I’m a frequent flier with QR but their behaviour this year has not been great so be careful when using them. If you make the mistake I have and stay loyal to them and bank Qmiles then when you use them to book a business class flight you are treated worse than a normal paying passenger. Firstly you are not allowed into their business lounge (no real big deal) but secondly and very annoyingly your luggage allowance is reduced from 40kgs to 30kgs. I wrote to them several times but it became very clear they really don’t care about loyal flyers. I must have flown with them at least 10 times (return) in business class to drum up enough miles for the ‘free’ flight.
    Also, I had to change my flight from May to Sept and then they cancelled the flight from Cardiff so I rang them to change it to LHR. They guy at the booking office said that I should have not been allowed to fly in Sept as I had originally booked my flight last July and point redemption flights have to be used within 1 year. So he was insisting that I fly by July 2020; he works in London so I would have thought the Government ‘no travel’ advice would be well known. He told me he was just following the rules! I then rang their office in Doha and they changed my ticket no problem. So for all those who don’t want to wait in long telephone queues I suggest you ring Doha. And don’t forget, don’t make the same mistake as I did – if you fly with them make sure you allocate your miles to Avios. DO NOT be loyal to Qatar, they really don’t deserve it.

    • Jenny says:

      That raises a question, do redemption points still expire if you refund them (e.g cancel) on a flight?
      Theoretically you could keep doing that and points wont expire. Assuming there are no fees

  • Jenny says:

    Does this apply for economy saver, special tickets (the cheaper ones) because the booking page still mentions a change fee of £100-200

    or normal price economy tickets

  • Andrew says:

    To answer the question about redemption points expiring, the answer is yes that the Q points/miles
    do expire after a certain amount of time.

  • Alex Sm says:

    I think that offering free choice of a new date without paying a fare difference is the only viable way forward to make people accept vouchers and not require a cash refund. A win win for both airlines and pax

  • Luke says:

    Unless I’m missing something, Qatar seems to have pulled most of the good fares I found yesterday for October (example Prague to Goa for £1,100). Now everything appears to be £2k+. Anybody found anything remotely attractive from the UK (or EU at a push)?

    • Dave says:

      Basically people have been gaming the system on the qatar Flyertalk forum. One person booked PNH to SGN then phoned up and changed it to PNH-DOH-AKL. I was trying to make a legitimate change and couldn’t as my flight back is on the 1st January 2021 which was annoying.
      But yeah people booking ex eu cheap fares and then shifting destination significantly. Qatar seem happy for people to do tha still but not with the cheap fares some people were finding

  • Shane says:

    Hmmm. I’ve been tracking the prices of various routes ex-Europe to SE Asia; this morning they’re all massively up. LHR-BKK-LHR was £2040 for end September, now it’s £3,200. WAW-CNX:BKK-ARN was around £1230, now it’s £2,275. Craziest of all OSL-BKK-OSL was around £1300, now it’s showing as £4,550. None of Qatar’s change-of-mind options are going to cut it for me at those prices.

    • Luke says:

      How about the on-off Bucharest-Colombo £950 fare for £5,459? As you say, who is going to bite at these prices?

    • Essjay says:

      I think the HfP article has come a couple of days too late. This was very widely covered across other sites on Thursday and the more attractive fares have been bought up already. There were still a few very good ones around yesterday morning but they’ve been getting snapped up.

      • Polly says:

        It was being discussed her from Thursday evening…

        • Alan says:

          Yep, OMAAT had some confirmed reports from readers. Although I think it’s generous I can’t see myself taking advantage of it. I’d mainly want to use it to swap to Oz/NZ but think it’s pretty unlikely they’ll open up (except for their trans Tasman bubble) before the end of 2020.

          • Polly says:

            Exactly, that was our idea for oz too.. but doubt it will happen…

      • Harry T says:

        I know several people who did very nicely out of this before it received more widespread attention. I would have capitalised on it but my travel plans are already set for the rest of this year.

        • Alex Sm says:

          You are very brave to make such a statement! Unless you mean that you have no travel plans 😉

          • Harry T says:

            @Alex unfortunately/fortunately I’ve already booked a few trips away before the end of this year and I don’t have enough annual leave left for more!

        • Luke says:

          I still don’t understand the logic of jacking up the prices after a couple of days though? Outside our “community”, I can’t imagine there was a huge rush from the general public to book tickets, even with these concessions. With the new pricing I would think they are pushing demand close to zero.

      • Rob says:

        We deliberately sat on this one until it was certain that it worked as it said it would. I don’t want to take responsiblity for someone dropping £1200 on a ticket just to find that they can’t actually change it.

    • Alex Sm says:

      So, basically they are just “reinventing” fully flex fares and present them as a ‘virtue’ of peace of mind? So clever!

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.