Qantas has announced more international capacity ahead of additional aircraft returning to its fleet, including going to daily on its Sydney-Auckland-New York route.
The airline says it is currently at around 80 per cent of its pre-Covid international capacity levels, which has almost doubled in the past year. This is expected to reach 100 per cent by March 2024, with this additional flying taking it beyond that level from July 2024 onwards.
Qantas launched its flights between Auckland and New York in June in direct competition with Air New Zealand. Both airlines fly three return services a week at the moment, Qantas will lift this to four times a week from the end of October but from August next year go to daily on the 14,200km flight.
Qantas International chief executive Cam Wallace (formerly Air NZ’s chief revenue officer) said the additional flying would help support the sustained demand for international travel and push down fares.
Qantas has received three long-awaited Boeing 787s in recent months and is gradually able to return more of its Airbus A380s to service as they complete post-storage maintenance, which is enabling flying levels to steadily increase to meet strong travel demand.