Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

List of Qantas destinations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of Qantas destinations
Remove ads

Qantas, the national flag-carrying airline of Australia, following is a list of destinations Qantas flies to as part of its scheduled services, as of January 2025.

Thumb
A map of Qantas' international destinations, as of December 2023

Qantas flies to 63 domestic and to 35 international destinations in 23 countries across Africa, North America, South America, Asia, Europe, and Oceania. This list excludes destinations formed as a result of codeshare agreements, as well as destinations served by its subsidiaries, though QantasLink destinations are included.

Remove ads

History

In 1938, Qantas began flying from Sydney to Singapore under wartime restrictons, services to New Zealand followed in April 1940 with Tasman Empire Airways Limited. Between 1945 to 1958, the Kangaroo Route was soon developed, with flights to London being announced in 1947 and flown with Super Constellation airliners. Qantas' network expanded significantly in later years, with destinations such as Japan, South Africa, and Hong Kong being added. Furthermore, as Qantas entered the jet age, the 1960s saw the addition of the Fiesta Route which focused services in the Americas, troop charter flights to Vietnam in 1966, weekly stops in Bali, Indonesia in 1969, and an increase of services to China increased in response to diplomatic relations in 1984.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, much of Qantas' network had been suspended, a situation that most airlines had experienced during this period. In 2021, it ended flights to Shanghai due to low-demand.[1]

Remove ads

List

More information Country, City ...
Remove ads

See also

Notes

  1. Kuala Lumpur's international traffic was taken over by Kuala Lumpur International Airport upon its inauguration in mid-1998.[citation needed]
  2. Most international traffic at Gimpo Airport was taken over by Incheon Airport in 2001.[66]
  3. Most international traffic at Don Mueang Airport was taken over by Suvarnabhumi Airport in 2001.[citation needed]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads