19 April, 2021

Quarantine-free Tasman flights resume after almost 400 days................ Australia - New Zealand travel bubble

After more than a year of international border closures, Qantas and Jetstar will today resume regular flights between Australia and New Zealand with the opening of the two-way trans-Tasman bubble.

Flights are resuming to all pre-COVID destinations in New Zealand across 15 routes and Qantas will today start a new route between the Gold Coast and Auckland, marking the airline’s first ever international flights from Gold Coast Airport.

The airlines will operate a combined 29 flights between Australia and New Zealand today, carrying thousands of customers, with around 200 flights to operate each week.

    630 Qantas and Jetstar employees coming back to         work; more aircraft back in air
    Jetstar to operate first flight out of Sydney to                 Auckland - JQ201
    Qantas to operate its first international flight out of       the Gold Coast


Jetstar’s first departure was JQ201 from Sydney to Auckland at 6.15am operated with an Airbus A320 aircraft while Qantas’ first departure out of Sydney was QF143 to Auckland at 9.05am and a massive Airbus A330 aircraft operating the service. Both flights are operating to Auckland at close to full capacity, including a full Business cabin on Qantas. Qantas’ first flight from Australia to New Zealand was QF151 Melbourne to Auckland departing at 8am.

Speaking from Sydney International Airport to farewell departing passengers, Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce said the opening of the two-way travel bubble was a significant milestone for both countries.

“Quarantine-free travel has been almost 400 days in the making. Reopening these flights across the Tasman is a very important milestone in the recovery from the pandemic for Australia and New Zealand but also aviation and tourism,” said Mr Joyce.

“The opening of the two-way bubble is fantastic for the family and friends who are reuniting after so long apart and for the many jobs which are so heavily dependent on tourism. It means we’ll be able to get more planes back in the sky and more of our people back to work.

“New Zealand was Australia’s second biggest source of international visitors before the pandemic. Today, it’s about to go straight to number one.

“We’ve seen strong demand since the bubble was announced, with tens of thousands of bookings made in the first few days. Qantas has also added more flights to Queenstown to meet expected demand during the peak ski season.”




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