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Travel Radar - Aviation News > News > Aviation > Airlines > Qantas to Settle COVID Flight Credits Lawsuit
AirlinesAviationDid You KnowIncidents & Accidents

Qantas to Settle COVID Flight Credits Lawsuit

Juna Tharakan
Last updated: 14 March 2026 09:06
By Juna Tharakan
3 Min Read
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Qantas Airbus A380 takes off from Sydney Airport
Qantas Airways agrees to pay £55 million to settle a class action lawsuit © Troy Mortier
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Australia’s flag carrier Qantas Airways has agreed to pay A$105 million (£55 million; $74 million) to settle a class action lawsuit over flight credits issued during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Summary
Dispute Over Pandemic RefundsSettlement Higher Than ExpectedWider Legal Pressure
Qantas Airbus A321XLR takes off from Airbus Hamburg
Claimants argued Qantas breached its contractual obligations © Airbus

Dispute Over Pandemic Refunds

The airline confirmed Friday, March 13, the settlement will resolve claims from passengers whose flights were cancelled between 2020 and 2022 but were offered travel credits instead of cash refunds. The agreement remains subject to court approval.

Qantas emphasised that the settlement was reached without any admission of liability.

The class action, led by law firm Echo Law, was filed on behalf of customers whose flights were cancelled during the global travel shutdown. Many affected passengers were travelling on services involving Sydney (SYD), Melbourne (MEL) and international destinations such as London Heathrow (LHR).

Claimants argued the airline breached its contractual obligations by failing to promptly issue cash refunds and instead providing travel credits. According to Echo Law, the carrier engaged in “misleading or deceptive conduct” regarding customers’ refund rights under Australian law.

The legal firm alleged that Qantas unlawfully benefited by holding large sums of customer funds that should have been refunded earlier.

Qantas A330 stationed at Brisbane Airport
Qantas set to settle dispute over pandemic refunds © Chris Olszewski

Settlement Higher Than Expected

The A$105 million agreement is nearly double the amount Qantas had previously indicated it expected to pay. In its February financial results, the airline told investors it had estimated a settlement of about A$55 million.

Echo Law said details on how eligible passengers can claim compensation will be released once the court formally approves the settlement.

Qantas noted it had already removed expiry dates from pandemic-era travel credits in 2023, allowing customers to convert them into cash refunds.

Qantas flight set to take off, one aircraft on the tarmac, another mid-air.
Qantas’ settlement agreement remains subject to court approval © David Syphers

Wider Legal Pressure

The settlement comes as Qantas faces broader scrutiny over decisions made during the pandemic.

In August 2025, an Australian court imposed a record A$90 million penalty on the airline for illegally dismissing more than 1,800 ground-handling workers. The ruling marked the largest fine issued under the country’s industrial relations laws.

Acknowledging the company’s actions caused “real harm,” Qantas CEO, Vanessa Hudson, previously apologised to affected employees.

For the latest aviation and airline network updates, follow our coverage and subscribe for breaking route news.

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ByJuna Tharakan
News Editor -A journalist and content creator with experience in news writing and subtitling, bringing a versatile storytelling style to the aviation and travel sector. She applies her media background to explore how airlines, airports and aviation infrastructure connect diverse geographies, offering readers both industry insight and human-centred perspectives.
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