Australia’s wealthiest cruise passengers are spending tens of thousands of dollars to buy two flights to guarantee they don’t miss their European summer sailings because of the chaos caused by the conflict in the Middle East.
With most of these luxury holidays planned and booked more than a year ago, the well-heeled are refusing to let go of their dream break and buying extra flights alongside their Middle East flights that avoid transiting through countries that remain on an Australian Government “Do Not Travel” list.
Many other Aussie travellers, who either can’t afford to change or just don’t care, are sticking with their plans and flying through Dubai and Qatar.
The news comes as Qantas announced increased flights to Europe – but at the cost of its India services. The airlines will add 2,000 seats a week to Europe, including Perth-Rome. Services to Paris will revert to three return flights a week and continue to operate from Sydney through Singapore.
Flight Centre global leisure chief executive James Kavanagh said following the major disruption to air travel caused by the conflict in the Middle East year-on-year cruise demand is now growing again, driven in part by the resilience of the Aussie traveller.
“Australian travellers are super resilient. Every time there’s an event in the world, and we tracked the data back to 1977 from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, as soon as it’s finished … we see a sharp recovery,” he said.
“March was huge for double bookings,” he said. “Some are still holding those flights. Some have actually given up on the flights that they would have held via the Middle East and they’ve just booked an alternative, and that alternative has cost them a bit more.
“The luxury traveller has got the ability to hold their preferred choice and then fork out on an alternative if the preferred doesn’t go ahead.”
The cost of hedging your bets is steep. A fare that might cost $1,700 to $2,000 in economy booked six months out can hit $4,000 for travel within four weeks. For a family booking business class inside that same window, the bill can easily push into six figures as it did for one family who laid out $100,000 to buy “back-up plan” flights to get to Europe. Of course, these flights may be refundable or flexible so they may not lose the money, just pay a penalty.
For cruise passengers, most would have booked their European sailings 12 to 18 months ago, well before Iranian missile strikes on Middle East airports in late February upended Etihad, Emirates and Qatar Airways.
So while the ships are still sailing, they are just getting harder to reach.
The budget-conscious traveller who can’t afford to change appears to be weighing up the risk that it’s worth taking the flight to get to Europe even though their travel insurance may not be worth much because most policies have exclusions about “acts of war” and “no travel warnings”.
The Insurance Council of Australia advises travellers to contact the airline or travel agent in the first instance and their insurer before making any decision
“Most travel insurance policies exclude claims caused by war, armed conflict, or military action, and do not cover cancellations simply because you have changed your mind about travelling,” it said.
“Even though the Australian Government says do not travel there, [passengers consider] that’s as a destination. So as a connecting through point, people are actually still travelling on the Middle Eastern carriers.”
The ability to absorb the hit, no matter where it comes from, is what separates the top of the market from everyone else. “The luxury customer is pretty resilient anyway,” Kavanagh said. “If they can fork out that money, they’ll find a way to get there.
What Kavanagh is also seeing is that the average travel-mad Aussie is snapping up cruise deals away from Europe that are coming on to the market to drive demand.
“We’ve started to see a bit of a lift in places like Canada,” he said.
“Japan has continued to be popular regardless, as it has for the last three years. Aussies want to travel, they want to have a break, they want to have a holiday and they’ll find out where they can go. After all the major events [in the Middle East] had happened, the first things that came out were sales to Hawaii, and then Japan and Canada started to get more attention.
“So it’s really shifting attention to where people can actually travel to.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade still advises against travelling to, or transiting through, Qatar or UAE as “the situation in the Middle East region remains volatile. There remains a risk of attacks and escalation.”
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