American vs Qatar Airways 2026: Oneworld Partners, Worlds Apart
AA has free Wi-Fi and 350+ destinations. Qatar has Qsuite and 84% on-time performance. We compare the oneworld codeshare partners for long-haul flights.
Quick verdict
Qatar Airways wins on business class (Qsuite with sliding doors, voted Skytrax World's Best), on-time performance (84.42% Cirium Platinum vs American's 76.43%), economy legroom (31-32 inches vs 30-31), checked bag inclusion, free Starlink Wi-Fi, and overall service quality (Skytrax World's Best Airline 9 times). American wins on carry-on weight (no limit vs 7 kg), US domestic network (350+ destinations), free Wi-Fi for AAdvantage members on domestic flights, and AAdvantage earning ease through credit cards.
| Spec | American Airlines | Qatar Airways |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (in) | 22 x 14 x 9" | 19.7 x 14.6 x 9.8" |
| Carry-on (cm) | 56 x 36 x 23 cm | 50 x 37 x 25 cm |
| Carry-on weight | No published limit | 7 kg (15.4 lb) |
| Carry-on fee | Free | Free |
| Personal item | 18 x 14 x 8" | Not published |
| 1st checked bag | $45 | $0 |
| 2nd checked bag | $55 | $0 |
| Basic economy | Basic Economy | Not restricted |
| Gate-check risk | Medium | Medium |
American Airlines and Qatar Airways are both oneworld members with a codeshare agreement, but comparing them as equals would be misleading. Qatar Airways has won Skytrax World’s Best Airline nine times. American has not won it once. Qatar’s Qsuite is the most celebrated business class in the sky. American’s Flagship Suite is new and competitive but barely deployed. Qatar posted 84.42 percent on-time in 2025 (Cirium Platinum Award). American posted 76.43 percent in 2025 on the same Cirium measure.
Qatar is the superior long-haul airline by every service metric. It offers Qsuite with sliding privacy doors, free Starlink Wi-Fi at speeds up to 500 Mbps, checked bags included in all fares, and a service standard that US carriers do not match. American’s advantages are domestic: 350-plus US destinations, AAdvantage earning through credit cards and everyday spending, and free Wi-Fi for members on equipped aircraft.
The practical question is not which airline is better (Qatar, clearly) but when to book each one. American is the right choice for US domestic travel and for building AAdvantage status that unlocks oneworld benefits on Qatar flights. Qatar is the right choice for any long-haul route where Qsuite is available and the March 2026 airspace disruption has not affected your schedule.
What We Looked For
- Business class product, Qsuite versus Flagship Suite
- On-time performance, a 6 to 12 point gap
- Checked baggage, included versus charged
- Wi-Fi, Starlink versus AT&T-sponsored access
- Economy comfort, seat pitch and width
- Loyalty programs, AAdvantage versus Privilege Club Avios
- 2026 operational stability, Qatar’s airspace disruption and recovery
Bags and Fees Head-to-Head
Carry-on. American allows a carry-on at 22x14x9 inches with no weight limit on every fare, including Basic Economy. Qatar allows a carry-on at 50x37x25 cm with a 7 kg limit in economy (15 kg in Business and First). American’s no-weight-limit policy is a genuine advantage for travelers with heavy laptops, cameras, or work equipment.
Checked bags. Qatar includes checked bags on all fare types: typically 1 to 2 bags at 23 kg in economy, 2 bags at 32 kg in Business and First. American’s Main Cabin fares include the first checked bag free on these international routes and charge $100 for the second; Basic Economy pays a fee for the first bag. AAdvantage elite members and co-branded credit cardholders get bag fee waivers, but the base comparison favors Qatar.
Winner for carry-on weight: American. No weight limit versus 7 kg. Winner for checked bag inclusion: Qatar. Free with fare versus 1 free Main Cabin bag plus a $100 second bag.
- Winner: carry-on weight limit
- American / no limit vs 7 kg in economy
- Winner: checked bag inclusion
- Qatar / 1-2 bags included vs 1 free + $100 second
Seats and Comfort
Economy. Qatar offers 31 to 32 inches of seat pitch across its fleet (32 inches on 777s, 31-32 on 787s and A380s). American offers 30 to 31 inches (average 30.2 across the fleet). The gap is modest but consistent: Qatar gives you approximately 1 inch more on every long-haul flight.
Business class. This is not a close comparison. Qsuite on the 777 and A350 features fully enclosed suites with sliding privacy doors, 80-inch lie-flat beds, 21.5-inch 4K OLED screens (Panasonic Astrova), and the signature Quad configuration where four center seats can merge for families or groups. Qsuite has won Skytrax World’s Best Business Class multiple times.
American’s Flagship Suite on the 787-9P features 51 suites with sliding doors, 79-inch lie-flat beds, and 4K screens. The product is competitive on hardware. But only 11 787-9P aircraft exist, and they fly primarily transatlantic routes (JFK/PHL/ORD/DFW/LAX to London Heathrow). On most of American’s long-haul fleet, business class is still the older product without suites or doors.
Qsuite Next Gen, arriving on A350-1000 deliveries in H2 2026, adds 23-inch seat width (up from 21.5), wireless charging, 60W USB-C, and built-in Starlink connectivity.
Premium Economy. American offers 38-inch pitch on 787s. Qatar does not currently offer a dedicated Premium Economy cabin.
- Winner: economy seat pitch
- Qatar / 31-32 in vs 30-31 in
- Winner: business class product
- Qatar / Qsuite, Skytrax World's Best
- Winner: business class deployment
- Qatar / Qsuite on most long-haul vs 11 Flagship Suite aircraft
- Winner: premium economy availability
- American / dedicated cabin vs none on Qatar
On-Time Performance
Qatar Airways posted 84.42 percent on-time arrivals in 2025 across 198,303 flights, winning Cirium’s Platinum Award for operational excellence. American posted 76.43 percent for full-year 2025 on the same Cirium measure, the worst of the US Big Three, with a 2.36 percent cancellation rate for full-year 2025 (US DOT), the highest among the major US carriers.
The March 2026 airspace disruption complicates Qatar’s 2026 numbers. The airline suspended all Doha operations in early March when Qatari airspace closed due to regional conflict. It has rebuilt steadily since through restricted corridors, reaching roughly 140 daily departures to 120-plus destinations by late May 2026, with a target of 150-plus by mid-June. Through the disruption period, schedule reliability was obviously impacted. For travel from mid-June onward, Qatar’s pre-disruption reliability should resume.
- Winner: on-time arrivals (pre-disruption)
- Qatar / 84.42% vs 76.43%
- Winner: 2026 operational stability
- American / no disruptions vs March airspace closure
- Winner: cancellation rate
- Qatar / lower historic rate vs AA's 2.36%
Route Network
American operates 350-plus destinations in 60-plus countries with the world’s largest fleet of over 1,000 mainline aircraft. Hubs at DFW, Charlotte, Miami, Chicago, Philadelphia, Phoenix, and others provide unmatched US domestic coverage. American’s widebody fleet includes 47 777-200s, 20 777-300ERs, 37 787-8s, and 33 787-9s. International routes span transatlantic, transpacific, and Latin American markets.
Qatar operates approximately 274 aircraft serving 150-plus destinations (rebuilding from roughly 140 daily departures in late May 2026 toward its full network by mid-June 2026). Doha serves as the single hub, connecting 11 US airports nonstop: Atlanta, Boston, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, JFK, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, and Washington D.C. Beyond Doha, Qatar connects to Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, Africa, and Australia, markets where American has limited or no presence.
The codeshare extends American’s reach through Qatar to 16 countries beyond Doha, including destinations in Africa, the Maldives, and Southeast Asia that American does not serve.
- Winner: US domestic network
- American / 350+ destinations
- Winner: US nonstop gateways
- Qatar / 11 US cities nonstop to Doha
- Winner: Africa/Asia/Indian subcontinent
- Qatar / extensive hub connectivity
Loyalty: AAdvantage vs Privilege Club
AAdvantage is the easier program for US-based travelers. Miles earn through credit cards (Chase, Citi, Barclays partnerships), everyday spending, and the massive domestic network. Status tiers are frozen for the third year in 2026. Free Wi-Fi for all AAdvantage members launched January 2026. The limitation: AAdvantage sees significantly less Qatar Qsuite award availability than Privilege Club members, who get first access to Qatar’s premium cabin inventory.
Qatar Privilege Club uses Avios, shared 1:1 with British Airways, Iberia, Aer Lingus, and Finnair. Transfer partners include Amex Membership Rewards, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Citi ThankYou, Capital One, and Bilt. Off-peak Qsuite awards from the US to Doha price at 70,000 Avios one-way, delivering exceptional value (3 to 5-plus cents per Avios). Privilege Club Avios are also the cheapest way to book American Airlines domestic flights through Avios, often undercutting AAdvantage pricing on the same route.
Winner for US earning ease: AAdvantage. Domestic network and credit card ecosystem. Winner for Qsuite award access: Privilege Club. First access to premium cabin inventory. Winner for transfer partner breadth: Privilege Club. Chase, Amex, Citi, Capital One, Bilt.
- Winner: US earning ease
- AAdvantage / domestic flights + credit cards
- Winner: Qsuite award access
- Privilege Club / first access to QR business inventory
- Winner: transfer partners
- Privilege Club / 5 major bank transfer partners
- Winner: booking AA domestic flights
- Privilege Club / Avios often cheaper than AAdvantage
Wi-Fi
Qatar offers free Starlink Wi-Fi for all passengers in all cabins on 100-plus widebody aircraft, with speeds up to 500 Mbps per aircraft. The full 777 fleet is equipped, A350s target Q2 2026, and 787s follow later.
American offers free Wi-Fi for all AAdvantage members (free to join) on Viasat and Intelsat-equipped aircraft, covering narrowbody and dual-class regional planes. Some long-haul widebody flights with Panasonic systems may still require paid Wi-Fi, meaning the free benefit does not necessarily apply on the international routes where you would compete with Qatar.
On a transatlantic or Middle East route, Qatar’s free Starlink in every seat is the better experience.
- Winner: long-haul Wi-Fi
- Qatar / free Starlink for all, 500 Mbps
- Winner: US domestic Wi-Fi
- American / free for AAdvantage members
Who Should Pick American
- You are flying US domestic routes where Qatar has no presence
- You need American’s 350-plus destination network to connect to your international flight
- You hold AAdvantage elite status and want reciprocal oneworld benefits on Qatar flights
- You want to earn AAdvantage miles through credit cards and domestic travel
- You carry a heavy carry-on and value American’s no-weight-limit policy
- You want Premium Economy on a route where Qatar does not offer it
- You are booking for near-term travel and want the schedule certainty of an airline not recovering from airspace disruptions
Who Should Pick Qatar
- You want Qsuite, the most awarded business class in commercial aviation
- You value on-time reliability and Qatar’s 84.42 percent Cirium Platinum record
- You want free Starlink Wi-Fi in every seat on your long-haul flight
- You want checked bags included in your fare without add-on fees
- You earn Avios through Amex, Chase, Citi, Capital One, or Bilt and want off-peak Qsuite awards at 70,000 Avios
- You are connecting through Doha to Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, Africa, or Australia
- You are flying after June 2026 when Qatar expects full network recovery
The Bottom Line
Qatar Airways is the better long-haul airline, and it is not close on the product. Qsuite versus whatever business class seat American puts on your specific flight is a gap that no loyalty program or credit card perk bridges. Qatar’s on-time record, free Starlink Wi-Fi, included bags, and Skytrax World’s Best Airline recognition nine times over reflect a fundamentally different level of service investment.
American is the better US domestic airline, and that matters because most international trips start with a domestic connection. AAdvantage is easier to earn, the US network is unmatched for reach, and elite status benefits transfer to Qatar through oneworld. The March 2026 airspace disruption is the only reason to hesitate on Qatar for near-term travel; once operations fully recover by mid-June, the pre-disruption reliability should return.
The optimal approach: earn AAdvantage or Avios (Privilege Club gives better Qsuite access), fly American domestically to the international gateway, and book Qatar metal for the long-haul leg. You get American’s domestic convenience and Qatar’s international product on the same oneworld ticket.
For more comparisons, see Emirates vs Qatar and Qatar vs Etihad.
Frequently asked questions
Is American Airlines or Qatar Airways better in 2026?
Is Qatar Qsuite better than American Flagship Suite?
Does Qatar Airways or American include free checked bags?
Can I earn AAdvantage miles on Qatar Airways flights?
Is Qatar Airways still disrupted in 2026?
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Last verified May 2026 against official American Airlines and Qatar Airways policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.