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Qantas vs Singapore Airlines 2026: Who Wins the Kangaroo Route?

Singapore wins on business class, on-time performance, and the Changi hub today. Qantas wins Australia network depth and Project Sunrise nonstops from 2027.
By Caden SorensonSourced from official Qantas & Singapore Airlines policy pages
On this page
  1. Quick verdict
  2. Side-by-side specs
  3. What We Looked For
  4. Bags and fees on Qantas vs Singapore Air...
  5. Seats and comfort head-to-head
  6. On-time performance and operational reli...
  7. Route network: Australia depth vs Asia a...
  8. Loyalty programs: Qantas Frequent Flyer ...
  9. Hub experience: Sydney vs Changi
  10. Project Sunrise and the 2027 Kangaroo Ro...
  11. Who Should Pick Qantas
  12. Who Should Pick Singapore Airlines
  13. The Bottom Line
  14. FAQ
  15. Go deeper
  16. Related

Quick verdict

Carry-on
Tie
Checked bag
Singapore Airlineswins
Basic economy
Tie
Overall: It depends on your priorities

Singapore wins on business class soft product today and on hard product once its delayed doored A350 seat arrives (originally due in 2026, now expected around 2027), on-time performance (78.58 percent vs 76.51 percent in Cirium's 2025 Asia-Pacific standings), Changi hub experience, and Star Alliance reach. Qantas wins on Australia and South Pacific network depth, oneworld access, refurbished A380 First Class on the upgauged Sydney-Singapore route from December 2026, and Project Sunrise nonstops from Sydney to London launching October 2027 (New York to follow).

Qantas vs Singapore Airlines specification comparison
SpecQantasSingapore Airlines
Carry-on (in)22 x 14.2 x 9.1"21.7 x 15.7 x 7.9"
Carry-on (cm)56 x 36 x 23 cm55 x 40 x 20 cm
Carry-on weight7 kg (15.4 lb)7 kg (15.4 lb)
Carry-on feeFreeFree
Personal item15.7 x 13.8 x 3.9"Not published
1st checked bag$0$0
2nd checked bag$0$0
Basic economyNot restrictedNot restricted
Gate-check riskMediumLow

The Qantas vs Singapore decision is the defining Kangaroo Route question for any traveler flying between Australia and Europe, and 2026 is the year it gets genuinely interesting. Both airlines compete head-to-head on Sydney-Singapore-London. Both run premium hard product. Both are mid-retrofit on their flagship cabins. The difference is that Qantas is going through a generational fleet renewal (refurbished A380s now, Project Sunrise A350-1000s from 2027), while Singapore is bringing an all-new doored business class seat to retrofitted A350-900s, a rollout that has slipped from its original 2026 target to around 2027. The product you book in 2026 is not the product you book in late 2027 on either airline.

Short version: Singapore wins the dimensions most travelers care about today, business class hard product once its delayed new seat arrives (now around 2027), on-time performance, and the Changi hub. Qantas wins on Australia and South Pacific network depth, oneworld redemptions through American or British Airways, Chairman’s Lounge and Qantas Club access for elites flying domestic Australia, and the Project Sunrise direct flights from Sydney to London starting October 2027 (New York to follow). The two airlines are in different alliances, so loyalty does not transfer. That makes the choice partly a routing call and partly a points-program call.

What We Looked For

The Kangaroo Route and trans-Pacific markets reward different things than US domestic comparisons, so the criteria are weighted accordingly:

  • Business class hard product in 2026 and 2027, because both airlines are mid-retrofit and the seat you book this year is not the seat you book next year
  • First Class availability, since both airlines are among the few that still operate it
  • On-time performance and operational reliability, which matters more on 14-hour sectors with tight connections
  • Network depth into Australia, Asia, and Europe, because routing dictates total trip time
  • Loyalty program value and alliance reach, since Qantas and Singapore are in different alliances and the redemption math diverges sharply
  • Hub experience, because Singapore Changi and Sydney Kingsford Smith are not equivalent transit experiences
  • Project Sunrise impact, because Sydney-London and Sydney-New York nonstops change the Kangaroo Route math from 2027

Bags and fees on Qantas vs Singapore Airlines

Both airlines run generous full-service baggage policies. Singapore is the slightly more flexible carrier on weight-concept routes, Qantas is competitive on US piece-concept routes.

Carry-on (both airlines):

  • Qantas: 7 kg per piece, 56x36x23 cm or 115 cm total. Most Qantas jets allow two cabin bags totaling 14 kg in Economy, plus a personal item. Carry-on details for Qantas.
  • Singapore: 7 kg per piece, 115 cm total dimensions, plus a personal item. Business and Suites allow two carry-on pieces. Carry-on details for Singapore Airlines.
  • Singapore is slightly more flexible on dimensions because it uses a 115 cm linear sum rather than a strict box. Qantas tightens to 105 cm total on Dash 8 regional turboprops, where wheeled bags are gate-tagged as Premium Hand Luggage.

Checked baggage in international Economy:

  • Qantas: 30 kg total on weight-concept routes (Asia, Europe, New Zealand, Africa). On North and South America piece-concept routes, 1 piece up to 32 kg. Sale, Saver, and Flex Economy fares share the same allowance.
  • Singapore: 25 kg on Economy Lite, 30 kg on Value and Standard, 35 kg on Flexi for weight-concept routes. On US and Canada piece-concept routes, 2 pieces at 23 kg each.

Singapore is more generous on US-Australia trans-Pacific routings (2 pieces standard in Economy). Qantas matches with 1 piece up to 32 kg, which is technically less luggage by piece count but more weight per bag.

Winner: international Economy bag allowance to the US
Singapore / 2 pieces vs 1 piece
Winner: Asia and Europe weight-concept Economy
Tie / both at 30 kg in mid-tier fares
Winner: status uplift
Qantas Frequent Flyer Silver and above / and KrisFlyer Elite Gold, both add allowance. Singapore's Star Alliance Gold lift is +20 kg on weight-concept routes, which is industry-leading
Winner: sale fare flexibility
Qantas. Sale Economy on Qantas keeps the full allowance / while Singapore's Economy Lite drops to 25 kg

Seats and comfort head-to-head

Singapore wins on consistency and has the better next-generation business seat coming, though its launch has slipped from 2026 toward 2027. Qantas wins on First Class availability in the South Pacific region thanks to the December 2026 A380 upgauge on Sydney-Singapore.

Economy:

  • Qantas: 79 to 81 cm (31 to 32 in) of pitch on long-haul A380 and 787. Six-way headrests, full meal service, complimentary wine, and Q Streaming on top of seatback IFE.
  • Singapore: 81 cm (32 in) of pitch on widebodies. KrisWorld IFE with 11.1-inch screens, 1,800+ entertainment options, six-way adjustable headrest, and free unlimited Wi-Fi for KrisFlyer members in Economy and Premium Economy (a policy in place since 2023; the entire fleet has carried Wi-Fi since the Boeing 737-800 retired in October 2025).

The Wi-Fi gap is real. Singapore offers free unlimited Wi-Fi fleet-wide: complimentary for all First and Business passengers, and for KrisFlyer members in Premium Economy and Economy (free to join, even mid-flight). Singapore has also signed Starlink to add high-speed low-Earth-orbit Wi-Fi on its A350-900, A350-900ULR, and A380 fleets from the first quarter of 2027. Qantas offers free Wi-Fi domestically but charges on most international widebodies, with its own high-speed satellite rollout still in progress. For an east-coast Australia traveler crossing the Pacific or flying to Europe, Singapore is the more connected economy cabin.

Premium Economy:

  • Qantas: 97 cm (38 in) pitch on A380 and 787, wider than Economy, calf-rest, footrest, and amenity kit.
  • Singapore: 97 cm (38 in) pitch on A380 and A350, calf-rest and footrest, 13.3-inch IFE, and Book the Cook menu pre-selection.

Singapore’s premium economy is slightly more refined on soft product (Book the Cook, pre-departure champagne in some markets). Qantas matches on hard product. Roughly tied.

Business Class today (April 2026):

  • Qantas refurbished A380 Business: 1-2-1 layout, fully flat bed of about 2 m (80 in), no sliding doors, 18-inch IFE, direct aisle access for every seat. The Boeing 787 Business Suite is similar but slightly tighter on shoulder room.
  • Singapore A380 Business: 1-2-1 layout, fully flat bed of about 198 cm (78 in), no sliding doors. A350-900LH and 777-300ER use the same 1-2-1 configuration.

Roughly tied today. Both are open business class without doors. Singapore’s soft product (food, attentive service, consistency across the fleet) gives it a slight edge.

The next-generation business seats (now both around 2027):

  • Singapore is investing S$1.1 billion to retrofit 41 A350-900s with an all-new business class featuring tall walls and sliding doors. Originally slated for Q2 2026, the rollout has slipped: Singapore now expects the first retrofitted aircraft in service around Q1 2027 (supply-chain and seat-certification delays), with a formal unveiling expected later in 2026.
  • Qantas does not get a new business seat until the A350-1000 Project Sunrise aircraft enter service, with Sydney-London nonstops from October 2027. Configuration: 52 business suites with a sliding privacy door and an 80-inch (2 m) flat bed, fully revealed by Qantas but not yet flying.
Qantas (A380 / 787)Singapore (A350 / 777 / A380)
Layout1-2-1, every seat aisle access1-2-1, every seat aisle access
BedAbout 2 m (80 in) fully flatAbout 198 cm (78 in) fully flat
Privacy doorNo (open suite)No today (new doored seat around 2027)
Fleet consistencyA380 plus 787 Business SuiteFlat-bed 1-2-1 across all long-haul widebodies
Next-gen seatA350-1000 Project Sunrise, from October 2027S$1.1B doored A350 suite, around 2027
First ClassYes (A380, open suite)Yes (A380 Suites, enclosed)

First Class:

  • Singapore A380 Suites: 6 fully enclosed suites in a 1-1 configuration, floor-to-ceiling walls, sliding door, separate recliner and lie-flat bed, 32-inch HD screen, and the unique double-bed configuration where suites 1A+2A or 1F+2F combine via retractable wall. Singapore Suites won the 2025 Skytrax World’s Best First Class Airline Seat.
  • Qantas refurbished A380 First Class: 14 open suites, no sliding doors, 213 cm (84 in) lie-flat bed, 23-inch IFE, ottoman for a dining companion. Qantas describes the open layout as a deliberate hospitality choice.
  • Qantas is upgauging Singapore-Sydney to A380 on 6 of 7 weekly flights from December 2026, increasing First Class availability on the Kangaroo Route.
Winner: Business Class today (June 2026)
Tie
Winner: Next-gen business seat
Singapore / doored A350 suite, now ~2027; Qantas Project Sunrise also ~2027
Winner: First Class hard product
Singapore Suites / clearly
Winner: First Class accessibility
Qantas / more frequencies on the Kangaroo Route from December 2026
Winner: Wi-Fi
Singapore / free fleet-wide for KrisFlyer members

On-time performance and operational reliability

Singapore Airlines is more punctual. In Cirium’s 2025 Asia-Pacific standings, Singapore sat at 78.58 percent on-time arrivals, ahead of Qantas at 76.51 percent.

Singapore Airlines 2025: 78.58 percent on-time across approximately 121,000 flights, among the most punctual carriers in Asia-Pacific.

Qantas 2025: 76.51 percent on-time across approximately 277,000 flights in Cirium’s Asia-Pacific tracking. Neither carrier appears in Cirium’s published global top 10 for 2025 (which ran from 90.75 percent down to about 80.9 percent), so these are regional figures, not global ranks.

The gap is about 2 percentage points. That is meaningful but not dramatic. For Kangaroo Route travelers with tight Singapore connections (especially the SIN-LHR or SIN-FRA segment), Singapore’s home-hub operational consistency is a real advantage. Qantas operates a much higher flight volume and is exposed to Australian domestic weather and ATC slot constraints that drag the average down.

Cancellation rates are not directly comparable in published Cirium data. Both airlines run very low cancellation rates by global standards, well under 1.5 percent on long-haul widebody operations.

Winner: on-time performance
Singapore Airlines
Winner: cancellation rate
Effectively tied
Winner: operational scale
Qantas / 277,000 flights gives the network more redundancy on rebooking

Route network: Australia depth vs Asia and Europe via Changi

Qantas owns Australia and the South Pacific. Singapore owns the one-stop network from anywhere in Asia to Europe and the US East Coast.

Qantas:

  • Hub: Sydney (SYD), with secondary operations from Melbourne (MEL), Brisbane (BNE), and Perth (PER).
  • Domestic Australia: by far the deepest network of any carrier, with 60+ destinations across the mainline and QantasLink turboprop network.
  • International long-haul: SYD-LAX, SYD-DFW, SYD-SFO, MEL-LAX, BNE-LAX, PER-LHR (the Perth-London Direct), and seasonal SYD-AKL-EZE (Buenos Aires).
  • Project Sunrise from October 2027: SYD-LHR nonstop on the A350-1000ULR, with SYD-JFK to follow.
  • Asia: SIN, HKG, MNL, DPS, NRT, HND served from multiple Australian gateways.

Singapore Airlines:

  • Hub: Singapore Changi (SIN), the world’s #1 airport per Skytrax 2025.
  • Network: approximately 80 destinations across 6 continents, with the densest South-Asia-to-Europe routing of any carrier.
  • US: SIN-EWR (the world’s longest commercial flight), SIN-JFK, SIN-LAX, SIN-SFO, SIN-IAH, SIN-SEA, all on the A350-900ULR or A350-900LH.
  • Australia: SIN-SYD, SIN-MEL, SIN-BNE, SIN-PER, SIN-ADL, SIN-CNS, SIN-DRW, SIN-OOL.
  • Europe: nonstop from Singapore to LHR, FRA, MUC, ZRH, CDG, AMS, FCO, BCN, MAD, IST, MAN, CPH, with onward feeders to most secondary cities.

Network winner by use case:

  • For Australia internal travel: Qantas, no contest. Singapore does not fly within Australia.
  • For US-Australia trans-Pacific direct: Qantas (more frequencies, multiple Australian gateways from LAX, DFW, SFO).
  • For US East Coast or Texas to Australia via one stop: Singapore (SIN-EWR/JFK/IAH connecting to SIN-SYD/MEL is competitive on total time vs Qantas SYD-DFW).
  • For Australia to Europe via Asia: Singapore, until Qantas Project Sunrise launches in 2027.
  • For Australia to Europe nonstop: Qantas (PER-LHR today, plus SYD-LHR from October 2027, with SYD-JFK to follow).
  • For Australia to South America: Qantas (SYD-AKL-EZE seasonal, no Singapore option).
  • For Asia to Europe: Singapore (deeper European network).

Loyalty programs: Qantas Frequent Flyer vs KrisFlyer

KrisFlyer has slightly higher per-point value (around 19 cents) and broader Star Alliance reach (26 airlines). Qantas Frequent Flyer has deeper Australia partner integration and oneworld access through American Airlines and British Airways.

Qantas Frequent Flyer (oneworld):

  • Alliance: oneworld, 16 member airlines as of April 2026 (Hawaiian Airlines joined April 22, 2026).
  • Tiers: Bronze, Silver (350 status credits), Gold (700), Platinum (1,400), Platinum One (3,600), Chairman’s Lounge (invitation only).
  • Qantas Points value: roughly 18 cents per point in the AFF Point Hacks valuation.
  • Sydney-London business class redemption: 280,000 Qantas Points one-way plus carrier charges.
  • Fuel surcharges: Yes, Qantas applies carrier surcharges on its own metal and on most oneworld partners.
  • Strengths: deep Australian retail and credit card earn ecosystem (Woolworths, Coles, BP, NAB, ANZ), Chairman’s Lounge for elite invitees, and the unique Qantas Wine and Marketplace earn options.

KrisFlyer (Star Alliance):

  • Alliance: Star Alliance, 26 member airlines as of April 2026 (ITA Airways joined April 1, 2026).
  • Tiers: KrisFlyer (basic), Elite Silver (25,000 Elite Miles), Elite Gold (50,000 Elite Miles), PPS Club (revenue-based, 25,000 PPS Value), Solitaire PPS Club (50,000 PPS Value).
  • KrisFlyer miles value: roughly 19 cents per mile in the AFF Point Hacks valuation.
  • Sydney-London Saver business class redemption: 240,000 KrisFlyer miles one-way (40,000 fewer than Qantas to the same city pair on equivalent metal).
  • Fuel surcharges: No, Singapore does not apply fuel surcharges on Singapore Airlines own-metal redemptions. Only airport taxes.
  • Recent devaluation: KrisFlyer Saver award chart increased on November 1, 2025, raising mileage costs by 5 to 12 percent on most premium routes.
  • Strengths: free unlimited Wi-Fi for all KrisFlyer members on Singapore flights, transfer partner of Amex Membership Rewards, Chase Ultimate Rewards, and Citi ThankYou.

Practical comparison:

  • For an Australia-to-Europe business class redemption on the operating airline’s own metal, KrisFlyer is cheaper (240,000 vs 280,000 miles) and does not charge fuel surcharges.
  • For credit-card-driven points hoarders in Australia, Qantas has the deeper retail and bank earn network.
  • For Star Alliance partner access (Lufthansa, ANA, United, Air Canada), KrisFlyer wins.
  • For oneworld partner access (American, British Airways, Cathay, Japan Airlines, Qatar), Qantas wins.
Winner: per-point value
KrisFlyer, narrowly / 19c vs 18c
Winner: alliance breadth
KrisFlyer / Star Alliance has 26 airlines vs oneworld's 16
Winner: Australia retail and credit card earn
Qantas Frequent Flyer
Winner: fuel surcharge avoidance
KrisFlyer / no surcharges on SQ own metal
Winner: flagship status invitation tier
Qantas Chairman's Lounge is more exclusive and visible than Solitaire PPS Club

Hub experience: Sydney vs Changi

Changi is consistently rated the world’s best airport. Sydney is functional, increasingly congested, and not a destination experience.

  • Singapore Changi (SIN): Skytrax 2025 #1 globally, 69.98 million passengers in 2025 (record), 4 terminals plus Jewel Changi (indoor waterfall, 280+ shops, free movie theaters, butterfly garden), 100+ airlines serving 170+ cities. Average minimum connection time approximately 60 minutes.
  • Sydney Kingsford Smith (SYD): functional with two domestic and one international terminal, increasing congestion around peak slots, the new Western Sydney Airport (WSI) is targeted for late 2026 to ease overflow but will not host Qantas international initially.

For a transit experience, Changi wins decisively. For Qantas elite members flying domestic Australia, the SYD T3 Chairman’s Lounge and Qantas First Lounges are excellent, particularly the Qantas Singapore First Lounge at SIN T1 which is widely regarded as Qantas’s best lounge globally and accessible to Qantas First Class and oneworld Emerald passengers.

Winner: transit passenger experience
Changi
Winner: elite ground experience for Qantas flyers
Qantas First Lounge Singapore / which is at Changi anyway

Project Sunrise and the 2027 Kangaroo Route shake-up

Qantas takes delivery of its first A350-1000ULR (Vega) in April 2027, with passenger service starting October 2027 on Sydney-London. Sydney-London and (later) Sydney-New York nonstops will reshape the Kangaroo Route, but Singapore via Changi remains the better booking through 2026 and into 2027.

The numbers:

  • Aircraft: A350-1000ULR with a 20,000-litre rear centre fuel tank, 12 ordered.
  • Routes: SYD-LHR (about 17,000 km / 10,573 miles, roughly 19.5 hours) and SYD-JFK (up to 22 hours).
  • Configuration: 6 First Class suites, 52 business class suites (each with a sliding door, 80-inch / 2 m flat bed), 40 premium economy seats at a 40-inch (102 cm) pitch, and 140 economy seats, for 238 passengers total, the lowest density of any A350-1000 in service.
  • Total time savings: up to 4 hours each way versus connecting via Singapore on Qantas or Singapore Airlines.

If you are booking in 2026 or early 2027, every Australia-Europe option requires a stop, and Singapore Airlines via Changi is the most efficient one-stop on most routings. Once Project Sunrise stabilizes (mid-2027 onward), Qantas owns the Sydney nonstop market until competitors respond. Singapore has not announced any plans to compete on a true Australia-Europe nonstop.

For Perth-London, Qantas already runs the only nonstop (PER-LHR daily on the 787-9), and that flight remains the fastest Australia-Europe option for west-coast Australians.

Who Should Pick Qantas

  • You live or fly frequently within Australia, where Qantas owns the domestic network
  • You want Project Sunrise nonstops from Sydney to London starting October 2027 (New York to follow)
  • You collect Qantas Frequent Flyer points and benefit from the deep Australian retail earn network
  • You want oneworld access through American Airlines, British Airways, Japan Airlines, or Qatar Airways
  • You hold Qantas Platinum or Chairman’s Lounge status and use the elite ground product on domestic
  • You are flying Perth to London nonstop, where PER-LHR remains the only direct option
  • You want refurbished A380 First Class on the Kangaroo Route, especially on the upgauged Singapore-Sydney rotations from December 2026

Who Should Pick Singapore Airlines

  • You want the better next-generation business seat (Singapore’s doored A350, now expected around 2027)
  • You want the most exclusive First Class in commercial aviation (A380 Suites with double bed)
  • You value on-time reliability for tight connections, especially through a single Asian hub
  • You want free unlimited Wi-Fi on every flight, complimentary in First and Business and free for KrisFlyer members in Premium Economy and Economy
  • You collect KrisFlyer miles and want fuel-surcharge-free redemptions on Singapore metal
  • You want Star Alliance breadth (26 airlines) for partner redemptions and elite recognition
  • You are routing US East Coast or Texas to Asia or Australia via Singapore on the A350-900ULR
  • You want the Changi hub experience for connections or stopovers
  • You want a more refined soft product (food, service, cabin consistency) across all classes

The Bottom Line

Qantas and Singapore are not really competing on the same product mix. Singapore is a premium hub-and-spoke carrier built around Changi, with an A350 fleet about to get a generational business class refresh and a First Class product (A380 Suites) that no airline matches. Qantas is an Australia-anchored full-service carrier with the deepest Pacific network, a refurbished A380 cabin, and a 2027 ultra-long-haul nonstop play that will reshape the Kangaroo Route once Project Sunrise launches.

For most of 2026 and into early 2027, Singapore is the smarter Kangaroo Route booking on premium cabins, on-time performance, hub experience, and free Wi-Fi. Qantas is the better choice if you live in Australia, value oneworld redemptions, hold Qantas elite status, or are flying Perth-London nonstop. From October 2027, Project Sunrise changes the calculus for Sydney-based travelers heading to London or New York, and the new Qantas A350-1000 cabin (six First suites, all-new business class) will be worth a fresh look once it stabilizes.

If you want a faster premium hub today, fly Singapore. If you want the longest direct flight in the world from 2027, wait for Qantas Project Sunrise. If you collect points in Australia, the alliance you already buy into probably picks the airline for you, because Qantas Frequent Flyer and KrisFlyer do not share status or redemptions.

For more on the Asian premium carriers, see our Singapore Airlines vs Cathay Pacific 2026 comparison and Qatar Airways vs Singapore Airlines 2026 comparison. For Singapore Airlines and Qantas full baggage policies, see Singapore Airlines and Qantas.

Frequently asked questions

Is Qantas or Singapore Airlines better in 2026?
Singapore Airlines wins most of the cabin and reliability dimensions, Qantas wins on Australia network and oneworld access. In Cirium's 2025 Asia-Pacific standings Singapore posted 78.58 percent on-time arrivals versus Qantas at 76.51 percent across roughly 277,000 flights. Singapore's new doored A350-900 business class, originally due in 2026, is now expected around 2027 after supply-chain and certification delays, while Qantas does not introduce a new business seat until the A350-1000 Project Sunrise aircraft enter service, with Sydney-London nonstops from October 2027. For Australia domestic feed, oneworld redemptions, and Sydney-London or Sydney-New York nonstops from 2027, Qantas is the right pick. For Asia and Europe routings via a single hub, premium hard product available today, and Star Alliance reach, Singapore.
Which has better on-time performance, Qantas or Singapore Airlines?
Singapore Airlines, narrowly. In Cirium's 2025 Asia-Pacific standings, Singapore posted 78.58 percent on-time arrivals across approximately 121,000 flights, ahead of Qantas at 76.51 percent across approximately 277,000 flights. The gap is roughly 2 percentage points, which matters for tight Kangaroo Route connections in Singapore or Bangkok where weather and slot constraints can cascade. Neither carrier placed in Cirium's published global top 10 for 2025, which started at 90.75 percent and ended around 80.9 percent.
Is Singapore Airlines business class better than Qantas business class?
Yes, and the gap widens once Singapore's new doored A350 seat arrives. Singapore's current A380 and A350 business class is a 1-2-1 layout with a 60-inch pitch and 78-inch lie-flat bed, no sliding doors. Qantas refurbished A380 business is also 1-2-1 with a fully flat bed of about 2 m (80 inches). The cabins are roughly comparable today, with Singapore winning on soft product (food, service, consistency). Singapore's all-new business class on retrofitted A350-900s introduces tall walls and sliding doors, but the rollout has slipped from its original 2026 target to around 2027. Qantas does not get a new business seat until the A350-1000 Project Sunrise aircraft enter service, with Sydney-London nonstops from October 2027.
Is Qantas First Class on the A380 better than Singapore Suites?
No. Singapore Suites on the A380 is a fully enclosed private room with floor-to-ceiling walls, a separate recliner chair, a separate lie-flat bed, and the unique double-bed configuration where suites 1A+2A and 1F+2F combine across a retractable wall. Qantas refurbished A380 First Class is an open suite without sliding doors, which Qantas describes as a deliberate Australian-hospitality choice. Both are excellent, but Singapore Suites is the more exclusive and private hard product. Qantas is upgauging Singapore-Sydney to A380 on six of seven weekly flights from December 2026, which adds availability for Qantas First Class on the Kangaroo Route.
Should I wait for Qantas Project Sunrise direct flights instead of connecting via Singapore?
Only if you are flexible into 2027. Qantas takes delivery of its first A350-1000ULR (named Vega) in April 2027, with Sydney-London nonstops scheduled to begin in October 2027 (tickets on sale February 2027) and Sydney-New York to follow. The aircraft has six First Class suites, 52 business class suites (each with a sliding door), 40 premium economy seats at a 40-inch (102 cm) pitch, and 140 economy seats, for 238 total. Until those flights start, every Australia-Europe routing requires a stop, and Singapore via Changi remains the most efficient one-stop option from the east coast of Australia. If you can hold off until late 2027 once Project Sunrise has stabilized, the time savings are real (about 4 hours each way versus a Singapore connection). Until then, Singapore Airlines is the smarter Kangaroo Route booking.

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Caden Sorenson

Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer

Caden Sorenson runs Travel Vient, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.

Last verified Jun 2026 against official Qantas and Singapore Airlines policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.