Widow devastated by Qantas flyer points policy: ‘I’ve just had enough’

We all know how hard it can be to accept the death of a loved one. Aside from the emotional turmoil you go through, there’s the issue of processing and sorting various documents and other affairs of your deceased loved one.

But for one widow, what was supposed to be a seamless process of transferring flyer points turned into another heartache.



After losing her husband, Brian, of 52 years in May, Rhonda said she was ‘cranky’ when Qantas denied the transfer of 6,800 frequent flyer points from her late husband’s account to hers.

Despite offering ‘sincere condolences’, the airline stated that their ‘terms and conditions’ did not allow such a transfer, and it asked the widow to immediately close the account by sending in a copy of her husband’s death certificate.


josh-withers-BT5wRim9M4U-unsplash.jpg
Rhonda was ‘cranky’ when Qantas refused to transfer her late husband’s flyer points. Credit: Unsplash




Rhonda said, ‘I know it's not a lot of points, but it's the principle of it because you get hardly anything out of it anyway.’

‘I just thought it would naturally come to me, so once I told them he passed away, I could've easily gone in and transferred them to myself without telling them, but I wanted to do the right thing.’

Qantas announced in September that it would change its policy, allowing frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from the beginning of October.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said that the announcement was an attempt to redeem their flagging reputation by addressing customer ‘pain points’.



This announcement brought hope for Rhonda, who asked the airline again about her points. However, there was no response.

‘I immediately wrote back (to Qantas) and said, “After hearing the news item, I was under the impression you were now looking at this”,' Rhonda said.

‘I haven't heard a word back since. I don't know if they're just ignoring me. I've just had enough.’

‘Everywhere I turn, there's a barrier, and what's 6,800 points to them? They are trying to keep their reputation intact, and until I heard that announcement, I was done with it,’ she continued.

'Now I still haven't heard, and I am cranky about it.’



However, when Rhonda's story went public, it wasn’t long before Qantas gave in and credited her with the points. Still, Rhonda remained less than impressed with the process, lamenting that it took media attention before getting credited with those points.

Qantas extended its sincere apologies to Rhonda. According to Qantas Loyalty spokesperson, ‘Our customer team have been in contact with her to advise that her husband's points have now been transferred to her frequent flyer account.’

Are Qantas frequent flyer points worth it? We wrote about a previous story where customers sparked outrage when the airline was undergoing point devaluation. Read more about it here.



Other airlines have discussed flyer points policies. In the case of Virgin—a rival of Qantas—mentioned that it will pass Velocity points to the deceased’s loved ones only if it is indicated in their will.

The company said, ‘If the deceased member has left instructions for their points balance to be transferred to a beneficiary, we'll let you know the next steps to complete this.’

Key Takeaways

  • A widowed grandmother expressed her frustration at Qantas after the airline refused to transfer her late husband's frequent flyer points to her.
  • After her story garnered media attention, Qantas eventually credited Rhonda with the points.
  • The issue arose in September when the airline announced a policy change to allow frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from October.
  • Major international airlines do not transfer frequent flyer points after death, as they see these points as the airline's property, not the customer's.

What do you think about this story? Have you ever been in a similar situation? Share your experiences in the comments below!
 
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We all know how hard it can be to accept the death of a loved one. Aside from the emotional turmoil you go through, there’s the issue of processing and sorting various documents and other affairs of your deceased loved one.

But for one widow, what was supposed to be a seamless process of transferring flyer points turned into another heartache.



After losing her husband, Brian, of 52 years in May, Rhonda said she was ‘cranky’ when Qantas denied the transfer of 6,800 frequent flyer points from her late husband’s account to hers.

Despite offering ‘sincere condolences’, the airline stated that their ‘terms and conditions’ did not allow such a transfer, and it asked the widow to immediately close the account by sending in a copy of her husband’s death certificate.


View attachment 33974
Rhonda was ‘cranky’ when Qantas refused to transfer her late husband’s flyer points. Credit: Unsplash




Rhonda said, ‘I know it's not a lot of points, but it's the principle of it because you get hardly anything out of it anyway.’

‘I just thought it would naturally come to me, so once I told them he passed away, I could've easily gone in and transferred them to myself without telling them, but I wanted to do the right thing.’

Qantas announced in September that it would change its policy, allowing frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from the beginning of October.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said that the announcement was an attempt to redeem their flagging reputation by addressing customer ‘pain points’.



This announcement brought hope for Rhonda, who asked the airline again about her points. However, there was no response.

‘I immediately wrote back (to Qantas) and said, “After hearing the news item, I was under the impression you were now looking at this”,' Rhonda said.

‘I haven't heard a word back since. I don't know if they're just ignoring me. I've just had enough.’

‘Everywhere I turn, there's a barrier, and what's 6,800 points to them? They are trying to keep their reputation intact, and until I heard that announcement, I was done with it,’ she continued.

'Now I still haven't heard, and I am cranky about it.’



However, when Rhonda's story went public, it wasn’t long before Qantas gave in and credited her with the points. Still, Rhonda remained less than impressed with the process, lamenting that it took media attention before getting credited with those points.

Qantas extended its sincere apologies to Rhonda. According to Qantas Loyalty spokesperson, ‘Our customer team have been in contact with her to advise that her husband's points have now been transferred to her frequent flyer account.’

Are Qantas frequent flyer points worth it? We wrote about a previous story where customers sparked outrage when the airline was undergoing point devaluation. Read more about it here.



Other airlines have discussed flyer points policies. In the case of Virgin—a rival of Qantas—mentioned that it will pass Velocity points to the deceased’s loved ones only if it is indicated in their will.

The company said, ‘If the deceased member has left instructions for their points balance to be transferred to a beneficiary, we'll let you know the next steps to complete this.’

Key Takeaways

  • A widowed grandmother expressed her frustration at Qantas after the airline refused to transfer her late husband's frequent flyer points to her.
  • After her story garnered media attention, Qantas eventually credited Rhonda with the points.
  • The issue arose in September when the airline announced a policy change to allow frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from October.
  • Major international airlines do not transfer frequent flyer points after death, as they see these points as the airline's property, not the customer's.

What do you think about this story? Have you ever been in a similar situation? Share your experiences in the comments below!
The same thing happened to me. VirtuaLly while I was in conversation with Qantas FF, telling them my husband was deceased and asking for his points to be transferred, his account closed before my eyes and nothing I said would convince Qantas to transfer those points. I'm totally off Qantas - forever!!
 
I have been totally off Qantas ever since it decided that people of 6 feet height were not allowed to be comfortable in their cattle-class seats. I suppose having had a 5 ft 4 inches tall CEO has that effect.

By the way, talking of airlines, has anyone ever thought that when aircraft an stops suddenly and violently, commonly on the ground, all those hard-edge overweight little suitcases you cram into the overhead lockers will still keep moving at about 100+ miles per hour and break loose to hurtle through the air and smash people to pulp?Same with the duty-free whisky, vodka and gin, the bottles of which will shatter on impact and spill inflammatory material allover the place. Maybe airlines should ban overhead lockers?
 
The same thing happened to me. VirtuaLly while I was in conversation with Qantas FF, telling them my husband was deceased and asking for his points to be transferred, his account closed before my eyes and nothing I said would convince Qantas to transfer those points. I'm totally off Qantas - forever!!
That is so wrong🙀
 
I have been totally off Qantas ever since it decided that people of 6 feet height were not allowed to be comfortable in their cattle-class seats. I suppose having had a 5 ft 4 inches tall CEO has that effect.

By the way, talking of airlines, has anyone ever thought that when aircraft an stops suddenly and violently, commonly on the ground, all those hard-edge overweight little suitcases you cram into the overhead lockers will still keep moving at about 100+ miles per hour and break loose to hurtle through the air and smash people to pulp?Same with the duty-free whisky, vodka and gin, the bottles of which will shatter on impact and spill inflammatory material allover the place. Maybe airlines should ban overhead lockers?
Never ever heard of that happening🤔
 
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Never ever heard of that happening🤔
That's what a long-standing and very experienced airline pilot told me when I wondered why aircraft seats were not rearward facing to attempt to minimise whiplash during a crash, as in some military aircraft. He said the benefit of forward-facing seats in which you may have room to adopt the brace position is that the assorted stuff stuffed into those overloaded overhead lockers will not smash into the back of your head at 100+mph but will hit the back of the seat first.

That you have never heard of it happening is probably because airlines don't want to talk about what actually happens "in the unlikely event of an accident".
 
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That's what a long-standing and very experienced airline pilot told me when I wondered why aircraft seats were not rearward facing to attempt to minimise whiplash during a crash, as in some military aircraft. He said the benefit of forward-facing seats in which you may have room to adopt the brace position is that the assorted stuff stuffed into those overloaded overhead lockers will not smash into the back of your head at 100+mph but will hit the back of the seat first.

That you have never heard of it happening is probably because airlines don't want to talk about what actually happens "in the unlikely event of an accident".
Interesting🙀i’m not a good flyer.
 
I have been totally off Qantas ever since it decided that people of 6 feet height were not allowed to be comfortable in their cattle-class seats. I suppose having had a 5 ft 4 inches tall CEO has that effect.

By the way, talking of airlines, has anyone ever thought that when aircraft an stops suddenly and violently, commonly on the ground, all those hard-edge overweight little suitcases you cram into the overhead lockers will still keep moving at about 100+ miles per hour and break loose to hurtle through the air and smash people to pulp?Same with the duty-free whisky, vodka and gin, the bottles of which will shatter on impact and spill inflammatory material allover the place. Maybe airlines should ban overhead lockers?
Can't imagine that ever happening the overhead lockers are usually crammed full. Bit OTT I think.
 
We all know how hard it can be to accept the death of a loved one. Aside from the emotional turmoil you go through, there’s the issue of processing and sorting various documents and other affairs of your deceased loved one.

But for one widow, what was supposed to be a seamless process of transferring flyer points turned into another heartache.



After losing her husband, Brian, of 52 years in May, Rhonda said she was ‘cranky’ when Qantas denied the transfer of 6,800 frequent flyer points from her late husband’s account to hers.

Despite offering ‘sincere condolences’, the airline stated that their ‘terms and conditions’ did not allow such a transfer, and it asked the widow to immediately close the account by sending in a copy of her husband’s death certificate.


View attachment 33974
Rhonda was ‘cranky’ when Qantas refused to transfer her late husband’s flyer points. Credit: Unsplash




Rhonda said, ‘I know it's not a lot of points, but it's the principle of it because you get hardly anything out of it anyway.’

‘I just thought it would naturally come to me, so once I told them he passed away, I could've easily gone in and transferred them to myself without telling them, but I wanted to do the right thing.’

Qantas announced in September that it would change its policy, allowing frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from the beginning of October.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said that the announcement was an attempt to redeem their flagging reputation by addressing customer ‘pain points’.



This announcement brought hope for Rhonda, who asked the airline again about her points. However, there was no response.

‘I immediately wrote back (to Qantas) and said, “After hearing the news item, I was under the impression you were now looking at this”,' Rhonda said.

‘I haven't heard a word back since. I don't know if they're just ignoring me. I've just had enough.’

‘Everywhere I turn, there's a barrier, and what's 6,800 points to them? They are trying to keep their reputation intact, and until I heard that announcement, I was done with it,’ she continued.

'Now I still haven't heard, and I am cranky about it.’



However, when Rhonda's story went public, it wasn’t long before Qantas gave in and credited her with the points. Still, Rhonda remained less than impressed with the process, lamenting that it took media attention before getting credited with those points.

Qantas extended its sincere apologies to Rhonda. According to Qantas Loyalty spokesperson, ‘Our customer team have been in contact with her to advise that her husband's points have now been transferred to her frequent flyer account.’

Are Qantas frequent flyer points worth it? We wrote about a previous story where customers sparked outrage when the airline was undergoing point devaluation. Read more about it here.



Other airlines have discussed flyer points policies. In the case of Virgin—a rival of Qantas—mentioned that it will pass Velocity points to the deceased’s loved ones only if it is indicated in their will.

The company said, ‘If the deceased member has left instructions for their points balance to be transferred to a beneficiary, we'll let you know the next steps to complete this.’

Key Takeaways

  • A widowed grandmother expressed her frustration at Qantas after the airline refused to transfer her late husband's frequent flyer points to her.
  • After her story garnered media attention, Qantas eventually credited Rhonda with the points.
  • The issue arose in September when the airline announced a policy change to allow frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from October.
  • Major international airlines do not transfer frequent flyer points after death, as they see these points as the airline's property, not the customer's.

What do you think about this story? Have you ever been in a similar situation? Share your experiences in the comments below!
i noticed qantus shares had risen a few days back. who in their right mind would touch them with a barge pole. Good on her.
 
With the frequent flyer scheme being virtually useless to the average person, I myself, couldn't be bothered even trying to have the points switched to me. Not worth the stress and hassle.
 
We all know how hard it can be to accept the death of a loved one. Aside from the emotional turmoil you go through, there’s the issue of processing and sorting various documents and other affairs of your deceased loved one.

But for one widow, what was supposed to be a seamless process of transferring flyer points turned into another heartache.



After losing her husband, Brian, of 52 years in May, Rhonda said she was ‘cranky’ when Qantas denied the transfer of 6,800 frequent flyer points from her late husband’s account to hers.

Despite offering ‘sincere condolences’, the airline stated that their ‘terms and conditions’ did not allow such a transfer, and it asked the widow to immediately close the account by sending in a copy of her husband’s death certificate.


View attachment 33974
Rhonda was ‘cranky’ when Qantas refused to transfer her late husband’s flyer points. Credit: Unsplash




Rhonda said, ‘I know it's not a lot of points, but it's the principle of it because you get hardly anything out of it anyway.’

‘I just thought it would naturally come to me, so once I told them he passed away, I could've easily gone in and transferred them to myself without telling them, but I wanted to do the right thing.’

Qantas announced in September that it would change its policy, allowing frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from the beginning of October.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said that the announcement was an attempt to redeem their flagging reputation by addressing customer ‘pain points’.



This announcement brought hope for Rhonda, who asked the airline again about her points. However, there was no response.

‘I immediately wrote back (to Qantas) and said, “After hearing the news item, I was under the impression you were now looking at this”,' Rhonda said.

‘I haven't heard a word back since. I don't know if they're just ignoring me. I've just had enough.’

‘Everywhere I turn, there's a barrier, and what's 6,800 points to them? They are trying to keep their reputation intact, and until I heard that announcement, I was done with it,’ she continued.

'Now I still haven't heard, and I am cranky about it.’



However, when Rhonda's story went public, it wasn’t long before Qantas gave in and credited her with the points. Still, Rhonda remained less than impressed with the process, lamenting that it took media attention before getting credited with those points.

Qantas extended its sincere apologies to Rhonda. According to Qantas Loyalty spokesperson, ‘Our customer team have been in contact with her to advise that her husband's points have now been transferred to her frequent flyer account.’

Are Qantas frequent flyer points worth it? We wrote about a previous story where customers sparked outrage when the airline was undergoing point devaluation. Read more about it here.



Other airlines have discussed flyer points policies. In the case of Virgin—a rival of Qantas—mentioned that it will pass Velocity points to the deceased’s loved ones only if it is indicated in their will.

The company said, ‘If the deceased member has left instructions for their points balance to be transferred to a beneficiary, we'll let you know the next steps to complete this.’

Key Takeaways

  • A widowed grandmother expressed her frustration at Qantas after the airline refused to transfer her late husband's frequent flyer points to her.
  • After her story garnered media attention, Qantas eventually credited Rhonda with the points.
  • The issue arose in September when the airline announced a policy change to allow frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from October.
  • Major international airlines do not transfer frequent flyer points after death, as they see these points as the airline's property, not the customer's.

What do you think about this story? Have you ever been in a similar situation? Share your experiences in the comments below!
We all know how hard it can be to accept the death of a loved one. Aside from the emotional turmoil you go through, there’s the issue of processing and sorting various documents and other affairs of your deceased loved one.

But for one widow, what was supposed to be a seamless process of transferring flyer points turned into another heartache.



After losing her husband, Brian, of 52 years in May, Rhonda said she was ‘cranky’ when Qantas denied the transfer of 6,800 frequent flyer points from her late husband’s account to hers.

Despite offering ‘sincere condolences’, the airline stated that their ‘terms and conditions’ did not allow such a transfer, and it asked the widow to immediately close the account by sending in a copy of her husband’s death certificate.


View attachment 33974
Rhonda was ‘cranky’ when Qantas refused to transfer her late husband’s flyer points. Credit: Unsplash




Rhonda said, ‘I know it's not a lot of points, but it's the principle of it because you get hardly anything out of it anyway.’

‘I just thought it would naturally come to me, so once I told them he passed away, I could've easily gone in and transferred them to myself without telling them, but I wanted to do the right thing.’

Qantas announced in September that it would change its policy, allowing frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from the beginning of October.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson said that the announcement was an attempt to redeem their flagging reputation by addressing customer ‘pain points’.



This announcement brought hope for Rhonda, who asked the airline again about her points. However, there was no response.

‘I immediately wrote back (to Qantas) and said, “After hearing the news item, I was under the impression you were now looking at this”,' Rhonda said.

‘I haven't heard a word back since. I don't know if they're just ignoring me. I've just had enough.’

‘Everywhere I turn, there's a barrier, and what's 6,800 points to them? They are trying to keep their reputation intact, and until I heard that announcement, I was done with it,’ she continued.

'Now I still haven't heard, and I am cranky about it.’



However, when Rhonda's story went public, it wasn’t long before Qantas gave in and credited her with the points. Still, Rhonda remained less than impressed with the process, lamenting that it took media attention before getting credited with those points.

Qantas extended its sincere apologies to Rhonda. According to Qantas Loyalty spokesperson, ‘Our customer team have been in contact with her to advise that her husband's points have now been transferred to her frequent flyer account.’

Are Qantas frequent flyer points worth it? We wrote about a previous story where customers sparked outrage when the airline was undergoing point devaluation. Read more about it here.



Other airlines have discussed flyer points policies. In the case of Virgin—a rival of Qantas—mentioned that it will pass Velocity points to the deceased’s loved ones only if it is indicated in their will.

The company said, ‘If the deceased member has left instructions for their points balance to be transferred to a beneficiary, we'll let you know the next steps to complete this.’

Key Takeaways

  • A widowed grandmother expressed her frustration at Qantas after the airline refused to transfer her late husband's frequent flyer points to her.
  • After her story garnered media attention, Qantas eventually credited Rhonda with the points.
  • The issue arose in September when the airline announced a policy change to allow frequent flyer points to be claimed by the next of kin from October.
  • Major international airlines do not transfer frequent flyer points after death, as they see these points as the airline's property, not the customer's.

What do you think about this story? Have you ever been in a similar situation? Share your experiences in the comments below!
After my husband had passed, I asked Qantas to transfer his points to mine; he had well over 60,000 points. I was quite prepared to provide a copy of his death certificate, but I guess it wasn’t their policy at the time. That was ten years ago.
 
Qantas are not the only ones, the banks won't honor a deceased person's reward points either.
I don't understand if a client has accumulated reward points, why they are not part of their estate.
The same as their money in their account.
 
I hate flying but love the take off and landing during a the flight I generally drift off to sleep
I only sleep on the long haul flights 10hrs+ and then I have to take something to knock me out. I agree that the only good part is the takeoff and landing 🛬. And airports…ugh…don’t get me started on that one! 😆
 
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I only sleep on the long haul flights 10hrs+ and then I have to take something to knock me out. I agree that the only good part is the takeoff and landing 🛬. And airports…ugh…don’t get me started on that one! 😆
The bars good😹we used to drive to the airport at night to watch the planes come and go after nightclubbing cheap amusement. Get drunk then drive home.(We had a Des)😍to be young again.
 
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Qantas took my flyer points off me because I didn’t fly during the Covid period, claimed they expired, yes during Covid, when you couldn’t fly. And they won’t give them back to me. I had over 17,000 points. I’m only a small fry to them so why should they care. I worked hard all my life, paid my taxes etc and helped keep Qantas afloat during Covid time with the government tax-payers money.
 
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Qantas took my flyer points off me because I didn’t fly during the Covid period, claimed they expired, yes during Covid, when you couldn’t fly. And they won’t give them back to me. I had over 17,000 points. I’m only a small fry to them so why should they care. I worked hard all my life, paid my taxes etc and helped keep Qantas afloat during Covid time with the government tax-payers money.
Lots of small fry's make one big one. :devilish:
 

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