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Qantas logs record first-half profit on strong travel demand, new aircraft

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 3:40 PM

Feb 26 (Reuters) – Australia’s Qantas Airways on Thursday reported record first-half underlying earnings, bolstered by resilient travel demand across its flagship and budget offerings and helped by ​new aircraft joining its ageing fleet.

Australia’s flag carrier posted ‌underlying profit before tax of A$1.46 billion ($1.04 billion) for the six months to December 31, beating the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of A$1.42 billion and the A$1.39 billion earned in the same period a year earlier.

New ‌aircraft ​accounted for about 60% of profit growth ⁠at budget arm Jetstar, ⁠which reported a 38% jump in underlying operating earnings on strong leisure demand.

The domestic unit posted a 5% rise in revenue driven by higher capacity. Qantas International earnings slipped 6% ​due to higher costs, wages and personnel training for new planes.

The carrier took delivery of nine aircraft in the half ⁠and expects 30 more over the ⁠next 18 months.

“We’re already seeing the benefits from ​the next generation aircraft that are flying, which, along with strong ​demand … helped us deliver another strong result,” CEO Vanessa ‌Hudson said.

“This gives us confidence in the benefits that will flow once Qantas’ new aircraft reach scale.”

The airline forecast second-half domestic unit revenue growth of 3%, in line with the prior ⁠six months, and fuel costs of A$2.5 billion, slightly lower sequentially.

Analysts at Jefferies said the first-half underlying profit before tax was a solid ⁠result, adding that ‌the market focus would be on the ⁠outlook for strong demand to continue.

Shares opened 4% ​higher ‌at A$11.09 apiece but quickly reversed course within ​minutes to ⁠trade 0.9% lower as of 2307 GMT.

Qantas also announced a share buy-back of up to A$150 million and an interim dividend of 19.8 Australian cents a share.

($1 = 1.4047 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Sameer Manekar and Nikita Maria Jino in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli ​and Tasim Zahid)