Qantas Confirms Sydney–London Nonstop From October 2027: The World’s Longest Scheduled Passenger Flight Is Finally Real — Airbus A350-1000ULR “Vega” Unveiled in Toulouse, 22 Hours Airborne, Tickets On Sale February 2027 — Project Sunrise Ends 80 Years of Stopovers on the Kangaroo Route — Sydney–New York Follows Later in 2027 — Complete Guide for Australian, UK & New Zealand Travellers

Published on : 19 Jun 2026

Qantas Confirms Sydney–London Nonstop From October 2027: The World’s Longest Scheduled Passenger Flight Is Finally Real — Airbus A350-1000ULR “Vega” Unveiled in Toulouse, 22 Hours Airborne, Tickets On Sale February 2027 — Project Sunrise Ends 80 Years of Stopovers on the Kangaroo Route — Sydney–New York Follows Later in 2027 — Complete Guide for Australian, UK & New Zealand Travellers

Published: June 18, 2026 — Thursday
Announcement date: June 17, 2026 — Airbus headquarters, Toulouse, France
Route: Sydney (SYD) → London Heathrow (LHR) — nonstop, both directions
Launch date: October 2027 — timed for the IATA 2027–2028 Winter Season
Tickets go on sale: February 2027
Distance: Over 16,000 km / approximately 9,942 miles / ~10,000 nautical miles
Flight duration: 19–22 hours nonstop (~20 hours typical eastbound/westbound average)
Time saved vs current one-stop service: Up to 4 hours
Aircraft: Airbus A350-1000ULR (Ultra Long Range) — specially engineered for Qantas
First aircraft name: “Vega” — named after a star, honouring 1940s Catalina flying boat navigation
Total aircraft ordered: 12 × A350-1000ULR (plus 12 × A350-1000LR from FY28 under “Project Fysh”)
First delivery: April 2027
Cabin capacity: 238 seats — across 4 cabins (vs 300–480 on a standard A350-1000)
Cabin classes: First · Business · Premium Economy · Economy (140 economy seats)
Special feature: “Wellbeing Zone” — dedicated mid-cabin stretching and hydration space
Extra fuel capacity: +20,000 litres in rear-centre tank — extends range by 1,000 nautical miles
Frequency: Daily nonstop service
Current record holder (to be broken): Singapore Airlines SQ24 Singapore–New York — 15,349 km, just under 19 hours (no economy class)
Qantas Kangaroo Route history: Started 1947 — originally 4 days, 7 stops (Darwin, Singapore, Calcutta, Karachi, Cairo, Castel Benito, Rome)
Project Sunrise launched: 2017 — 10 years in development
Next Project Sunrise route: Sydney–New York JFK — confirmed for “later in 2027” — exact date announced 2027
Existing ultra-long-haul services continuing: Perth–London · Perth–Rome · Perth–Paris · Sydney–Singapore–London (1-stop)
CEO: Vanessa Hudson, Qantas Group Chief Executive
Pilot training: Underway — Australia’s first A350 simulator (Sydney) + British Airways (UK) + additional overseas training


The tyranny of distance has finally been conquered. That is how Qantas Group CEO Vanessa Hudson described it on June 17, standing on the tarmac at Airbus’s Toulouse facility in front of the first Airbus A350-1000ULR ever built in Qantas colours. After ten years of development, two name changes, a pandemic-era pause, and nearly eighty years since the original Kangaroo Route first connected Sydney to London with seven stops over four days, Qantas has confirmed it: nonstop Sydney–London flights begin in October 2027. No stopover in Singapore. No stopover in Darwin. No connection through the Middle East or Southeast Asia. Just over 16,000 kilometres, up to 22 hours airborne, and a single aircraft that takes off from Sydney and lands at Heathrow. This will be the longest scheduled passenger flight in the world. Here is everything Australian, UK and New Zealand travellers need to know about the journey Qantas has spent a decade building toward.


PART 1 — THE ANNOUNCEMENT: WHAT WAS CONFIRMED IN TOULOUSE

A Decade in the Making

Project Sunrise was launched in 2017 with a singular, audacious goal: connect Australia’s east coast directly to Europe and North America without a single stop. At the time, no commercial aircraft in the world was capable of safely covering the distance with a viable passenger payload. Qantas spent years working with both Airbus and Boeing to determine whether a version of their existing widebody aircraft could be engineered to make the journey.

In May 2022, Qantas placed its order: 12 Airbus A350-1000ULR aircraft, specially configured for the ultra-long-range mission. The “ULR” designation — Ultra Long Range — signals that this is not simply an A350-1000 with a marketing label. It is a structurally modified variant, fitted with an additional 20,000-litre fuel tank in the rear centre section, extending the aircraft’s range by approximately 1,000 nautical miles beyond the standard A350-1000.

On June 17, 2026, at an event inside Airbus’s Toulouse manufacturing headquarters, Qantas confirmed the route that the world had been waiting to learn: Sydney to London. Despite the announcement being, in CEO Vanessa Hudson’s own words, “hardly a surprise” — London had long been considered the most likely first Project Sunrise route — the formal confirmation marks what Hudson called “the most substantial milestone in [Qantas’s] 105-year existence.”

The CEO’s Words

“Since we first flew the Kangaroo Route in 1947, where we stopped seven times on the way to London, every generation of aircraft has taken a stop out of the journey,” Hudson said. “This is a moment Qantas has been working towards since the day we were founded.”

The “tyranny of distance” phrase Hudson used in Toulouse is a deliberate callback — it is one of the most famous descriptions of Australia’s geographic isolation, drawn from historian Geoffrey Blainey’s 1966 book of the same name. For Qantas, eliminating the final stopover on the London route is as much a statement about Australia’s place in the world as it is an operational achievement.


PART 2 — THE AIRCRAFT: WHAT MAKES THE A350-1000ULR DIFFERENT

Built Specifically for This Mission

The Airbus A350-1000ULR was chosen, and 12 aircraft were ordered in May 2022, specifically to make Project Sunrise possible. This is not a standard widebody pulled from an existing production line — it is a bespoke variant engineered around one mission: flying further than any passenger aircraft has flown on a scheduled commercial service, while keeping passengers comfortable for up to 22 hours.

Key technical specifications:

Specification Detail
Base aircraft Airbus A350-1000
Variant A350-1000ULR (Ultra Long Range)
Extra fuel capacity +20,000 litres (rear-centre tank)
Extended range +1,000 nautical miles over standard A350-1000
Maximum range More than 16,000 km / ~10,000 nautical miles
Maximum flight duration Up to 22 hours
Total aircraft ordered 12 (A350-1000ULR)
First aircraft name Vega
First delivery April 2027
Additional aircraft type 12 × A350-1000LR from FY28 (Project Fysh)

Why Only 238 Seats? The Comfort-Over-Capacity Decision

This is the single most telling design decision in the entire Project Sunrise programme. A standard Airbus A350-1000 operated by an airline like Cathay Pacific seats more than 330 passengers — some configurations push toward 480 in high-density layouts. Qantas’s Project Sunrise A350-1000ULR will carry just 238 passengers across four cabins.

That is roughly half to two-thirds of a standard A350-1000’s typical capacity. The reasoning is twofold. First, the additional fuel tank physically displaces cabin space and adds weight, which must be offset by carrying fewer passengers (and therefore less overall payload weight) to maintain the aircraft’s ultra-long-range performance. Second — and this is the deliberate design philosophy Qantas has built the entire programme around — a 20-hour-plus flight cannot be sold as a standard long-haul product. Passenger wellbeing on a flight of this duration is not a marketing add-on. It is the central design constraint.

The Wellbeing Zone

A defining feature of the Project Sunrise cabin is the “Wellbeing Zone” — a dedicated mid-cabin space separate from any seating class, designed specifically for passengers to stretch, move around and access hydration stations during the flight. On a 20-hour-plus nonstop service, in-seat immobility is a genuine health consideration — deep vein thrombosis risk increases meaningfully on flights of this duration. The Wellbeing Zone is Qantas’s structural response: a built-in space, not just an aisle, dedicated to passenger movement.

Four Cabin Classes

The Project Sunrise A350-1000ULR will operate four distinct cabins:

  • First Class — Qantas’s top-tier suite product, expected to be among the most spacious First offerings in the industry given the overall reduced seat count
  • Business Class — Full flat-bed, direct-aisle-access configuration
  • Premium Economy — Qantas’s well-regarded Premium Economy product, extended legroom and wider seats
  • Economy — 140 economy seats — the largest single cabin by seat count, but still a notably generous allocation given the total 238-seat aircraft

The 140-seat economy cabin is itself a significant data point. Singapore Airlines’ SQ24 service — the current holder of the world’s longest scheduled flight record (Singapore–New York, 15,349 km, just under 19 hours) — does not carry economy class passengers at all. It is an all-premium configuration. Qantas’s decision to include a substantial 140-seat economy cabin on a flight that will be even longer than SQ24 is a deliberate statement: Project Sunrise is designed as a mass-market proposition, not an ultra-premium niche product.


PART 3 — THE ROUTE: WHAT THE JOURNEY ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE

Distance and Duration

The Sydney–London route spans over 16,000 kilometres — nearly 10,000 nautical miles — making it Qantas’s longest single sector and, upon launch, the longest regularly scheduled nonstop passenger flight in the world.

Flight duration will run between 19 and 22 hours nonstop, with the exact time depending on prevailing winds and the specific direction of travel (eastbound and westbound jet stream conditions typically produce different flight times on routes of this length). The new flights will cut up to four hours from current one-stop itineraries — a genuinely significant time saving for passengers who currently route through Singapore, Dubai, Hong Kong or other connecting hubs.

Breaking the Current World Record

The present longest regularly scheduled nonstop passenger flight is Singapore Airlines’ route between Singapore and New York, covering 15,349 kilometres in just under 19 hours. Qantas’s Sydney–London service, at over 16,000 km, will exceed this distance — and depending on conditions, may also exceed the flight duration, making it the new outright holder of the title “world’s longest scheduled passenger flight” upon its October 2027 launch.

The Kangaroo Route: From 4 Days to 22 Hours

Qantas first connected Sydney and London in 1947, when the original Kangaroo Route took four days with seven stops — Darwin, Singapore, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Karachi, Cairo, Castel Benito (in present-day Libya) and Rome — before finally reaching London. Each successive generation of aircraft over the following 80 years progressively eliminated stops: the early jet age cut it to two or three stops, the 1980s and 1990s reduced it further, and Qantas’s current Sydney–Singapore–London service represents the one-stop modern baseline.

October 2027 closes the loop entirely. Eighty years after the first Kangaroo Route flight took four days and seven stops, Qantas will fly the same city pair nonstop in under a single day.

What Happens to the Existing Routes?

The new nonstop service will not replace Qantas’s existing long-haul options — it will operate alongside them:

  • Perth–London (nonstop): Continues. This was Qantas’s original ultra-long-haul breakthrough route, launched in 2018, and remains the longest direct flight an Economy passenger can currently take with Qantas — 14,499 km flown over 16–18 hours.
  • Perth–Rome and Perth–Paris: Continue as part of Qantas’s existing European network from Western Australia.
  • Sydney–Singapore–London (one-stop): Continues to operate, giving passengers a choice between the nonstop Project Sunrise service and the traditional connecting option (useful for those wanting a stopover in Singapore, or seeking different fare points).

This means Qantas will, from October 2027, offer Australian and UK travellers three distinct ways to fly Sydney–London: the new nonstop Project Sunrise service, the established one-stop Singapore routing, or connecting via Perth and another European gateway.


PART 4 — WHAT THIS PROVES: THE PERTH PRECEDENT

Why Qantas Is Confident This Will Work

A critical piece of evidence underpinning Qantas’s confidence in Project Sunrise is the track record of its existing ultra-long-haul network. Since 2018, Qantas’s Perth–London route — followed by Perth–Rome, Perth–Paris, Melbourne–Dallas and Auckland–New York — has consistently posted some of the airline’s highest customer satisfaction scores of any route in its network.

This matters enormously for the Sydney–London launch. Ultra-long-haul flying was, prior to Perth–London’s 2018 launch, an unproven commercial proposition — airlines and analysts alike questioned whether passengers would tolerate 17+ hour nonstop flights, or whether the psychological and physical demands of such a journey would suppress demand and satisfaction. The Perth–London data answered that question definitively: passengers not only tolerate ultra-long-haul flying, they rate it among their best Qantas experiences. The single connection eliminated, the predictable single boarding and landing process, and Qantas’s cabin design investments (which directly informed the Project Sunrise Wellbeing Zone concept) all appear to outweigh the simple discomfort of extended time in the air.

Sydney–London, at up to 22 hours, will be roughly 4–6 hours longer than the existing Perth–London service. But the underlying customer satisfaction evidence gives Qantas a strong commercial basis for confidence that the even-longer Sydney route will be similarly well received.


PART 5 — WHAT’S NEXT: SYDNEY–NEW YORK AND BEYOND

The Second Project Sunrise Route

Project Sunrise will ultimately connect Australia’s eastern seaboard with additional global hubs, with Sydney–New York confirmed as the subsequent route following Sydney–London. Qantas has stated that the New York service will launch towards the end of 2027 — just a few months after the London route begins — with a confirmed specific date to be announced in early 2027.

Sydney–New York presents an even greater distance and duration challenge than Sydney–London, given New York’s position on the US East Coast relative to London’s in Western Europe. The same fleet of 12 A350-1000ULR aircraft will be deployed across both routes, meaning Qantas’s Project Sunrise operation will, by the end of 2027, be running two of the longest scheduled flights in aviation history simultaneously from the same Sydney base.

The Full Fleet Picture

Qantas’s total Project Sunrise-related order extends beyond the 12 A350-1000ULR aircraft. The airline will also receive 12 A350-1000LR (Long Range, not Ultra Long Range) aircraft from FY28 as part of the “Project Fysh” announcement made in August 2023 — named after Qantas co-founder Hudson Fysh. These LR variants, while not capable of the extreme Sydney–London/New York missions, will support Qantas’s broader long-haul network modernisation across other international routes.


PART 6 — BOOKING GUIDE: HOW TO PLAN FOR PROJECT SUNRISE

Key Dates for Travellers

Date Milestone
April 2027 First A350-1000ULR (“Vega”) delivered to Qantas
February 2027 Tickets go on sale for Sydney–London Project Sunrise service
October 2027 First commercial Sydney–London nonstop flight departs
Late 2027 Sydney–New York Project Sunrise service launches (exact date TBC, early 2027)

What to Expect on Fares

Qantas has not yet released specific fare information for the Project Sunrise Sydney–London service — pricing details are expected closer to the February 2027 on-sale date. Based on the established pattern from Perth–London (which commands a premium over connecting one-stop fares but not an extreme one) and the reduced 238-seat capacity of the Project Sunrise aircraft, industry analysts expect:

  • Economy fares: A premium over standard one-stop Sydney–London economy fares, reflecting both the convenience of nonstop travel and the constrained 140-seat economy cabin
  • Business and First fares: Likely positioned as a flagship premium product, with strong demand expected from corporate and high-net-worth leisure travellers seeking to eliminate connection time entirely
  • Premium Economy: Expected to be a strong value proposition for travellers wanting enhanced comfort on a 20+ hour journey without the full business class price point

Who Should Book This Route?

Best suited for:

  • Business travellers needing to minimise total journey time between Australia and the UK
  • Passengers who find connections and immigration transit processes more fatiguing than extended time in a single cabin
  • Travellers seeking the novelty and milestone experience of flying the world’s longest scheduled passenger route
  • Anyone currently connecting through Singapore, Dubai, Doha or Hong Kong who would prefer to eliminate that stop entirely

Consider the one-stop alternative if:

  • You want a stopover break — Singapore remains a popular voluntary stopover destination for Qantas passengers travelling to London
  • Budget is the primary consideration — one-stop fares are likely to remain less expensive
  • You are uncomfortable with extended single-cabin confinement regardless of onboard amenities

How UK Passengers Can Plan Ahead

UK travellers planning Australia trips for late 2027 onward should monitor qantas.com for the February 2027 on-sale date. The nonstop London–Sydney westbound service will be subject to the same up-to-22-hour duration, and UK passengers should expect Heathrow Terminal 3 (Qantas’s existing London base) to be the operating terminal, though this has not yet been formally confirmed for the Project Sunrise service specifically.

How Australian Passengers Can Plan Ahead

Australian travellers should watch qantas.com.au for booking opening in February 2027. Given the global media attention on this launch and the genuine novelty of the world’s longest flight record, the inaugural October 2027 service and the surrounding launch period are likely to see exceptionally high demand — booking early once sales open is recommended for anyone hoping to fly on or near the launch date itself.


PART 7 — PILOT TRAINING AND THE ROAD TO CERTIFICATION

Pilots have started training using Australia’s first A350 simulator, based in Sydney, as well as with British Airways in the UK — leveraging BA’s existing A350 fleet experience. Some Qantas pilots are also gaining additional experience with other overseas operators as part of the comprehensive training programme required before ultra-long-haul certification.

A second A350-1000ULR aircraft has already entered its eight-week testing and certification programme after completing its maiden flight earlier in June 2026. This testing phase is critical — Project Sunrise’s entire commercial viability rests on Airbus and aviation regulators certifying that both the aircraft’s extended-range fuel system and Qantas’s crew duty and rest protocols meet safety standards for flights of this unprecedented duration.

The combination of aircraft certification (expected to complete well ahead of the April 2027 first delivery) and pilot training (already under way 16 months before launch) reflects the scale of operational preparation required to safely operate a 22-hour nonstop passenger service — a feat with no direct precedent in commercial aviation history at this distance with a substantial economy cabin.


Quick Facts — Project Sunrise Sydney–London at a Glance

Fact Detail
Launch date October 2027
Tickets on sale February 2027
Route Sydney (SYD) ↔ London Heathrow (LHR)
Distance 16,000+ km / ~9,942 miles
Duration 19–22 hours nonstop
Time saved vs 1-stop Up to 4 hours
Aircraft Airbus A350-1000ULR
First aircraft “Vega” — delivered April 2027
Total ULR aircraft 12
Seats 238 — First, Business, Premium Economy, Economy
Economy seats 140
Frequency Daily
World record Will be world’s longest scheduled passenger flight
Current record holder Singapore Airlines SQ24 (SIN–JFK, 15,349km, no economy)
Next route Sydney–New York JFK — late 2027
Existing routes continuing Perth–London, Perth–Rome, Perth–Paris, Sydney–Singapore–London
Programme launched 2017
Book at qantas.com (global) · qantas.com.au (Australia)

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Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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