Qatar Airways wants to ride the luxury travel wave with the launch of all-new first class suites which it claims will be more like flying in a private jet.
The design of these luxe suites is now “70-80%” complete, says Qatar Airways CEO Badr Al-Meer; “we are only finalizing colors and small touches.”
Speaking with media at the airline’s Qsuite Next Gen business class launch, where he also talked up the future of the A380, Al-Meer revealed he would see the first prototype of Qatar’s new 777 first class suite this week.
The posh private suites will crown the airline’s 60-strong Boeing 777-9 fleet, which Al-Meer says Boeing has promised to begin delivering from the first quarter of 2026, will lean into the Gulf carrier’s experience with its Qatar Executive private jet fleet.
“We will utilise our knowledge and our expertise from having a private jet company,” Al-Meer has previously said. “I feel that nobody can develop a first class cabin better than us” for that reason, he explained.
“We want to combine the experience from flying commercial and from flying a private jet and develop something new.”
Of course, it was barely a year ago – in June 2023 – when Al-Meer’s predecessor Akbar Al Baker declared the superlative Qsuite had made first class obsolete, and Qatar Airways would no longer offer first once its A380 superjumbos were retired.
“Why should you invest in a subclass of an aeroplane that already gives you all the amenities that first class gives you?” he posed. “I don’t see the necessity.”
But Al-Meer sees things differently.
“We have always been pushing away the concept of having a First Class cabin on our aircraft,” he admitted, “but I have decided in the last few months that we have to introduce a First Class cabin… especially when we have to exit the A380.”
“Based on demands for certain sectors we see that there is and that there will be, always, very high demand on first class.”
That said, Al Meer’s citing of demand for first class on “certain sectors” or flights mirrors Al Baker’s take back as far as 2020, when he revealed plans for the 777-9 first class in an exclusive interview with Executive Traveller.
Al Baker’s thinking was that the 777-9’s first class suites would cater for what he saw as “huge demand here in Qatar to two or three European destinations” such as London and Paris.
“So we may introduce a very small first class cabin for our local passengers who want a very exclusive first class product,” he said, adding that a small number of the Boeing 777-9 jets on order would thus sport a “very exclusive first class cabin of just four seats.”
Al Baker said this would be a deliberately “very niche product” for routes with an established pattern of well-heeled travellers.
Executive Traveller understands design work on the suites progressed through to mid-2023 before Al Baker his the pause button – and it seems Al-Meer is now picking up exactly where Al Baker left off.
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