What does Qatar Airways do when a global event – in this case, the World Cup – comes to town? It adjusts what it does, temporarily focusing away from its core business – transit passengers – to respond to the different demand environment.

Unlike other operators, Qatar Airways won't fly from Doha International, which has reopened to airlines. Still, it will benefit from Doha Hamad's terminal expansion, opening soon and growing passenger capacity. And the oneworld airline has cut flights on many routes while increasing frequency – sometimes significantly – on others. It'll be much more of a point-to-point airline for a few weeks.

Qatar Airways cuts flights by 7%

The World Cup runs from November 20th until December 18th. To help take account of everyone traveling to/from the event, Qatar Airways has 8,251 flights between November 14th and December 24th, according to the latest OAG data. However, that's down from 8,884 – a drop of 7% – versus the preceding 41 days.

Analyzing schedules shows that Asia is the biggest loser, with flights 23% lower, mainly because of a big temporary drop in services to Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, and India.

Africa also does badly (-19%), while South America (+24%), the Middle East (+8%), and North America (+4%) stand out positively. Don't get too excited about South America: it's just one route.

Qatar Airways Airbus A350-1000
Photo: Vincenzo Pace | Simple Flying.

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Other airlines grow

On the face of it, it seems odd for Qatar Airways to reduce capacity during a period of heightened demand. However, there's limited capacity, and it's partly to enable other carriers to grow. Indeed, non-Qatar operators have increased Doha Hamad flights by 44%, from 1,819 to 2,616.

If Doha International is included, 'other carriers' have added three-quarters more services: from 2,313 to 4,025. As they grow, Qatar Airways adjusts, refocuses, and adds and cuts capacity where required.

Qatar Airways (Oneworld Livery) Airbus A350-1041 A7-ANE
The very short 140-mile (225km) hop from Doha to Dammam will rise up to 10x daily. Almost its full fleet will be used but to vastly different degrees. In order of flights: B777-300ER, A320, A330-300, B787-8, A350-1000 (pictured), A330-200, B777-200LR, A350-900, B787-9, and (on just one occasion) the A321. Photo: Vincenzo Pace | Simple Flying.

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Qatar Airways' key fight increases

The same 'World Cup' versus 'pre-World Cup' periods show that many Qatar Airways routes have more flights. Some 18 are notable, as shown below. Post-World Cup, most reduce to, or near, their previous levels, while all flights to Dubai World Central end. My personal favorites are Dammam (up to 10x daily), Madrid (up to 5x daily), and São Paulo (up to 3x daily).

  1. Abidjan: 4x/5x weekly to 1x daily (via Accra)
  2. Accra: 4x/5x weekly to 1x daily (continues to Abidjan)
  3. Belgrade: 5x weekly to 1x daily
  4. Copenhagen: 10x weekly to 2x daily
  5. Dammam: 5x daily to up to 10x daily
  6. Dubai World Central: zero flights to up to 10x daily
  7. Madinah: normally 2x daily to 3x daily
  8. Madrid: 2x daily to up to 5x daily
  9. Manchester: 2x/3x daily to 3x daily
  10. Maputo: 4x weekly to 6x weekly (3x nonstop, 3x via Johannesburg)
  11. Mashhad: 3x weekly to up to 1x daily
  12. Miami: 1x daily to 2x daily
  13. São Paulo: 2x daily to 3x daily
  14. Shiraz: 3x weekly to 1x daily
  15. Singapore: 2x daily to 3x daily
  16. Tehran: 12x weekly to 20x weekly
  17. Zagreb: up to 4x weekly to 1x daily
  18. Zürich: 10x weekly to 2x daily

Will you be traveling to Doha for the World Cup? If so, let us know who you're flying with in the comments.