In Toulouse this week, beneath the assembled gaze of executives from two companies that have spent the better part of a decade turning an improbable idea into riveted aluminium, Qantas confirmed what the industry had long suspected and quietly wanted: London, not New York, will host the inaugural Project Sunrise flight.
From October 2027, the Australian flag carrier will operate a daily non-stop service between Sydney and London Heathrow, a route of nearly 10,000 nautical miles flown in roughly 22 hours, and in doing so will claim the title of the world's longest commercial flight. Tickets go on sale in February.
The decision to open with London settles a question that had become its own minor parlour game in aviation circles. There had been persistent speculation that Qantas might pivot to New York for the launch, a choice that would have carried its own commercial logic given the strength of the trans-Pacific premium market and the symbolic weight of connecting Sydney directly to Manhattan.
But London was always the sentimental favourite, and on this occasion sentiment and strategy point in the same direction. The Kangaroo Route, that historic artery between Australia and the United Kingdom, has defined Qantas since the airline first stretched towards Europe. To eliminate the stopover entirely, to remove the long-standing necessity of breaking the journey in Singapore, Dubai or Perth, is to complete a project that the airline has been pursuing in one form or another for the better part of a century.
Vanessa Hudson, the Qantas chief executive, framed it as the fulfilment of a commitment made in 2017, when the airline first laid down the challenge of connecting Australia's east coast directly to London and New York. The promise, she said, becomes reality in October 2027.
The aircraft that makes this possible is worth dwelling on, because the A350-1000ULR is not simply a long-range jet with a marketing suffix attached. It is a genuinely bespoke machine, engineered around a single, punishing mission profile. The additional range comes principally from a rear centre fuel tank holding some 20,000 litres, integrated into the aircraft's structure rather than bolted on as an afterthought, lifting the type's reach by roughly 1,000 nautical miles over the standard A350-1000.
That sounds modest in percentage terms. In practice it is the difference between a route that closes and a route that opens, the marginal endurance that turns Sydney to London from an engineering aspiration into a scheduled departure. Airbus has paired the extra fuel with an increased maximum take-off weight, and the cabin itself has been designed from first principles for the realities of spending the better part of a day aloft, with a wellbeing zone and a configuration built explicitly around the science of mitigating jetlag on flights of this duration.
The certification effort behind all of this has been substantial, and quietly innovative. The lead test aircraft, MSN 707, completed its first flight from Toulouse on June 2, flying for three hours and 43 minutes and reaching just above 41,000 feet. It now carries something in the order of five tonnes of flight test instrumentation and around a thousand specialised sensors, the data from which Airbus intends to use not only to certify the variant but to recalibrate its digital models of the A350 cabin more broadly.
The manufacturer has described the exercise as establishing a new framework for derivative certification, which is the sort of claim that sounds like corporate throat-clearing until one remembers how much of modern aircraft development now happens in simulation rather than in the sky. A second aircraft is progressing through an eight-week test and certification programme, and it is this second airframe, not the heavily instrumented MSN 707, that will be the first delivered to Qantas. The lead test aircraft will be retrofitted to commercial specification once its work is done.
The journey so far has been one without challenges. The timeline has slipped and slipped more than once. The first delivery, once expected by the end of this year, has moved to April 2027, with Airbus attributing the delay to supply chain pressures that will be wearily familiar to anyone who has followed the aerospace sector through the past several years.
The first aircraft, named Vega, is now scheduled to arrive in April 2027, leaving Qantas a relatively compressed window between delivery and the October launch. This is not unusual for a programme of this ambition, and four months of margin to enter service with a brand-new variant on the world's longest route is not generous, but the airline appears confident. Crucially, much of the human readiness is already under way.
Qantas pilots have begun training on the airline's first A350 simulator in Sydney, and are also flying with British Airways in the United Kingdom, with further training planned alongside Cathay Pacific in Hong Kong over the coming months. Type readiness, in other words, is not waiting on metal.
The commercial proposition rests on a simple and persuasive promise: up to four hours saved against the current one-stop alternatives. For the premium-heavy traffic that Qantas is targeting, time is the product, and the willingness to pay for its recovery is the entire commercial thesis of Project Sunrise. Whether that thesis holds at scale is the question the next several years will answer.
Qantas has ordered 12 of the ULR variant for Sunrise, alongside a further 12 standard A350-1000s for its wider long-haul renewal, so the airline has placed a meaningful, though not reckless, bet on the economics of ultra-long-haul flying with a fully refreshed widebody fleet behind it.
What is striking, stepping back from the specifications and the schedule, is how thoroughly the industry has normalised an idea that would have seemed fanciful not long ago. A 22-hour scheduled passenger flight, operated daily, profitably, was for decades the stuff of conference keynotes rather than timetables. Singapore Airlines reopened the conversation with its A350-900ULR services to the United States, and Qantas has now taken the concept to its logical extreme.
There is no longer a destination on earth that Australia cannot reach in a single hop, and from October 2027 the proof will be a Qantas A350 lifting out of Sydney each evening, turning west, and not landing again until it reaches London. The final frontier of long-haul aviation, as Qantas likes to call it, is about to become a line in the schedule. That, in the end, is the most remarkable thing of all.
The author is an aviation analyst. X handle: @AlexInAir.