Qatar Airways Qsuite on the 777-300ER: An Old Jet, the Best Crew in the Sky, and the Bonus That Never Came

Qatar’s Qsuite on a Tired 777:
An Old Jet, and the Best Crew in the Sky
"The aluminium is fifteen years old and it shows. The people inside it are the best in the business — and this year they were told there’d be no bonus."
There is a particular kind of loyalty that survives disappointment, and Qatar Airways keeps testing mine. I booked the Qsuite on a Boeing 777-300ER knowing exactly what I was getting: an ageing airframe, the older hard product, and — if the last few months are anything to go by — a company that seems intent on making its own life harder. And yet, I would do it again tomorrow. This remains, for me, one of the best cabins in the sky, and the reason has almost nothing to do with the aeroplane.

That faintly creepy statue by the garden at Hamad International — Doha does ‘grand’ better than almost anywhere, and ‘slightly uncanny’ when it wants to.
An Old Bird, and Why
The 777-300ER I flew is not young. Qatar is leaning hard on its older airframes right now, because a good part of the modern fleet — the A350s especially — is sitting in the dry air of Teruel in eastern Spain, parked out of harm’s way while the regional conflict and its insurance mathematics make flying the newest, most expensive metal through contested airspace a losing proposition. So you get the older 777: heavier, thirstier, and showing its age if you look closely.

Broken trim at row 1 — the tell-tale sign of an old airframe being worked hard while the modern jets sunbathe in Aragón.
And you don’t have to look very closely. At row 1 the trim was visibly broken — the sort of tired detail that tells you this jet has been kept flying while its younger siblings sit out the war in the Spanish desert.
Seat 2J
Seat 2J is a Qsuite, and even the older generation of Qsuite is still, quietly, a benchmark. The door, the privacy, the bed — it all holds up years after the rest of the industry started copying it. The amenity kit has changed: it comes in blue now, noticeably smaller than the generous old one (cost-saving is visible even here) — but Qatar hasn’t cheapened what matters. The Diptyque products inside are still the real thing.

Seat 2J, and the new amenity kit — blue, smaller than the old one, but still stocked with the good Diptyque products.
The in-flight entertainment remains one of the best screens in the sky: huge, sharp, quick to respond. Fifteen-year-old airframe or not, this is a display I’d happily have at home.

One of the best IFE screens in the sky.
The Heroes of the Air
Here is where I run out of cynicism. The crew on this flight were, as they almost always are on Qatar, the best of the best — anticipatory without hovering, warm without performing, precise in a way that makes an entire cabin feel effortless. I have written before that Qatar’s cabin crew are the heroes of the air, and I meant every word.
Which is exactly why the rest of the story is hard to write. In 2024/25 the Qatar Airways Group posted the best result in its history — a record profit of around 2.15 billion US dollars on record revenue — and followed it with another near-two-billion-dollar year. And this year, the people who actually deliver that product were told there would be no bonus, with management pointing to the regional situation: the same instability, incidentally, that has those A350s parked in Teruel. Emirates, reporting its own record year, handed eligible staff twenty weeks’ pay. And in the handful of years Qatar did pay a bonus, the arithmetic told its own story — a couple of weeks for the crew and the ground staff, and months of salary for executives and vice-presidents.
So the next time someone brings you a flawless course meal at 38,000 feet on a fifteen-year-old jet, remember that they did it for a record-profit airline that decided they hadn’t earned a bonus. They are the best in the business, and they deserve a great deal better than they are getting.
The Meal

Rosé Champagne as the welcome drink.
It opens the way Qatar always does: a glass of rosé Champagne before the doors even close.

The amuse-bouche — small, precise, a statement of intent.

A tuna fillet starter that wouldn’t look out of place in a good restaurant on the ground.

And — a personal weakness — the chili oil. My favourite thing on the trolley, and I won’t apologise for it. 🙂

The steak main, cooked properly — which on an aircraft is its own small miracle.
It is genuinely hard to believe what these crews produce out of a narrow galley on an old airframe. Set it beside what a European legacy carrier hands you across a similar distance and the gap is almost embarrassing.
The Verdict: Still One of the Best Cabins in the World
Despite all the negative experiences we’ve had over the last months — the ageing airframes, the broken trim, the shrinking amenity kit, the sense of a company squeezing where it shouldn’t — the Qsuite on Qatar’s 777-300ER is, and remains, one of the best business-class cabins in the world.
Not because of the aluminium, which is tired, but because of the people inside it. Book it without hesitation. Just spare a thought for the crew who make it what it is — and who, in a record-profit year, deserved a bonus they never got.