
Australian carrier Jetstar is closing its week-long ‘South Australia Sale’ at 23:59 AEDT on Sunday 26 October 2025, offering one-way fares from as low as AUD 64 between Melbourne and Adelaide. The flash sale has been timed to fill shoulder-season capacity ahead of the airline’s major network expansion kicking in the same day, which adds extra frequencies between Adelaide and Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.
Corporate-travel managers say the discounts provide a brief window to lock in Q1 2026 field-visit budgets at substantially lower cost. With fare caps on government contracts set to increase in January, opportunistic advance purchase could deliver savings of up to 25 % on typical intrastate itineraries.
The sale also coincides with Adelaide Airport’s terminal upgrade, which now features more self-service kiosks and an expanded Qantas Group lounge precinct. Mobility teams should remind travellers that Jetstar’s base fare excludes checked baggage and seat selection; ancillary fees can erode headline savings if not bundled correctly.
The carrier is pushing its FareCredit option—allowing cancellation for a voucher—to lure risk-averse travellers still wary of weather-related disruptions following this month’s east-coast storm system.
While the sale is domestic, it indirectly supports international mobility: many long-haul itineraries route through Adelaide to connect with Qantas’ relaunch of Adelaide–Auckland services in October 2025, giving expatriates in New Zealand cheaper feeder legs.
Corporate-travel managers say the discounts provide a brief window to lock in Q1 2026 field-visit budgets at substantially lower cost. With fare caps on government contracts set to increase in January, opportunistic advance purchase could deliver savings of up to 25 % on typical intrastate itineraries.
The sale also coincides with Adelaide Airport’s terminal upgrade, which now features more self-service kiosks and an expanded Qantas Group lounge precinct. Mobility teams should remind travellers that Jetstar’s base fare excludes checked baggage and seat selection; ancillary fees can erode headline savings if not bundled correctly.
The carrier is pushing its FareCredit option—allowing cancellation for a voucher—to lure risk-averse travellers still wary of weather-related disruptions following this month’s east-coast storm system.
While the sale is domestic, it indirectly supports international mobility: many long-haul itineraries route through Adelaide to connect with Qantas’ relaunch of Adelaide–Auckland services in October 2025, giving expatriates in New Zealand cheaper feeder legs.







