
Not to be outdone, Virgin Australia on 22 April 2026 expanded its three-day-old ‘Supercharged Sale’, releasing another one million discount seats and cutting entry prices to just A$55 one-way in Economy Lite. All up, 1.5 million sale seats are now on offer across the airline’s domestic network for travel between 22 July 2026 and 27 March 2027. Headline deals include Sydney–Ballina from $55, Melbourne–Launceston from $59, and Brisbane–Sydney from $95. Economy X extra-legroom upgrades start at $15, signalling a push to upsell comfort without alienating price-hunters.
While these routes are domestic, companies or travellers planning onward international legs can streamline visa and travel document requirements through VisaHQ, which handles applications for Australia and more than 200 other destinations in one online dashboard: https://www.visahq.com/australia/ Pairing the airline’s cut-price tickets with quick, reliable paperwork makes last-minute mobility projects and bleisure trips much less stressful.
For mobility planners, the sale provides inexpensive options for relocating staff and shipping project teams during Australia’s traditionally expensive spring peak. However, Economy Lite excludes checked baggage; employers should factor ancillary fees into total-trip costs. Virgin’s move escalates the fare war ignited by Qantas the previous day and illustrates how carriers are trading short-term yields for load-factor stability amid high fuel bills. Analysts say the dual sales could pressure low-cost rival Jetstar to follow suit, further lowering domestic airfare benchmarks. The promotion also highlights rising competition in secondary markets such as Newcastle, Hobart and Ballina, benefiting regional businesses and remote-work commuters.
While these routes are domestic, companies or travellers planning onward international legs can streamline visa and travel document requirements through VisaHQ, which handles applications for Australia and more than 200 other destinations in one online dashboard: https://www.visahq.com/australia/ Pairing the airline’s cut-price tickets with quick, reliable paperwork makes last-minute mobility projects and bleisure trips much less stressful.
For mobility planners, the sale provides inexpensive options for relocating staff and shipping project teams during Australia’s traditionally expensive spring peak. However, Economy Lite excludes checked baggage; employers should factor ancillary fees into total-trip costs. Virgin’s move escalates the fare war ignited by Qantas the previous day and illustrates how carriers are trading short-term yields for load-factor stability amid high fuel bills. Analysts say the dual sales could pressure low-cost rival Jetstar to follow suit, further lowering domestic airfare benchmarks. The promotion also highlights rising competition in secondary markets such as Newcastle, Hobart and Ballina, benefiting regional businesses and remote-work commuters.