Qatar Airways has clinched regulatory approval for a 25% investment in Virgin Australia, paving the way for the Australian carrier to eventually restart long-haul operations.

The “strategic partnership” between the two carriers – first announced in October 2024 – was greenlit by Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board on 27 February. The approval comes more than a week after anti-trust regulators proposed to approve the commercial partnership.

Virgin owners Bain Capital – together with Virgin Group and the Queensland Investment Corporation – will retain their shareholding of the airline following the Qatar investment.

The decision means that Virgin Australia can eventually restart long-haul flying, wet-leasing Boeing 777s from Qatar to fly between Australia and Doha.

The airline is targeting to launch these flights by June and will now await a decision by Australia’s International Air Services Commission for the allocation of air traffic rights.

If the green light is given, it will launch flights from Sydney, Brisbane, and Perth to Doha in June, with flights from Melbourne to the Qatari capital to follow in November.

The partnership will also allow for secondment opportunities for Virgin Australia pilot and cabin crew to Qatar Airways.

Qatar first announced its intention to take a minority 25% stake in Virgin Australia – for an undisclosed sum – on 1 October. It said the deal would provide Virgin Australia with “access to the critical scale and expertise of a world leading global airline”.