Can an airline tell you if someone is on a flight?
How do I know if a passenger is boarded on a flight or not? Unless you are the one who purchased the ticket for the passenger flying, airlines will not give out that information. In the United States, it is falls under the Privacy Act of 1974.
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Aircraft operators are required to report detailed information on their flight path to various national regulators, including the Federal Aviation Administration. That data is generally a matter of public record and is published to various websites popular amongst airline enthusiasts.
Flight tickets have departure and arrival details, PNR and booking code, seat number, and boarding time on them. Passengers scheduling an international or a domestic flight need to buy their flight tickets at first so that a seat or seats can be held throughout the journey.
In the air travel industry, airlines keep a record of their passengers in what they call a PNR, a passenger name record. It could include the passenger's itinerary, fare details, how the passenger paid, any special services required, age, and sometimes gender, too.
Currently, all passengers must continue to have their physical IDs on hand. If a digital ID cannot be verified at the TSA security checkpoint, a passenger must use an acceptable physical identity document (e.g., driver's license, passport) to proceed through the identity verification process.
A Brief Overview of Passenger ListsThe earliest passenger lists recorded only a passenger's name, age, sex, occupation and the country of origin. By the 1840s, lists added the country where the person intended to settle. Additional notes might indicate if a passenger died on board or gave birth.
Amadeus Airport Passenger Verification locates the person from the moment the boarding pass is scanned: no more guessing or waiting for no-shows. Airlines can decide when to process waiting lists, offload luggage, and determine whether or not to hold the gate or close boarding.
American Airlines seats can generally be selected during booking or after booking your flight. However, you'll need to avoid basic economy fares to get free seat selection. And you'll only get free preferred or extra-legroom seat selection if you have elite status or use miles to pay the fee.
If you're traveling with a group, the best way to avoid a seat selection fee is to book your seats at the same time. If the airline is assigning seats for you, it typically seats people under the same record locator number together.
Originally Answered: Can you sit in first class if seats are empty and ask nicely? Short answer: no. The airlines don't want to encourage passengers to buy cheap seats and then pester the flight attendants for an upgrade. They want First Class seats going only to the people who pay full price for them.