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Do airlines try to seat you together?

Yes, if you book airline tickets together, you are more likely to have seats beside each other. When you book tickets together, the airline will usually try to seat you together. However, there is no guarantee that you will be seated together, especially if the flight is full.



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Some parents assume they will automatically be seated with their kids. Others may end up separated from their families if they are rebooked due to a cancellation. Regardless of the reason, airlines are not legally required to seat families together.

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Some parents assume they will automatically be seated with their kids. Others may end up separated from their families if they are rebooked due to a cancellation. Regardless of the reason, airlines are not legally required to seat families together.

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Don't count on sitting together, unless you're willing to fork over extra money. It has become increasingly common for airlines to charge passengers extra to choose seats on flights in advance, making it common for parties to be separated on flights.

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In order for you to try and succeed in this clever move, you and your travel partner should try and book an aisle and a window seat respectively, leaving the middle seat empty. The thought behind it is that the probability that another traveler will want to seat in between two people is, in fact, low.

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But the CAA found that when a passenger flies Ryanair, as compared to other airlines, the likelihood of being separated from their party doubled. According to its study, 18 percent of all flyers surveyed were separated from their traveling companions if they chose to not pay to sit together.

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Seat designation
On many aircraft, the rightmost seats have letter designations HJK, skipping the letter I. This is because each seat has a row number followed by letter; letters that may be confused with numbers (I, O, Q, S, or Z) must be avoided, usually for people with dyslexia.

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Whilst our seating system will always try to seat families together, seats are allocated on a first come first served basis so the earlier you check in the more likely you are to be seated together.

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Tammy Nelson was flying on Delta Airlines from Cincinnati, Ohio, to San Jose, California, when she was asked to swap seats with a woman who wanted to sit next to her two children.

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However, there are ways you can achieve this for free.
  1. Pick your airline carefully. ...
  2. Check-in early. ...
  3. Make a specific request. ...
  4. Ask another passenger to swap seats. ...
  5. Sit near the front or the back. ...
  6. Use a seat map. ...
  7. Choose a window seat. ...
  8. Select extra legroom.


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If you want a window seat, then suppose you choose from left to right (looking toward plane's nose): kid, kid, parent (aisle), parent (aisle). if in the middle then it's parent, kiddo, kiddo, parent. Mirror image it if you want the other side of the plane.

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More often than not a pilot will not know the other pilot he will be flying with. Of course this will greatly depend upon the size of the airline's domicile.

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Boarding groups To simplify the boarding process, we board all customers by group. You can find your group number on your boarding pass. Your group depends on whose traveling, your ticket and your MileagePlus status.

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Seat assignment Most airlines assign booked seats before your flight; see Planning your flight. A few airlines do not assign seats (e.g., Southwest), but do assign you a boarding group based on how early you confirm your flight on-line within 24 hours of the flight.

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Passengers who don't pay for a particular spot will be randomly allocated a seat as well when they check in, free of charge, although the chances of getting a seat up front will be diminished.

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Not Enough Passengers Occasionally, airlines might cancel because there aren't enough passengers. They occasionally do so when operating the flight would result in a too big an expense. There are indeed high costs to flying an aircraft.

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If you were not able to make an advance seat assignment, keep an eye on the seat map as these seats will begin to open up once check-in begins and then once the gate opens for the flight.

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The ultimate survival guide for flying Ryanair
  1. Study your arrival airport. ...
  2. Purchase checked baggage in advance. ...
  3. Know the carry-on baggage rules. ...
  4. Pay for your extras in advance. ...
  5. Consider a higher fare class. ...
  6. Buy a Family Plus fare if flying with kids. ...
  7. Correct booking errors within 48 hours. ...
  8. Skip Ryanair extras.


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If you choose not to pay to reserve a seat, your seat will be assigned to you free of charge when you check in, between 24 hours and 2 hours prior to departure.

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