Loading Page...

Should you give up your seat on a plane?

Should you give up your seat if someone asks to sit with a family member or friend, or stick like cement in the seat you have been allocated or pre-selected ahead of departure? If it is the latter - where you have paid for the perk of seat selection - you are entitled to stay put and politely decline the request.



People Also Ask

No matter which airline you're flying on, don't ever pay to select a seat. By the way, you shouldn't pay baggage fees either, you can read our article about that. I personally flew on well above 100 flights where I was offered the privilege of choosing a seat for a fee, and I've never paid a single dollar for that.

MORE DETAILS

The back of the plane is definitely the worst place to sit for travelers who hate turbulence since it's far from the plane's center of lift and gravity. This section can also be very loud since some planes have engines and auxiliary power units toward the back of the body that make a lot of noise.

MORE DETAILS

What Are the Worst Seats on a Plane?
  • The dreaded middle seat is our pick for the worst seat on a plane. ...
  • Seats towards the back of the plane tend to experience more turbulence than those towards the front. ...
  • An aisle seat located near a bathroom is one of the worst seats on the plane.


MORE DETAILS

Even more specifically, the middle seats in the back of the aircraft are statistically the safest, with just a 28 percent fatality rate. By comparison, aisle seats in the middle of the cabin had a fatality rate of 44 percent.

MORE DETAILS

So when you walk on the plane and see our happy, smiling face, we're actually looking you up and down, trying to find our ABPs, the flight attendant from Salt Lake City remarked in the video. ABP stands for able body person, or someone who can assist flight attendants in an emergency, according to Kamalani.

MORE DETAILS

Stay in Your Own Space Following airplane etiquette means that you do not do this. While in your seat, please keep all of your body – arms, hands, head, legs, feet, and other parts – only in the space that is bordered by your seat measurements. Trust us, your neighbor will thank you for this small act of civility.

MORE DETAILS

If you are proposing to trade seats because you want to be near your spouse or friends, or have a very tight layover, and you are offering a comparable seat (aisle for an aisle, window for a window), it's always worth the ask and is generally viewed as acceptable.

MORE DETAILS

One would have a better chance of surviving a plane crash, if one is placed in the back of the plane. A statistical study, carried out on accidents that have occurred since the 1970s in the United States, says so (see diagram below). Logical: in case of impact, it is the front that takes everything...

MORE DETAILS

Even more specifically, the middle seats in the back of the aircraft are statistically the safest, with just a 28 percent fatality rate. By comparison, aisle seats in the middle of the cabin had a fatality rate of 44 percent.

MORE DETAILS

September 24, 2023 A single-engine Beechcraft BE23 crashed in a field near Roger M Dreyer Memorial Airport in Gonzales, Texas, around 7:30 p.m. local time on Saturday, September 24. Only the pilot was on board. The FAA and NTSB will investigate.

MORE DETAILS

Jet airliners, on the inside, are loudest in the last few rows at the rear. Outside, right at the engine exhausts, but you're in serious danger from the engine if you're anywhere near that. Most of the noise goes backwards away from the plane.

MORE DETAILS

Seats in the back are away from the wings, which causes a more turbulent ride. Seats in the back are also usually closer to the lavatory, which could mean foul odors. Finally, those sitting in the back are the last ones to off the plane, which is bad if you have a connecting flight.

MORE DETAILS

An Insider article previously reported that the back of the plane is the worst for turbulence, and from my experience, that's definitely the case. Even in the air, whenever the plane passed through clouds, I could feel my seat and the compartments above me shaking.

MORE DETAILS

A strategy that travelers have been trying for years to varying degrees of success is the middle seat trick — when checking in online, two people traveling together will each select the aisle and window seats in a three-seat row and hope that the middle seat remains open.

MORE DETAILS

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.

MORE DETAILS

You can buy the second seat for the same fare as your original seat if both seats are purchased at the same time. If you don't buy an extra seat in advance, you may have to do so on the day of departure for the fare level available on the day of departure.

MORE DETAILS