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What are the dangers of flying overweight?

In fact, overweight passengers can significantly affect both safety and comfort during a flight. For instance, larger people could have trouble finding chairs that fit them or correctly fastening their seat belts. In the case of turbulence or an emergency landing, this could pose serious safety risks.



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Choose Your Seat Wisely
While some passengers prefer window seats, aisle seats are often better for overweight passengers that are only purchasing one seat. Window seats are often the better option if you purchase an additional seat.

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Even though there are no weight limits for fat passengers, there are normally three basic requirements for flying while overweight: Passengers must be able to sit with both armrests down. Passengers must be able to buckle their seatbelts. The aisle must not be blocked by a passenger.

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You should be fine. You could try and google the largest seat in your class category and try to book it. You will be fine, you probably won't even need an extender on your belt. A size 22 won't have difficulty fitting in a airline seat, and doing up the seat belt.

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I am a bigger person, size 24-26-28. Will I fit in an airplane seat? You will probably need to buy two coach seats and ask for a seatbelt extender (or to have yours). Remember, two coach seats are generally much cheaper and more spacious than a single first class seat.

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That doesn't make it a good idea, which is why pilots are trained to do weight and balance plus performance calculations before every flight. Besides the safety angle, taking off over gross weight could land you in trouble with the FAA even if nothing goes wrong, you can lose your ticket for that.

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Most likely, it won't be comfortable, but you'll still fit at 300. Try and book next to an empty seat, if you can.

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Although there is not a liftable armrest, I have found that those extra few inches of room are readily available in first-class seats. I also like the extra leg room as a taller passenger, which allows me to do some in-seat leg exercises to prevent stiffness.

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Passengers who do not fit into the 17.8-inch seat comfortably with the armrests down must purchase two seats at the time of booking. The airline will then assign two seats next to each other, free of charge.

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3 Answers. Airlines do care about your carry-on weight and even your weight. Many have carry-on weight limits, which low-cost carriers usually enforce, weighing the carry-on and tagging it as cabin luggage. Full-service airlines rarely bother.

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However, a 2019 advisory from the FAA said airlines can weigh passengers, according to CNBC. “It allows us to have actual accurate and current, up-to-date weights for our particular flight,” Captain Laura Einsetler, a commercial airline pilot with more than 30 years of aviation experience, told NewsNation.

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How does the airliner crew know if the plane is overweight before takeoff? To ensure that an airliner is within its weight and balance limits, the crew uses a system that consists of three elements: weighing, recording, and loading.

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A standard airline seatbelt extends approximately 46 inches, and a seatbelt extension adds approximately 25 inches.

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Even though there are no weight limits for fat passengers, there are normally three basic requirements for flying while overweight: Passengers must be able to sit with both armrests down. Passengers must be able to buckle their seatbelts. The aisle must not be blocked by a passenger.

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How fat is too fat to fly? Even though there are no weight limits for fat passengers, there are normally three basic requirements for flying while overweight: Passengers must be able to sit with both armrests down. Passengers must be able to buckle their seatbelts.

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Each bag should weigh less than 23KG/50LBS. This is an international regulation set for the health and safety of airport workers who have to lift hundreds of bags daily.

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Instead, airlines use an average airline weight per passenger and multiply it by the total number of passengers. Currently the FAA average weight per passenger is 190 pounds in the summer and 195 pounds in the winter for men, and 179 pounds in the summer and 184 pounds in the winter for women.

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I am 6'3 and pushing 400 pounds and I have never had a problem on BA flights. Yes I need a seatbelt extension but only so I will be comfortable. I admittedly do fit between the armrests. I do feel bad for people next to me because my shoulders are quite broad but I try to get an aisle seat so I can at least lean out.

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Ryanair seat belts are said to be 30 '' as opposed to Thomson 28 '' short haul. Much depends on weight distribution really because my son is heavier but is 6ft 5ins and has no problem.

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