Standby passengers typically have priority based on how much they paid for their tickets and their relative status in the airline's frequent flyer program.
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Airline employees and some of their family and friends can also travel standby, often for free or at a significant discount. They typically have lower priority than regular passengers, and are given a seat after all regular fare passengers have seats.
Standby customers are usually boarded first. If there are seats they get on. Airline employees tend to check the loads before they travel, so if there are no open seats, you typically don't see people try to standby for the flights.
What it is. A standby list allows you to change to a different flight if a seat becomes available. It's an option if you're hoping for an earlier flight or if your flight has been canceled or delayed. Flying standby with us is free and easy, but there's no guarantee that you will get a seat while on a standby list.
People flying standby go to check-in as usual and pass through security. At the gate, the waiting begins. Holders of standby tickets do not have a mandatory right to carriage. This means that they can only fly if all seats are not already occupied by passengers with regular tickets.
Standby passengers may also have to vacate their seat for a full fare-paying customer. Non-employees can get on the standby list by speaking to a ticket agent or gate agent. This usually must occur in person at the airport, and not over the phone.
Standby, on the other hand, involves showing up at the airport without a confirmed ticket and hoping to secure a seat if there are no-shows or last-minute cancellations. While waitlisting is often done in advance, usually online or through customer service, standby is typically done at the airport on the day of travel.
A buddy pass is a form of standby ticket by using your family's or friend's ticket benefits. It is not a confirmed ticket and means a person with buddy pass gets on a flight if there are empty or available seats. With this kind of arrangement, a buddy pass is typically much cheaper and flexible than confirmed tickets.
Flight Attendants (FAs) are strictly required to be seated during take-off and landings only and usually not during descent or climb, unlike passengers who are usually required to be seated and buckled. Then it depends on the local rules for how long they are supposed to stay there.