airline seating – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Sat, 18 Oct 2025 00:16:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 WestJet to retrofit some cabins where reclining seats may cost more http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/westjet-to-retrofit-some-cabins-where-reclining-seats-may-cost-more/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/westjet-to-retrofit-some-cabins-where-reclining-seats-may-cost-more/#respond Sat, 18 Oct 2025 00:16:07 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/10/18/westjet-to-retrofit-some-cabins-where-reclining-seats-may-cost-more/ [ad_1]

It’s a move that has created quite a media firestorm: Canadian airline WestJet announced it will begin converting some of its aircraft to a layout including a new, no-recline economy section and new first-class seating. The airline says this will help it offer cheaper fares for some passengers. The trade-off, however, comes at the expense of passengers’ recline … unless they’re willing to spend more.

While not the first low-cost carrier to pioneer cheaper, unbundled fares, the airline has been busy finding new ways to court budget-conscious passengers. No-recline seats are the latest example.

The airline claims it is simply trying to help passengers save a buck by offering newer, lower-cost fares.

One of WestJet’s defining experiences has historically been its all-economy-class cabins, where the seat pitch — that is, the space between a fixed point on your seat and the same point on the seat in front of you — is a mere 30 inches (although it varies by aircraft and configuration).

The airline announced earlier this year that it would begin upgrading part of its fleet with a new interior configuration. Once retrofitted, WestJet’s Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 737-800 aircraft will be equipped with a new first-class cabin — dubbed “Premium” — in addition to the more familiar economy cabin. In WestJet’s case, this economy cabin will offer two different seat configurations.

‘Premium’ cabin

The first-class seats are at the front of the plane and offer not just the most spacious option and recline but also come equipped with power outlets, tablet holders and a tray for snacks and drinks — just like most premium cabins on other airlines. The seats will resemble the same seat make and model as currently featured on WestJet’s Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners, giving the rest of the fleet a more consistent look and feel.

WESTJET

Standard seating

Standard seating will offer passengers the usual 30-inch seat pitch, but starting with this new interior redesign, the seats will have no additional recline; they will be in a fixed, upright position. The airline claims that in user testing, some passengers said they favored a fixed-recline seat option to avoid other passengers invading their personal space.

“Through our guest user testing, half indicated they preferred a fixed recline, to avoid feeling impacted by other passengers encroaching upon their space,” Jennifer Booth, a spokesperson for WestJet, told Nexstar in a published statement.

The airline believes it will reduce inflight incidents or fights over reclining, as flyers can never seem to settle on proper reclining etiquette. Of course, cynics would say it’s just another way for the airline to make money.

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Standard seating is found toward the back of the aircraft, and seats become slightly less spacious the farther back you are. Exit-row seats are part of the standard seating option but offer more legroom.

Artist rendering of new WestJet interior.
Artist rendering of new WestJet interior. WESTJET

Extended Comfort

“Extended Comfort” seats, while still part of the economy cabin, offer a seat pitch of between 34 and 36 inches, which allows passengers to better stretch their legs in their space. The recline on these seats is also rather generous, with 2 to 4 inches of recline. The Extended Comfort seats will be at the front of the economy cabin, just behind the premium cabin. So, in addition to more space, passengers will board earlier while there’s still overhead bin space and disembark ahead of the rest of the economy cabin.

WESTJET

Rollout of new interiors

The first plane with the new cabin configuration is expected to enter service later in October. The airline hopes to have all 43 reconfigured by early 2026. WestJet, a Canadian airline, operates most of its flights within Canada but serves many destinations in the U.S. and Mexico, as well as a few locations in Central America and the Caribbean.

In order to recognize which aircraft configuration will be present on your flight at the time of booking, WestJet will designate its flights with older, all-economy configurations as “economy seating only.” If you have already purchased your flight and would like to know what configuration you’ll see once you board, you can check the airline’s flight guide within 72 hours of departure, read the check-in email 24 hours prior to departure, or find out during the check-in process.

Reaction

A WestJet Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner.
A WestJet Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner. WESTJET

As you can imagine, passenger reactions have been decidedly mixed, with some saying no passengers should be reclining anyway and others saying they don’t want to pay for what was once free.

Whether there’s extended pushback remains to be seen. But one prominent airline analyst told TPG that he believed the idea wouldn’t work.

“Christmas won’t arrive for another two and a half months, but WestJet just gave Air Canada an early holiday gift,” said Henry Harteveldt, industry analyst and president of Atmosphere Research Group. “Of all the dumb ideas I have seen airlines do in my career, this is one of the, if not the, dumbest. I strongly believe WestJet’s decision will backfire quickly and badly. I urge the airline to abandon this foolhardy idea and look for ideas that will actually attract, rather than repel, passengers.”

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Southwest Airlines has installed extra legroom on 47% of its planes http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/southwest-airlines-has-installed-extra-legroom-on-47-of-its-planes/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/southwest-airlines-has-installed-extra-legroom-on-47-of-its-planes/#respond Thu, 11 Sep 2025 18:47:11 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/11/southwest-airlines-has-installed-extra-legroom-on-47-of-its-planes/ [ad_1]

Southwest Airlines technically doesn’t launch assigned seating for another four months. But starting now, if you’re flying with the airline to Hawaii, you’ll be on a plane that already has its new extra-legroom seats.

And since the airline hasn’t ended its open seating policy just yet, that means a prime boarding position could land you one of those spacious seats at no added cost.

As of this week, the Dallas-based carrier has finished installing extra-space rows on all of its Boeing 737 MAX 8 jets — the same aircraft it uses on flights to and from the Aloha State. It’s a milestone in Southwest’s push to get all of its planes reconfigured with extra-legroom accommodations before late January 2026, when it officially launches open seating and starts charging extra for those roomier rows.

So, think of this as the “soft launch,” of sorts, during the final few months of first-come, first-served seating.

Nearly half of Southwest planes now have extra legroom

It’s not just Southwest’s Hawaii flights that have its new extra-legroom seats, either. As of Sept. 8, the carrier had retrofitted 380 of its planes with the new seating setup — about 47% of its fleet.

As part of the cabin revamp, crews also installed in-seat power outlets and larger overhead bins on all of Southwest’s MAX 8 planes that fly its longer routes.

Related: Southwest’s ‘variable’ redemptions take effect

Southwest plane on tarmac
Southwest Airlines planes are seen at the Austin Bergstrom International Airport (AUS) in Austin in January 2023. DANIEL SLIM/GETTY IMAGES

Southwest’s MAX 8 (and Boeing 737-800) planes that have been retrofitted now feature five extra-legroom rows at the front of the aircraft and three additional rows of elevated seating near the mid-cabin emergency exit.

We should note that these are just regular coach seats with more legroom. So for now, as you board a plane that has these spacious rows, you may have to look closely to see what type of seat you’re choosing.

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Southwest recently began installing specially-colored headrests to make its extra-legroom seats stand out. But you’ll only notice the colors on about a quarter of the planes that have the new seating setup.

Here’s what the MAX 8 and 737-800 seat map will look like once the aircraft is outfitted with the new configuration.

Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 737-800 seat map with the new configuration.
Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 737-800 seat map with the new configuration. SOUTHWEST AIRLINES

Retrofits for every plane

Southwest began refitting its planes this spring after announcing its shift to assigned and extra-legroom seating in 2024.

The carrier has already started selling flights with assigned seating, which officially begins Jan. 27, 2026. At that point, customers who purchase the airline’s newly named Choice Extra fare will have access to extra legroom.

Top-tier Rapid Rewards A-List Preferred members will be able to select one of those seats for free within 48 hours of a flight’s departure. Travelers who carry the Southwest Rapid Rewards® Priority Credit Card (see rates and fees) the Southwest® Rapid Rewards® Performance Business Credit Card (see rates and fees) will be able to do the same.

Read more: Southwest unveils big credit card refresh: 50% fee hikes, but new seating and boarding perks

Best ways to get a Southwest extra-legroom seat in 2025

Between now and January — while Southwest still has open seating in place — your best bet for scoring one of the extra-legroom seats is to secure an early boarding position.

Southwest boarding posts
A Southwest Airlines boarding post at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL). SEAN CUDAHY/THE POINTS GUY

The airline sells Upgraded Boarding as an optional add-on within 24 hours of departure. This guarantees an A1-15 boarding position — and, in essence, ensures an extra-legroom seat will be available when you get on the plane.

Read more: What to know about Southwest Airlines’ 8 boarding groups starting in January

Up next

Southwest still has to finish retrofitting its Boeing 737-800 fleet with the new configuration. The airline now expects to start updating its 737-700s in December, a spokesperson told TPG.

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