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Less Familiar Reasons Why You May Be Ineligible For An Exit Row

a sign on a plane

For most people, if you’re not sitting in first or business class, seats in the exit rows can be some of the most desirable ones on the plane. You don’t have to worry about pitch (the person in front of you can’t recline their seat) and you have legroom for days. Airlines became savvy to this several years ago and now charge a premium for sitting in one of those seats.

Of course, sitting in an exit row is more than just legroom; you also have an important job to do. If you’ve ever sat in the exit row, you’ve gotten the spiel from the flight attendant; they’re from the FAA. You probably know a lot of them by heart. You have to be at least 15 years old, able to lift and move the (upwards of 50 pound) emergency door, be able to see, hear, understand and speak English, have sufficient mobility, strength and dexterity in both arms, hands and legs to assist in an evacuation, etc. (with all that responsibility, it sounds like THEY should pay US to sit there, huh?)

But there are a few qualifications the flight attendants don’t necessarily mention, and they’re situations that are everyday, normal things.

Now, that last one is interesting. One of the members the Facebook group we used to run sent me what she experienced on an Iberia flight to the metropolitan New York area:

I was in the exit row and asked for a seat belt extender. I can totally use the standard belt but since this was going to be a long international flight, I wanted the comfort. I was given one and then the flight attendant returned and told me that I wasn’t able to sit in the exit row if I needed one. I guess because I’m a bit heavier I can’t do the job? She offered me another seat, but I said “I paid extra for this seat,” and said nicely that I intended to stay in my seat. When she insisted that I couldn’t sit there with the extender, I handed it back to her and clicked my regular seat belt. “Problem” solved. Did I weigh any less? No. I just was a bit uncomfortable but now all of a sudden faith in my emergency landing skills was restored? Please.

Our reader initially took the incident as “fat-shaming.” But since she was allowed to sit there without the seatbelt extender, I suspected the reasoning was more than just her size. So I did some research.

It turns out if you have a seatbelt extender, the concern is that the extra 12″ to 25″ of seatbelt (here are the airlines’ current regulations for passengers of size, seatbelt extenders, etc.) will be a potential tripping/entanglement hazard in the event of an emergency. Which yeah, makes sense.

The airlines, of course, mention the rules ahead of time. When you make a reservation and request an exit row, this is an example (in this case, it’s Delta) of what you have to agree to before buying that add-on:

However, there are a couple of unfortunate issues about this:

So yeah – if you want to upgrade to an exit row, just make sure you note, meet – and continue to note and meet – all of the qualifications.

*** Many thanks to our reader for sharing her story with us
*** Feature photo (cropped): Andrew Currie / flickr / cc by 2.0

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