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Decoding Airline Classes: Understanding the Different Types of Seats

a row of blue seats on an airplane

Details are shown on Delta Air Lines first A220 in Atlanta, Georgia at Hartsfield Jackson International airport on Sunday October 28,2018. (Chris Rank/Rank Studios 2018)

Have you ever felt like this when booking airfare? “I’d like to book a seat in Basic Premium Extra Plus Comfort Class that includes exit row seat assignments but without an extra carry on bag.” It sounds like the aviation version of ordering something at Starbucks. “Hi! I’d like a Venti of two bags of Peach Tea steeped in coconut milk only, no water, with one pump of vanilla at kids’ temperature, please.”

Knowing what class of airline seat you were buying didn’t use to be hard. There were only two or maybe three classes to choose from. First Class. Business Class. And Coach. Yep, that’s Coach. Not Economy. Not Main Cabin. Not Core. It’s just plain old Coach. And you know what? Everyone was fine with that. No one was complaining that the names were inappropriate. You knew what class you were in, and everyone was happy.

Flash forward to today and numerous names differentiate the airline’s seat choices. None of the names are the same and names that happen to be similar can still mean very different seat types. American Airlines leads the pack with eight different categories. United follows closely behind with seven, and Delta has six. Southwest Airlines is the easiest to understand, as they only have one class of seats, and they don’t even bother to give it a name. 🙂

Here’s my attempt to make sense of all these names, from top to bottom…

Start with the most difficult one first, and then everything will seem easy after that, right? Off we go!

American Airlines

United Airlines

Delta Airlines

From here on out, things get much easier to understand. Since the following airlines only fly within the US and to the Caribbean, Mexico and Central America, there isn’t a huge need for these planes to have flatbed seats. Unless you want to compete against the above airlines on transcontinental routes, we’ll get to that in a second.

Alaska Airlines

JetBlue

Spirit

Frontier

Standard Seating – The standard seats on Frontier. You must pay for any seat assignment, or they will select seats for you during check-in.

Southwest

Final Thoughts

In the airline industry, product differentiation is a common practice where airlines assign special names to their products. However, offering business class seats that are superior to first-class seats and multiple types of economy tickets can create confusion among passengers. While it is unfortunate that this issue needs to be addressed, I do hope this piece proves useful to those seeking clarity on the matter.

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