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What to Do If You’re Sitting Next to A Smelly Passenger

a woman blowing her nose in a tissue

For those of us sitting in coach, unless you and your travel partners fill up the entire row, chances are you’re going to be sitting next to a total stranger. If you’re lucky, they’ll be pleasant and follow all the unwritten rules of flying. Other times you may totally lose the seating lottery and not only do you have a stranger sitting next to you…but they smell. Badly.

Maybe they smell like they haven’t bathed in a long time. Perhaps they have really bad breath. Maybe the odor suggests a lack of personal hygiene in certain unmentionable places. Whatever the case, it’s a 4-hour flight. So now what?

You have options!

You don’t have to just grin (or grimace) and bear it and hope the flight goes quickly. There are a few things you can proactively do to help your situation.

Tell the flight attendant

Airlines DO all have rules in their Contract of Carriage about body odor. Here are what the 3 legacy airlines say, although every U.S.-based airline has similar verbiage:

So yes, you can tell the flight attendant, preferably before takeoff.

But please, don’t be an A-hole, point and say “They stink.” I mean, do unto others, right? So get up, find a flight attendant and quietly, discreetly let them know that the passenger next to you smells badly. If there’s an empty seat on the plane, hopefully they’ll be able to relocate you to it.

However, even if the person has an odor, there’s no guarantee they’ll be removed from the flight. The smell could be due to a disability they have, in which case they have a right to remain on the plane. And because I know someone is going to ask, such disabilities could be, but are not limited to:

Anyway, if the person’s body odor is caused by a disability and it’s determined they’re allowed to remain on the plane, the following options might be helpful:

Use your air vent

PC: Honeywell

That overhead air vent can do more than keep you cool. When aimed to land on your face, it can also blast smelly air away from your nose.

Use a mask

During the pandemic, many people used masks (particularly KN95 masks) to prevent breathing in the COVID-19 virus. The same masks can also help keep bad odors out.

A cheap or homemade 1- or 2-ply mask, or one of those silly gaiters that people would wear won’t do a thing to keep the bad smell out of your nose, just as the holes in them were too big to keep out microscopic virus molecules, they won’t keep out smelly molecules either. But a well-fitting KN-95 mask will help keep out a decent amount of “malodorousness.”

Vick’s VapoRub

Bring a small container (they even sell one that’s the size and shape of a lip balm so it can fit in your bag o’ liquids) and rub some under your nose. It won’t make the smell go away completely, but it should help to take the edge off. (BTW, this, with the KN-95 mask? (*chef’s kiss*)

Feature Photo: Aqua mechanical // flickr // CC BY 2.0

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