r/Damnthatsinteresting 2d ago

How long haul airline seating works Image

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6.1k Upvotes

337 comments sorted by

1.7k

u/bodhiseppuku 2d ago

What year is this from? Premium Economy is not close to 2x-3x cost of Economy seating in my experience.

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u/Stouty4567 2d ago

Yeah this graph is very off…

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u/SabraDistribution 2d ago

Former airline employee here, this post is completely wrong.

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u/RealEstateDuck 2d ago

Firat time I see someone pulling an airplane out of their ass.

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u/CowntChockula 2d ago

Homelander enters the chat

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u/jepvr 1d ago

No, it can't be wrong. It has thousands of upvotes.

-sigh-

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u/vaporeng 2d ago

Yeah it also says a first class seat takes the same space as about 8 economy seats.

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u/rancid24e 2d ago

Maybe you’re thinking about domestic first class. In long haul international flights, a first class seat can easily take up the space of 8 economy seats.

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u/ccaccus 2d ago

Right? When I was travelling to Japan, it was about $1200 round trip. The upgrade to premium economy was like $160. I would never have paid $2400, let alone $3600.

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u/ElSleepychameleon 2d ago

We've made this flight many times on business class many times for under $1500. 4 of the 5 trips business class and premium were full while economy was 60% empty.

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

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u/ccaccus 2d ago

$700 extra is not 1.5x, it's just under 1.3x. 1.5x would mean the premium economy seating was $1200.

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u/MukdenMan 2d ago

I fly Premium Economy across the Pacific every time and its like an extra $300 or something (and worth it). I only fly on Asian airlines, mainly Starlux or EVA but sometimes a Japanese airline.

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u/Dr-McLuvin 1d ago

What do u get with premium economy? I’ve never even heard of it until just now.

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u/_WingCommander_ 1d ago

Slightly more leg room

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u/MukdenMan 1d ago

Tons of leg room, wider seats, solid arm rests between seats so you won’t touch the other person, softer seats (I think), bigger screen. It’s a huge improvement for only a slight increase in price, nothing like Business Class.

Here is the Premium Economy on Starlux, which is the best I’ve been on:

https://thepointsguy.com/news/starlux-airlines-premium-economy-airbus-a350/

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u/Active-Tomato-2328 2d ago

Yeah it’s more like 1.25x-1.5x. Usually just slightly more leg room is the main perk. If you’re lucky they’re larger seats with no middle seats.

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u/hurricane14 1d ago

What's missing is the distinction between economy plus and true premium economy. The former is just more legroom. The later is kinda like business class on the 90s

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u/WhosAfraidOf_138 2d ago

Cathay Pacific is 2x price (although for 16 hours it's worth it)

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u/DLimber 1d ago

Yea I wouldn't use it if it was lol

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u/PhD_In_Struttin 2d ago

Where do the snakes go?

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u/MonkeyFluffers 2d ago

You won't see them anymore due to cutbacks. Had to fit another couple rows of seats in there somehow.

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u/mndza 2d ago

I’m sick and tired of these motherfuckin snakes on this motherfuckin plane!

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u/Bald_Nightmare 2d ago

Saw this movie in the theatre when it came out and after SMJ delivered this line people actually started cheering and clapping, 😆.

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u/happy--muffin 2d ago

I’ve had it with these monkey-fighting snakes on this Monday through Friday plane

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u/m1raclemile 1d ago

Airlines actually had to cut back on the snakes due to increase costs.

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u/Sumo-Subjects 2d ago

A missing piece here is cargo…many commercial airliners fly some industrial cargo in the belly of the airplane; it’s not just people’s checked luggage. That’s why the airlines always play this game of how much to charge for checked luggage, it’s not behave they really care, it’s because if too many people bring more than 1-2 checked bags they won’t be able to fit a MUCH more profitable palette down there

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u/wvs1993 2d ago

But the title states: how airline seating works so im not missing that part

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u/Sumo-Subjects 2d ago

True, I guess I was focusing on the comments mentioning “why don’t we only do business class seating” and the answer is that the aircraft is profitable in other ways and they have a business need to still offer Economy too

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u/JoEel75 2d ago

As someone who works in cargo for an airline while cargo is more profitable than checked baggage, it's not that valuable when it comes to straight profit. The airline I'm with as an easy example, if cargo makes 1 million dollars a fiscal quarter than passengers (including baggage) made 4 million. Certainly profitable, but as far as it tends to go, cargo is an afterthought with us.

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u/Sumo-Subjects 2d ago

Makes sense, thank you for the insight!

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u/Necessary-Contest706 2d ago

If you lost 25% of your revenue, it wouldn't be an afterthought. The entire airline would shut down.

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u/JoEel75 2d ago

20 percent revenue, also they regular choose to skip on cargo. Cause it's not losing out on revenue. Passengers generate more money, so if skipping on cargo means having/keeping passengers they'll do it any day of the week. I've seen stuff pile up and sit in our yard ready to go for a month but not go because more passengers bought a ticket last day and they needed the space for baggage. Unless it's live human organs, the airline I work for doesn't care a while lot, some food products and pharmaceuticals we try to hurry on but thats only because if they sit in the warehouse for too long we lose the money, but otherwise stuff can sit there for months. Not typically an issue with larger flights admittedly, but on A320s and A321 it does tend to be.

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u/Necessary-Contest706 2d ago

Cargo isn't on the way to vacation, so it makes sense that you would be willing to delay it in favor of passengers.

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u/ArchdukeOfNorge 2d ago

It varies by airline, but especially larger ones do significantly less cargo operations.

Let’s look at Delta, the largest airliner, and one of, if not the most profitable airliners in the world. Per their 2023 shareholder’s annual report (Form 10-K, p. 35), cargo revenues for the year were $723 million, which represents only 1.2% of their $58.048 billion in total operating revenues. This trend holds for the other major airliners I’ve looked at as well.

Their 10-K filling on page 6 also discusses cargo specifically, stating, “in 2023, cargo revenues decreased year over year, mostly resulting from lower yield due to decreased market demand and increased industry capacity.”

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u/6xLeverage 2d ago

Small % of revenue but likely very high margin.

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u/ArchdukeOfNorge 2d ago edited 2d ago

It still wouldn’t shut the airliner down if they lost that revenue like the other user said. And with expenses for passenger v. cargo, the margins won’t be that different. Passenger specific expenses are quite small compared to the passenger revenues; for Delta these expenses are less than 10% of the passenger revenues. Other expenses (like pilot salaries, aircraft maintenance, etc.) would/should be factored as being expenses for both passenger and cargo services.

Cargo is something airliners do because the space it occupies would fly empty otherwise, so it’s an easy way to make an extra tiny bit of revenue. But in no way are cargo ops crucial to the success of large airliners.

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u/CosmicCreeperz 2d ago

He said profit, not revenue. Huge difference. Assuming airlines are profitable in any particular quarter, of course.

Though from what I understand it’s not where near 20-25%, more like 1-2%.

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u/comdoriano009 2d ago

Maybe an afterthought for you. Certainly not for the airline if really is that profitable

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u/ArchdukeOfNorge 2d ago

It’s in the range of a percent or two of total revenues for major airliners

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u/PandaRocketPunch 2d ago

I think the point is airlines want the best of both. They're pushing the checked baggage prices as far as tolerable to retain passengers, but allow enough space for more expensive cargo, rather than a bunch of passenger bags.

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u/ExpertPepper9341 2d ago

 A missing piece here is cargo…many commercial airliners fly some industrial cargo in the belly of the airplane; it’s not just people’s checked luggage. That’s why the airlines always play this game of how much to charge for checked luggage, it’s not behave they really care, it’s because if too many people bring more than 1-2 checked bags they won’t be able to fit a MUCH more profitable palette down there

This is so completely wrong it’s laughable. If it was true, they’d just be flying cargo, and not bother flying passengers at all, like countless cargo companies do.

Yes, airlines stuff some cargo into the plane, but it’s a fraction of the profitability.

With no passengers filling aircraft seats as demand dwindles in the wake of Covid-19, an increasing number of airlines are now piling cargo in the cabins of their aircraft in the hope to generate at least a fraction of the revenue they would have generated under normal circumstances.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/cathybuyck/2020/03/26/airlines-spot-revenue-opportunity-and-use-their-passenger-aircraft-to-ship-urgent-cargo/

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u/Sumo-Subjects 2d ago

Yeah someone else who works in cargo explained that , but thank you for the extra info and link! It’s really helpful

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u/MattMBerkshire 2d ago

And fully flexible tickets in economy.

The price difference can be a shit ton more than the leading fare.

Applies through all classes.

I did business from LHR to LHE via IST earlier this year.

Leading business class ticket with Turkish was £1600, fully flexible including no show refund was £4500.

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u/splanky47 2d ago

It’s also missing accuracy.

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u/FoundationOk5820 2d ago

Why don’t they use those c130s for commercial flights so I can get some sleep??

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u/professionalcumsock 2d ago

Enemy ac-130!

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u/Littlesebastian86 2d ago

First class “not actually that profitable”?

  • ya citations needed. Sounds like bull shit.
  • love the specifics of “that profitable”

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u/xTarheelsUNCx 2d ago

Good to be skeptical. I’ve seen sources saying this is least profitable however I work for an airline and we are constantly told by the company that first class is the biggest money makers and those seats must stay in good working condition. Not to mention, airlines don’t do anything if it doesn’t make them money. They’re not providing bigger seats out of the goodness of their hearts. (In the US anyway)

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u/GrandOpener 2d ago

“Biggest money maker” and “not that profitable” are potentially compatible statements. If—eyeballing the graph above—first class is twice as expensive as business, but takes up three times as much room, then it’s reasonable to assume that it is less profitable, but it’s still absolutely essential that those seats are filled. 

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u/xTarheelsUNCx 2d ago

Just did a quick flight search. From IAD to HND (Japan) $1600 economy. $8500 first class. If one first class seat takes up the room of 3 economy seats, the 3 seats is still roughly half the cost of the 1. Obviously there are A Lot of variables to this, but first class seats are absolute money makers.

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u/_IsNull 2d ago

Additionally, there's the cost of maintaining a separate first-class lounge, check-in counter, transportation, and other amenities.

In the interview, Al Baker said the cost of the luxury seats doesn’t justify the return, noting that Qatar Airways’ business-class offering provides similar perks anyway.

Qatar Airways isn’t alone. Last year, American Airlines announced it will discontinue its first class offering on international flights from 2024 and replace it with business class seating.

Instead, the US-based airline confirmed premium seating in its long-haul fleet will grow more than 45% by 2026. The change, the airline said, was due to a shift in customer demand. Air New Zealand, Turkish Airlines, and Delta Air Lines have also followed suit

https://www.airport-technology.com/features/are-first-class-seats-past-their-peak/

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

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u/xTarheelsUNCx 2d ago

Depends on configuration. Staggered dual pods take up approx same space as 6, which would be 3 per seat

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u/Connect_Raisin4285 2d ago

Important to note that first class in this graphic is most likely the pods you see on flights like emirates and Lufthansa. Business class in these are the seats most people consider first class which are the lie flat seats. Premium economy should be similar to the first class on an A321 type flight which are larger seats and usually have less across than economy. So the first class seats take up the same amount of room as potentially 9 or more economy seats.

I use to work for an seating company and did the initial sales layouts of the aircraft(over a year ago so I forgot some of the sizes). We did discuss internally alot that the premium economy was the most profitable section of the plane while the first class seats were more of a status item for the airlines, which is why not many airlines offer them, to push their brand and get rich people talking about them. Advancements in business class could eventually push it to be more profitable as newer designs can offer the same bed length with a small pitch.

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u/xTarheelsUNCx 2d ago

This is a very important distinction

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u/Various_Ambassador92 2d ago

For the business class long-haul flight I took recently, each row had 4 seats instead of the standard 9 for economy and probably took up roughly two rows worth of length. So each seat took up about as much space as 5 economy seats, and I indeed paid roughly 5x the cost of economy for my ticket. With the numerous ways service is improved on top of that, that probably does indeed mean that the profit margin was lower.

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u/GrandOpener 2d ago

I was comparing first class and business. The size difference between first class and economy is much more than 3x. The infographic seems to claim that first class is a little more profitable than economy anyway. 

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u/xTarheelsUNCx 2d ago

Yeah I can really only give opinion on the airline I’m familiar with, and their first class is configured in a way that 2 first class seats are roughly the size of 6 economy. I certainly can’t speak to all airlines. So many variables. (There’s also a caveat where some airlines, mine included, no longer have a first class; it starts at business and goes back to economy. This could skew the data in these)

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u/DukeDevorak 2d ago

I think it's because that first class seats are difficult to fill up, and airlines cannot simply drop the prices to increase the sales because first class seats are essentially luxury goods, with which the price does not only serve as to deliver luxurious services, but more importantly, to separate those VIPs from those "peasants" in the same flight.

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u/WhileNotLurking 2d ago

Revenue != profit.

The first class tickets bring in a ton of revenue, but also have a lot of costs. If you maintain the costs - but don’t get the revenue you are in the hole. So it’s essential to keep the seats working.

Additionally there are knock on effects. If airline X gets the reputation that their first class experience sucks because of broken seats - that’s going to haunt them as you may get several customers who elect to find a new airline for their first class experience. Loosing you long term revenue.

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u/ArchdukeOfNorge 2d ago

To add some context, in 2023 Delta made $19.119 billion in premium seating revenue, compared to $24.477 billion in economy revenue. Given the square foot differences between the two, it illustrates that premium seating is profitable. However their 2023 10-K filling doesn’t give revenue differences for the various premium seating options.

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u/SleepyFlying 1d ago

The seats must stay in working order because loosing the revenue from that seat is a big hit while loosing the revenue of an economy seat is meh.

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u/gamja-namja 2d ago

https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/mje/2021/10/27/the-death-of-first-class/

I googled half a dozen sources saying the same thing (all from academic journals), here's one

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u/UndoxxableOhioan 2d ago

First, there is a huge misunderstanding of first class. This is talking long haul international first class, not the seats we see in 737-sized aircraft. International business is generally better than domestic first.

So we can see it in the fact that most airlines do not even offer first class. United Polaris is business class. Delta One is business class. American’s top product is called Flagship Business.

Even on airlines still offering first, this cabins are far smaller. Emirates has 14 first class seats on their A380s, but 76 business class. They have 8 on 777s, but 42 business class seats. Singapore is even more stark, with 4 first class seats on their 777-300s, but 48 businesses class seats. And notably they did not put any first class seats in the A350s that fly their longest routes.

This is because most businesses, which typically are the ones paying for travel, will not pay for first class but will pay for business class on flights over a certain length.

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u/Dry-Worldliness6926 2d ago

Its the most profitable. This post is full bs

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u/FireMaster1294 2d ago

More profitable per customer or per square foot? There’s a difference, which is the entire point of this graphic. Different aircraft will be different. I know the full rooms with beds are usually pulling just a bit more than econo. Business usually pulls more, but it varies per company

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u/gamja-namja 2d ago edited 2d ago

https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/mje/2021/10/27/the-death-of-first-class/

Found several sources that confirm the post is correct

And before that weirdo comes to accuse me of being a bot and posting a cropped image, he literally just cropped the ticket price table to show that 😂

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u/ArcanePyroblast 2d ago edited 2d ago

Ok I'm thoroughly confused and my middle class upbringing is gonna show here, but the costs this paper is attributing literally are just made up to suit this narrative. It literally has a line for "additional costs" that isn't enumerated, I'm expected to believe the average first class seat is having $300 spent on food which, considering I work in the hospitality industry at a pretty high level and have done some work for in-flight entertainment, I'm going to call complete and total horse shit on this number myself. I could serve you literally the best food in the world if my cost was 300 dollars. The source that this paper CITES, is a blog, so not a source that should have been used for this at all. Second of all that "source" only lists the cost to the airline as "up to $100 a meal".

I want to be perfectly clear. If the argument is, could the airlines make more money on a lower tier seat per square foot or even per capita, I might agree. But this paper provides no sources for where they ass pulled the cost of their first class services, and the ones they did cite, they didn't bother to read before citing them.

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u/Majestic_Tangerine47 2d ago

This paper also fails to recognize the repeat business and corporate accounts that monopolize FC. FC is absolutely a huge sector where airline profits sit.

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u/ArcanePyroblast 2d ago

I just wonder what the goal of this commenter or the paper was. Because it's business 101. You don't sell shit that isn't going to make you money somehow.

Yes I know what a loss leader is. It has to recoup its costs somehow. And according to this paper if first class is the loss leader, at those rates, airlines would literally never be able to make money. They're alleging that airlines are pissing away in some cases orders of magnitude greater costs on certain sectors of the flight budget breakdown. You can't do that and expect to run a business and I'm not even a fuckin C suite knob, just a guy who has to balance his own P&Ls.

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u/Majestic_Tangerine47 2d ago

I have a theory. The author can't afford first class and suffers from some entitlement complex where "the airlines are wrong" rather than recognizing his position on the ladder.

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u/ArcanePyroblast 2d ago

This right here lol. Can't deny it feels a tiny bit classist, but I also can't lie and say the thought didn't cross my mind, that's why my first comment I established I grew up firmly middle class flying economy and thus far in life I've climbed to economy plus so there's certainly bits of flying I don't understand but I have an internet connection and the ability to click some links and think critically for just long enough for the brain to start getting hurty

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u/Majestic_Tangerine47 2d ago

I'm gonna use that hurty brain line. Hilarious.

Same flying background, too. This guy's sitting next to us in PE and being all pissy about it, where I'm pretty satisfied just not sitting in the middle.

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u/ManikSahdev 2d ago

I think it refers to Space used by the seats ca revenue generated, is some other basis like that.

Basically opportunity cost 101 for what those seats could be, vs what they are.

Everything in life is just opportunity cost lmao

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u/[deleted] 2d ago edited 2d ago

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/gamja-namja 2d ago

It's wild how I just googled half a dozen sources on google to confirm that business class does in fact make more profit then first class and you guys are getting upvoted

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u/skinte1 2d ago

Lol, it's not. Unless you mean profitable per seat which is a completely useless metric. Most airlines that still operate first class does it because it's a status symbol. Whether or not first class is profitable at all depends largely on the size of the seats/suites chosen by the airline. They are not really taking an actual loss but they are loosing out on a potential higher revenue from replacing those seats primarily with business class. Especially since business has a much higher occupancy than first and one empty first class seat often means loosing out on 2-3 paying business class passengers.

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u/FilouBlanco 2d ago

Saying that business is almost the same as premium economy is really weird too. I sometimes check business prices to see if I treat myself and it always outrageous.

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u/anoidciv 2d ago

I remember reading that first-class is so luxurious because they're trying to claw back the flyers who would be able to afford private travel. Now why would they invest so much into retaining these customers if there wasn't a healthy profit margin? Stupid graph.

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u/rollsyrollsy 2d ago

It might also be that having low-profit first class creates a quality halo effect for the whole brand (ie helps to win biz class sales from competitor airlines)

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u/Hughcheu 2d ago

It’s why most automotive brands have a sports car. Break even profit or even loss making, but it improves the brand.

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u/No-Refrigerator-1672 2d ago

It's also about the marketing. "Look, the most wealthy persons are choosing our airlines! Book a ticket too!" It should be even more effective in modern times, whrn those people would voluntary share about their flights on social neteorks and effectively provide free marketing.

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u/Complete-Dimension35 2d ago

Consistent low profit margin is better than no profit margin because you're not selling.

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u/Decent-Coconut2419 2d ago

You’d be surprised at how many of those first class seats are taken up by non-paying employees, family of employees, buddy passes, etc. I used to fly standby for free on delta because of a family connection and these seats were always wide open

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u/NightmareStatus 2d ago

3hr flight from Haneda to taipei first class is like 5 grand US. I call shenanigans. First class flight from LAX to Haneda is $21k USD. This post can suck my ball hair.

Sincerely Someone that's been flying for years watching the prices skyrocket

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u/SLC_NinerMan96 2d ago

Yeah if there's one thing I know about airlines it's that they wouldn't just be willing to take a bath on their first class passengers which they pay so much in overhead to accommodate in the first place.

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u/skinte1 2d ago

they wouldn't just be willing to take a bath on their first class passengers

Most airlines that still operate first class does it because it's a status symbol. Whether or not first class is profitable depends largely on the size of the seats/suites chosen by the airline. They are not really taking an actual loss but they are loosing out on a potential higher revenue from replacing those seats primarily with business class. Especially since business has a much higher occupancy than first and one empty first class seat often means loosing out on 2-3 paying business class passengers.

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u/SLC_NinerMan96 2d ago

Okay honestly I can buy the status thing because rich people are weird. That was a nice bit of added context. Thanks!

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u/crumpetsandbourbon 2d ago

The other issue is the space it takes up, on most airlines there is a relatively small difference between first class and business. This looks like the space you would get in a suite which are only available on very few airplanes, and have minimal availability. The suites are also incredibly profitable given their obscene cost.

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

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u/fibula-tibia 2d ago

For real. If it’s not profitable, why would it ever be an option

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u/DCS_Sport 2d ago

This is very inaccurate. Premium seating, including first class, typically pays for the entire airplane with economy essentially getting a “free ride”. United Airlines, for example has 46 Polaris First-class seats in the front of their 767-300s. At roughly $6000 per seat, you’re talking over a quarter-million dollars of revenue in the first third of the airplane alone. The 22 business and 99 coach seats done even come close to making that much.

Most other major global airlines follow a similar business model. First and business pay for everything else

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u/husky430 2d ago

I feel the need to point out that your scenario is only accurate if all seats are purchased.

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u/gamja-namja 2d ago

You're completely correct, it's easy to Google the answer. No idea how all the people calling BS on this post are getting upvoted

https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/mje/2021/10/27/the-death-of-first-class/

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u/omega552003 2d ago

As a frequent United flyer I can assure you that the 6000 for Polaris seats is not they're typically priced. That would be what's called F fare, full first class fare and it would be adjusted for specific route and time, currently flights to mainland China are limited so some of those tickets have gone into the 10000s. But a lot of the seats are discounted fares which may be only 2k. Also there are no business seats on United, it's Polaris/Premium Economy/Economy+/Economy for long haul and United First/Economy+/Economy for domestic.

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u/TheFamousHesham 2d ago

It’s weird seeing a comment so confident, yet so wrong.

United Polaris isn’t first class. It’s business class.

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u/HephMelter 2d ago

The post is not talking about raw revenue, it's talking about revenue per surface area, and PROFIT. The attendants and other perks for first-class probably cost more than economy, which means profits are lower

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u/That-Establishment24 2d ago

United Polaris is business class, not first.

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u/Eschatologists 2d ago

Pretty sure the domestic situation is a bit different, US domestic first class is basically a scam, international first class is truly luxurious. And most people dont pay full price for first class, they get an upgrade with miles, their first class basically aborb the cost of customer retention

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u/TheFamousHesham 2d ago

And United Polaris is BUSINESS CLASS

— not first class!

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u/naughtydismutase 1d ago

Polaris isn’t even first class.

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u/whatanerdiam 2d ago

Facebook tier shittery

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u/Educational_Ask_1647 2d ago

So.. how about making an a380 fitout which is all business and premium seats? Or an a350. If this is true, then the most profitable fit out is not to pack them in like sardines.

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u/Sumo-Subjects 2d ago

Singapore airlines flies a business and premium economy only A350 from NY to Singapore. I’m not sure the economics make as much sense for other routes

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u/Educational_Ask_1647 2d ago

Perhaps i was too opaque. The lack of significant alternates doing this, (noting the project sunrise nonstop routing per-lhr qantas does is significantly smaller than usual in economy) suggests the diagram over simplifies and in fact airline economics works better with the complex of classes and profit margins.

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u/seba07 2d ago

Demand and supply. Let's say you're running a supermarket and apples have the largest profit margin. Do you think that your profit would increase if you removed every other item from your inventory? Business travel is decreasing (special after covid where people find out about zoom) and you won't fill a plane that way.

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u/Eschatologists 2d ago

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Compagnie

It exists, its only doable on very specific routes for which you can regularly fill a plane with business passengers. In the case of this company parts of the savings is passed onto the customers, their business seats are cheaper than their competitor's. They only fly Paris to NY

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u/Super_mando1130 2d ago

Southwest basically does with only 737s all full of economy seats

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u/LagSlug 2d ago

Any data to support this?

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u/omega552003 2d ago

Lots, a whole industry has figured this out.hers a couple of videos that go into this

https://youtu.be/BzB5xtGGsTc

https://youtu.be/ggUduBmvQ_4

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u/LagSlug 1d ago

Thank you, I have nothing against Wendover, but I'm asking for data from primary research. For example, a spreadsheet offering this information in a tabularized format.

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u/thorheyerdal 2d ago

This is absolute bs

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u/fancy_tupperware 2d ago

Notice how they bold the word “unprofitable” so that’s what people notice. Try this: “May even be unprofitable for certain flights.” They are wording it to sound like they are struggling and doing people a favor.

Also: “we don’t like rich people any more than you do.” Sure Jan.

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u/dj_spinn3r 2d ago

The airline I travel in is full economy seats. 💰❌

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u/Stunning-Leek334 2d ago

Calling BS on this. No way a $25k international first class ticket isn’t more profitable than a $8k business class ticket unless you are giving me a free car when we land.

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u/Darkwyrm789 2d ago

Hah nice try Big Airline, you'll get no sympathy from me!

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u/[deleted] 2d ago

[removed] — view removed comment

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u/JoefromOhio 2d ago

Bullshit. Bot.

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u/BRRGSH 2d ago

Fuck off with this BS propaganda. They're so kind and helpful having economy seating, is basically like a donation from the generous CEO...

It's not like low cost full economy airlines exist, based on this BS Ryanair is losing money on the daily.

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u/Any_Protection_8 2d ago

Wait what Premium Economy, afaik has reclining seats. I am really irritated that it is not more common if these economics are right. Business and first class is really expensiv, but I would never fly coach on long distance. Premium Economy with reclining seats is basically old business class from back in the day.

Maybe we should define what you get here because beside economy here seems to be a difference what to expect from the others. In Asia for example I was upgraded to business with my wife and we could make beds from the seats. It was absolutely awesome. Unfortunately only 1h flight, anyway still worth it.

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u/That-Establishment24 2d ago

Most seats recline. What do you mean?

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u/Any_Protection_8 2d ago

Support for the legs. Yes they recline but do not lift your legs like one of those seats for old people. Those are comfy af.

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u/ProBattleDancer 2d ago

I am kinda surprised to see PE and B at the same time.

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u/TheOriginalNozar 2d ago

Nice source you’ve shared

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u/Missingbeav3rbuzz3r 2d ago

This is an attempt to drive down business class pricing or demand. It worked. Can we make everyone over 250lbs buy multiple tickets please? I'd be one, I'd do it...

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u/realparkingbrake 2d ago

Ironic that in a crash landing the peasants in the back have the best odds of surviving.

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u/josee5252 2d ago

awfull and full of bs

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u/Competitive-Turnip40 2d ago

very dumb post

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u/EyyyyyyMacarena 2d ago

Haven't even seen a 'First Class' option in a while. I think they're doing away with it. I flew Istanbul > Taipei recently with Turkish Airlines and they only had business class, no first class.

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u/Lisshopops 2d ago

Haha I prefer sitting all the way in the back because it’s not only safer in case of a crash but it’s closer to the restroom and cheaper

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u/HappyyValleyy 2d ago

"capitalism breeds innovation" mfs when profit incentive actively makes things worse

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u/QueenOfQuok 2d ago

I guess it's been a while since I've seen an airplane that had any more differentiation than first class/ regular class. As a matter of fact, the last time I flew I don't even remember seeing first-class seating. It was all the same. And it wasn't some kind of budget airline, it was a regular old United flight. Maybe there was an actual first class and business class there that got more goodies from the flight attendants, but...I sure didn't see any luxury seating. So maybe this chart doesn't apply to domestic flights.

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u/omega552003 2d ago

This is for long haul so 6+ hour flights

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u/Mr_Derp___ 2d ago

Well geez I guess if the profitability of being an airline is so low, they should just be all run by the government for the good of the people, since we already bailed out the entire fucking industry with taxpayer dollars.

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u/DJjazzyjose 2d ago

ah yes, nothing's better than government run service. come to NJ or NY to see how the trains run.

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u/read-my-comments 2d ago

80 percent of most companies profit comes from 20 percent of their customers.

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u/Petrolhead02 2d ago

Did a long ass 10+ hour flight from Sydney to LA during Covid and there was only 10 passengers, all of us in economy Loved just how much we cost the airline

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u/loopingrightleft 2d ago

Human sub human sardine

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u/Eschatologists 2d ago

Premium economy is kind of a scam, its like flying low cost in Europe but buying a ton of add on, you'll still have a miserable economy experience but itll cost you double, the only thing that might ecer be worth it is reasonably priced extra leg space seats if you are tall. Otherwise just bunk it at minimum price and get yourself a business seat once in a blue moon with the money saved (and the miles if you fly frequently or have a travel credit card)

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u/ch50nn 2d ago

What about pricing based on when you need to fly? Small case scenario probably but I recently paid 2.5X times more than I would normally when booking a long haul flight in economy, due to urgent nature of the booking. Pretty sure it was profitable for the sardine seats we got

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u/Ok_Veterinarian6404 2d ago

I always thought cattle class was the most profitable.

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u/ksiyoto 2d ago

Economy is a byproduct for the airline industry.

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u/xX0LucarioXx 2d ago

A lot of layers to this

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u/MatsGry 2d ago

Business is where they make the money always.

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u/nick1812216 2d ago

Wow, business and premium are really carrying the team

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u/Standard_Cell_8816 2d ago

The poor folks get to sit farthest away from point of impact, allowing them to burn to death rather than die on impact.

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u/tacobell_shitstain 2d ago

This is completely fucking wrong.

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u/The_Greatest_USA_unb 2d ago

I didn't take airplane for at least 15 years, what's the actual difference between premium economy and economy ? I don't remember it even existed.

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u/ErrorEra 2d ago

Basically what economy seats were like 15 years ago. If you tried to take a flight now, economy seats have shrunk, prepare to have your knees scraped, or legs splayed out that you spill over to neighbor's seat.

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u/The_Greatest_USA_unb 2d ago

Well that sucks. Boat and train it is then.

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u/My_leg_still_hurt92 2d ago

slightly more legroom and the seats are an inch or two wider, you may get also a footrest.

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u/sailormiwako 2d ago

nah they'll just put you at an emergency exit and call it premium 💀

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u/mrxdub1 2d ago

This is way off. 1st class is where airlines make their super profit. Business is profit. Economy and Premium Economy (for those that have it) cover the costs of the flight

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u/realparkingbrake 2d ago

Concorde became profitable when they realized they had been underpricing the tickets and greatly raised prices. Their business passengers didn't know what their employers were paying for the tickets anyway.

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u/ExpertCommission6110 2d ago

What if, we go back to trains?

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u/DiaperFluid 2d ago

I cant do those small ass seats anymore. Have you ever sat in the spirit economy for an extended period of time? Like more than 3hrs? Fuck that. Pretty much forced to fly whatever class gives me the comfiest seat

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u/K1nsey6 1d ago

Cargo is the cash cow on long haul flights

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u/TravelingGonad 1d ago

No sources, pretty meaningless and false.

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u/L7ryAGheFF 1d ago

If true, why not just get rid of first class?

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u/Rumpled_NutSkin 1d ago

This is the opposite of interesting. Why is this posted in this sub?

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u/LordYabushige 1d ago

Lol not on easyjet/ryanair

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u/Jron690 1d ago

I just booked flights to Italy from the east coast (US) and the premium economy seats were like $600 a seat more round trip. It was around 1/3rd more not 3x

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u/audio-nut 1d ago

A 4 class B737 for long haul? First class takes up almost 3x the business class space?

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u/Guagadu 50m ago

The weird thing about this is that the graphic maker chose a Boeing 737 - a single aisle airplane thst mostly flies short routes and in most places doesn't tend to have more than one, maybe two classes.

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u/SuperKrusher 2d ago

Sounds like bs. First class ticket prices are like 10x the cost of economy. It seems like a plane is 2.5x the side of economy. So seating space alone the space effectiveness of 1 plane’s 1st class is equal to 5 planes’ economy.

Now service wise, that’s a whole thing altogether and highly depends on the airline. Some airlines give economy free coffee, tea etc whenever they want. Meaning while there is obviously a cost gap, it is not as major as some people may make it out to be.

The only way this diagram makes sense is if people don’t buy first class tickets. Then you have empty seating and a big waste of profits/expected revenue. That though, isn’t because the seats don’t make profit, it’s because airlines price them too high and people don’t buy them and instead go business or economy. That is the airlines fault.

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u/dongasaurus 2d ago

So you’re saying it’s obviously more profitable because it costs 10x as much, but if the seats go empty (which they do) the price needs to be lowered to fill the seats. Airlines do this by providing perks, dicounts, upgrades etc and seats often still go empty in first class. Point is, maybe they aren’t actually getting 10x per seat, and this is ignoring that the seats aren’t the same size and don’t carry the same operating costs.

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u/FucktardSupreme 2d ago

So the middle class is subsidizing the poor and the ultra rich, just like in real life. 

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u/KeepYaWhipTinted 2d ago

Everyone is subsidising the ultra rich, my friend.

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u/Eschatologists 2d ago

Premium economy is a scam, just fly economy and yhe occasional business with your miles.

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u/RetardedChimpanzee 2d ago

How does first class cost their airline so much more than business?

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u/Rodgethedodge 2d ago

Which part of the plane is the safest in a crash? The very back middle im guessing?

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u/L1zoneD 2d ago

So basically catering to the rich again and slamming the middle class, lmao.

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u/BullOfBallstreet 2d ago

Economy should be done away with. Loading up humans like cattle into extremely tight seats should be made illegal. It’s just not safe or healthy. That same seat will sell for like $300 on low demand periods, and $1800 when demand is high. So there’s no reason they can’t do a 10sqft seat for a reasonable price. It would increase comfort considerably. Also put less demand on flight attendants.

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u/SteakSauce12 2d ago

Why It’s not public transit? No ones forcing you to fly on an airplane. You have lots of different choices. You could charter private if you don’t wanna take an airline .

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u/StarfishPizza 2d ago

Surely ‘A whole bunch of strangers in a long metal tube’ is the very definition of public transport sans the economies of scale? A few examples I can think of would be a bus, a train, and a plane 🤷‍♂️

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u/BullOfBallstreet 2d ago

What a horrible argument. Have some standards.

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u/asdf1x 2d ago

first class means you die first in case of impact

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u/BananaOnRye 2d ago

But they’re more comfortable, definitely worth it

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u/South5 2d ago

If they are travelling at 500mph the time it takes for the whole plane to be fubar’ed is less than one second.

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u/MedicOfTime 2d ago

If this was really true, the entire plane would equalize to business class seating only. Give us two more inches a row and everyone is happy.

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u/longtimenothere 2d ago

The thing analysis like this miss is the fact that a lot of 1st class isn't directly paid for.

A lot of people upgrade to first class using points or status. That means they might be paying more for other tickets to earn miles, or flying that particular airline more instead of competition, or using credit cards to earn points that kickback to the airlines.... all in order to be able to upgrade to 1st class.

If there wasn't a first class to upgrade to, then all that behavior would disappear and the airlines are back to competing with Spirit airlines on price.

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