Current:Home > ScamsOn an airplane, which passenger gets the armrests? -Secure Growth Solutions
On an airplane, which passenger gets the armrests?
View
Date:2025-04-18 03:22:57
Flying is rife with frustrations, particularly as airlines shrink the space between seats to shoehorn in more passengers. The uncozy confines are fueling debate over proper flight etiquette, from what is appropriate when it comes to reclining your seat to who has the right to use an even smaller, more contested zone: armrests.
Compounding the issue is that there are no formal or clear-cut rules around which passenger is entitled to the two armrests that straddle the middle seat. Airlines don't address the issue in writing or in safety demonstration videos before take off, leaving passengers to negotiate the shared space with little guidance.
The frequent result, not surprisingly, is a tussle over precious space informed by people's personal views on who has dibs on the armrests or how they should be partitioned.
"Different people have different perspectives," said Jess Bohorquez, founder and CEO of Points by J, a travel tips website.
For example, ultra-courteous passengers could empathetically view the debate from the perspective of the passenger in the middle seat, who is, after all, the most cramped. The window-seat occupant can lean into the window, while aisle passengers can stretch their legs.
"In my opinion, the window and the aisle seats are more desirable because you don't have people on each side of you," she said. "Since the middle is already a tough enough seat to be plopped into, if you're being generous as a window- or aisle- seat person, you'll give them both of the armrests."
Gray area
A summer survey from flight aggregator Kayak around the "Unspoken Rules of Air Travel" found that armrests are essentially up for grabs. Fifty-seven percent of respondents said the middle seat passenger is not entitled to both arm rests. Not even Kayak's own marketing team could agree on which passenger should cede the space to their seat mate.
"It was hotly debated among our team," Kayak's consumer travel trends expert Kayla Deloache told CBS MoneyWatch. "Does it automatically go to person in middle seat? To whoever gets there first? There was some disagreement."
That said, she doesn't think it's incumbent on airlines to specify rules for armrest usage.
"There are already so many rules when you fly that adding something like this on top of it wouldn't make sense. They need to focus on the safety of the passengers with rules. This is really up to the flyers," she said.
Etiquette expert Diane Gottsman agrees that airlines weighing in would send them down a slippery slope.
"Then they would have to cover kicking the seat, hitting the call button, reclining," she said.
"It's all a negotiation"
Underlying the contest for space on a plane is an axiom of flying these days that few passengers may think about: Even when you purchase an airplane ticket, nearly every inch on an aircraft is up for negotiation, according to travel expert Chris Elliott of consumer news site the Elliott Report.
"The idea that anything on the plane belongs to anyone is absurd. It's a shared space, including your seat, the space in front of you, next to you. Anyone who says that the armrest belongs to anyone is blowing smoke," he told CBS MoneyWatch. "Even the space in your seat, sometimes you find people spilling over into your seat if you are seated next to someone bigger. You may not be able to use the entire seat and airlines are very unsympathetic to that. So I wouldn't even say the seat belongs to you, it's all a negotiation."
The same battle also rages for space under seats and overhead bins. "Where does your space end and theirs begin?" Elliott added.
To avoid altercations, a polite passenger can choose to address the issue head on and simply ask their seat mate if they mind your using the armrest.
"At least you asked and didn't assume that it's yours," Elliott said.
veryGood! (578)
Related
- Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
- Greenland's ice sheet melting faster than scientists previously estimated, study finds
- Defense Department to again target ‘forever chemicals’ contamination near Michigan military base
- 6 nuns have been kidnapped in Haiti while they were traveling on a bus, religious leaders say
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Spirit Airlines shares lose altitude after judge blocks its purchase by JetBlue
- Tata Steel announces plans to cut 2,800 jobs in a blow to Welsh town built on steelmaking
- Many animals seized from troubled Virginia zoo will not be returned, judge rules
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Stanford's Tara VanDerveer will soon pass Mike Krzyzewski for major coaching record
Ranking
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Teen Mom's Kailyn Lowry Gives Birth to Twins, Welcomes Baby No. 6 and 7
- Henderson apologizes to LGBTQ+ community for short-lived Saudi stay after moving to Ajax
- Mexican marines detain alleged leader of Gulf drug cartel, the gang that kidnapped, killed Americans
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Plane makes emergency landing on a northern Virginia highway after taking off from Dulles airport
- Nearly 75% of the U.S. could experience a damaging earthquake in the next 100 years, new USGS map shows
- 10 people dead after a landslide buries a house in the southern Philippines, officials say
Recommendation
Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
Selena Gomez, David Henrie returning for Wizards of Waverly Place reboot
Nearly 75% of the U.S. could experience a damaging earthquake in the next 100 years, new USGS map shows
AP Week in Pictures: North America
US Open player compensation rises to a record $65 million, with singles champs getting $3.6 million
Scott Peterson Case Taken on by L.A. Innocence Project to Overturn Murder Conviction
More than 580,000 beds sold at Walmart, Wayfair and Overstock recalled because they can break or collapse
Starting five: Caitlin Clark, Iowa try to maintain perfect Big Ten record, at Ohio State