Travel Tips

How to Choose the Best Seat on a Plane: The Expert Guide

2 min read 37 views
How to Choose the Best Seat on a Plane: The Expert Guide

The seat you choose can turn a three-hour flight into a pleasant experience — or a genuine ordeal. Yet most passengers pick their seat in ten seconds without really thinking. This guide gives you the tools to choose smartly, based on the aircraft, flight duration and your traveller profile.

Understanding the Seat Map Before You Choose

Every aircraft has a different configuration. A Boeing 737 is not laid out like an Airbus A320 or a long-haul A350. Before selecting your seat, two pieces of information are essential: the aircraft type (check your ticket details — it determines seat width, row count and layout) and the seat map (most airlines show it during seat selection; take time to read it carefully).

On flights booked through Tribeds, the aircraft type is displayed in your confirmation.

Window, Aisle or Middle: The Honest Comparison

Seat Pros Cons Best for
🪟 WindowView, head support, light control, no one climbs over youHard to access toilets, slow to exitSleepers, solo travellers, sightseers
🚶 AisleFreedom of movement, easy toilet access, quick exit, leg stretchingService trolley, passengers brushing past, exposed elbowTall passengers, frequent flyers, those who move around
😬 MiddleNo significant advantageSqueezed between strangers, armrest battles, claustrophobicAvoid unless travelling in a trio or last resort

Seats to Avoid at All Costs

  • In front of toilets: constant queue in the aisle, odours, flush noise every few minutes.
  • Next to the galley: lights always on, crew conversations, metal trolley noise.
  • Last non-reclining row: blocked by the rear bulkhead — useless for sleeping on a long-haul.
  • Behind a non-reclining seat: some seats in front of exit rows don't recline, reducing your space.

Seats Worth Going For

Exit row seats

Legroom often double the standard. Ideal for tall travellers or anyone wanting to stretch out. Downside: no underseat storage, and you must be able to assist with evacuation (auto-refused for elderly, children, pregnant women).

Bulkhead seats

Directly behind a cabin divider — generous legroom without exit row restrictions. Often reserved for families with infants (bassinet attachment). Check the seat map before targeting them.

Choosing Based on Your Traveller Profile

  • You sleep on planes → Window, mid-aircraft, away from toilets.
  • You're tall (6ft+) → Exit row or bulkhead, aisle seat.
  • Travelling with a baby → Bulkhead (bassinet), aisle for easy access.
  • Tight connection → Front rows, aisle, main exit side.
  • Travelling as a couple → Window + aisle on a quiet flight — the middle seat may stay empty.
  • Motion sickness → Middle of plane over the wings, window for a visual reference point.

How to Maximise Your Chances of a Good Seat

  1. Select your seat at booking — the best seats go first. Tribeds gives you seat map access immediately after confirmation.
  2. Check again 24h before departure — operationally blocked seats are released in the final hours.
  3. Check in online as soon as it opens — 24–48h before departure, free premium seats often become available.
  4. Arrive early at the airport — check-in agents sometimes have access to seats no longer visible online.

Ready to Fly in the Right Seat?

Book your flights on Tribeds, select your seat straight after confirmation, and travel stress-free. Don't forget to sort your luggage with our baggage size guide so there are no surprises at boarding.

choisir siège avion meilleur siège avion siège hublot couloir exit row avion bulkhead avion siège confort avion
Designed with by Ogilio
Atlas
Hello
How can I help you?