Well, mine's 1A , but not according to this report, which says the majority of passengers prefer 6A. Puzzling.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/tr...inpointed.html
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Well, mine's 1A , but not according to this report, which says the majority of passengers prefer 6A. Puzzling.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/tr...inpointed.html
Wasn't that the coveted seat on Concord Tonish? To have a boarding card for seat 1A on flight BA 001?
I would not even know where to start too figure out 'the best seat'. Nowadays where planes aren't full I go to the back which usually secures a whole row to sleep on.
The 'study' seems to have been undertaken purely to provide the airlines with details of passenger seat preferences so they can make sure they charge extra for them. Not so long ago all the seats were the same price (i.e. free) but now it's another lucrative form of revenue that is obviously being fully exploited.
I can't blame them for doing it but for the paying passenger it's another thing contributing to the steady and significant rise in fares over the last few years.
While taxes have contributed to rises in the fares, fuel and surcharges are the main reason. However, the airlines now make a lot of money out of theses incidentals like seat selection and baggage. BA in particular have been exploiting them for a couple of years now.
I agree Lynne when you see the cost of the flight and separate the taxes out there's not much left for the airline.
The low cost carriers get a (sometimes) well deserved bad press for the way they add extras to their base fares but the so-called full service airlines are catching them up rapidly in that area.
I'm not at all anti BA and have flown with them a number of times this year already but they have recently barred all phone calls to other than their premium lines, have booking fees on both online and phone bookings, charge for early seat selection (and even more for exit row seats) and have a free baggage allowance less than half what it was a couple of years ago. Try booking a Club fare to the US and they'll take well over £2,000 each from you and if you want to pre-book seats to ensure your group are together that'll cost £60 per seat in each direction - for a family of 4 it means forking out another £480. Sadly, other airlines are going the same way.
I confidently predict that before long all but a few seats that nobody wants will carry an additional charge for pre-booking. In fact, we're not that far away from there now.
When the flight cost does not include baggage etc. that suits us fine. We flew with Thomson 3 times last year all on late deals we paid on average £350 per ticket it was an extra £40 (this has gone up to £50 this year) for 20k of baggage, however as we own our own villa we have everything we need over there so did not have to pay for baggage we did not need. If the price is seperated out I think this is a fairer way of doing it, but if they are adding them on to make extra proft then this is a rip off. when we flew with BA in October the flight was £361 when we checked the pricing £70 was the flight cost and the rest was taxes!