How does jetBlue determine its boarding order?Why do airlines seat people the way they do?how are boarding groups determined?How does the Southwest Airlines boarding process work?How can I determine which airlines are relatively safe?How can I get a different seat after boarding a flight?Where does Google Flights get its data from?Boarding Point in trainHow does seat assignment work with 'direct to gate' service from Norwegian?How old does a child need to be to sit separately from parents when flying?how are boarding groups determined?How can I find flight number and ticket number from a past flight one year ago?Easyjet: change seat after boarding
What chord could the notes 'F A♭ E♭' form?
Why doesn't increasing the temperature of something like wood or paper set them on fire?
The unknown and unexplained in science fiction
Where do 5 or more U.S. counties meet in a single point?
What's weird about Proto-Indo-European Stops?
shebang or not shebang
Picking a theme as a discovery writer
Did any early RISC OS precursor run on the BBC Micro?
A♭ major 9th chord in Bach is unexpectedly dissonant/jazzy
Translation of "invincible independence"
Splitting polygons and dividing attribute value proportionally using ArcGIS Pro?
Explaining intravenous drug abuse to a small child
Test whether a string is in a list with variable
Does restarting the SQL Services (on the machine) clear the server cache (for things like query plans and statistics)?
Assuming a normal distribution: what is the sd for a given mean?
Are modes in jazz primarily a melody thing?
Would a legitimized Baratheon have the best claim for the Iron Throne?
Employee is self-centered and affects the team negatively
Bash prompt takes only the first word of a hostname before the dot
Displaying an Estimated Execution Plan generates CXPACKET, PAGELATCH_SH, and LATCH_EX [ACCESS_METHODS_DATASET_PARENT] waits
Gift for mentor after his thesis defense?
Can you just subtract the challenge rating of friendly NPCs?
What is more safe for browsing the web: PC or smartphone?
In a series of books, what happens after the coming of age?
How does jetBlue determine its boarding order?
Why do airlines seat people the way they do?how are boarding groups determined?How does the Southwest Airlines boarding process work?How can I determine which airlines are relatively safe?How can I get a different seat after boarding a flight?Where does Google Flights get its data from?Boarding Point in trainHow does seat assignment work with 'direct to gate' service from Norwegian?How old does a child need to be to sit separately from parents when flying?how are boarding groups determined?How can I find flight number and ticket number from a past flight one year ago?Easyjet: change seat after boarding
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
My question is nominally similar to how are boarding groups determined? which was closed as a duplicate of
Why do airlines seat people the way they do? but neither seem to answer my question and I feel like a lot has changed in the past few years.
US airlines now tend to board by group/zone and these zones have seemingly nothing to do with where you are sitting. On jetBlue, I believe, the first to board are people who paid extra (first class, early boarding etc) or who have elevated status for being a frequent flyer.
Given I don't travel enough to gain preferred treatment and I don't want to pay more, is there anything I can do to be able to board earlier on jetBlue flights? For example, does checking in online or earlier/late influence the zone? What about how the ticket is purchased (over the phone or online with jetBlue, Expedia, or a travel agent) or how it is paid for (e.g., jetBlue credit card)?
Are the criteria used to create the zones publicly available?
air-travel seating jetblue
add a comment |
My question is nominally similar to how are boarding groups determined? which was closed as a duplicate of
Why do airlines seat people the way they do? but neither seem to answer my question and I feel like a lot has changed in the past few years.
US airlines now tend to board by group/zone and these zones have seemingly nothing to do with where you are sitting. On jetBlue, I believe, the first to board are people who paid extra (first class, early boarding etc) or who have elevated status for being a frequent flyer.
Given I don't travel enough to gain preferred treatment and I don't want to pay more, is there anything I can do to be able to board earlier on jetBlue flights? For example, does checking in online or earlier/late influence the zone? What about how the ticket is purchased (over the phone or online with jetBlue, Expedia, or a travel agent) or how it is paid for (e.g., jetBlue credit card)?
Are the criteria used to create the zones publicly available?
air-travel seating jetblue
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago
add a comment |
My question is nominally similar to how are boarding groups determined? which was closed as a duplicate of
Why do airlines seat people the way they do? but neither seem to answer my question and I feel like a lot has changed in the past few years.
US airlines now tend to board by group/zone and these zones have seemingly nothing to do with where you are sitting. On jetBlue, I believe, the first to board are people who paid extra (first class, early boarding etc) or who have elevated status for being a frequent flyer.
Given I don't travel enough to gain preferred treatment and I don't want to pay more, is there anything I can do to be able to board earlier on jetBlue flights? For example, does checking in online or earlier/late influence the zone? What about how the ticket is purchased (over the phone or online with jetBlue, Expedia, or a travel agent) or how it is paid for (e.g., jetBlue credit card)?
Are the criteria used to create the zones publicly available?
air-travel seating jetblue
My question is nominally similar to how are boarding groups determined? which was closed as a duplicate of
Why do airlines seat people the way they do? but neither seem to answer my question and I feel like a lot has changed in the past few years.
US airlines now tend to board by group/zone and these zones have seemingly nothing to do with where you are sitting. On jetBlue, I believe, the first to board are people who paid extra (first class, early boarding etc) or who have elevated status for being a frequent flyer.
Given I don't travel enough to gain preferred treatment and I don't want to pay more, is there anything I can do to be able to board earlier on jetBlue flights? For example, does checking in online or earlier/late influence the zone? What about how the ticket is purchased (over the phone or online with jetBlue, Expedia, or a travel agent) or how it is paid for (e.g., jetBlue credit card)?
Are the criteria used to create the zones publicly available?
air-travel seating jetblue
air-travel seating jetblue
edited 6 hours ago
choster
34.9k5100153
34.9k5100153
asked 7 hours ago
StrongBadStrongBad
2,36721227
2,36721227
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago
add a comment |
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
In October 2017, jetBlue adopted a new boarding system which remains in use as of May 2019. There is a lengthy discussion at FlyerTalk about its practice; FrequentBusinessTraveler.com offered some details as to who gets slotted into which of the General Boarding groups:
- Pre-boarding for customers with disabilities
- Mosaic and Mint® customers
- Group A (Even More® Space customers)
- Courtesy boarding for active military personnel and customers traveling with children in car seats or strollers
- General Boarding, Group B (window seats in the back half of the plane)
- General Boarding, Group C (middle seats in the back and window seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group D (aisle seats in the back and middle seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group E (middle seats in the front; N/A for E-190 aircraft)
- All remaining customers
Like seating, airlines have learned to monetize boarding order, which has become more important as baggage fees discourage people from checking bags, putting cabin storage at a premium. If you are not a frequent flyer, and do not qualify for a pre-boarding group, are not interested in paying more, it seems you can try choosing a seat in the back to get into a higher priority boarding group.
Some reports say the general boarding group assignment is algorithmic, based on which seats are predicted to be occupied on a particular flight. It would thus be possible for the same seat on the same aircraft to be assigned two different boarding groups based on how full the flight was, but it is hard to gauge whether this is actually the case from mere anecdotal reports. jetBlue says only "Your boarding group is based on your actual seat, not the rows."
Some airlines, including American, Delta, and United, put credit card holders in a slightly preferred group, but jetBlue does not. Other airlines, notably Southwest, assign boarding order based on the order in which you check in, but again, jetBlue does not.
The speed of boarding a plane is not the only consideration an airline has in determining its boarding groups. It wants to make its high revenue and frequent flyers feel special—so that they continue to be high revenue or frequent flyers. It also wants to capture whatever excess revenue they can by upselling boarding order, rewarding passengers who buy a service package, join a club, obtain the credit card, and so on. Uniformed military personnel receiving priority boarding became commonplace on U.S. airlines after September 11, as the airlines wanted to be perceived as patriotic and grateful.
It is quite possible for these secondary considerations to displace the primary one. When I was a frequent flyer on United, there were a couple of occasions when I was flying out of ORD or SFO where the gate agent boarded us by row because over 80% of people on the flight were "Premier" customers.
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138061%2fhow-does-jetblue-determine-its-boarding-order%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
In October 2017, jetBlue adopted a new boarding system which remains in use as of May 2019. There is a lengthy discussion at FlyerTalk about its practice; FrequentBusinessTraveler.com offered some details as to who gets slotted into which of the General Boarding groups:
- Pre-boarding for customers with disabilities
- Mosaic and Mint® customers
- Group A (Even More® Space customers)
- Courtesy boarding for active military personnel and customers traveling with children in car seats or strollers
- General Boarding, Group B (window seats in the back half of the plane)
- General Boarding, Group C (middle seats in the back and window seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group D (aisle seats in the back and middle seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group E (middle seats in the front; N/A for E-190 aircraft)
- All remaining customers
Like seating, airlines have learned to monetize boarding order, which has become more important as baggage fees discourage people from checking bags, putting cabin storage at a premium. If you are not a frequent flyer, and do not qualify for a pre-boarding group, are not interested in paying more, it seems you can try choosing a seat in the back to get into a higher priority boarding group.
Some reports say the general boarding group assignment is algorithmic, based on which seats are predicted to be occupied on a particular flight. It would thus be possible for the same seat on the same aircraft to be assigned two different boarding groups based on how full the flight was, but it is hard to gauge whether this is actually the case from mere anecdotal reports. jetBlue says only "Your boarding group is based on your actual seat, not the rows."
Some airlines, including American, Delta, and United, put credit card holders in a slightly preferred group, but jetBlue does not. Other airlines, notably Southwest, assign boarding order based on the order in which you check in, but again, jetBlue does not.
The speed of boarding a plane is not the only consideration an airline has in determining its boarding groups. It wants to make its high revenue and frequent flyers feel special—so that they continue to be high revenue or frequent flyers. It also wants to capture whatever excess revenue they can by upselling boarding order, rewarding passengers who buy a service package, join a club, obtain the credit card, and so on. Uniformed military personnel receiving priority boarding became commonplace on U.S. airlines after September 11, as the airlines wanted to be perceived as patriotic and grateful.
It is quite possible for these secondary considerations to displace the primary one. When I was a frequent flyer on United, there were a couple of occasions when I was flying out of ORD or SFO where the gate agent boarded us by row because over 80% of people on the flight were "Premier" customers.
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
add a comment |
In October 2017, jetBlue adopted a new boarding system which remains in use as of May 2019. There is a lengthy discussion at FlyerTalk about its practice; FrequentBusinessTraveler.com offered some details as to who gets slotted into which of the General Boarding groups:
- Pre-boarding for customers with disabilities
- Mosaic and Mint® customers
- Group A (Even More® Space customers)
- Courtesy boarding for active military personnel and customers traveling with children in car seats or strollers
- General Boarding, Group B (window seats in the back half of the plane)
- General Boarding, Group C (middle seats in the back and window seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group D (aisle seats in the back and middle seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group E (middle seats in the front; N/A for E-190 aircraft)
- All remaining customers
Like seating, airlines have learned to monetize boarding order, which has become more important as baggage fees discourage people from checking bags, putting cabin storage at a premium. If you are not a frequent flyer, and do not qualify for a pre-boarding group, are not interested in paying more, it seems you can try choosing a seat in the back to get into a higher priority boarding group.
Some reports say the general boarding group assignment is algorithmic, based on which seats are predicted to be occupied on a particular flight. It would thus be possible for the same seat on the same aircraft to be assigned two different boarding groups based on how full the flight was, but it is hard to gauge whether this is actually the case from mere anecdotal reports. jetBlue says only "Your boarding group is based on your actual seat, not the rows."
Some airlines, including American, Delta, and United, put credit card holders in a slightly preferred group, but jetBlue does not. Other airlines, notably Southwest, assign boarding order based on the order in which you check in, but again, jetBlue does not.
The speed of boarding a plane is not the only consideration an airline has in determining its boarding groups. It wants to make its high revenue and frequent flyers feel special—so that they continue to be high revenue or frequent flyers. It also wants to capture whatever excess revenue they can by upselling boarding order, rewarding passengers who buy a service package, join a club, obtain the credit card, and so on. Uniformed military personnel receiving priority boarding became commonplace on U.S. airlines after September 11, as the airlines wanted to be perceived as patriotic and grateful.
It is quite possible for these secondary considerations to displace the primary one. When I was a frequent flyer on United, there were a couple of occasions when I was flying out of ORD or SFO where the gate agent boarded us by row because over 80% of people on the flight were "Premier" customers.
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
add a comment |
In October 2017, jetBlue adopted a new boarding system which remains in use as of May 2019. There is a lengthy discussion at FlyerTalk about its practice; FrequentBusinessTraveler.com offered some details as to who gets slotted into which of the General Boarding groups:
- Pre-boarding for customers with disabilities
- Mosaic and Mint® customers
- Group A (Even More® Space customers)
- Courtesy boarding for active military personnel and customers traveling with children in car seats or strollers
- General Boarding, Group B (window seats in the back half of the plane)
- General Boarding, Group C (middle seats in the back and window seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group D (aisle seats in the back and middle seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group E (middle seats in the front; N/A for E-190 aircraft)
- All remaining customers
Like seating, airlines have learned to monetize boarding order, which has become more important as baggage fees discourage people from checking bags, putting cabin storage at a premium. If you are not a frequent flyer, and do not qualify for a pre-boarding group, are not interested in paying more, it seems you can try choosing a seat in the back to get into a higher priority boarding group.
Some reports say the general boarding group assignment is algorithmic, based on which seats are predicted to be occupied on a particular flight. It would thus be possible for the same seat on the same aircraft to be assigned two different boarding groups based on how full the flight was, but it is hard to gauge whether this is actually the case from mere anecdotal reports. jetBlue says only "Your boarding group is based on your actual seat, not the rows."
Some airlines, including American, Delta, and United, put credit card holders in a slightly preferred group, but jetBlue does not. Other airlines, notably Southwest, assign boarding order based on the order in which you check in, but again, jetBlue does not.
The speed of boarding a plane is not the only consideration an airline has in determining its boarding groups. It wants to make its high revenue and frequent flyers feel special—so that they continue to be high revenue or frequent flyers. It also wants to capture whatever excess revenue they can by upselling boarding order, rewarding passengers who buy a service package, join a club, obtain the credit card, and so on. Uniformed military personnel receiving priority boarding became commonplace on U.S. airlines after September 11, as the airlines wanted to be perceived as patriotic and grateful.
It is quite possible for these secondary considerations to displace the primary one. When I was a frequent flyer on United, there were a couple of occasions when I was flying out of ORD or SFO where the gate agent boarded us by row because over 80% of people on the flight were "Premier" customers.
In October 2017, jetBlue adopted a new boarding system which remains in use as of May 2019. There is a lengthy discussion at FlyerTalk about its practice; FrequentBusinessTraveler.com offered some details as to who gets slotted into which of the General Boarding groups:
- Pre-boarding for customers with disabilities
- Mosaic and Mint® customers
- Group A (Even More® Space customers)
- Courtesy boarding for active military personnel and customers traveling with children in car seats or strollers
- General Boarding, Group B (window seats in the back half of the plane)
- General Boarding, Group C (middle seats in the back and window seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group D (aisle seats in the back and middle seats in the front)
- General Boarding, Group E (middle seats in the front; N/A for E-190 aircraft)
- All remaining customers
Like seating, airlines have learned to monetize boarding order, which has become more important as baggage fees discourage people from checking bags, putting cabin storage at a premium. If you are not a frequent flyer, and do not qualify for a pre-boarding group, are not interested in paying more, it seems you can try choosing a seat in the back to get into a higher priority boarding group.
Some reports say the general boarding group assignment is algorithmic, based on which seats are predicted to be occupied on a particular flight. It would thus be possible for the same seat on the same aircraft to be assigned two different boarding groups based on how full the flight was, but it is hard to gauge whether this is actually the case from mere anecdotal reports. jetBlue says only "Your boarding group is based on your actual seat, not the rows."
Some airlines, including American, Delta, and United, put credit card holders in a slightly preferred group, but jetBlue does not. Other airlines, notably Southwest, assign boarding order based on the order in which you check in, but again, jetBlue does not.
The speed of boarding a plane is not the only consideration an airline has in determining its boarding groups. It wants to make its high revenue and frequent flyers feel special—so that they continue to be high revenue or frequent flyers. It also wants to capture whatever excess revenue they can by upselling boarding order, rewarding passengers who buy a service package, join a club, obtain the credit card, and so on. Uniformed military personnel receiving priority boarding became commonplace on U.S. airlines after September 11, as the airlines wanted to be perceived as patriotic and grateful.
It is quite possible for these secondary considerations to displace the primary one. When I was a frequent flyer on United, there were a couple of occasions when I was flying out of ORD or SFO where the gate agent boarded us by row because over 80% of people on the flight were "Premier" customers.
edited 1 hour ago
user3761894
948615
948615
answered 5 hours ago
chosterchoster
34.9k5100153
34.9k5100153
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
1
1
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
Is group E supposed to be Aisle seats in the font? Otherwise it seems like an extension of group D that doesn't entirely make sense.
– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138061%2fhow-does-jetblue-determine-its-boarding-order%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
@choster When I booked through my employer's travel agency, I got a much better spot than I've ever on my own.
– Azor Ahai
6 hours ago
Isn’t it just a matter of check-in order?
– jcaron
6 hours ago
@jcaron maybe, I don't know that is why I am asking. Do you have any evidence that it is?
– StrongBad
6 hours ago
@AzorAhai I bet they sold you a government fare which behaves as a full-fare economy class ticket (Y class). Depending on the airline, you often get bonus FF miles and segments as part of the deal too.
– user71659
3 hours ago
@user71659 I have no idea
– Azor Ahai
3 hours ago