Southwest Airlines Won’t Block Middle Seats in New Pandemic Policy
As air traffic slowly recovers, big US carriers struggle financially. Southwest Airlines, the nation's largest domestic airline, withdrew their Coronavirus pandemic
blocking middle seats this week, as many worry. Southwest Airlines won't prohibit middle seats on future flights due to their pandemic policy.
Southwest capped flight passengers at 66% after that policy. Every middle seat would fly vacant,
increasing passenger distance. The airline did it in May. Southwest now sells all seats on flights starting December 1.
Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines will ban middle seats until January 6. Delta and Alaska Airlines are the two major US carriers barring middle seats over the holidays.
Alaska said it would restrict middle seats on flights over Christmas and New Year. Alaska and Delta are trying to boost revenues by boosting confidence in their processes.
Since American Airlines and United stopped blocking middle seats, the public has criticized them.
JetBlue will cap seat sales at 70% until December 1. The airline cannot guarantee that you will not be seated next to another customer.
Southwest, American, and United cite pandemic studies claiming flying is safe. Hospital-grade air filters, mask laws, and thorough aircraft cleaning are cited.