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A mom flying with her family was able to “successfully” swindle an entire row of seats for her group as others weighed in on the move.
Posting in the “r/unitedairlines” forum on Reddit and using the title “Seat Shenanigans – advanced tactics,” a user revealed in real time how he saw the mom hack the system.
“I preboarded (10C). Row in front of me is completely open. [A] family of four comes on in group 2. They take 9A, C, D and F. Mom says to kids, ‘Don’t unpack yet,’” the post relayed.
The user then said the “mom is anxiously refreshing the seating chart in the app. I’m thinking they are waiting for the upgrade to Polaris (as am I). I check the app, see that row 9 is showing completely empty.”
The user believed at first the family was given an upgrade — until he realized this was not about an upgrade.
“They’re watching the seating chart like hawks, hoping the seats don’t get booked, waiting for the door to close, because they wanted to take over an empty row,” the person wrote.
“Door is closed, and we’re taxiing. The seats are theirs! Well played, mom,” said the user.
Many Redditors took to the comments section to discuss the travel “win” and to weigh in on taking seats in this manner.
“I really think people should sit in the seats they paid for,” commented one user.
“There was no doubt what they were up to.”
Another user said, “The seat map is notoriously inaccurate, so that alone wouldn’t incline me to think shenanigans — but the mother’s behavior with telling the kids to not unpack yet and constantly refreshing her phone display is rather sus[picious],” the person wrote.
Another user shared, “Lately I have seen FAs call people out and make them pay. A guy went full ‘man child’ when they told him to pay for the exit row he invited himself to or go back.”
“You gotta admire their strategy. Not something I would do, but wow,” said another.
Gary Leff, a Texas-based travel industry expert and author of the blog “View From the Wing,” told Fox News Digital that some airlines have changed their policies regarding switching seats when flights are not fully booked.
“You used to be able to take any open seat in your cabin once the doors closed,” he said.
“You might move closer to the front, grab an aisle seat or head for an empty row in the back so you could stretch out.”
Added Leff, “[Flyers] may not be able to get what they want from the airline when reserving seats, or the airline may want a fee for the seats they want and the passenger doesn’t want to pay — so they’ll try their luck on board.”
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