The Oklahoman

Southwest to stop practice of blocking middle seats

- Dawn Gilbertson

Southwest Airlines will no longer limit the number of seats for sale on each flight, joining rivals American and United.

The newpolicy, which means middle seats will once again be filled on flights with strong demand, takes effect Dec. 1, after Thanksgivi­ng but ahead of the Christmas and New Year’s travel season.

The airline has limited the number of seats for sale for months due to the COVID-19 pandemic, wooing skittish travelers. American and United have been filling flights for months.

“This practice of effectively keeping middle seats open bridged us from the early days of the pandemic, when we had little knowledge about the behavior of the virus, to now,” the airline said in a statement Thursday. “Today, aligned with science-based findings fromtruste­d medical and aviation organizati­ons, we will resume selling all available seats for travel beginning December 1, 2020.”

Southwest CEO Gary Kelly said in an interview on CNBC Thursday that flying is a “very safe environmen­t.”

Southwest said passengers who already bought tickets for travel in December and beyond will be notified via email on Friday and given the option of a refund (not just a voucher for future travel) regardless of the type of ticket they bought. The refund must be requested by Oct. 31.

When the new policy takes effect, the airline said it plans to notify passengers two to three days before travel if their flight is going to be full and they will be given the option to change to a less full flight at no charge if one is available.

Southwest’s move is motivated by money, of course. The airline lost $20 million in bookings in October due to the seat caps and faces a loss of at least double that amount in in November.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/AP ?? Southwest Airlines employee Oscar Gonzalez assists a passenger at the ticket counter at Love Field in Dallas.
TONY GUTIERREZ/AP Southwest Airlines employee Oscar Gonzalez assists a passenger at the ticket counter at Love Field in Dallas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States