USA TODAY US Edition

What is the best airline seat?

Window vs. aisle; the debate rages on

- Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.

Window or aisle? For air travelers, the choice of economy-class airline seat — window or aisle — is an enduring question, if not a source of countless arguments. For much of the year, it’s also a highly academic question, since planes are so overbooked that you’re lucky to get any seat.

Except now. While planes are flying less full and the airline industry is predicted to make what’s called a “soft” landing (industry-speak for “the fee-fueled profit boom is ebbing ”), air travelers have a choice. The debate is real.

Window proponents say a view and a fuselage to sleep against make theirs the superior choice. Passengers who prefer the aisle seats say it’s better because they have easy access to the restrooms, the possibilit­y of a little extra legroom, and they’re first to exit the aircraft. There is only one thing both sides agree on: the intense dislike of the middle seat. No matter what you choose, you’ll need to know a few things before you make that seat selection.

First, a few numbers. Statistica­lly, the aisle seat is more popular, at least among frequent air travelers. More than seven in 10 air travelers looked for an aisle seat, and the rest opted for a window, according to the website ExpertFlye­r. Leisure travelers, who may like looking out the window, might lean in the other direction, but we don’t have the numbers to prove it.

ExpertFlye­r’s Chris Lopinto likes the window seat. “I can work or sleep without my aisle mates climbing over me and creating an inconvenie­nce for everyone,” he says.

Laura Wittchen, who works for a college in Hamilton, N.Y., agrees. “The window seat is perfect,” she says. “No one bothers you to move. You have complete control of the window shade, which should always be down. People in aisle seats are always being asked to move so that couples and families can sit together. I have never been asked to move in a window seat.”

Nonsense, the aisle crowd says. Their seats of choice are better, and they have their reasons. Lauren Fritsky, a frequent air traveler and a veteran of many long-haul flights between the USA and Australia, says it’s the only way to fly.

“You can use the bathroom at your will, without having to step over or wake the stranger next to you,” says Fritsky, a marketing profession­al from New York. “You can get up to stretch or walk around. You have more openness on your one side to position your body, instead of being cramped by two bodies or one body and a wall. You can be the first one out of your row when disembarki­ng. And you can easily get out of your seat to get something from the overhead.”

The latest aircraft configurat­ions have turned more travelers into aisle aficionado­s, suggests Allen Klein, a writer and profession­al speaker who lives in San Francisco. Many airlines have moved their seats closer together recently, which has forced him to move to the aisle. “Because of my legs and the chance of a blood clot, I wear compressio­n socks and need to get up once an hour to exercise,” he says.

For yet another group of air travelers, the choice of a window or aisle depends on the circumstan­ces. That’s the assessment of Dan Suski, founder of the airline review website Seatlink.com.

“For overnight flights where I need to get some sleep, the window seat is the clear winner,” he says. “You get something to rest your head or pillow on, and you’re guaranteed fewer interrupti­ons from other passengers. For day flights or when I want to get work done, it’s the aisle seat all the way. The aisle gives you freedom to get up and move around at any time, and it’s always a little faster for deplaning.”

In a perfect world, all the seats would afford both a view of the outside and easy access to the restrooms. The aircraft designer who figures out how to do that while still cramming passengers into the plane will make millions.

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Christophe­r Elliott Special for USA TODAY

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