Has anyone broken the U2 "sitting allocated at check in" algorithm?
#1
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist and Ambassador: The British Airways Club




Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Somewhere between 0 and 13,000 metres high
Programs: AF/KL Life Plat, BA GGL+GfL, ALL Diam, Hilton Diam, Marriott Gold, blablablah, etc
Posts: 33,211
Has anyone broken the U2 "sitting allocated at check in" algorithm?
I'm surprised that I could not find a thread on this so apologies if I missed it. What are others' experiences about the "seat allocated at check in" and best time to check in for it?
I used to think that it was a case of try to check in as late as possible as they'd first allocate rubbish seats to hope to sell the good ones for a fee till the last minute but I am no longer sure. Conversely, I used to think it was random in terms of what seat you get within a row, but more recently I have had the impression that at least on some flights they seem to give couples window and middle and single passengers aisle (which isn't good for me!)
I thought it would be good to share experiences!
For reference, I take upfront seats on many flights when I want the proper hand luggage (comfort of a good seat comes mostly as a bonus), but I find that prices seem to have increased a lot for this recently so don't always do it if I am on a very short trip for which the backpack is enough. I also find that on many of my flights, U2 seems to have reduced the upfront area by one row which surprises me, and as a result, there have been times when only a middle seat would be available there in which case I sort of object paying.
I used to think that it was a case of try to check in as late as possible as they'd first allocate rubbish seats to hope to sell the good ones for a fee till the last minute but I am no longer sure. Conversely, I used to think it was random in terms of what seat you get within a row, but more recently I have had the impression that at least on some flights they seem to give couples window and middle and single passengers aisle (which isn't good for me!)
I thought it would be good to share experiences!
For reference, I take upfront seats on many flights when I want the proper hand luggage (comfort of a good seat comes mostly as a bonus), but I find that prices seem to have increased a lot for this recently so don't always do it if I am on a very short trip for which the backpack is enough. I also find that on many of my flights, U2 seems to have reduced the upfront area by one row which surprises me, and as a result, there have been times when only a middle seat would be available there in which case I sort of object paying.
#2


Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 809
Recent experience.....I checked in 23 days prior to a flight. The group was myself and 2 children. Auto / randomly allocated 11C (exit row) 12C and 12D.
Never before have we been split in such a manner. Seat map showed many rows with 3 seats available. Clearly they might have been seats already purchased but not yet checked in.
Never before have we been split in such a manner. Seat map showed many rows with 3 seats available. Clearly they might have been seats already purchased but not yet checked in.
#3



Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Glasgow, UK
Programs: BA GfL, Marriott LTS
Posts: 2,303
I have flown 14 sectors on U2 so far this year split evenly between where I've paid for SB and where I haven't.
I pretty much always check-in immediately, or wait to the 30 day mark if I've booked that far out.
My non SB seat allocations have been 1 x A, 3 x D and 3 x F all between rows 16 and 24.
Ironically the only middle seat I've been allocated is for a flight next week where I've paid for SB, but the original flight was cancelled and I moved to an earlier (busier) one.
I pretty much always check-in immediately, or wait to the 30 day mark if I've booked that far out.
My non SB seat allocations have been 1 x A, 3 x D and 3 x F all between rows 16 and 24.
Ironically the only middle seat I've been allocated is for a flight next week where I've paid for SB, but the original flight was cancelled and I moved to an earlier (busier) one.
#4
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist and Ambassador: The British Airways Club




Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Somewhere between 0 and 13,000 metres high
Programs: AF/KL Life Plat, BA GGL+GfL, ALL Diam, Hilton Diam, Marriott Gold, blablablah, etc
Posts: 33,211
One more data point - checked in 48 hours before the flight and got aisle seat about 3/4 back in the cabin. Have the impression that the system started allocating seats from about 2/3 back and then continued to move backwards little by little with all back rows still free. Most front is allocated but given the pattern I suspect (perhaps wrongly) it is mostly people who paid for the seats.
#5
FlyerTalk Evangelist



Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: London
Posts: 19,068
Checked in for our first Easyjet flight since 2019 and our own experience supports the OPs hypothesis.
Myself and the 12 year old were given 9A & 9B for a flight just under 3 weeks from the check in date. This flight is completely sold out. I booked myself a bigger cabin bag along with the tickets in Feb.
MrLapLap, travelling alone with small bag only, checked in closer to a month before the flight date and was given an aisle seat in the mid twenties. That flight still has 150 tickets available.
Myself and the 12 year old were given 9A & 9B for a flight just under 3 weeks from the check in date. This flight is completely sold out. I booked myself a bigger cabin bag along with the tickets in Feb.
MrLapLap, travelling alone with small bag only, checked in closer to a month before the flight date and was given an aisle seat in the mid twenties. That flight still has 150 tickets available.
#6
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Montreux CH
Programs: FB Platinum, M&M FTL, BA Blue
Posts: 12,646
I am wondering about this two, because I have just received the check-in notifications for two flights that I will take in 30 days time. So, I am going to do this live and report back here with the results!
ETA - And here are the results! I have checked in exactly one month before the following flights:
MAN-BFS Seat 19B
BFS-EDI Seat 19F
So that's one middle seat, then one window seat. Not too bad, that's a 50% success rate at having a decent seat and anyway, these flights have a timetabled block time of just 50 minutes.
ETA - And here are the results! I have checked in exactly one month before the following flights:
MAN-BFS Seat 19B
BFS-EDI Seat 19F
So that's one middle seat, then one window seat. Not too bad, that's a 50% success rate at having a decent seat and anyway, these flights have a timetabled block time of just 50 minutes.
Last edited by Concerto; Aug 30, 2023 at 8:30 am Reason: Updated info
#7



Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Glasgow, UK
Programs: BA GfL, Marriott LTS
Posts: 2,303
I'm now at 41 U2 sectors over the last 24 months. Of these, I purchased SB for 12.
From the non SB flights (i.e. 29), I'm at 10 Aisle (34.5%), 16 Window (55.2%) and 3 Middle (10.3%)
Generally seated in rows 18-21, but occasionally as far forward as 15 and as far back as 25.
And yes, I realise that I should have purchased easyJet Plus but I kept convincing myself that my U2 usage would tail off.
From the non SB flights (i.e. 29), I'm at 10 Aisle (34.5%), 16 Window (55.2%) and 3 Middle (10.3%)
Generally seated in rows 18-21, but occasionally as far forward as 15 and as far back as 25.
And yes, I realise that I should have purchased easyJet Plus but I kept convincing myself that my U2 usage would tail off.
#8
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Montreux CH
Programs: FB Platinum, M&M FTL, BA Blue
Posts: 12,646
So, best plan would be to check in as quickly as possible when check-in opens. Might be worth paying for a standard seat assignment on EDI-GVA because that's quite a long flight. Can you pay for a seat after check-in has been completed?
#9




Join Date: Apr 2016
Location: Isle of Man
Programs: BA Blue, IHG Gold, Radisson Premium, Clan Loganair, Starbucks Gold
Posts: 956
No, you have to choose before check-in, you can't roll the dice and pay if you end up in a middle.
My EasyJet experience is that if I'm travelling in a two or a three (me+wife, me+child, or me +wife+child) they will allocate us in a block together. If we're travelling as a three we get the block of three, as a couple we'll get window+middle or middle+aisle. Travelling solo it's rare I get allocated a middle seat for this reason, I'll usually be allocated either the aisle or the window with a couple next to me. I usually only get the middle where a couple have tried to be clever and paid for aisle+window, so even then I don't usually end up in the middle.
But if the flight time is more than an hour I'll pay to choose my seat, I'm a six footer and the middle seat between two strangers is hell. I'll tolerate it on the jump across the puddle to Manchester or Liverpool but even the run to Gatwick is beyond my tolerance.
In terms of timing, there seems to be no rhyme or reason to it. Without paying I'm usually in the back ten rows, although I quite often seem to score a row 1 seat when I pay for a large cabin bag (no seat selection). I suspect that EasyJet operate a form of theoretical seating but, unlike Ryanair and Wizz, don't deliberately split people up.
My EasyJet experience is that if I'm travelling in a two or a three (me+wife, me+child, or me +wife+child) they will allocate us in a block together. If we're travelling as a three we get the block of three, as a couple we'll get window+middle or middle+aisle. Travelling solo it's rare I get allocated a middle seat for this reason, I'll usually be allocated either the aisle or the window with a couple next to me. I usually only get the middle where a couple have tried to be clever and paid for aisle+window, so even then I don't usually end up in the middle.
But if the flight time is more than an hour I'll pay to choose my seat, I'm a six footer and the middle seat between two strangers is hell. I'll tolerate it on the jump across the puddle to Manchester or Liverpool but even the run to Gatwick is beyond my tolerance.
In terms of timing, there seems to be no rhyme or reason to it. Without paying I'm usually in the back ten rows, although I quite often seem to score a row 1 seat when I pay for a large cabin bag (no seat selection). I suspect that EasyJet operate a form of theoretical seating but, unlike Ryanair and Wizz, don't deliberately split people up.
#10
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist and Ambassador: The British Airways Club




Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Somewhere between 0 and 13,000 metres high
Programs: AF/KL Life Plat, BA GGL+GfL, ALL Diam, Hilton Diam, Marriott Gold, blablablah, etc
Posts: 33,211
my experience resembles that. And yes, they start with 18-21 on a 320 (not sure if other plane types differ). So booking early I mostly get those mediocre rows but very rarely a middle. Later you may get a less central row (better for disembarkation through either door) but chances of a middle seem to ncrease.
#11
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Montreux CH
Programs: FB Platinum, M&M FTL, BA Blue
Posts: 12,646
I booked an aisle seat for EDI-GVA, cost 6.99. I think it is worth it for a flight longer than 2 hours although I can manage a middle on longer flights and have done it. Way back in my pre status days I ended up in a middle seat in the middle block on Air France SFO-CDG and I survived it (as do thousands of other people every day).
#12
Original Poster
FlyerTalk Evangelist and Ambassador: The British Airways Club




Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Somewhere between 0 and 13,000 metres high
Programs: AF/KL Life Plat, BA GGL+GfL, ALL Diam, Hilton Diam, Marriott Gold, blablablah, etc
Posts: 33,211
I booked an aisle seat for EDI-GVA, cost 6.99. I think it is worth it for a flight longer than 2 hours although I can manage a middle on longer flights and have done it. Way back in my pre status days I ended up in a middle seat in the middle block on Air France SFO-CDG and I survived it (as do thousands of other people every day).
#13




Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: NQY
Programs: BAEC
Posts: 604
Very infrequent easyJet flyer. Just to add my experience. Checked in 30 days in advance for UK->Switzerland. Did return flight at same time. 2 Adults+1 Child. On outbound we got three together in row 2, happy with that. On return we got three aisle seats, two adjacent across the aisle, the other row in front, even though there were many three in a row available further back in the plane. Not sure what I'll do next time!
#15
FlyerTalk Evangelist


Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Montreux CH
Programs: FB Platinum, M&M FTL, BA Blue
Posts: 12,646
Just to share my recent check-in successes. I let the system choose a seat for me in both instances and I checked in a couple of days after the notification arrived in my email.
GVA-BRS 19F
BRS-GVA 18C
So, a window seat on the trip to Bristol and an aisle on the way back to Geneva.
GVA-BRS 19F
BRS-GVA 18C
So, a window seat on the trip to Bristol and an aisle on the way back to Geneva.

