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02 January 2025

Want a front-row seat in flight? Pay extra

Airlines have been debating the viability of pricing seats according to their position. (FILE)

Published
By Reuters

American Airlines said it would charge a fee to customers who want to sit in the first few rows of the coach class cabin.

It is the latest move in a continuing a trend among airlines to bolster revenue with creative fees on perks that used to be included in the ticket price.

The carrier said the programme called "Express Seats" lets passengers pay to sit in those seats and enter the plane in the first group, to speed boarding and exiting.

The fee starts at $19 for short flights like St. Louis to Chicago and rises to $39 for longer trips like Chicago to Honolulu.

The programme applies to travel within the United States, including Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands.

Customers may purchase the seats only at airport self-service check-in machines any time from 24 hours to 50 minutes before departure.

Cash-strapped airlines have been tapping into new ancillary revenue streams to offset historically low ticket prices and volatile fuel costs.

Some of the more controversial fees, like one to check a single bag, has been broadly accepted by the US airline industry.

Airlines also have experimented with fees to sit in exit rows and in aisle seats.