It's happened to us too - and it doesn't change it's YOUR responsibility to pay attention to any changes to your tickets in advance of the flight to catch any plane changes, etc. You can fix these situations in the airline app or by calling the airline well in advance of arriving at the airport and checking in. We fly all the time (internationally and domestically) and make sure to check any ticketed flights regularly for changes if it's important for us to all sit together. |
Oh fck off. It's the airline's responsibility to NOT move your children into separate locations from you when you have booked together, and paid to select seats together. The airlines are screwing up on this. We had cross country flying in both directions earlier this month with a family of five, all booked together well in advance, and the airlines fcked it up on several trips, with the gate agent admitting as much. Just cause they ping my app a few hours before the flight doesn't make it my responsibility. I paid for seats together, it's their responsibility to honor that. And regarding changing seats: I do it if I can for others, and I offer to pay in cash or buy drinks if someone does it to accommodate me. Good for you for making sure to "check any ticketed flights regularly" like some kind of airline lackey, but fck that. The airlines stopped being decent to deal with years ago. |
Sometimes parents pay to sit together and then there is some sort of flight change and the airline breaks parties up. Even with a young kid of diaper age. I know from first hand experience. So don’t assume every parent asking to switch just didn’t pay to pick seats. The airlines don’t care about us and usually the parent is also trying to do you a favor assuming you don’t want to be seated next to a solo 2 year old. |
It may well become your problem when my kid has a panic attack mid flight or vomits at the end of the flight. But yes, enjoy your precious seat. |
Cool story. I have my personal feelings and opinions too but choose to operate as an adult within the current system which says it’s my responsibility to deal with this if it happens. Doesn’t matter what I “feel” personally about it. You sound like a child. Learn to read the T&C when you book your next flight, you might learn something. |
"The Airline said so" is not a compelling argument to me. It sounds like it is to you, a high conformity person. There are two ways to resist bad policy: 1. Don't participate (never fly, in this case) 2. Don't cooperate. You are of the spineless sort who will cooperate no matter what, as long as it's official, and as long as it's in writing. |
Well the airplane is under federal jurisdiction / authority so I’d rather not “fight the man” and end up with a federal felony charge. But you do you, 17 YO keyboard warrior. Remember to send in your weekly small-dollar Mamdani donation before Friday EOD. |
Some of us regularly garden our reservations only to have changes made after we show up at the airport. Even when the changes are made further in advance, you can't always fix them. Flights are often completely booked or just have middle seats available. For days. |
Well that’s on you for not having psychic insight into whatever flight seating changes the airline is going to make at any given time. We as customers have no right to expect that if we pay extra money to sit with our kids the airline will actually honor that. I mean unfortunately in this day and age there is just no technology available to locate birthdates in the system of young children and create coding to prioritize booking them next to an adult companion. Stupid breeders should just stay home if they’re not willing to frequently refresh an app to check for flight seating changes in the months-long interim between booking and traveling. Or be willing to completely uproot your entire travel plans including potentially waiting days for a new booking should that be necessary to not have your toddler seated rows away from you. We must protect capitalism at all costs! |
You’re hilarious if you think someones getting a federal felony charge for making the airline deal with issues following their own stated in writing policies about seating parents with kids. |
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You guys have bickering on this thread since January.
Side note, if you travel with your family you don’t get asked to switch seats. They only ask singletons it appears. I’ve never in my life been asked to switch, but I’m always with my husband and kids. |
I have noise canceling headphones. Your crotch rocket’s panic attack won’t phase me at all. Not my problem. |
| I call bs on all these “they changed my seat after I bought it”. We fly monthly and our seats have never been changed after we paid for them. Family of 5 and never once (barring aircraft change the day of) You’re being cheap by not paying for one. Just admit it. |
Really? It depends a lot on the route I guess but we have had flights canceled and been rebooked before. We’ve also booked on one type of aircraft and then the aircraft was changed so the seating changed. Maybe Dulles to London is pretty cut and dry each evening but like, BWI to Des Moines doesn’t have the same benefit. |
I had it happen this summer. People were quite angry that they had paid for seats and been moved. You had to notice the change and then switch your seats again to something you like, or bring it up at the check-in desk. If you don't notice until the plane you're totally up a creek. |