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Airlines don’t have to tell you how much legroom you’ll have on your


Economy seating on a flight tends to be a squeeze for most, but on some planes, it’s gotten tighter than usual. The kicker? You likely won’t be able to tell when you’re booking your ticket, because airlines don’t have to tell you upfront. 

Frequent WestJet flyer Alexandra West said in an interview with CBC News that she first noticed she couldn’t comfortably fit in their economy seats last year. 

“I used to love WestJet because I would buy their economy tickets, and I would have about two inches of clearance in front of my knee. So it was comfortable. It was just fine,” West, who is a veterinarian living in central Alberta, said. “But now, I cannot sit in those seats with my legs straight forward.”

WestJet’s new seat configuration rollout has been a hot topic after a video showing an Alberta family’s cramped seating situation on a recent flight went viral. The video, posted by Amanda Schmidt, who goes by the username @amanda_rae.13 on TikTok, showed her father struggling to fit his legs in his seat. 

Although WestJet did not respond to a request for an interview in time for publication of this story, the airline said in a previous email statement to CBC News that the airplane in the video was part of its “newly reconfigured aircraft.”

The airline said in order to make air travel more available, it was trying new products, such as changing the seat pitch on certain rows in some of its aircraft to accommodate an extra row.

Seat pitch is the measure of distance from the back of a seat to the back of the seat in front of it. The standard seat pitch for Canadian airlines is 30 inches. The seat pitch of some rows of economy seating in WestJet’s reconfigured aircrafts was reduced to 28 inches. 

West said the airline didn’t inform her about the difference in seat pitch when she was booking her flight. 

“I actually did another booking today. It does not advertise what the pitch is for the ticket that you’re buying. All it does is offer you to upgrade if you would prefer more legroom. It says upgrades on average give you an extra three inches of legroom, but it doesn’t specify what that number is,” West said. 

John Gradek, an aviation expert at McGill University, said there are no current requirements for airlines to let passengers know what the pitch of their seat will be when booking a flight.

“When you make a reservation … there is no direct statement saying the seat you’ve requested or that you’ve been assigned is a 28-inch pitch,” Gradek said. “And that that carries with it some level of comfort that you know, you would have to judge whether that comfort is acceptable to you or not.”

He added that this is different from some low-cost European airlines, which “very, very clearly identify” that their seats are 28-inch pitch, even advertising it, when customers are booking flights. 

Captain Jacob Astin, chair of the WestJet Master Executive Council, which represents all WestJet pilots said in a previous statement to CBC News…



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