Southwest Airlines is loved or hated. Few choose the middle ground, and no one wants that seat! Listen to how to choose a Southwest Airlines seat.
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Some won't fly Southwest owing to their odd open-seat boarding process. It can be difficult and requires
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a lot of work to acquire a nice Southwest seat. A good seat implies different things to different people.
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Southwest allows open seating. Instead of seats, customers are assigned a boarding group, A, B, or C, and a boarding position, 1-60.
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Your boarding group and location decide when you board the plane and how many seats you can choose from.
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It was once completely free. Airlines distributed placards with one of the three letters. People camped out under a letter hours before a flight
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In the mid-2000s, Southwest expanded boarding positions because this looked bad. Now that the lines have numbers
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Unless you wish to sit near the bulkhead or an exit row aisle or window, you should board in the first half of a full flight to obtain a good seat.
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With all this seating debate, which seats are good? Nearly all airline seats are alike. Except for exit rows, there's no more legroom
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Personal needs determine Southwest's best seat. Connecting flight passengers may want to sit in the front to exit quickly
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