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Best Airline for Plus-Size Travelers 2026: JetBlue Now Tops

JetBlue replaces Southwest as the US top pick after Southwest's CoS policy weakened January 2026. No advance mandate, wide 18.4 inch (46.7 cm) seats, low gate friction.

··16 min read·Verified Jun 2026
On this page
  1. Customer-of-Size policy comparison (verified June 2026)
  2. Seat width by aircraft type (the underemphasized dimension)
  3. What we looked for
  4. 1. JetBlue (the new US top pick by default)
  5. 2. Alaska Airlines (the close second when you can pre-purchase)
  6. 3. Air Canada (the global standout for domestic)
  7. 4. Delta (the discreet, no-mandate US option)
  8. 5. Air Canada (domestic) and the European CoS leaders (KLM, Air France)
  9. 6. Airlines to avoid (Frontier, Allegiant, the now-defunct Spirit, and largely Southwest in 2026)
  10. 7. The Reddit and community signal on the 2026 Southwest change
  11. 8. Booking tips and tactical recommendations
  12. The bottom line

This guide was written at a moment of policy regression in plus-size air travel. In January 2026, Southwest Airlines moved from open seating to assigned seating, and in the process materially weakened the Customer of Size policy that made it the consensus best US airline for plus-size travelers for over a decade. The change required advance purchase of the second seat with refund only if the flight wasn’t sold out. NAAFA chair Tigress Osborn told the NY Times: “Southwest was the only beacon of hope for many fat people who otherwise wouldn’t have been flying. And now that beacon has gone out.”

The new top pick is JetBlue, almost by default. Not because JetBlue’s policy is dramatically generous, but because in the current US landscape, JetBlue is the only major carrier that doesn’t require advance proof and doesn’t impose strict armrest-must-lower enforcement at the gate. Combined with some of the widest narrowbody economy seats in the US at 18.4 inches (46.7 cm), EvenMore extra-legroom rows, and seatbelt extenders provided onboard, JetBlue is the lowest-friction US option in 2026.

The best airline for plus-size travelers in 2026 is JetBlue Airways, with Alaska Airlines as the close second when you can pre-purchase and bet on the post-travel refund. Air Canada remains the global standout for domestic Canadian flights under the One Person, One Fare policy. Frontier and Allegiant should be avoided for any plus-size traveler who can afford an alternative. Below is the full breakdown by airline, by aircraft seat width, and by trip type.

Update (May 2026): Spirit Airlines ceased all operations at 2:30 a.m. ET on May 2, 2026 and converted to a Chapter 7 liquidation, so it no longer sells tickets or flies. We have kept the Spirit references below as a record of how its Customer of Size handling and Big Front Seat compared while it operated, but it is not a bookable option. Plus-size budget flyers who used to weigh Spirit should now compare Frontier, Allegiant, and Breeze, with the same caution about strict armrest enforcement and no refunds on the first two.

Customer-of-Size policy comparison (verified June 2026)

AirlineExtra seat required?Refund if empty seat?Second seat free?2026 notes
SouthwestStrongly recommended in advance (assigned seating since early 2026)Only if flight departed with an open seat, same fare class, within 90 daysNo (was effectively yes pre-2026; complimentary day-of seat only if adjacent seats happen to be free)Major policy regression alongside assigned-seating rollout
AlaskaYes, must purchaseYes, full refund if any open seat in both directions, request post-travelNoTightening in 2026 (no more day-of complimentary extra seat)
JetBlueNo requirement; optional purchaseN/A (optional purchase)NoWide 18.4 in (46.7 cm) seats; extender provided onboard; add an SSR at booking
DeltaNo requirement (recommended)No refunds offeredNoExtender-only passengers don’t have to buy extra seat
AmericanYes if can’t fitPossible refund if open seat in each direction (case-by-case)No”Same fare” only if booked at same time
UnitedYes, mandatoryNo formal refundNoDay-of purchase at prevailing fare (much higher)
Spirit (ceased ops May 2026)Yes if encroaches or armrest won’t lowerNo refundsNoCeased ops May 2, 2026 (Chapter 7), no longer bookable; while operating, Big Front Seat ($) was the workaround
FrontierYes, advanceNo special refundNoWill deny boarding + rebook if not pre-purchased
AllegiantYes if armrest won’t lowerNoNoWill deny boarding if flight sold out
HawaiianRecommended advance bookingNot formalNoGenerous seatbelt length and extender availability reported; now co-located with Alaska reservations post-merger
Air CanadaNo, free second seat (domestic only) with medical formN/A (free)Yes, domesticOne Person, One Fare still in effect; 48-hr advance + physician form
British AirwaysBuy in advance or in Manage My Booking if cabin space existsNot standardNoExtra seat only if same-cabin space available; no BA-operated extra seat if itinerary mixes carriers
Air FranceYes if won’t fitYes, full refund if any free seat in cabin; 25% discount on advance 2nd seatNo (but discounted)Among most generous in Europe
KLMRecommended if armrest won’t lowerYes, full refund if empty seat in same class at takeoffNo (75% of fare)Best European refund policy
EmiratesOptional Empty Seat Option ($55-165); extra seat via office for true CoSNo formal CoS refundNoEmpty Seat Option is a useful workaround
QatarYes via “EXST” booking code; Economy Reserve as alternativeNo formal CoS refundNoEXST must be booked with travel agent/office
SingaporeYes, same fare for 2nd seatNone publishedNoBut seat widths are best-in-class

The honest summary: in 2026, no US airline gives plus-size travelers a guaranteed free second seat. Air Canada does on domestic flights. KLM and Air France offer the most generous European refund policies. JetBlue and Delta have the lowest gate-friction US policies. Southwest is no longer the answer.

Seat width by aircraft type (the underemphasized dimension)

Aircraft / configWidth (in / cm)Carriers using this config
Spirit Big Front Seat (ceased ops May 2026)20.0 / 50.8Spirit domestic (2-2 layout), no longer operating
Airbus A22018.6 / 47.2 (single window seats wider)Delta, JetBlue, Breeze
Boeing 777 9-abreast18.5 / 47.0Japan Airlines (all 777-300ERs), some Cathay Pacific
JetBlue A321 economy18.4 / 46.7JetBlue domestic
A350 9-abreast18.0 / 45.7Singapore, Qatar, Cathay, JAL, Delta
A380 main deck18.0-18.5 / 45.7-47.0Emirates, Singapore, Lufthansa
A330 2-4-218.0 / 45.7Delta, Hawaiian, Air Canada, KLM
777X (2027+)18.0 / 45.7 at 10-abreastLufthansa, Emirates orders
Boeing 777 10-abreast17.0-17.2 / 43.2-43.7Emirates, United, American, Air France, most carriers now
787-9 9-abreast17.0-17.3 / 43.2-43.9Most carriers (industry standard for 787)
A350 10-abreast (rare)~17.0 / 43.2Some LCC configurations

Aircraft to look for: A220 (Delta, JetBlue, Breeze), 9-abreast 777 (only Japan Airlines as a primary carrier), A380, A350 9-abreast (Singapore, Qatar, Cathay, JAL, Delta). These are the widest mainline economy seats currently flying.

Aircraft to avoid: 10-abreast 777-300ERs (Emirates, United, American, Air France) where 17 inch width on a 12+ hour flight is genuinely uncomfortable. 9-abreast 787s (most carriers) where width is also tight.

What we looked for

  • Customer of Size policy as written and as enforced, since the gap between policy and gate-agent reality varies by airline
  • Refund mechanism for purchased second seats, where Alaska, KLM, and Air France lead and many US carriers offer nothing
  • Seat width by aircraft, since 1.5 inches of width matters more than 1.5 inches of pitch over a 10-hour flight
  • Seatbelt extender policies, where airline staff training varies and the experience differs in stigmatization
  • Armrest flexibility, where the gap between fixed armrests (exit rows, many low-cost carriers) and standard liftable armrests is a meaningful comfort factor
  • Real-world Reddit and traveler signal, especially around the 2026 Southwest regression and the resulting recommendations cluster

1. JetBlue (the new US top pick by default)

JetBlue is the lowest-friction US airline for plus-size travelers in 2026. The reasons are structural, not aspirational.

No mandatory advance extra-seat purchase. JetBlue allows but doesn’t require buying a second seat. Plus-size travelers can simply book a flight and show up, with the option to add an extra seat at booking or upgrade to an EvenMore extra-legroom row.

Wide economy seats at 18.4 inches (46.7 cm). JetBlue’s A321 economy seats are 18.4 inches wide, which JetBlue describes as the widest available on the A321neo and which sits well above the roughly 17 inch (43 cm) industry standard. JetBlue’s A220 fleet is comparable, with 18.6 inch (47.2 cm) single window seats. This extra width is the structural reason JetBlue is comfortable for plus-size travelers, even though no current JetBlue seat matches Spirit’s retired 20 inch Big Front Seat.

EvenMore extra-legroom rows. EvenMore (JetBlue’s premium experience, formerly Even More Space) adds up to 38 inches (97 cm) of legroom along with early boarding and other perks, for an extra charge. The seat width is the same 18.4 inches, so the benefit is legroom and recline rather than added width. Standard JetBlue armrests lift; this is normal economy hardware, not a fixed or lift-flat design.

Seatbelt extenders provided onboard. JetBlue’s economy seatbelts are 45 inches (114 cm) and the crew provides a 25 inch (64 cm) extension onboard on request. You can also add a Special Service Request at booking at no fee, which flags your needs in advance and reduces the discretion-friction of asking publicly during boarding.

Negative: the wide-seat advantage is real but modest, 18.4 inches is roomy for a narrowbody yet still well short of the 20 inch Big Front Seat that Spirit retired. Travelers who specifically need maximum width on a US domestic flight no longer have a 20 inch option.

The retrofit caveat. JetBlue’s A320 retrofit trims standard economy pitch toward 30 inches from the older 32.3 inch layout. For tall plus-size travelers, this affects legroom but not seat width, and the EvenMore extra-legroom rows on the A321 are the workaround when pitch matters.

2. Alaska Airlines (the close second when you can pre-purchase)

Alaska remains a strong US choice when you can pre-purchase the second seat and bet on the post-travel refund.

The Alaska refund mechanism. Buy two seats at booking. After your flight, if any seat in your cabin was empty in either direction, Alaska will refund the cost of the second seat. The refund is requested post-travel through Alaska’s customer service. Reports are consistent that the refund is processed reliably when flights weren’t full.

The 2026 tightening caveat. Alaska reportedly removed the day-of complimentary extra seat option in late January 2026 (matching the broader US industry trend). The purchase-then-refund flow remains, but the day-of free upgrade is no longer available. For booked-full flights, you’re paying for both seats with no refund.

Crew demeanor. Reddit signal from r/AlaskaAirlines is consistent: Alaska crews are reportedly the most discreet about plus-size accommodations. The brand reputation around customer service holds for this dimension.

Aircraft. Alaska’s 737-800 and 737 MAX 9 fleet has 31 inch standard pitch. The E175 regional jets are denser and worth avoiding for plus-size travelers on multi-segment trips.

3. Air Canada (the global standout for domestic)

Air Canada’s One Person, One Fare policy is the only “free second seat” policy among major North American carriers. It’s the structural pick for plus-size travelers on Canadian domestic flights.

How One Person, One Fare works. Under this Canadian Transportation Agency framework, a passenger who needs extra space by reason of a functional disability, which Air Canada handles to include obesity, can request an extra seat free of charge when travelling within Canada. In Air Canada’s own words, you “can request an extra seat free of charge when travelling within Canada” by completing the Air Travel Requirements Assessment Form and obtaining medical approval. Air Canada asks for at least 48 hours notice before departure.

Domestic only. Critically, the policy doesn’t apply to international flights. For US-Canada or Canada-international travel, Air Canada applies standard CoS pricing.

The medical-form friction. The 48-hour advance requirement and physician’s form is real friction. For last-minute travel, this isn’t usable.

Aircraft and seat width. Air Canada’s A220 fleet has the wider 18.6 inch (47.2 cm) single window seats. The 777 9-abreast (where flown) is 18.5 inch (47 cm) width. The 787 is 17 inch (43 cm) in 9-abreast, narrower than Delta or Singapore on widebody.

4. Delta (the discreet, no-mandate US option)

Delta doesn’t require advance extra-seat purchase and is reported as one of the more discreet US crews. The trade-off is no formal refund policy.

No mandate. Delta’s official position is that an extra seat is “recommended” but not required for plus-size travelers who can fit with the armrest lowered. Extender-only passengers (passengers who fit but need a seatbelt extender) explicitly don’t need to buy an extra seat.

No refund policy. Unlike Alaska, KLM, or Air France, Delta doesn’t offer a documented refund mechanism for purchased second seats even on flights with empty seats. The CoS dimension is one of the few areas where Delta is less generous than its US peers.

Seat width. Delta’s A220 and A330 are the wider aircraft in the fleet. The 757 is narrower. The 767 retrofit (Delta One Suite) is widebody but the economy section is dense.

Delta Comfort+. The mid-tier paid extra-legroom at 33-34 inch pitch. Width unchanged from standard economy. For plus-size travelers who need width more than pitch, the upgrade value is moderate.

5. Air Canada (domestic) and the European CoS leaders (KLM, Air France)

For international travel, the European carriers have the most generous refund policies.

KLM. Optional extra-seat purchase. Full refund if any empty seat in the same class at takeoff. The second seat costs 75% of the standard fare (a 25% discount). This is the most generous European policy.

Air France. 25% discount on advance second seat purchase. Full refund if any free seat in the cabin. Comparable to KLM, equally generous.

Lufthansa. No published CoS policy. The plus-size workflow on Lufthansa is to call and book a second seat manually. Less customer-friendly than KLM or Air France.

British Airways. You can buy an extra seat in advance or through Manage My Booking when there is space in your cabin, paid by card or Avios. No standard refund. Note you cannot buy a BA-operated extra seat if your itinerary also includes a flight operated by another airline.

Emirates. Offers the Empty Seat Option ($55-165 USD or AED 200-600) which is a per-flight bidding mechanism for an empty adjacent seat. For true CoS accommodations beyond that, contact via Emirates office.

Qatar. Uses an EXST booking code that must be processed through a travel agent or Qatar office. Economy Reserve is an alternative product to consider.

Singapore Airlines. Same fare for second seat (no discount). But Singapore’s economy width on A350 at 18-19 inches is among the widest in the industry, so a single seat may be sufficient where it wouldn’t be on Emirates 10-abreast 777.

6. Airlines to avoid (Frontier, Allegiant, the now-defunct Spirit, and largely Southwest in 2026)

Spirit (ceased operations May 2026). Spirit ceased all flights on May 2, 2026 under a Chapter 7 liquidation and is no longer bookable, so it is included here only as a record. While it operated it had 28 inch pitch standard economy, among the narrowest seats in the US, strict armrest-must-lower enforcement, and no refunds for purchased extra seats. The Big Front Seat at 20 inch width and 36 inch pitch was the workaround for those willing to pay (typically $30-150 per segment), but the experience varied. Reddit and Trustpilot reports flagged inconsistent gate-agent enforcement of the CoS policy.

Frontier. Will deny boarding and rebook if extra seat isn’t pre-purchased. 28 inch pitch standard. The Premium extra-legroom row at 33-38 inch pitch is the only legroom option but width is unchanged. No refund policy.

Allegiant. Will deny boarding if flight is sold out and extra seat wasn’t pre-purchased. Allegiant’s standard seatbelts are reported to run short relative to other US carriers, and the airline draws frequent complaints from extender-only passengers. Extender-only passengers face the most friction on Allegiant.

Southwest (post-Jan 27, 2026). The historic US plus-size champion. The new policy requires advance purchase with refund only if flight not sold out and same fare class and within 90 days. NAAFA and plus-size advocacy organizations have publicly criticized the change. For 2026 bookings, Southwest is no longer the recommendation it was. JetBlue and Alaska are now the better domestic picks.

7. The Reddit and community signal on the 2026 Southwest change

The Southwest policy regression is the dominant story in plus-size air travel coverage for 2026. The community reaction is unusually unified.

u/osoatwork (r/SouthwestAirlines, Jan 2026): “Customers of size, what is your plan? I’m debating going to Frontier.”

u/MahoganyQueen73 (r/SouthwestAirlines): “We will now shop around to find the most economical option, with no expectation of reimbursement.”

Tigress Osborn, NAAFA chair, to NY Times: “Southwest was the only beacon of hope for many fat people who otherwise wouldn’t have been flying. And now that beacon has gone out.”

Plus-size travel bloggers consistently flag being able to flag a seatbelt-extender need in advance (rather than asking aloud at boarding) as one of the most stress-reducing parts of the experience, which is a point in JetBlue’s favor given its no-fee Special Service Request at booking.

Fat Girls Traveling community consensus: Alaska, Air Canada (domestic), KLM, and JetBlue are the carriers most often praised. Frontier and Allegiant are most often cited as worst experiences, as was Spirit before it ceased operating in May 2026.

8. Booking tips and tactical recommendations

For domestic US travel (2026): Default to JetBlue. The combination of no advance mandate, wide 18.4 inch (46.7 cm) seats, and an onboard extender you can flag in advance via SSR is the lowest-friction US option.

For when JetBlue doesn’t fly your route: Alaska is the structural backup. Pre-purchase the second seat at booking, request the post-travel refund, and bet on the empty-seat refund mechanism.

For Canadian domestic travel: Air Canada under One Person, One Fare. Get the physician’s form ahead of time. 48-hour advance booking required.

For European long-haul: KLM or Air France for the refund-generous policy. Singapore Airlines or Japan Airlines if you specifically want the widest economy seats (18-19 inch widebody economy is significantly more comfortable than 17 inch).

For aisle vs window: aisle. Reddit community consensus is consistent that the aisle seat gives shoulder-lean room outward instead of having to crowd into the window-side passenger’s space. The downside is mid-flight bathroom-access for window-side neighbors.

Avoid exit rows for plus-size travel. Exit rows have fixed armrests (federal safety reg) and the tray table lives in the armrest, which further narrows usable seat width. Pitch is generous but width is worst.

Pre-request the extender online or via call for any airline that supports it (JetBlue, Delta, several international carriers). The privacy benefit of avoiding the public ask during boarding is real.

Document the empty seats. On Alaska, KLM, Air France, and any airline with a refund-if-empty policy, photograph or note the empty seats in your cabin on both directions of your trip. Submit the refund request promptly post-travel.

The bottom line

For 2026, JetBlue is the new US top pick for plus-size travelers by default. Not because the policy is dramatically generous, but because in the current US landscape no other carrier offers the combination of no advance mandate, wide 18.4 inch (46.7 cm) economy seats, and an onboard extender you can flag at booking.

Alaska is the close second for routes JetBlue doesn’t serve, with the most reliable post-travel refund mechanism in the US.

Air Canada is the global standout for domestic Canadian travel under One Person, One Fare. Genuinely free second seat with medical form documentation.

KLM and Air France lead Europe on refund policy generosity. Singapore Airlines and Japan Airlines lead on seat width (18-19 inches widebody economy) for long-haul comfort.

Avoid Frontier and Allegiant for any plus-size traveler who can afford an alternative. The CoS enforcement on these carriers is strict and the refund policies don’t exist. Spirit belonged on this list too, but it ceased operations in May 2026 and is no longer flying.

Southwest in 2026 is no longer the recommendation it was. The January 27 policy change moved Southwest from the top-tier to the middle tier. The 90-day window and same-fare-class requirements aren’t fatal, but the policy has lost the no-fuss reputation that made Southwest the consensus pick for over a decade.

The honest summary: the best airline for plus-size travelers depends on route. For US domestic, JetBlue first, Alaska second, Delta third. For Canada domestic, Air Canada. For Europe long-haul, KLM or Air France for policy, Singapore Airlines or Japan Airlines for seat width. Skip Frontier and Allegiant; Spirit is no longer an option after its May 2026 shutdown. Verify the aircraft type before booking (A220, 9-abreast 777 or A350 are the widest mainline economy currently flying).

For airline-specific seat width and aircraft type details, see the Delta carry-on guide, JetBlue carry-on guide, Alaska carry-on guide, and Air Canada carry-on guide. For comparison head-to-heads, see JetBlue vs Delta and Alaska vs Hawaiian.

Quick Comparison

#1JetBlue Airways★★★★½

No mandatory advance extra-seat purchase. Wide 18.4 inch (46.7 cm) economy seats. EvenMore extra-legroom rows. Seatbelt extender provided onboard.

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#2Alaska Airlines★★★★☆

Advance extra-seat purchase required, with full refund if any open seat in both directions. Most reliable refund among US carriers.

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#3Delta Air Lines★★★★☆

No mandatory purchase. Extender-only passengers don't have to buy extra seat. Generally discreet crew. No formal refund policy.

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One Person, One Fare: free second seat on flights within Canada with the Air Travel Requirements Assessment Form and medical approval. 48-hour advance notice. International not covered.

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#5KLM★★★★☆

Optional extra-seat purchase. Full refund if any empty seat in same class at takeoff. 75% of fare for second seat (25% discount).

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#6Air France★★★★☆

25% discount on advance second seat. Full refund if any free seat in cabin. Among most generous in Europe.

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#7Singapore Airlines★★★★☆

Same fare for second seat (no discount). But A350 seat width at 18 to 19 inches (46 to 48 cm) in economy is among widest in the industry.

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#8Japan Airlines★★★★½

9-abreast 777-300ER economy at 18.5 inch (47 cm) width. Premium Economy at 19.5 inches (50 cm) with leg and foot rest. Widest mainline economy currently flying.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best airline for plus-size travelers in 2026?
JetBlue, in a clear shift from the historic Southwest answer. JetBlue doesn't require advance purchase of an extra seat, runs some of the widest narrowbody economy seats in the US at 18.4 inches (46.7 cm), and provides seatbelt extenders onboard. Alaska Airlines is a strong second when you can pre-purchase and bet on the post-travel refund. Air Canada remains the global standout for domestic Canadian flights with its One Person, One Fare policy that provides a free second seat with a medical form. Southwest, the historic top pick, materially weakened its Customer of Size policy in January 2026 alongside the move to assigned seating.
What happened to Southwest's Customer of Size policy?
It changed materially when Southwest moved from open seating to assigned seating in early 2026. The old open-seating system effectively let a Customer of Size board, take an empty adjacent seat, and have any pre-purchased extra seat refunded with little friction. Under the assigned-seating policy, Southwest strongly recommends buying the second seat in advance to guarantee adjacent seats, and a refund of that purchased extra seat is given only if the flight departed with at least one open seat, both seats were in the same fare class, and you request it within 90 days of travel. A complimentary extra seat is still possible day-of, but only if adjacent seats happen to be available, which may mean a lower seat category, otherwise you are rebooked. NAAFA and plus-size travel advocates have publicly criticized the change, and the no-fuss reputation Southwest built over decades is largely gone.
Which airline gives plus-size travelers a free second seat?
Air Canada on domestic flights under the One Person, One Fare policy. This policy classifies functional obesity as a disability for the purpose of domestic air travel and provides a free second seat with a physician's form submitted 48 hours in advance. It does not apply to international flights. Among US carriers, no airline currently provides a free second seat; all require purchase, with Alaska offering the most reliable post-travel refund if the flight had any empty seats.
What's the widest economy seat among major airlines?
Among narrowbody domestic seats, the Airbus A220 leads at 18.6 inches (47.2 cm) and JetBlue's A321 economy is close behind at 18.4 inches (46.7 cm), both wider than the roughly 17 to 17.3 inch (43 to 44 cm) industry standard. Spirit's 20 inch Big Front Seat was the widest narrowbody seat, but Spirit ceased operations in May 2026 and no longer flies. Among widebody long-haul: Japan Airlines 9-abreast 777-300ER at 18.5 inches (47 cm), Singapore A350 at 18 to 19 inches (46 to 48 cm), and Emirates A380 main deck at 18 to 18.5 inches (46 to 47 cm). Avoid 10-abreast 777s (Emirates, United, American, Air France in 10-abreast config) where seat width drops to about 17 inches (43 cm).
Do airlines refund the second seat if the flight isn't full?
Alaska: yes, with a post-travel refund request. KLM: yes, full refund if any empty seat in same class at takeoff. Air France: yes, full refund if any free seat in the cabin. Southwest (2026 policy): only if flight not sold out and same fare class and within 90 days. American: case-by-case if open seat in each direction. United, Frontier, Allegiant: no formal refund. Spirit also had no formal refund but ceased operations in May 2026. Delta: no published refund policy.
Which US airlines should plus-size travelers avoid?
Frontier and Allegiant draw the loudest negative reports for plus-size travelers due to narrow seats and tight pitch (around 28 inches / 71 cm standard), strict armrest-must-lower enforcement, no refund policies for purchased extra seats, and a history of denying boarding when an extra seat wasn't pre-purchased. Allegiant's seatbelts are reported to run short relative to other US carriers. Spirit drew the same complaints while it operated, but it ceased operations in May 2026 (Chapter 7) and is no longer bookable. United is mandatory-purchase with no formal refund and draws mixed reports on Customer of Size enforcement consistency.
Is Premium Economy worth it for plus-size travelers?
Often yes on flights over 6 hours. Premium Economy widens seats to 18 to 19 inches (46 to 48 cm) versus about 17 inches (43 cm) in economy, which is a meaningful comfort difference on long-haul. Delta Comfort+ is the best ratio for short and medium-haul. JetBlue's EvenMore rows add up to 38 inches (97 cm) of legroom on the same 18.4 inch (46.7 cm) wide seat, so the benefit there is legroom rather than width. Singapore Airlines premium economy at 19 to 19.5 inches (48 to 50 cm) and Japan Airlines premium economy at 19.5 inches (50 cm) are the standouts for long-haul. The premium is roughly $200 to $600 over economy depending on route.
C
Caden Sorenson

Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer

Caden Sorenson runs Travel Vient, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.