Miami Herald

Southwest Airlines ends unique policy and will let passengers pick seats

- BY ALEXANDRA SKORES

SOUTHWEST ALSO ANNOUNCED THE ADDITION OF RED-EYE FLIGHTS, WHICH WILL BEGIN ON VALENTINE’S DAY 2025 IN SOME MARKETS.

Southwest Airlines on Thursday announced the end of its open-seating model, one of the airline’s most unique policies.

For over 50 years, Southwest has been known for open seats but now will lean into seating models that are like its competitor­s. According to the airline, Southwest conducted research and 8 million simulation-based boarding trials. More details were expected later Thursday and during the company’s investor day in late September.

“Moving to assigned seating and offering premium legroom options will be a transforma­tional change that cuts across almost all aspects of the company,” said Bob Jordan, CEO of Southwest, in a news release. “Although our unique open seating model has been a part of Southwest Airlines since our inception, our thoughtful and extensive research makes it clear this is the right choice — at the right time — for our customers, our people, and our shareholde­rs.”

Southwest’s research found 80% of its customers and 86% of potential customers prefer assigned seats. When customers choose different airlines, the open-seating policy is the No. 1 reason cited for the change, Southwest reported.

The airline will also add premium, extended legroom. Details of how the aircrafts’ cabins will change are still in the design phase, but Southwest expects roughly onethird of seats to offer extended legroom, the same as its narrow-body aircraft competitor­s.

Jordan also said financial results for the second quarter were “impacted by both external and internal factors.” Southwest had previously lowered its financial expectatio­ns for the quarter and reported a $7.4 billion operating revenue for the quarter, a 4.5% increase from the previous year. Unit revenue was slightly better than the company’s previous expectatio­n of up to 4.5% for the quarter, which Southwest attributed to the final days of June and “the resulting benefit from incrementa­l bookings from other carrier cancellati­ons.”

Southwest also announced the addition of red-eye flights. The flights will begin on Valentine’s Day 2025 in these initial nonstop markets: Las Vegas to Baltimore and Orlando; Los Angeles to Baltimore and Nashville; and Phoenix to Baltimore.

Overnight flights at Southwest were rumored to begin in the next few years, but were rolled out ahead of expectatio­ns from leaders. Southwest will phase in additional red-eye flying in its upcoming schedules as part of its “multi-year transforma­tion to a 24-hour operation,” the airline reported. It expects to provide incrementa­l revenue and cost savings.

The changes come as activist investor Elliott Investment Management has called on Southwest to make dramatic alteration­s to the airline’s business model to generate a return for shareholde­rs. Elliott has disclosed a $1.9 billion stake in the air carrier.

 ?? BILL GREENBLATT UPI, file ?? ‘Assigned seating and offering premium legroom options will be a transforma­tional change that cuts across almost all aspects of the company,’ said Southwest’s CEO.
BILL GREENBLATT UPI, file ‘Assigned seating and offering premium legroom options will be a transforma­tional change that cuts across almost all aspects of the company,’ said Southwest’s CEO.

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