OP, if you ask this on the TRANSPORATION FORUM you will get your answer. Those Transportation DISer's all have fab info!!![]()
Another thing to note is that they changed the policy so that only the children and parents can board during preboard. They no longer allow grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, roomates and neighbors to board with the child
thank God! I hated when we would be flying home from MCO and saw entire families boarding with the one child under age 4...so annoying! (This was before they changed the child preboards to between A and B so you could have an A pass and still have half the flight board before you)
Southwest is very quick to tell you that the Early Bird Check in does NOT guarantee A group. Fortunately I have always been lucky without it to get A group. In fact the one time I got Early Bird check in, I was lower on the list than I was when I didn't have it.You can always check in 24 hours before and get an A pass which will get you on sooner or you can pay $10 each way for Early Bird Checkin and you will definitely be one of the front of the A group. That is what I do with 2 under 2 and travelling alone. It is worth the extra $20...
But otherwise you board between A & B with kids 4 and under.
thank God! I hated when we would be flying home from MCO and saw entire families boarding with the one child under age 4...so annoying! (This was before they changed the child preboards to between A and B so you could have an A pass and still have half the flight board before you)
Yeah, me too.
You really only noticed that on the flights to and from Orlando. SO many families preboarding it was crazy.
Me four.Me three!
Technically there is no such thing as a "saved" seat. You can sit there even if they are "saving" the seat for someone.Me four.
Now Southwest has to grow some and stop the saving of seats.
I hate it when a couple of people in a large party spends the $10.00 for the Early Bird pass and then you walk on the plane and find coats, carry on, and all sorts of crap sprawled all over the front of the plane saving seats for the rest of their party too cheap to buy the Early Bird.
I can see allowing each person to save maybe one seat each in case a child or spouse was on a different reservation and got stuck behind them, but it is ludicrous to see two people saving numerous rows. (It happened on my last flight and Southwest wouldn't do anything about it.
What is the use of purchasing Early Bird when they allow one person from each party to just buy one and then save seats for the rest of their party?
Technically there is no such thing as a "saved" seat. You can sit there even if they are "saving" the seat for someone.
this is trueKey word - technically. Although Southwest does officially allow saving of seats. Somebody dug that little policy up on the transportation board not too long ago.
In this case, the owners of the crap would not move it, they were guarding the front of the rows, jumping up and blocking people from trying to get into their saved rows and the flight attendants would not ask them to stop it. Yes, you could technically try to move it yourself, but then you might be asked to deplane after the cat fight starts.
I love Southwest and it is the carrier of choice for my family. We really don't care where I sit on a plane - the back is going to get there at almost the same time as the front, so who really cares? But it really makes them look bad when they offer paid Early Bird and then the people who paid for Early Bird have to move to the back because somebody has numerous rows blocked off.