Tips on being comfortable in an airplane seat?

Mo0o

Lifer
Jul 31, 2001
24,227
3
76
For some reason airplane seats seem to be the most uncomfortable seats every designed. I sent hours at a time in front of my desk but a few hours in an airline seat and im ready to stage a walk out. Any frequent travelers here have any expert tips? I've tried those neck pillows and they dont seem to help much.
 

HN

Diamond Member
Jan 19, 2001
8,186
4
0
turn the neck pillow around so the padding is under your chin. it'll keep your head from nodding forward.

if you want elbow space on the armrest, keep the backrest angle different from your neighbor.

get the aisle seat. allows for just a little bit more stretch; just don't trip anyone or get in the way of food service.
 

patrick409

Senior member
Aug 13, 2003
233
1
0
Emergency exit row gives you more leg room.

I'd suggest doing some research on the exit rows of the airline/plane model before picking an exit row seat. I flew on a Delta 737 and 757 last week and picked the front exit row in economy. They don't recline and have a fixed armrest, so it wasn't all that comfortable. Extra leg room doesn't help that much if you're forced to sit straight up for 5 hours. I'm about 5'11" and 170ish for reference. I believe the 2nd exit row reclines on Delta's planes.


I find that placing a pillow between my lower back and the seat does wonders.

Get a travel pillow for your neck, but pick one that's breathable as some of the thicker/inflatable ones can make you sweat and gets uncomfortable.

For longer flights you might want to bring a bottle of water and lip balm, as the low humidity really kills your throat/lips.
 

Capt Caveman

Lifer
Jan 30, 2005
34,543
651
126
After a few hours, get up and hang-out in the back galley with the stewardesses to stretch your legs.
 

Leros

Lifer
Jul 11, 2004
21,867
7
81
My first choice is the exit row.

If I can't get that I try to get an aisle seat so I can poke my legs out a bit. The aisle sit isn't bad except I usually get whacked in the elbow a few times from the drink cart.

I hate flying.
 

white

Senior member
Nov 2, 2000
988
3
81
- Business / First class seats
- Exit row seats (but make sure there's not another exit row behind you otherwise you can't recline your seat)
- Bulkhead
- Airport bar

If you want more comfort on a plane, you're going to have to pay for it.
 

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
26,185
4,844
126
I've been on a single plane for as long as 25 hours (Atlanta -> Johannesburg, 4 hour delay before takeoff, and stop for fuel in Senegal without the ability to get off the plane, and while I'm in coach). The seats aren't that bad if you pick a good one.
Here's where you do seat research

http://www.seatguru.com/
I was just about to post the same thing. That website (and a few other websites like it) show which seats are good, marginal, or bad.

Then I do things like this:
1) I get window seat so that I have something to lean on. Leaning helps for comfort quite a lot. I don't care if I wake others or accidently elbow them in the face when I need to go to the bathroom. They should know better and get a window the next time.

2) If the window isn't available, then get the aisle. A good trick is that almost all isle armrests are movable (check for a hinge). There is a hidden secret button underneath the armrest (often in a hole on the bottom side of the armrest). Press the button, pull the armrest up about 30° to 60° and bingo, you can now sleep or rest leaning into the aisle against the armrest (a pillow or coat or blanket helps to distribute the weight).

3) Oscillate from one side of the plane to the other if you have multiple flight legs. That way, you get to lean on a different side with each flight leg.

4) Keep your seat back angled differently from those around you. It either puts you ahead of them for armrest control or it puts you behind them so you can lean on their seat side.

5) Select an undesireable row. You'll be far more likely to have an empty seat next to you.

6) Select the 2-seat section not the 3-seat section, if possible. Couples want to sit together and the 3-seat sections are more likely to be full. Plus, you are guaranteed not to get that horrible "middle" seat that has no window to lean on and no aisle for quick escape.

7) Take your shoes off.
 
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jiggahertz

Golden Member
Apr 7, 2005
1,532
0
76
I'd suggest doing some research on the exit rows of the airline/plane model before picking an exit row seat. I flew on a Delta 737 and 757 last week and picked the front exit row in economy. They don't recline and have a fixed armrest, so it wasn't all that comfortable. Extra leg room doesn't help that much if you're forced to sit straight up for 5 hours. I'm about 5'11" and 170ish for reference. I believe the 2nd exit row reclines on Delta's planes.


I find that placing a pillow between my lower back and the seat does wonders.

Get a travel pillow for your neck, but pick one that's breathable as some of the thicker/inflatable ones can make you sweat and gets uncomfortable.

For longer flights you might want to bring a bottle of water and lip balm, as the low humidity really kills your throat/lips.

Yeah, first exit rows usually don't recline so people can exit behind you. At 6'4" I will gladly take no recline for the extra leg room.