The choice of seat on an aircraft can significantly impact a passenger's flight experience, regardless of airline or class. While some seat layouts appear to offer advantages, certain configurations have proven problematic for travelers.
One such example is the Airbus A220's economy cabin, which typically shifts from a 2-2 business class layout to a 2-3 arrangement in economy. This transition causes one aisle seat at the front of economy to be positioned directly in the aisle, resulting in extra legroom but frequent disruptions and limited under-seat storage. The issue affects specific seats on several airlines, including Air Austral (4D), Air Canada (12D), Air Tanzania (4C), Animawings (4D), Breeze Airways (4D and 10D depending on version), Bulgaria Air (3D), Cyprus Airways (4D), Delta (10C), Ibom Air (4D), Iraqi Airways (4D), QantasLink operated by National Jet Systems (4D), and TAAG Angola (4D). Some carriers such as Air Baltic, Air France, Croatia Airlines, Smartwings, ITA Airways, JetBlue, Korean Air, and Swiss do not have this problem.
In business class cabins with a 1-1-1 configuration—such as those found on some Air New Zealand flights—passengers may expect more space and privacy. However, all seats face away from the windows and toward each other. As noted by an aviation forum user named Louis: "Where 'window seat' means looking at other people's feet," referencing how window views are difficult and privacy is reduced for those not seated on the left side.