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Review: Turkish Airlines Boeing 777 Business Class (part 1)

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This is my review of Turkish Airlines business class on the Boeing 777 fleet.

Just before half term, I popped down to Istanbul for two nights.  Having flown extensively on Qatar Airways, Etihad and Emirates over the last two years, I wanted to see if I was missing out.

Turkish Airlines is trying hard to compete with the Middle East ‘big three’, but is it pulling it off?

Firstly, here are two facts you probably don’t know about Turkish Airlines:

It flies to more countries than any other airline in the world

It has won the Skytrax ‘Best European Airline’ poll for the last five years

Turkish Airlines Boeing 777-300ER

Turkish rosters Boeing 777-300ER long-haul aircraft onto many of its Heathrow services.  A sale last Autumn allowed me to book a business class return flight from Heathrow to Istanbul for just over £300, which was an excellent deal given the flight length and the flat bed service.

Of all the Star Alliance lounges at Heathrow Terminal 2, I decided to visit United Club again in the satellite terminal.  I reviewed the United Club lounge here.

On boarding the aircraft, I must say that I was not hugely impressed by what I found.  Emirates may get criticised for its ‘bling’ but I will take that any day over the utilitarian grey, black and white Turkish cabin.

Turkish airlines business class review 777-300ER

Turkish operates a two-class Boeing 777 fleet.  The aircraft have no First Class or Premium Economy.

There are seven rows of business class on the 777-300ER.  The cabin is split into two, separated by a galley, so it feels small and private.  You don’t get the ‘dormitory’ feel that you get on a British Airways 777.

I was in 7B.  The Seat Guru website says that is a bad seat because the galley and toilets are directly behind it.  Er, no.  Row 7 may be the last row of business class but the economy cabin is immediately behind you – no galley, no loos.  This meant that the seat was very quiet with no passengers walking past me during the flight.

The real surprise was the 2 x 3 x 2 seating.  Actually, this wasn’t a surprise, because when I checked in the night before I discovered that I had been placed in a middle seat!  I swiftly moved to an aisle in a window block.

This middle seat is exceptionally undesirable in my mind.

Turkish airlines business class review Boeing 777-300ER

Even my own seat, pictured below (aisle) was less than ideal.  As you can see, you are sharing a tray table with the person the next to you.  You are also very close to your neighbour.  There is a small partition you can raise for privacy but it doesn’t go very far.  I also found, when I raised the privacy screen, that I killed off all of the daylight from the cabin window and struggled to read.

For a couple, of course, this is not an issue and as long as you aren’t in the middle block you will be perfectly happy.

Turkish business class review boeing 777-300er

You are also very close to the person across the aisle from you.  The seats align across the cabin (relatively rare for business class these days) and Turkish seemed to have very narrow aisles.

There were some positive things that struck me:

There are luggage bins in the middle of the aircraft (a lot of airlines remove them these days to give a feeling of space) which means one bin per seat!  You won’t struggle for storage.

The seat was comfy and, when I briefly put it into fully flat mode during the flight as a test, was comfy.  I was given a blanket but not a toiletry bag – this was not necessarily a surprise given it was a relatively short day flight.

Turkish airlines business class review boeing 777-300er

The aircraft had wi-fi (BA is on an ever-shrinking list of airlines which don’t have it on long-haul) but they charge for it.  I understand that a free service also has issues (too many people try to use it and the service is painfully slow) but I still believe that business class passengers should receive it for free.

I didn’t switch on the IFE on this relatively short flight, so I can’t comment on that.

All in all, I was not hugely impressed by what I found.  It is, of course, still better than British Airways Club World in terms of space and seat size, but Turkish does not want to be judged on such comparators.  It wants to be judged against Qatar, Emirates and Etihad who are setting the pace these days – and, in pretty much every respect, it comes up short.

Of course, if you need to fly from London to Istanbul in business class then it is a no-brainer to choose the Turkish Airlines Boeing 777 services over the standard British Airways Club Europe service. 

Turkish Airlines is a member of Star Alliance.  I credited my flight to my Lufthansa Miles & More account – not because it offers a great deal on Turkish (it doesn’t) but because it is my only active Star Alliance account.

In Part 2 of my Turkish Airlines Boeing 777 business class review – click here – I will look at the food and drink offering.

Comments (49)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • C Y S Yuen says:

    Partly OT but it’s about a deal on TK:

    TK Business class EDI-IST-HKG return for £13xx pver Easter holiday!

    However don’t think I will fly them after reading the TR…

    • Rob says:

      I’d fly TK at £1300 rather than Qatar at, say, £2000 and I would hope the review gives that impression.

    • John says:

      The EDI-IST will more like Raffles’ experience, but IST-HKG will be better.

  • Colin says:

    Thanks for the review. If you are sitting in a window seat, I assume you have to step over the persons legs next to you to get out if thier bed is flat ?

  • Jordan D says:

    Are TK not wet leasing any 9W aircraft anymore with their three cabin seating?

    • Rodger McSalty says:

      pretty sure that stopped long ago.

      • Rob says:

        It was great when you could redeem BMI miles for the Jet Airways aircraft which TK ‘borrowed’ and which had been fitted out to an incredibly high specification.

  • Jac says:

    The biggest problem flying with TK is the terrible ground support. On my flight from Kathmandu last year, the IFE was broken while on the connection to London they had forgotten to load the headsets for business class so you could watch a wide selection of movies but without sounds.
    I wrote a complaint and got reply saying thank you for your email we confirm the IFE was broken but thanks to your email we identified the problem and this is now corrected.
    Regarding wifi this is free for business class (at least I neve got charged)

  • pauldb says:

    If you want to be a serious reviewer, you’ll need to get over your apparent reticence of taking wider shots of an occupied cabin. 😉

    • Rob says:

      I don’t want to be a ‘proper’ reviewer! Plenty of ‘official’ wide angle PR photos on the web if you want them.

  • Alex W says:

    OT: My mum found an old AIR MILES membership card. Long shot I guess, but is there a way to redeem the balance now that AIR MILES is defunct? Thanks.

  • Lux says:

    The 2-3-2 seating is not ideal; it’s the same issue with Emirates regional (and long haul?) 777s with the unlucky middle seat. I’ve experienced the passive-aggressive hogging of shared space (it’s one cupholder and one shelf each, not two for you and none for me!).

    This is something Qatar handle better, from memory they’re 2-2-2 in business on their 777s.

  • Peter K says:

    OT: I added my family to BA exec and Avios.com as they regularly fly to oz but are not part of any FF scheme! Have joined them to my BA household account (NOT an avios.com one).

    They have gained some avios via avios suitcase but combine my avios says their details do not match though have checked and they all do. Any idea why or how to go about dealing with this without ringing customer services?

    They’ve been open less than 90 days but thought that rule only applied for combining avios from Iberia?

    • Guesswho2000 says:

      Have you tried using CMA from both ends? I mean from both BAEC and Avios.com? I sometimes have issues using it from BAEC, but logging in to Avios.com and using CMA from there, for the same transaction, works a treat.

      • Peter K says:

        Yes, tried both ways and also in different browsers (chrome and IE). Also tried clearing cookies but did not help.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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