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JetBlue economy is looking good – low fares, free food and unlimited free wi-fi

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JetBlue will be shaking up the transatlantic market this Summer with flights from London Heathrow to New York JFK and Boston.

It has just revealed its economy “Core” flying experience and it is impressively ambitious.

Whilst we have previously called JetBlue a hybrid low-cost carrier thanks to its Mint business class cabin, this might actually be slightly unfair to the airline. In many ways it will offer a better economy experience than legacy carriers such as British Airways and Virgin Atlantic.

JetBlue food drink wifi London Heathrow New York Boston

Norwegian taught us that a transatlantic low-cost carrier meant unbundling everything. The only thing included in your ticket was, well, your seat. Additional luggage, food, in-flight entertainment and more had to be paid for on top.

JetBlue is pursuing a completely different strategy. This week it outlined the service concept for its economy cabin, which it calls “Core”. In many ways it is a step up from the legacy airlines and bears no relation to the Norwegian model.

What is Core?

Core is JetBlue’s economy experience. There will be 114 economy seats on flights between London and the USA, 24 of which will offer extra legroom.

As a reminder, JetBlue will use brand-new Airbus A321LR aircraft – the LR stands for ‘Long Range’ and allows what would otherwise be a short haul aircraft traverse the Atlantic.

These are single-aisle aircraft as you can see below.

JetBlue transatlantic A321LR Core economy cabin 2

How much legroom will JetBlue have from London?

JetBlue is touting its new Core cabin offering as the most spacious economy seat flying transatlantic routes.

Core will feature 32″ of seat pitch as standard and approximately 35″ for its 24 “Even More Space” extra-legroom seats. For comparison, a British Airways 787 features a 31″ pitch in World Traveller.

Core will be spacious in other regards too. Thanks to the new Airspace cabin interior by Airbus, which improves sidewall sculpting, each Core seat will have a width of 18.4″.

This issubstantially better than British Airways, which offers a seat width of just 17″ on its 787s and 17.5″ on its A350s in World Traveller.

JetBlue transatlantic A321LR Core economy cabin

Free in-flight entertainment and wifi

JetBlue is making in-flight entertainment free too, which is not always the case with low-cost long-haul airlines.

A 10.1″ full HD seat-back screens will provide “an extensive library of seatback entertainment” including “hundreds of movies” as well as a number of live TV channels focussed on news and sports.

More importantly, JetBlue will also be offering free, unlimited high-speed wifi, even if you are seated in economy.

This is a big deal, given what established airlines charge. A 1 hour wifi package starts at £4.99 with British Airways, with full-flight packages as high as £23.99.

An economy food revolution

Innovation in economy dining has stagnated (arguably declined) in recent decades as legacy airlines try to cut costs to complete with low-cost carriers.

JetBlue will buck that trend as it offers a genuinely new and customisable dining experience for Core passengers – for free. This is new for JetBlue, which has previously charged for economy meals.

Whilst most airlines offer a choice of pasta or chicken with a tin-foil lid, JetBlue will let you choose your main course and sides from the in-flight entertainment screen:

“Customers will have the option to choose one of three main selections including a protein or vegetable that comes with a base, and two out of three hot and chilled side options.”

It’s a bit like an in-flight salad bar, albeit that the crew will be putting together the meals for you.

Dishes will be served in fully re-usable serving dishes – no tin foil trays or single use plastics here.

Whilst it isn’t dine-on-demand, it will allow you to pick and choose from a much greater selection. Typical mains include roasted chicken with brown rice and herbs or spiced aubergine with coconut cauliflower quinoa. Sides include mac and cheese and a mixed heirloom tomato salad.

You’ll also get two full meals on a transatlantic flight. This is more than most airlines serve in economy on short transatlantic flights, where the second meal tends to be a pizza slice or light snack.

How will JetBlue achieve all this?

In many ways, JetBlue’s Core meal offering is closer to business class than it is to its competitors economy food. It looks like a seriously impressive offering both in quantity and quality.

The bigger question is how JetBlue hopes to deliver this. Will JetBlue overstock options in order to allow everyone a choice, or will you be stuck with whatever is left if you’re too slow with ordering?

It will also likely increase the work-load of cabin crew, who will have to prepare 114 individual meals based on passenger customisation. It’s hard to see how this won’t affect delivery times, although JetBlue will believe that it can pull it off.

Conclusion

Whilst we’ve previously called JetBlue a hybrid low-cost carrier, it may be more accurate to call it a low-cost, full-service airline given the promises it has made for its economy cabin.

Free, unlimited wifi, wider seats and more legroom as well as two customisable full meal services mean it is overtaking its transatlantic competitors when it comes to customer experience. If the price and schedule is right, you’d be crazy not to book JetBlue over other airlines.

(The schedule, of course, could be the sticking point. JetBlue will launch with just one daily flight on each route.)

It will be interesting to see how the incumbents react to JetBlue’s launch. A number of airlines, including United, have already announced ‘spoiler’ flights on JetBlue’s new routes in order to try and squash any threat it poses. To compete, they’ll have to up their economy experience too.


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Comments (99)

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

  • Alex W says:

    This sounds better than Premium Economy on BA and presumably will be cheaper. I hope they will do cheap one-way tickets.

  • Oh! Matron! says:

    Tenuously related but: when travelling to JFK, and then into manhattan, I tend to get the train… I get the train over to Jamaica, then have to pay for the trip I’ve just made to be let out, as well as getting my next ticket to Penn.

    Before I get the escalator up to the train in JFK to Jamaica, is there not a ticket machine there? If so, where the hell is it?

    • Doug says:

      Nope because within the airport the AirTrain is free to move between terminals. It’s always been pay on exit.

    • Andrew says:

      If you’re a regular visitor, just keep your Metrocard topped up or buy a Metrocard from a Hudson News in the terminal when you arrive and then just swipe out, avoiding the queues at Jamaica.

      • Chrisasaurus says:

        Just avoid the jerk at the counter at the station near the Conrad who sold us two cards each 90 cents short of the full journey

  • William Kerr says:

    sounds a great option – sorry but cannot remember the situation using Avios with Jet Blue – are they exchangeable for ticket purchase and can you earn Avios – is it a partner airline with BA ? Bill , 67 retired in Sussex avid collector of Avios and Virgin (about 200.000 points combined)

    • Rhys says:

      No relation to BA currently! It does codeshare with AA so it might be possible to use Avios to purchase an AA ticket on a JetBlue operated flight…..

      • ChrisC says:

        My understanding is that you won’t be able to earn and burn avios and earn TPs on the B6 TATL routes as they have specifically excluded from the AA-B6 link up in the US and from the AA/BA/IB/AY Joint Venture.

        I suppose that at some point in the future if BA gets a code share on a B6 flight then at least earning will be possible.

      • Chrisasaurus says:

        So by extension does it potentially allow for aadvantage redemption?

      • Nick says:

        Rhys, think about it. Are there any other examples where you can use Avios for an AA marketed flight on a non-AA airline? That’s right, there aren’t, because Avios redemptions can only be made on an operating airline, not on their codeshares.

        And it’s very widely known that the AA/B6 tie-up is very heavily restricted even on domestic routes, let alone international ones. So no chance at all really, at least for the next few years.

  • AJA says:

    If I was going to fly either of the two routes JetBlue are operating and the price for the seat was right I would give them a go. The fact that they are relatively unknown in the UK is irrelevant. For most people flying in economy the price is the most important issue. I think if they are successful it will force standards to be raised which is a good thing for consumers. Good luck to them I do hope they are successful and do not get pushed out by the legacy competition.

    • AJA says:

      Actually I think price is the most important factor in business class too, followed by the seat, then the lounge access on the ground, then catering on board and finally status and any benefits that confers

      • Memesweeper says:

        Timing and reliability are the most important factors in business. A small fleet and infrequent flights won’t compare well with BA/AA.

        Norwegian used to really struggle when they hit a tech issue with aircraft in the US. BA have (or had) a spare long haul aircraft stationed at JFK.

        • AJA says:

          You’re right of course those are key. It will be interesting to see how JetBlue copes if / when it goes wrong.

  • William Kerr says:

    Just seen there is the True Blue Programme and no tie ups with Avios or Star Alliance … Bill Kerr

  • William Kerr says:

    Thanks Rhys…

  • John says:

    This all sounds very inviting I agree, but I do think there’s a touch of hype in this sentence: “If the price and schedule is right, you’d be crazy not to book JetBlue over other airlines.”

    Crazy? Crazy to choose an established, reliable company with a more robust schedule? Particularly if I’m travelling for business, the “known quantity” factor is pretty important.

    Don’t get me wrong, I’ll be trying it out if I get the chance. But this reads a bit like an advertorial if I’m honest.

    • Yorkieflyer says:

      Jet Blue are very much an established and reliable company

      • John says:

        Indeed, but my understanding is that transatlantic routes are a bit of a different ballgame. (I’m also really wondering how they can make the numbers stack up, given the failure of entrants with a lower-cost model. Good luck to them though.)

        • Boon says:

          But Jetblue have been doing similar “long haul” flights for ages. Just that it’s “domestic” JFK to LAX. 6 to 7 hours each way. No difference to LHR to JFK.

  • Mikeact says:

    Look forward to the food review further forward, ‘Mint Business’.

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