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British Airways unveils new short haul seating (tables return!) for its latest A320neos

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Single aisle aircraft are rarely sexy, but British Airways is making some welcome changes to upcoming deliveries of its short haul workhorse.

It is introducing the new Airbus ‘Airspace’ cabin interior as well as brand new short haul seating.

BA’s new short haul seating

A handful of rows were available to view at the British Airways showcase event at 122 Leadenhall on Monday evening. As you can see, I had a little go:

New British Airways short haul seating

There’s not much you can do with short haul seating, and the photos I took aren’t great due to the blue lighting used, but the new seats appear to be upholstered in a navy blue. Red detailing on the adjustable headrests also introduces some much needed colour into the cabins.

In Club Europe, British Airways will introduce a new and redesigned middle table console. This is a welcome addition after BA started removing these from new deliveries and provides a welcome place to place a glass of champagne!

As before, the number of Club rows can be adjusted from flight to flight and the console tables can be removed and inserted at will.

There is some herringbone stitching – reminiscent of BA’s other Club branding – on the seatbacks.

Other changes include the addition of more accessible USB-A and USB-C ports with one of each for every passenger. With USB-C now able to charge high-power laptops and other devices, the decision has been made to remove three-pin mains sockets. They will be capable of delivering 60W in Club Europe and 15W in Euro Traveller.

The seats are being manufactured by Collins Aerospace in Northern Ireland and feature Scottish leather.

Whilst the changes will not fundamentally alter the cabin – Club Europe remains a ‘eurobusiness’ proposition with blocked middle seat – it does include minor adjustments to modernise the aircraft.

Bigger overhead bins are coming

The Airspace cabin was initially introduced on the Airbus A350 back in 2016. According to Airbus,

“Signature design elements recognisable throughout all Airspace cabins include wider seats; larger overhead storage bins; spacious, contemporary lavatories with antibacterial surfaces; along with unobstructed under-seat foot space.”

Airspace was introduced for single-aisle aircraft in 2021, five years after the first A320neo was delivered.

SWISS was the first airline to fly the Airspace cabin on the A320neo in 2022. It is currently an optional extra for airlines, which is why BA’s existing fleet of A320neo aircraft generally have the older style. It has been quietly rolled out on some of the more recent BA neos which feature the larger ‘XL’ overhead bins although, in our experience, passengers are not yet aware that they can be loaded differently.

Whilst likely to be pricier, the Airspace cabin comes with a number of benefits. Chief amongst them are the larger overhead bins, which allow more trolley bags to be stored in each unit. This is achieved by increasing the volume of the bins, allowing bags to be stored on their side wheels-first:

The new bins are capable of holding eight 61cm x 40cm x 25cm size bags each and increase overall luggage capacity by over 60%. This should help on full flights where British Airways typically asks for volunteers to check their cabin bags – and in some instances recently we’ve seen bags removed from everyone in the lower numbered boarding groups

Other design changes include slimmer sidewall panels that increase cabin width at shoulder level and redesigned window bezels that make the cabin look bigger and brighter. The aircraft will also feature programmable LED mood-lighting, just as you see on the latest widebody aircraft.

When will we see the new cabins?

British Airways currently has 13 next generation A320neo and 7 A321neo aircraft on the order books, although it’s likely to order more in the future as it phases out its current aircraft.

The new cabins will appear on all future deliveries.

BA’s next A320neo and A321neos are expected to be delivered in the next 6-8 weeks, likely in April. The new cabin will be launched either on G-TNED (A321neo) or G-TTNV (A320neo), depending on which comes first.

That leaves 33 existing A320neo and A321neo aircraft in BA’s fleet with the older cabin, although Airbus does offer a light-touch refit kit to install similarly large overhead bins on existing aircraft.

BA has not made an announcement regarding adding the new seats or bins to its existing fleet.


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Comments (142)

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

  • Fraser says:

    Are the seats slightly narrower, as the middle table armrests don’t seem to be adjusted inwards?

    As for removing 3 pin plugs, this is a terrible decision. USB ports can carry data as well as power, and many companies prohibit their employees from plugging devices in to random USB sockets to charge for security reasons, leaving business travellers without a policy-compliant way to power their devices while working.

    • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

      Awaiting SuperSecretStuff’s full analysis of the USB situation later. His pet peeve

    • BahrainLad says:

      Not to mention a three pin plug is more likely in my experience to actually work and provide a decent supply.

    • TimM says:

      Those companies that prohibit employees from plugging into USB charging sockets should instead provide their employees with secure devices, be it phones, tablets or laptops, that simply do not permit any data transfer without explicit permission. Better still, secure devices with 12 hours+ battery working time!

      • Chrisasaurus says:

        Everything is secure until it isn’t

      • mradey says:

        Or use a device inline which blocks USB data transfer whilst allowing charging.

    • TimM says:

      As a hand-luggage-only traveller, the larger overhead bins is the most significant news in this article. This reduces one element of stress from the journey – ensuring I board early to ensure there is space for my max-sized cabin trolley bag. Having it stowed in the hold can add up to an hour to the journey – especially unwelcome on short-haul.

      RyanAir introduced astronomic hold luggage fees because, Michael O’Leary said, they wanted everyone to travel cabin baggage only but failed to provide the necessary overhead locker space in order for them to do so. He also famously said that airline miles were the ‘crack cocaine’ of loyalty schemes. I think extra fees became Michael O’Leary’s crack-cocaine.

      Which other airlines will be adopting these larger overhead lockers?

      • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

        Aer Lingus are adopting them too; the rollout is underway.

  • TimM says:

    Previous reply was meant to e to the main article, not a reply!

  • Tsd123 says:

    Do we know the wattage of the USB C ports? This can vary from 15w to 60w+ with large ramifications for what can be charged. I’ve always liked having a plug for those reasons, so they’ll be sorely missed

    • Bob says:

      60W in Club Europe, 15W in Euro Traveller

    • Rhys says:

      Not exactly, but I did confirm that the USB-C ports would be high-powered.

      • Alastair says:

        Are you sure it was USB-C 60W for the front and 15W for the back? That sounds insane. More sane would be 60W for USB-C and 15W for USB-A across the whole aircraft but this is BA we’re talking about…

    • Paul says:

      60w in CE and 15w in ET.

      • PaulB says:

        How strange, surely at the bulk BA are buying these there’s not a noteworthy price difference, and it’s easier to just fit the same throughout?

    • Marc says:

      On the reel that BA has posted on their Insta it reads 60W in one shot.

      I assume it won’t change dynamically depending on how large CE is so it’s probably 60W up to the last row of how far the curtain can potentially move back and 15W from there on.

    • marks7389 says:

      Losing the socket is not great for those devices with proprietary fast charging, such as OnePlus.

  • PB884 says:

    LCC Iberia express have been flying these aircraft for some time – bigger bins, led lighting and easily accessible usb sockets in front of you rather than below seat. Iberia mainline have offered free messaging to members and business ticket holders for some time too. Welcome steps in the right direction but really just more IAG standardisation – such as only painting the tail so easier to switch airframes around the group.

    • PB884 says:

      Re. livery I’m thinking Lingus, Iberia, Vueling, Level…not BA for now

    • Jolly Vicar says:

      Flew with Iberia and Iberia express recently on the 321neo and the bins have a handy pictogram on them showing the way to stack the hand luggage. No more “full flight, free hold luggage “ announcements and crew removing rucksacks to make way for carry ons. Fastest boarding for a long time. Looking forward to it on BA

      • PB884 says:

        Iberia also check in all cabin bag size bags for free before security, if you wish – I wish others would follow suit.

  • John says:

    Looking good, Rhys.

    • Jill Kinkell says:

      Jackets can hang on the pull out hook on the side of the headrest of the seat in front of you. ( the Cabin crew should tell folk. ) irritates me no end when opening an overhead bin to find a heap of coats etc.
      As for tables…. Can’t say I’ve been on a short haul that hasn’t had them , so no change there for me, why can’t BA do something decent and inspiring?

  • AJA says:

    I think those seats look nice. I hope they are comfortable. It’s a shame there aren’t any pics looking at the back of the seat as I was wondering how big the table is and whether there’s anything to incorporate where you can put your mobile phone or tablet .

    And while I like the bigger bins it just encourages people to bring ever larger bags into the cabin. On my last flight where these bins were already installed most people didn’t know you should store the bags vertically on their sides so the result was there was still a scrum for space. And placed vertically leaves no room for jackets to be placed lying on top of bags.

    • Rhys says:

      Big table. There’s a literature pocket that looks like you could potentially hook an iPad in.

      • AJA says:

        Thanks! That’s good news on the table and I like that literature pocket to hang my tablet from.

  • PeterK says:

    A pity the earlier neos were delivered without a table. A cost cutting exercise that will result in a CE product inconsistency for years to come, unless they are going to retrofit (unlikely).

  • aseftel says:

    Navy seats with red highlights looks more Air France to me. Do BA use red in any other cabin?

    • Rhys says:

      Not at the moment, but that’s why it’s new!

      • willmo says:

        ‘at the moment’ – is that a hint for something else coming Rhys?

        • Rhys says:

          No, just the acknowledgement that something new by definition is different to what has existed in the past!

      • Paul says:

        Thanks Rhys great article.
        Lots of people seem to have a negative opinion.
        Just enjoy it and nothing nice to say don’t say it

    • Alex says:

      Looks like Delta or Air Canada to me

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

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