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Take a look at Iberia’s new A321XLR business class seat

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Later this year, Iberia will be the first airline to take delivery of the extended-range Airbus A321XLR.

Internal IAG politics means that the Spanish flag carrier is leap-frogging its sister airline Aer Lingus which is in the midst of a pay dispute with its pilots.

Aer Lingus pilots want salary increases of over 20% whilst management are refusing to budge beyond 8.5%.

Review Iberia A321XLR

These days, all new aircraft orders are made centrally by IAG and management there are using the A321XLR as a stick in their negotiations. Until the pilots come to a deal with Aer Lingus it will defer all A321XLR deliveries for the airline, implicitly reducing flying time for pilots.

This means that Iberia will become the launch carrier when it takes delivery of its first aircraft “by the end of Summer.”

What the A321XLR means for Iberia

The A321XLR is the newest variant of the A321 family and extends the aircraft’s range even further, to 4,700 nautical miles. This puts it within spitting distance of 10 – 11 hour flights, including to the western United States and as far East as India and Sri Lanka.

This makes it a very attractive aircraft for long, thin routes where the capacity of a widebody aircraft with 300+ seats is too much.

Aer Lingus already operates its ‘long range’ sibling, the A321LR, whilst Iberia is expecting a fleet of eight A321XLRs. It has already confirmed that the first destinations are going to be Boston and Washington DC which are currently seasonal routes; the A321XLR will allow it to ramp down capacity during the quieter winter months without dropping the routes entirely.

Iberia is configuring its A321XLR with 14 lie-flat, direct aisle access business class seats and 168 economy seats for a total capacity of 182. A premium economy cabin is conspicuously absent.

Iberia’s new A321XLR business class seat

Since the aircraft is being used for flights of 8+ hours, it is only right that it will feature a proper, lie-flat seats in its business class cabin.

Iberia only just unveiled a new business class seat for its latest batch of A350s, based on the Recaro R7 model. Unfortunately, this staggered seat is not available for the narrower fuselage on the A321XLR, forcing Iberia to go seat shopping again.

Whilst no official announcement has been made, a low resolution photo (see below) of the new seat was accidentally posted on Iberia’s newsroom last week and spotted by reader Andy.

What is clear from the image above is that Iberia has selected the VantageSOLO seat from Northern Irish manufacturer Thompson Aero Seating. If it looks familiar, that’s because it is the same seat that JetBlue uses on its A321LR planes to London, which I reviewed here.

This is an inward-facing herringbone seat, which means you’ll be facing away from the windows and into the aisle. This is an unfortunate compromise that is down to the geometries of the cabin.

Although counter intuitive, the space between the aisle and the windows is actually wider than on widebody aircraft. This means that herringbone seats must be angled more horizontally in order to maintain the same density.

Unfortunately, this becomes a problem in outward-facing herringbones as the seat itself becomes an obstruction to the aisle. There is no easy way to avoid this. As you can see below, flyDubai’s latest lie-flat business class seat from Safran Seats overcomes this issue by slicing off the corner of the seat cushion, which raises questions around overall comfort when sitting.

Iberia’s A321XLR seat avoids this altogether by settling for an inward-facing herringbone.

Love is an open door

Visually, it’s in-keeping with Iberia’s new widebody business class seat, which I reviewed here. That means woven, warm-grey upholstery and light wood-effect finishes on hard surfaces such as the console table and and storage. Iberia’s signature red and yellow tones are only used as accent colours, including on the in-flight entertainment screen and likely inside some of the storage areas.

Unlike JetBlue, it looks like Iberia has opted to install the seat without a fully closing privacy door. That may be an unusual choice in 2024, when doored suites are the norm, but in this case I think Iberia has made the right choice.

The addition of doors on business class suites adds significant additional weight and complexity. According to independent aviation journalist John Walton, “a modern lightweight composite door would come in at about 8-10kg”, with some of the flexible panel solutions on the market a few kilos less.

In aviation, every additional kilo makes a difference. A door on every one of the 14 seats Iberia intends to install in business class would add an additional 140kg across the entire aircraft, which in turn increases the fuelburn on every flight. Across the entire life of the aircraft – some 20+ years – that can quickly add up to thousands of tons of fuel saved.

In this case, I think the trade-off in privacy versus weight and fuel is one worth making. That’s because I already find the Thompson VantageSOLO seat to be very private. On top of that, the inward facing herringbone means that you are protected from the comings and goings on the aisle, unlike outward facing herringbones where your head and shoulders are closest to the aisle. In my opinion, the door, whilst neat, adds little additional privacy or protection for this seat, so I can see why Iberia has gone without it.

Other things to look out for are 18-inch, 4K screens, hopefully with Bluetooth pairing.

“Each seat will have its own lighting system, which can be adjusted independently to the desired environment, while each seat will have its number backlit during night mode, so that it can be more easily found.”

I will be intrigued to see if Iberia’s version of the seat features the same clever laptop drawer as found on JetBlue’s Mint seat, which is one of the most useful storage areas I’ve ever used:

A question mark also remains over whether Iberia has opted for Thompson’s ‘business plus’ front row option, which would make the two bulkhead seats in row one substantially more spacious a la JetBlue’s Mint Studio. At present, Iberia treats all business class seats the same: could this change with the A321XLR?

For now, however, we will have to wait and see until Iberia reveals the seat in greater detail.


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Comments (67)

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

  • PB884 says:

    Let’s not forget this variant has been solely driven by accountants. The additional fuel tank below the passenger cabin has caused certification delays due to temperature control (fuel getting really cold during long high altitude flight and the need to carefully warm it so as the cabin floor isn’t freezing) and more critically the impact of this tank during a crash/gear up landing. It’s not good for pilots who are unable to climb as high as wide body a/c to get above weather and have very small speed margins at high weights, particularly important when navigating turbulence (google “coffin corner”). Cabin crew have limited galley space to offer a full long haul service, and one assumes, nowhere to rest. And passengers get cramped seats without the benefits of new generation long haul a/c such as lower cabin altitude/higher humidity. The only benefits to passengers I see are perhaps 1. greater route choice and 2. hopefully lower fares due to the efficiencies of flying a 321neo long haul. (To put the 140kg door issue into perspective, it’s about as much fuel as a 320neo burns in 4 minutes).

    • pigeon says:

      The A321 will have 18 inch wide economy seats, much wider than the 777 and 787 fleets (as low as 16.9 inches on the 787-8 I think!).

      • Doommonger says:

        Its a dilemma that i’ve thought long and hard about recently, is the general consensus that an another 1.1 inches makes the difference, weight wise or does reducing it make for amore pleasurable long haul experience

        • TGLoyalty says:

          No just how many people you want on board affects how many crew you have to have and I suspect galley and toilets too

      • Nerida says:

        The 787 has seats that are 17.2 inches wide all across the family when configured at 9 abreast.

    • Super Secret Stuff says:

      It’s not entirely driven by accounts. People want direct flights and it’s easier to do that with the smallest possible plane. Both in terms of economics but also available runway length. Now technology has advanced, fuel burn is lower, adding an extra to this model makes entire sense.

      • PB884 says:

        At max take off weight for a 10-11h flight these things will need virtually the same runway length as a wide body.

    • Track says:

      They gone mad.

  • Richie says:

    The J seat chooce doesn’t set them above JetBlue, which I feel is a mistake for a ‘full service’ airline.

    • pigeon says:

      JetBlue doesn’t even fly to Spain, no ways Iberia will bother to differentiate themselves.

      • Richie says:

        Not yet. There might be demand for a B6 flight from FLL-MAD.

        • Lady London says:

          For some strange reason I could see JetBlue in BCN sooner than MAD

          • ChrisBCN says:

            Agree with Lady London, BCN would make more sense than MAD; I doubt Level would fight back too hard, despite being IAG. Iberia in MAD would however fight back hard.

          • Ziggy says:

            Given B6’s current position, I wouldn’t be surprised if there wasn’t a single B6 TATL flight operating in 2-3 year’s time .

  • zapato1060 says:

    Hope this reinstates flights to JNB and MLE.

    • G says:

      One can hope from Madrid. iberia are excellent avios wise for redemptions.

  • Bernard says:

    Does anyone really care whether a seat faces towards or away from a window. All but the geeks have blinds shut after takeoff to before landing.

    • Rhys says:

      Feels more private if facing the window and not other passengers!

  • Nick says:

    Speaking of pilot disputes, VY will be shut down entirely if theirs don’t agree to a deal. Talk of drastic! (Of course it would then reopen under a new name and new contracts, but the brand is so poor it’s seen as disposable.)

    XLRs are interesting, they never really made sense at LHR because of the slot constraints, but would make some routes viable that aren’t otherwise so there’s a trade-off there that will be constantly reassessed. Crew/union agreements that are significantly more generous than legal minima (on rest, etc.) don’t help, as the full range won’t be available on BA where it would on other airlines.

    The real test will be when AA get theirs. If they’re sticking to the original plans it will be a hugely exciting move for them and will allow a pretty big shake-up of some of their network.

  • Alex G says:

    The seat doesn’t appeal to me.

    Would Apex Suite fit on an A321?

  • James says:

    Looks awfully crammed. Although, surely can’t be worse than experiencing Iberia’s A350 ‘suites’ on a flight from BOG to MAD earlier this year. They’re small and ‘feature’ the flimsiest (and lowest) panels which vibrate the entire seat/bed when somebody walks by. Actually ‘vibrate’ is an understatement…more like a 2.5 on the richter scale. We would have more chance of getting some sleep up back.

  • Ron says:

    I don’t get this obsession with doors in business class, over 20 flights with this feature and haven’t closed one yet. The weight saving would be beneficial or put to better use.

    • Rob says:

      The lack of doors is not the problem with the 787 seat. It’s the total lack of privacy, the fact that you need to ask the crew to put it in or out of bed mode, the lack of storage and the incredible lack of width – I’m a 40 chest, 34 waist and find it tight.

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