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Business Plus seats are the ‘next big thing’ in premium travel …. but how good are they?

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Airlines (or their passengers) aren’t immune to trends.

Just look at how doored suites – unheard of in business class before Delta and Qatar Airways introduced them in 2017 – have proliferated. These days its rare to see a new seat introduced without the feature.

Love them or loathe them (what did doors ever do to you?!) doors are clearly more than a fad and are now seen as an essential part of the business class cabin. According to CAPA, the Centre for Aviation, less than 10 A350 aircraft were flying with business class suites in 2018. Six years later, the number stands at around 120.

'Business Plus' seats are becoming the 'next big thing' in premium travel

With the debate largely settled, it is quickly becoming apparent that the next trend in premium cabin interiors is an exclusive new sub-class: so called ‘Business Plus’ seats.

Unlike most cabin trends, this is one that has taken a leaf from economy cabins and low-cost carriers. Airlines have for many years been selling ‘Economy Plus’ or ‘extra legroom’ front row seating, allowing customers to trade up to a marginally better seat for a little extra cash.

The practice has long crossed over into the mainstream with full service airlines such as Virgin Atlantic offering ‘Economy Delight’ with 34″ of legroom, bridging the gap between economy (31″) and premium economy (38″).

If booked in Economy Delight, you get the same service as any other economy passenger including the same meals – albeit that, at the front of the cabin, you’re more likely to get your first choice.

'Business Plus' seats are becoming the 'next big thing' in premium travel

The same thinking is now coming to business class, with a number of airlines opting for new front row ‘Business Plus’ style seating. Whilst Virgin Atlantic was one of the first to launch such a product with its Retreat Suites on the A330neo, it has since been joined by:

  • American Airlines, which is introducing the concept this year
  • JetBlue, which features its Mint Studio front row seats on its transatlantic A321LR aircraft
  • Lufthansa, which features a Business Plus suite (and the only seat with doors) as part of its new Allegris business class

I spoke to Andy Morris, Chief Commercial Officer of Northern Ireland-based seatmaker Thompson Aero Seating. Thompson is one of the largest suppliers of business and first class seats. He told me that:

“This concept is increasingly popular as airlines not only look for giving the best possible passenger experience, and/or an edge on their competitors but also potentially driving additional revenue. Upselling is becoming increasingly evident in all of our everyday lives and so we’re seeing increasing demand for this concept.”

Thompson was one of the first manufacturers to explore this hybrid seat, which sits within the existing business cabin.

“We began began developing the ‘First Class for Free’ concept way back in 2015. Our philosophy is the layout of passenger accommodation maximisation, whereby we ensure that each of our products is adapted for maximum efficiency to deliver the best return on investment for aircraft real estate to our airline customers.”

One reason that there is an increasing number of front-row business class seating is that it is a solution to a problem. Modern business class seats feature a tessellating layout, with the ‘foot coffin’ of the person behind adjacent to the row in front.

'Business Plus' seats are becoming the 'next big thing' in premium travel

When seated in row 1, there is nobody in front of you and, as a result, there is extra space created.

“Business class front row seats require some type of monument installed to provide an ottoman and various other features, such as the in-flight entertainment screens. Historically these monuments may also have been to provide additional cabin crew stowage.”

In the past, this space would have been used for more storage or potentially even wasted. But airlines and seat makers have woken up to the possibilities of making better use of this space by creating special Business Plus seats, increasing the size of the footwell and adding additional amenities such as more storage.

Thompson worked with factorydesign, a London-based aviation design agency:

“We explored how we could use the same footprint of the front row monument, but instead of creating a hybrid design for use by the passenger and cabin crew for stowage, we asked how we could elevate the front row passenger experience.”

The result is a front-row seat that maximises the available space with a full-width (rather than tapered) seat in bed mode, larger in-flight entertainment screens, more storage and (often, but not always) improved privacy thanks to higher sidewalls.

I’ve experienced both Virgin Atlantic’s Retreat Suite and JetBlue’s Mint Studio, both of which are a £/$ upgrade from a standard business class seat. Other airlines, such as Air France, offer the bigger front row seats for free but exclusively to top frequent flyers.

'Business Plus' seats are becoming the 'next big thing' in premium travel

From a hard product perspective, the seats are hard to fault. In both cases, you gain substantial additional personal space. In JetBlue’s case that comes as part of an ottoman side-seat. The Retreat Suite avoids the tessellation problem entirely and gives you the entire rectangular space of your seat, akin to many first class seating products such as on Malaysia Airlines.

But is a bigger seat enough to convince passengers to pay an additional £250 each way, which is what both Virgin Atlantic and JetBlue charge?

“One challenge we do see from some airlines is how such a ‘hybrid product’ is marketed and sold. For example, is it ‘business class plus’ or first class?”

If we return to the concept’s roots, with extra legroom economy seating on low cost carriers, you really are just paying for a better seat. Onboard experience is identical, and you don’t get other benefits such as an improved or free meal.

The first airlines to offer Business Plus, including Virgin Atlantic and JetBlue, have taken a minimal approach to upgrading other parts of the business class experience. You still get exactly the same meals, amenity kit and bedding as anyone else. The only ‘upgrade’ for Mint Studio customers is a set of pyjamas (seemingly only on red-eye flights) and, in the Retreat Suite, an additional pillow.

'Business Plus' seats are becoming the 'next big thing' in premium travel

Does that approach wash its face with business class passengers paying hundreds to upgrade on long haul routes? I’m not sure, particularly if you’ve just spent £250 for the privilege.

Differentiation is key – otherwise, what’s the point in upgrading? Part of that includes communicating differentiation and validating expectations that you are getting something better than a standard business class seat.

One idea could be to provide an exclusive take on the standard amenity kit – perhaps in an accent colour – or a substantially better bedding set designed for the wider seat. You could even stock an upgraded champagne, exclusive to this front row.

For now, relatively few airlines are offering or flying a Business Plus seat. Even Virgin Atlantic, which introduced it in 2022, only offers it on five A330neo aircraft, making any investment in the soft product difficult to justify at this early stage.

As more airlines start offering it I hope we see a bit more creativity with the offering, particularly where the upgrade is paid-for. One interesting takeaway from my conversation with Andy is that the concept could be expanded beyond bulkhead rows:

“In the future this may not necessarily be restricted to the front row as we continue to further develop and maximise our airline customers’ revenue opportunities throughout the business class cabin.”

As First Class cabins get ever more luxurious, with fully enclosed suites and double beds, could a Business Plus sub-cabin allow airlines to offer an improved customer experience whilst avoiding comparisons with those top-end luxury suites?

Comments (59)

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

  • BJ says:

    Business LIGHT would seem a far more real and obvious trend to me than Business PLUS.

    • Steve says:

      Yes. I am happier to just pay extra for the seat. I don’t need fancy alcohol or food. It’s all about being able to stretch properly and have a good rest.

      Most of the products I get are never used anyway.

      But I guess those are a minimal expense for airline in the whole price of the seat, so removing them wouldn’t shave that much from the price?

    • Rhys says:

      In terms of onboard experience that’s the same though – only real changes are to ground experience eg. lounge access. Less interesting to write about!

      • BJ says:

        Seat selection and baggage fees too, possibly wifi and even IFE differentials in the future. Then there are miles and TP. I think the light side works well at Finnair given the competitiveness of their fares and the short MCT at HEL. Coming the other way I think SkyPriority works well at AF/KLM to plus regular stuff versus most competitors. I am having difficult seeing airlines getting excited about 5th cabins but reconfigurable or slightly different seats in regular business cabins I can see provided passengers are willing to pay the premium. However, like @Steve, I personally just want tge seat and space. Flexibility and miles-earning are also more important to me than other premium features though.

        • Rhys says:

          This article is specifically about cabin innovation though, not fare buckets!

  • lumma says:

    I personally wouldn’t pay it, but in fairness it’s not that much more expensive than what a non status passenger needed to pay BA to ensure they didn’t get a terrible seat in the old Club World cabins

  • Eoc says:

    Got to love the self important language of the designers. design becomes monuments and my favourite cabin space becomes real estate.

    • Skywalker says:

      It’s going to get to a stage where every seat row has its own name, like street names.

      And then as always, one particular row will become very fashionable – like “Savile Row”, and command very high prices.

    • Tim says:

      “monument” is what the engineers call the transverse wall between the seating area and whatever is in front it (the exit, galley or whatever).

  • Paul says:

    BA have been successfully offering J+ for around 15 years! They call it First !

    • Alex G says:

      BA First might once have been the world’s best business class. It isn’t any longer.

      • Tom says:

        BA F is still worth it if the plane still has the old ying-yang Club World seats, such as in all the A380s.

        And it often does not cost that much more than CW.

      • HAM76 says:

        BA F is still a different experience than CW. On US routes the “competition’s” products aren’t much better anyway.

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    We declined the Virgin UC mid row seats on our upcoming reward fight to Barbados booked within days of seat release. They were available at £250 but really we both prefer window seats – even though the view to the Caribbean is predictable and repetitive!
    So, no, £250 for purely sitting centre plane with a bit more space to forget things is not for us! Bigger IFE screen …….very very rarely use it!

    • GM says:

      I was looking at the Retreat Suite the other week when I was sitting in 2A and pondering this. I usually travel solo, and part of the reason for paying the extra for J is to try to get a window seat…while still having aisle access (depending on layout, obviously). The suite looked more spacious than the regular seats on the A339 for sure, and the screens were huge in comparison, but seemed best for a couple with no interest in looking out the window. Not something I’d pay for usually. It was occupied though, so maybe others did.

  • Bertie says:

    Qatar’s Q suite is similar to the examples mentioned here in that the adjoining seats of the centre aisle front rows can be converted into a bed (row 7 on the aircraft I saw from memory). Sincerely hope Qatar don’t follow this trend and charge more for them!

    • Rhys says:

      Qsuite is standard across the entire cabin. Different to what I’m discussing above, where the bulkhead rows are quite different

  • kt74 says:

    I bet hardly anyone pays for it, and they are predominantly given away to high status frequent flyers – similar to the best seats in Old Club World, throne seats on the likes of Swiss etc. So what’s the point of differentiating the soft product any further?

  • The Streets says:

    I generally avoid the first row of business on long haul as it can often be located near the galley where there’s noise from staff chatting or preparing meals or fellow passengers pulling the curtain back and letting the light in

    • Jasdev says:

      Exactly this.

    • Harry T says:

      Especially when flying BA!

      • JDB says:

        @Harry T – yes this is a very BA issue. The non stop clattering in the galley is unique to BA, as is the way the cabin crew clomp up and down the cabin, day or night. Other airlines train their staff to keep the noise down and move around the cabin silently. That and the failure to clean the aircraft are low cost issues that BA ought to address.

        • Jill Kinkell says:

          Reply to JDB: Couldn’t agree more about cabin staff clomping. They are very heavy footed. Although I could book 1a on LH. depends on galley and loo , and if very close opt for windows 2/3. OH and I very rarely sit together on long flights. I’ll see enough of him on holiday!

        • GM says:

          Can’t say I’ve found 1A troublesome on VS flights. Usually have headphones on etc, but crew seem to keep it down and don’t notice the lav either. And I’m the irritable sort.

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