The best airline in the world just added a new fee its customers will hate
REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
The world's largest international airline announced that it will "institute a minimal charge" for certain economy class passengers who wish to select their seats in advance of their flight.
Passengers should expect to pay $15 per person for short flights and $40 per person for long-haul flights, AP reported.
The new policy, which will come into effect on October 3, applies only for customers traveling in economy on discounted Special or Saver fares.
In a statement to Business Insider, an Emirates spokesperson wrote:
"Emirates can confirm the introduction of a minimal charge for those looking to select their Economy Class seat in advance, for tickets issued on or after October 3, 2016. The charge is only applicable on Special and Saver fares in Economy Class and will vary depending on the duration of the flight. Children below the age of 2 and accompanying passengers on the same booking will be exempted from the fee. This charge is also not applicable once online check-in opens, which is 48hrs before flight departure. At this stage, seat selection is free."
Seat selection fees are nothing new in commercial aviation. However, these fees are usually associated with more value-oriented airlines. As a result, this announcement is a departure from Emirates' traditional place as a high-end carrier.
Emirates, who was named the best airline in the world by aviation consumer website Skytrax in July, reported $1.93 billion in profits for the last fiscal year. The airline currently operates the world's largest long-haul international fleet with roughly 250 aircraft - consisting mostly of Boeing 777 and Airbus A380 jets.
- CEO says he tried to hire an AI researcher from Meta, and was told to 'come back to me when you have 10,000 H100 GPUs'
- We bought a house in Japan for $30,000. We'll have more land than we could afford in the US, and our kids will be more independent.
- Rumors Prince William is having an affair with Rose Hanbury are flooding social media again after Stephen Colbert waded into 'Katespiracy'
- COVID-19 vaccine can slash risk of post-infection heart failure by half, study finds
- Stock markets close higher in volatile trade ahead of key Fed policy meeting
- 10 Must do activities in Kodaikanal on your next trip
- Harnessing the benefits of weekly fasting: transforming your health inside out
- Citroen to supply 4,000 units of EV e-C3 to BluSmart Mobility in 12 months