Find the best seat on your flight

SeatScore scores every seat on your flight for space and legroom. Enter a flight number and travel date, and the cabin map shows which window, aisle, and middle seats give you the most room before you choose at booking.

How SeatScore works

Enter your flight number and date. SeatScore identifies the aircraft type assigned to that flight, loads the cabin layout, and scores each seat from 1 to 10 using the fuselage shape, window placement, tail taper, and airline-specific details such as exit rows and recline-limited rows.

Why window seats are not all equal

A plane is a tube, so the cabin wall curves inward. On some aircraft the wall is widest at shoulder height and lets you sit upright; on others it leans in above the armrest and crowds your head. Every window also sits in a shallow recess in the wall — a seat lined up with a window gains a few inches of shoulder room, while a seat facing solid wall between two windows does not. This is why two window seats on the same plane can feel noticeably different.

Aircraft seat guides

Airline seat guides

Frequently asked questions

How does SeatScore know which aircraft my flight uses?

You enter a flight number and date. Airlines assign a specific aircraft to each flight, and that can change by date, so the date pins down the cabin you will actually fly.

Which is better: window, aisle, or middle?

Aisle seats give the most freedom to move; window seats give a wall to lean on and the view; middle seats usually have the least space. SeatScore scores all three on your exact flight.

Which seats should I avoid?

The last rows near the tail are tighter and often sit beside galleys and lavatories. Recline-limited rows are also worth skipping on longer flights.