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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.

  • Andrew J says:

    Some nice clear pictures (without blue mood lighting) of the new seats are now on BA’s Instagram. Looks a lot darker blue than the pictures in the article.

  • Christopher says:

    People are never happy about anything on here. BA might as well not bother!

    • Greg says:

      I beg to differ Peter. I often leave positive comments, but when you are a frequent traveller, you realise that BA is very poor when compared to its competitors. And a lot of us of us are stuck with them due to our loyalty programme.

      If I had any way of amassing Star Alliance points in the UK, believe me, my comments would be much more positive.

      • Rhys says:

        In my experience the opposite is true. Eg. food at the KLM lounge in Amsterdam is worse than BA at Heathrow. Lufthansa’s in-flight meals in business can be very weak vs BA.

        I’m not saying BA is better, but it’s arguably no worse than many of its European competitors.

      • Rob says:

        My concern is that there is literally nothing here for most BA flyers who are down the back and inviting consumer media to show them stuff neither they or there readers can afford is odd.

        • Greg says:

          Maybe we should all avoid acronyms such as CE, or even the word Club Rob, and say these are Business Class Seats – you know the expensive ones up front. That might avoid folk saying they have had a table every time they have flown.

      • Paul says:

        Agreed but you won’t find that a theme here as BA pay way too much to be objectively critical. While accepting lounge food in LHR works it’s not a patch on many lounges around Europe and most home carriers wipe the floor with BA. Back to the new economy seat, that is what it is and no amount of mood lighting. Red stitching, or cheap tables will change that. So let get real it a replacement economy class seat

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          “…as BA pay way too much to be objectively critical”

          Despite all the BA related articles @Rob said the other week that HfPs income from BA is only a very small part of the sites income as they don’t advertise very often.

          • Rob says:

            1.1% of our 2023 revenue was from BA.

            CitizenM hotels pay us more, to pick a random example.

            In fact, we got more money from the Dufry status match article – one article – than BA paid us in the whole of 2023.

      • dougzz99 says:

        Greg, you’re not stuck with BA because of the loyalty program, you’ve chosen them as a result of it. So overall you prefer the entire package of what BA offers to another airline?

        • Paul says:

          No this is not true. It is simply not possible to obtain any value or status to the same degree with any other programme unless you fly a limited number of routes frequently. One glaring example is domestic flying for which BA have a monopoly the exploit. There are no credit cards that offer you the opportunity to obtain greater value and BA have both Mastercard and Amex which in turn limits offers and competition.
          BAEC is the only game in town in the U.K. for most.

          • Roy says:

            Many people manage to fly perfectly happily without elite status or airline credit cards. It surely is a choice to value these aspects of the package above all else – a choice that many here make, course, for perfectly rational reasons – but still a choice.

          • PaulB says:

            Yeah, I’m with Roy on this one. You’re choosing to value the loyalty program, elite status, etc sufficient to make the total offering from BA your choice. That’s not an unreasonable decision, but it is a choice – and indeed surely if another carrier was sufficiently better in service, or sufficiently cheaper etc. you (&others!) would indeed switch to them as having the better overall offering despite them not having the strong loyalty program. Overall surely this means the loyalty program is doing it’s job and keeping you loyal – isn’t that the point?!

          • Rob says:

            We’ve done this four times in the past in (sponsored) reader surveys, remember.

            We offer flights to New York (class varies) and YOU pick the airline you fly if you win. The only rule is that the ticket will be issued as an ID90 so no miles, no status points, no status benefits.

            Virgin Atlantic wins every time, and by a huge margin. And because the winner flies the airline they vote for, it is ‘fair’ as a comparison.

            Once you add in miles, TP, status etc, BA wins as the market shows.

  • Tracey says:

    I’d be happy with this on a 2 hour flight on a 4+ hour flight eg z Larnaca or Tel-Aviv I’m less keen on this as a business class product.

  • Alex G says:

    Do those new “Club Europe” economy seats recline? What will the seat pitch be in CE?

    • Greg says:

      Good question. I’m guessing no more than the non-Club-Europe economy ones.

      • Jon says:

        I’m sure BA once claimed no-one prioritised legroom, but I’m not at all sure they asked anyone properly 🤷🏼

        I’ll take 1D, 1E and 1F on easyJet for the extra legroom and sat as a family, any day (can’t sit a 6yo in an exit row, but 1F is allowed).

  • dougzz99 says:

    Why are you here? Everything displeases you and invokes criticism. You seem to dislike BA and this website. Surely you just move along to another website and another airline. Perhaps you could direct me to your website with its superior writing and content?

    • TGLoyalty says:

      To be fair you need both sides in a fair debate and Andrew might feel BA reps read these comments for feedback so they can see how terrible their product actually is.

      Though I feel like Andrew might be too far on the I hate it all side of things.

      • dougzz99 says:

        You honestly think BA will change based on comments on a third party website. My point with Andrew, and I apologise if I confused multiple posters, is that if all you have is criticism just go elsewhere.
        Is the BA product that bad, you can only really compare to like, and it’s not like KLM/AF or LH are knocking it out the park. Comparisons of First to AF/LF or business to Turkish frequently fail to consider price.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Do I think one persons opinion can sway a decision at some of the worlds biggest companies … Yes first hand experience. Is that good or bad? depends on the opinion

          Do I think they’ll see and take not of Andrew’s comments no idea.

          • Rob says:

            Flyertalk, in particular, is hugely influential. I was even told by a programme head that there is a deliberate policy of ‘throwing a bone’ to FT members when bad news is announced, giving up something which the readers over there feel as necessary. I’m sure the same happens here.

            Remember that most people who work in loyalty never actually meet any of their members and FT / other forums is as close as they get.

        • dougzz99 says:

          Flyertalk has to be an exception, particularly the BA thread. With respect Rob, and you may know better, but surely it’s unusual to have such a concentration of your best* customers in a single Internet thread. The wealth of knowledge there in regard the entire BA operation frequently leaves me in slight disbelief.
          *Best. No idea about revenue but people flying frequently and clearly close to BA in a variety of ways.

  • Greg says:

    I just read a BA post on LinkedIn. “Working with the best of British suppliers from England, Scotland and Northern Ireland…..”

    Seems like they only like Wales to service their engines.

  • Bunter says:

    I can’t fathom what the fanfare is all about, the current fleet of Airbus 320 aircraft (ceo and neo) won’t have a retro fit.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      How do you know they won’t be?

      No annoucement isn’t the same as not happening.

      BA may well be waiting for customer and staff feedback – does it speed up boarding etc etc

  • Nancy says:

    No mention of the new First suite starting with A380? While a bit later, I found that more exciting yesterday than new CE seats, which don’t make a huge difference.

    • Rhys says:

      Coming in a 4th article tomorrow. The only news is that it is confirmed – which we already knew. No other info, so there isn’t much to say!

    • Alex G says:

      The old joke is that BA First is the World’s best business class. Although I’m not sure that that is true any longer as some other airlines now offer fantastic J products.

      If BA are going to continue to offer F cabins, then they really need to up their game substantially and make it amongst the world’s best. Somehow, I can’t see them doing that.

      https://simpleflying.com/best-airlines-first-class-list

      • PaulB says:

        I think the old joke is an unfair characterisation – BA’s First doesn’t compete with Emirates, Singapore, etc. but nor does it work out anywhere near as expensive. Sure I’d kinda like to see the A380 F seat be a notable step up, but I’d also be fearful for what they’d then try and market it for!

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