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SAS Business Class review on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

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This is our review of Scandinavian Airlines long haul business class.

You may not know it, but Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) was the first airline to fly over the North Pole on a commercial flight, when it launched flights from Copenhagen to Los Angeles. The flight, on the 15th November 1954, not only reduced flying time but also lowered fuel consumption.

Back then, the Douglas DC-6B had to make two fuelling stops en-route – Kangerlussuaq (Greenland) and Winnipeg (Canada) – with a total flight time of 28 hours.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Fortunately, modern aircraft can do it faster and more direct than in years gone by. Virtually all airlines now fly the polar route between Europe and the US as it offers the most direct path. Depending on where you are flying you don’t quite get as far North as the North Pole, but you do creep up into Greenland.

Polar routings are also used for flights to (or more commonly from) Asia. For example, my recent flight with Finnair from Japan took me over the North Pole and I was issued a certificate to prove it!

One of the unique aspects of taking the polar route, at least in winter, is that even though you are on a ‘day flight’, departing and arriving in daylight hours (and on the same day), you experience a sunset and sunrise as you enter the polar night. This is thanks to the reduced daylight hours in the Arctic winter. In summer, of course, this doesn’t happen!

To celebrate 70 years since the first commercial polar flight, SAS invited us to try it on the same route as all those years ago. HfP paid for all of its other expenses.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Earn and redeem Virgin Points on SAS

Don’t forget that SAS has been undergoing a transformation since exiting Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

With new owners including Air France KLM, it has left Star Alliance and joined SkyTeam, so you can earn and redeem Virgin Points on flights. Anyone with Virgin Points should be keeping a much closer eye on SAS now.

The state of Denmark also owns just over 25% of the airline, so it is doubling down on its Copenhagen hub to turn it into “a key international gateway to and from Scandinavia and Northern Europe.” It will continue flying from Stockholm but on a secondary basis.

SAS check in and lounge

As I’m based in London my journey started at Heathrow airport, where SAS operates from Terminal 2.

At the moment, SAS does not operate a proper shorthaul business class, opting instead to offer something called ‘SAS Plus’, which is also the name for its long haul premium economy cabin.

This is, effectively, short haul premium economy. I got a free middle seat but this is not guaranteed. Food was a free cold boxed meal, but that’s pretty much it. This will all change in 2025 when SAS reintroduces ‘proper’ business class with guaranteed free middle seats and improved food on short haul routes.

For now, however, this situation continues. At Heathrow, this means there are only dedicated desks for economy and SAS Plus. It was a bit messy and the check-in staff didn’t know how to add my Global Entry number to my booking, presumably because they mostly deal with short haul flights.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Once I had my boarding pass I headed to the so-called ‘fast track’ security queue at Terminal 2. This is always much less fast than it ought to be because they keep shuffling in passengers from the standard queues ….

SAS uses the Plaza Premium lounge at Heathrow T2 which we have reviewed here. It’s been very busy recently due to the ongoing lounge refurbishments in the terminal, with airlines sending their passengers here instead, but hopefully the lounges will all be completed soon. The new No1 Lounge should also alleviate capacity issues.

I won’t go into detail about my SAS Plus experience to Copenhagen – suffice to say that it’s a necessary step to reintroduce a proper short haul business class product, especially for connecting passengers.

In Copenhagen I had a long layover and got to try out the flagship SAS Lounge which I covered here.

Onboard SAS’ A350

SAS has a fleet of A350s and A330s for its widebody fleet, as well as some A321LRs which also ply some of the long haul routes. The A350-900, being the newest widebody, is obviously the flagship and is what SAS operate on their longest flights, including to LA.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

It can seat 300 people in a three-class configuration, with 40 business class seats – 32 in a large forward cabin and eight in a very private two-row rear cabin. There is no First Class.

SAS has gone with the Thompson Vantage XL seat, which you can also spot on Delta and Virgin Atlantic (as its A330neo Upper Class seat). This is a very comfortable seat, although in this iteration it is without a door as it is coming up to five years since it was introduced.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Seats are arranged in a staggered 1-2-1 layout. That means seats alternate between being next to the aisle and next to the window. If, like me, you prefer the privacy and protection from a ‘true’ window seat (with your side console between you and the aisle) then I recommend selecting an even-numbered row.

Here’s an odd-numbered row:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

And here’s the more private even-numbered one:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

The one compromise with the seat is the relatively small footwell. I think this has improved in more recent Thompson Vantage XL models.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

If you have big feet or simply want more space, then I suggest you book one of the bulkhead rows – 1 and 9 – which have significantly larger foot wells:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Otherwise the seat is very comfortable. There is some open shelving for your headphones, amenity kit and other bits you might want during the flight:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

You don’t get any other storage but that was enough for what I had. Not pictured is the bottle of water that is provided. The colour of the cabin – the ochre shelf interior and dark grey seat – felt very Lufthansa to me!

Also in a very accessible spot was a universal mains socket and USB-A port. A remote for the IFE was also available although as the seat is close to the screen I didn’t use it.

Opposite there are, bizarrely, two literature pockets: the upper one empty, presumably for storage although I’m not sure how useful such a fold out storage unit is.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

One think I would note is that the seat reclines quite close to the screen, making it a bit of a hassle to get out of your seat without un-reclining it.

The tray table slides out from the side console and offers a single or double leaf option. It was adjustable and contoured:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

The pop-out mechanism was easy and intuitive, which can’t be said for all business class tables!

Here is the seat in bed mode. The armrest can also be retracted although it doesn’t quite go flush to the seat.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

All things said and done, though, this is a very comfortable seat and cabin.

In-flight entertainment and wifi on SAS

An 18.5″ HD touchscreen is built into the seat, but it feels bigger because you are (relatively speaking) quite close to it. It was very responsive and I liked the SAS in-flight entertainment system.

The catalogue was stocked with some classics as well as newer releases:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

On the A350 you can also choose to watch the in-flight cameras which I always like to do or have on in the background when I’m not watching anything.

The supplied headphones were good and I didn’t end up digging my own out. You still need a wired connection – there’s no Bluetooth connectivity.

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Everyone in business gets a free wifi pass, which was good enough for general work and social media, although I think you’d struggle with video.

Anyone who isn’t eligible for free wifi can buy a full-flight pass for €16 which isn’t too bad for an 11 hour flight, although many airlines are beginning to move to free wifi for all passengers.

Amenity kit and bedding

SAS works in collaboration with Duxiana for its business class amenity kits. These are provided in different forms including a shoe bag, laundry bag or travel pouch. I got the shoe bag, I believe:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Inside was a Dux eye mask, ear plugs, bamboo toothbrush, travel socks and lip balm and face cream from Verso.

Also at my seat was a good-sized white pillow and duvet, although sadly no mattress pad or protector for sleeping on.

Food and service onboard Scandinavian Airlines

What most impressed me about my trip, however, was not the cabins but the food and service on board. It started with a pre-departure drink, with a choice of water, juice or champagne:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Crew handed out the menu, which had a gradient cover that looked like a very light sunset or sunrise. This was followed, after take-off, with a hot towel and another drinks service, this time with roasted cashews. I went for the special Polar cocktail which is mixed at your seat:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

I followed this up with a glass of champagne with dinner. SAS serve Charles Heidsieck Brut Reserve NV.

Then it was time for dinner. Rather than take your order in advance, crew bring a trolley down the aisle with a spread of all the available dishes – four of them in total. If you’re not sure you can take a look before you decide.

It also meant SAS could deliver a premium meal service without having to resort to bringing everything out on trays. It may not be a big thing but it just feels that tiny bit classier!

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

To start, there was a choice of:

  • mixed salad with pickled pumpkin and nigella seed
  • snow crab and salmon tartare with black pepper mayonnaise, root vegetables in ponzu and mustard cucumbers
  • lightly smoked duck with Waldorf-inspired celeriac remoulade, grapes and celery

The crew let me try both the snow crab and smoked duck. Initially, I thought I would like the snow crab more, but in the end the smoked duck was the winner for me. The crab wasn’t as crabby as I wanted it to be!

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

For the main courses there were four choices:

  • veal chuck roast with creamy blue cheese, dauphinoise pottaoes, celeriac with caraway, black cabbage, lingonberries and toasted walnuts
  • chicken breast with mushroom fricassee, potato and celeriac puree, buttered carrots, poached leeks and leek oil
  • vegetarian red Thai curry with jasmine rice, brocollini, baked pumpkin and grapes

The fourth option, which was not in the printed menu, was baked salmon.

Here is the veal: the creamy blue cheese was delicious. I also liked the very Scandi cutlery!

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Crew ask if you would like any garnishes, which can include salad, pumpkin seeds, baked cheese etc.

For dessert it’s again a trolley service and you can pick and choose from:

  • cheeseboard with Havgus and Krondild cheeses from Arla UNIKA with green tomato marmalade from Hedhe-Escalante, Sweden
  • lemon and black current tartlet with black currant cream cheese
  • Hansens Is organic ice cream
  • seasonal fresh cut fruit

I went for the ice lolly and black current tartlet. The ice lolly was fab: you think it’s a standard choc ice but it has a spine of fruit preserve down the middle!

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Coffee and tea followed.

If you are hungry mid-flight then crew came round with sandwiches, or you could help yourself at the self-service bar in the galley which featured sandwiches and snacks, such as gummy bears:

Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

A second meal service occurred around two hours or ninety minutes before landing. This was a single tray service with no choice:

  • traditional Scandinavian open-faced sandwich with sun-dried tomato tartare, grilled artichokes, fried olives and chive mayonnaise on Danish rye bread
  • fresh cut fruit and handmade pralines from Hedhe Escalante
Review: SAS Business on the A350 from Copenhagen to Los Angeles

Conclusion

I have to say, I was pleasantly surprised by my SAS experience. It’s a night-and-day contrast to the poor food currently served by fellow Nordic airline Finnair, and the trolley service is a nice retro touch.

Things such as the hand-shaken cocktail make a difference and show SAS is willing to do things properly. Although it’s now five years old, the business class cabin is still in good nick and offers a competitive seat.

Once the short haul business class connections are sorted, hopefully sometime next year, you shouldn’t need much persuading to fly SAS from the UK.

In the next part of this series, due later this week, I will try out the SAS Plus premium economy cabin (review here).

Head for Points made a financial contribution to the Woodland Trust as part of this trip. The Woodland Trust creates and manages forests in the UK in accordance with the Woodland Carbon Code.


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Comments (42)

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

  • Cal says:

    The description of SAS Plus for short haul is incorrect.
    There is no blocked middle seat, you only get food and (sometimes) lounge access.

  • Vit says:

    “ You get a free middle seat”

    Correct me if I’m wrong but don’t think if this is always the case or in writing anywhere. I suspect you get this seat next to you empty due to your EBG status which is known to block the seat next to you if it is not a full flight.

    • Tim says:

      Yes, I believe they will still fill the middle seat if they can.

      • JJ says:

        Concur with this, middle seat was taken on all flights this year that’s domestic and international, despite being EBG. I believe one can purchase the middle seat for extra space (from memory this option is available on the SAS website).
        Food is hit and miss, domestic has been a small bun with filling, while international was cold meat salad. But the chocolates after were nice.

        • Dubious says:

          And if you are a vegetarian you are often told by the call centre that you don’t get a special meal on those flights because they are too short…when in reality they do provide food but once you find this out onnboard it is too late to get one.

  • No longer Entitled says:

    Nice to see The Woodland Trust making an appearance. I presume this is entirely voluntary so fair play to HfP for making the effort.

  • Damien Loveday says:

    I flew the same route in early December and can confirm there is no mandated empty middle seat on short haul. Hopefully this changes. Agree with pretty much everything in this article albeit worth noting the food is hit and miss. On the way out to LA the food served on my flight was fine, if not spectacular (the starter was a low scoring 4/10 seafood ‘patty’ the main a much better chicken). On the way back from LA the food was truly awful. I sent all mine back and just slept, as it seemed most in my cabin also did judging by the returned food trays. Service was excellent though and bed was actually very nice to sleep in (I’m a side sleeper and slept like a dream). All in all I’d fly SAS business again long haul if the price was right (which it was for this flight at £3k versus 10k for direct flights from London to LA).

    • NorskSaint says:

      Couldn’t agree more @damien.
      Am Diamond with SAS since leaving blighty behind for a life in the Artic.

      I would go so far as to say the food is truly terrible on SAS. Even in Business I’ll bring my own as I won’t chance whatever it is they try to serve. The food quality Rhys had is certainly not representative of normal SAS flights I am sorry to say, and they clearly upped the budget for this special commemorative flight.

  • Bobby says:

    One thing that is omitted from flight reviews is the length of time from takeoff to main course and to meal service being finished? Was it completed within 90 mins of takeoff?

  • Thaliasilje says:

    This is a review that needs to be taken with a massive pinch of salt. SAS crew and operations were tipped off about Rhys flying on this flight and made special arrangements.

    The treatment you received was far better than what the average passenger experiences. Regular SAS flyers know that their crew typically aren’t very service-oriented and often have a cold, impersonal approach.the scandi way.

    You also conveniently skipped reviewing short-haul SAS Plus, likely because there’s nothing good to say about it, and instead, you pivoted to mentioning the airline introducing business class next year.

    This is probably the most biased review I’ve ever read on HfP. Flyertalk offers a far more accurate reflection on SAS.

    • Rob says:

      Except Damien says ‘Agree with pretty much everything in this article albeit worth noting the food is hit and miss’.

      I’d also reread what was written about short haul because it makes it clear it’s a mess. It will also be gone in 12 weeks so why waste time on it?

    • RC says:

      As a commercial passenger on this route and JFK quite frequently I’d suggest your assertion of bias is quite off the mark.
      The SAS product is a good one on long haul. Comfortable seat, usually experienced good crews and food far better than average. Good bubbles and not a hint of ‘brunch’ in sight.
      Toilets tend to be very clean, unlike a certain brunch airline. I’d go as far as saying it’s one of the best long haul products out there – provided you’re not obsessing about doors over anything else.
      On short haul the middle seat in plus can and is regularly filled. There is no blocking even for Diamond and Pandions, if they can sell the seat. On short haul the crews are much more variable – from excellent to easyJet rejects (who can be appallingly bad).

    • danstravel says:

      So much negativity… what happened to if you have nothing nice to say then don;t say anything at all.

      It is impossible to make these reviews representative of every single passenger. One persons idea of outstanding is another persons unacceptable. Just read the review and enjoy it for what it is.

      • D says:

        Because it’s supposed to be a review, if others differ then I’d rather hear the good and bad.

        • Rhys says:

          You mean the good and bad just like I highlight in my review? Backed up by the experiences of RC above?

          • FlyingMoose says:

            The differentiator for acceptable vs terrible service with SAS generally lies in the origin of the crew. The Scandinavian crews are absolutely terrible, rude, not attentive, don’t take requests, will get verbally aggressive if ‘orders’ aren’t meet promptly, seem to religiously believe they are there for my safety etc. The SAS Connect crews from the UK and Ireland, Estonian crews on Xfly or the Spanish crews on CityJet are much friendlier, service minded and willing to go the extra mile for the customer. As far as I’m concerned, SAS should really just get rid of their Scandinavian cabin crews.

          • Rhys says:

            The Danish crew on my flight seemed perfectly nice, including with other passengers (I watched).

          • FlyingMoose says:

            They literally had a photo of you on the lounge screens, welcoming you and “being honoured” to have you. Do you really think they didn’t tailor the service on this flight for yourself?

          • Rhys says:

            Do you really think I’m stupid enough not to see through special services like that? It’s not hard to take a look around the cabin and watch how everyone is treated.

          • D says:

            I agree! No issue with your review at all.

            But disagree with the comment from above ‘if you have nothing good to say…..’ surely that’s the point.

    • RC says:

      Interesting to see @flyingmoose bringing a few stereotypes to the discussion. From my own experience as EBD, married to EBP, it’s the newer (‘connect’) crews who can sometimes be a problem. One recent flight there were two of them in the jump seat loudly discussing/shrieking last night’s recreational activities in explicit details. Thru both had Estuary English accents.
      As a regular traveler, it’s much better to have an efficient service. Nothing worse than someone who feels the need to engage crew in their life story thus delaying service for everyone else.

  • Tess says:

    Having just flown a very expensive SAS pro plus to Aarhus via Copenhagen (just under £1000) I can confirm the middle seats in all rows (including 1 and 2) are very much used. The meal also was just a small salad in a cardboard box. All drinks served in plastic cups and the sparkling options (cava or a french brut blanc) were undrinkable. In addition you have to pay (over £20/leg) if want to select a seat even if book in highest class of ticket possible. I won’t be complaining about BA anytime soon given the alternatives.

    • RC says:

      Sorry that’s incorrect.
      EBP, EBD and EBG never pay for seat assignments. Nor higher level sky team FF.
      If you’re neither of those, yes you pay. Just like every other airline in Europe. As HFP readers this should be obvious:. The solution – get FF status or pay up.

  • RC says:

    I’d also echo the point about the hopelessness of the Heathrow check in. They ask for paper proof of ESTA. Truly clueless and likely very badly trained.

    I’d disagree about the food. Outbound is excellent, though inbound from LAX is always weaker. Ex LAX breakfast was a salad. Weird.

    However, the AF lounge at LAX has some delicious food and drink (puts QF F lounge to shame) so it’s a bit academic anyway.

    • Rhys says:

      US catering is often poor. I don’t think I’ve ever had better catering departing the US vs arriving.

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