![]() ![]() Will they allow us to board together or make us split up Full flight 12:30 tomorrow, MCO to PHL. I will be awake a few minutes before the 24 hour point so I should be okay in that sense. Our family of 5 got A59, A60, B01 B02 and B03. Since I am checking two different people, do I have to do that twice? I am concerned our boarding order could separated by a bunch of people if there is a minute or two between when I can check us both in. When I look at the reservation on my phone and I click the check-in button, I am prompted for a name. Easier to me than flipping through the gallery for multiple BP's on one device.Thank you for the information! My own approach is to go all-electronic when I'm flying alone but get kiosk printouts when I'm flying with family. Perhaps farther back if you're wanting aisle-aisle. In fact, checking-in as early as possible is recommend as Southwest has that unique method of boarding (which I hate). You'll likely end up with B boarding passes, but that should be good enough to get you seats together towards the middle part of the plane. Oct 17, 16, 11:09 am 2 WorldLux Join Date: Sep 2015 Programs: LH SEN BA Gold Posts: 8,387 That should work. (3) Whatever you do, you are correct in that you should do it at T-24 hours on the dot. ![]() (Some airports have "BP-only" kiosks that shouldn't have any queue.) Or you can print from a kiosk at the airport. (2) You can save BP images to your phone's gallery and go entirely electronic for security and boarding. 1.ĭelta Air Lines is the only carrier still limiting seat sales in economy class, a policy in effect through April 30.(1) You could check both pax in on a phone, although it would likely take a few seconds longer than checking in via computer (for multiple PNRs). Southwest stopped blocking middle seats on Dec. The boarding changes follow most airlines' moves to stop blocking middle seats, a policy that was popular early in the pandemic. American Airlines never changed its boarding procedures. United and Delta still have pandemic boarding policies in place. "With these resources as our guides, we are returning to our grouped boarding process.'' "We continue to work within public health guidelines and take clinical guidance from our own medical experts to ensure we are doing everything we can to keep our customers and crewmembers safe in this next phase of our 'new normal,''' JetBlue spokesman Derek Dombrowski said in a statement. In early March, JetBlue stopped boarding passengers from back to front and resumed its traditional boarding procedures by groups. The nation's largest domestic carrier is not the first airline to revert to pre-pandemic boarding procedures. King noted that Southwest, like all airlines, continues to have "physical distancing" reminders at the airport and requires passengers to wear masks at the airport and on its planes. Spring break surge: Millions board flights in March Passenger screenings, which topped 2 million a day before the pandemic, fell below 90,000 in April and did not top 1 million again until mid-October. airport passenger counts have topped 1 million a day for 12 consecutive days and 17 days total in March, according to Transportation Security Administration screening statistics. Travel, which has been decimated by the coronavirus pandemic, is showing strong signs of life this month as more Americans are vaccinated and coronavirus case count trends improve in many areas of the country. "The majority of our customers are familiar with Southwest’s standard boarding style and have an expectation for the normal boarding process as they return to travel,'' Southwest spokeswoman Brandy King said in a statement. It had been boarding passengers in groups of 10 since it unveiled its "Southwest Promise'' health and safety protocols in May. The nation's largest domestic carrier, which doesn't assign seats, began boarding passengers in groups of 30 on March 15. Southwest Airlines has resumed its traditional boarding procedures, ditching a pandemic policy of boarding passengers in smaller groups to promote social distancing. Watch Video: The travel industry's big idea they hope gets things back to normal ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |