Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
Lifestyle
Grace Hoffman, Lifestyle Writer & Clare McCarthy

'I paid €50 for extra legroom on a plane and an old couple tried to take my seat - I refused to switch'

Sitting for hours on an airplane for a long-haul flight can be incredibly uncomfortable, but a good seat has the potential to make the journey much more pleasant.

For those who can't experience the luxury of first-class flights, extra legroom in economy seating is arguably the next best thing.

One man has told, how after paying around €50 extra for more legroom on a 12-hour flight, an elderly couple tried claiming the seats he booked for their own.

READ MORE: Irish traditional match maker fears he may be only one left in the country

Taking to popular forum Reddit, the man said he received evil glares from passengers after refusing to move from the seat he paid for, the Mirror reports.

Captioning the post, the Reddit user wrote: "Old couple try to take our seats on a plane."

The man explained: "A few years ago my significant other and I planned a three-month trip around the world. Our first flight was from New Zealand-LA. 12-13 hours.

"We booked and paid for our flights and I added the premium economy seats as I'm 6'3 and wanted the extra legroom. Cost an extra $60 (€56).

"This flight was with Air New Zealand, the screen has your name on it when you get to your seat.

"We get on the plane. Find our seats and there is this older couple sitting there (mid 70s). I ask them if they got confused with their seat numbers. They hadn't.

"I show them my ticket and seat number and point to my name on the screen. They then ask me just sit in their seats which were ten rows back. No leg room."

After the elderly couple refused to move from the seats, the man demanded that they return to their original seats as he 'paid extra'.

The man explained the conversation: "Me: You want me to sit in your seats?

"OP(old people): Yes, that would be nice thank you.

"Me: I paid extra for these seats and would like to sit in them. Please move to your seats.

"OP: Oh, it's not that bad there's plenty of legroom.

"Me: Yeah, there's plenty of legroom in my seats because I paid for it. I'll help move your bag if you need."

In the midst of their conversation, a flight attendant approached the passengers to question what was going on as a long line had formed in the middle of the plane.

The conversation continued: "OP: This man wants us to move seats!

"Flight attendant: Sir, please go to your allocated seats.

"Me: Here is my ticket, these people are sitting in my seats. I paid extra because I need the legroom.

"FA to old people: Excuse me, you will have to move to your own seats as you have not paid for these seats.

"Old people: Well, can we please have an upgrade?

"FA: Sorry, this is a full flight so that's not possible."

The man added: "I got some stink eyes from other people on the flight. I paid for the extra legroom and I need it."

Flocking to the comment section, Reddit users shared their opinion about the controversial ordeal.

One person wrote: "I have no idea why the other people who paid extra for legroom would glare at this guy."

Meanwhile, someone else said: "This isn't a two hour flight where you buck up for the good of old people, which is still not right given the social experience that is flying - I wouldn't care if it was a two hour flight there is still the principle of the matter, but I may cave depending on my mood.

"12-13 hours is no joke though - there is no giving in. You move those people or the plane doesn't take off!" They added.

READ NEXT:

Get breaking news to your inbox by signing up to our newsletter

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.