Skip to content
Points Analyst Points Analyst

Points Analyst is your home for news, analysis, and commentary on the airline and travel industry news and what it means for your customer experience and points strategies.

Points Analyst Points Analyst

Points Analyst is your home for news, analysis, and commentary on the airline and travel industry news and what it means for your customer experience and points strategies.

  • Home
  • About Points Analyst
  • Affiliate Disclosure
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Home
  • About Points Analyst
  • Affiliate Disclosure
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Close

Search

Airline News

Southwest’s Assigned Seating Disaster: What Went Wrong

By Mitch
February 16, 2026 2 Min Read
Comments Off on Southwest’s Assigned Seating Disaster: What Went Wrong

Southwest’s switch to assigned seating on January 27 has turned into an operational mess, with A-List Preferred members boarding in Group 5 instead of Groups 1-2, overhead bins full by Row 4, and passengers walking backward through boarding crowds to stow bags.

The core problem isn’t assigned seating itself—it’s that Southwest implemented it without fixing boarding group logic or bin management.

The Bin Space Crisis

Early boarders are grabbing overhead space at the front of the plane regardless of their seat assignment. Passengers assigned to Rows 4-8 who board in Groups 4-5 find zero bin space near their seats, forcing them to store bags in Row 20, then fight upstream through active boarding to reach their assigned seats.

Gary Leff at View from the Wing called it “far more chaotic than other airlines.” He’s right. Delta, United, and American solved this years ago by boarding back-to-front within elite tiers, ensuring bin space aligns with seat assignments.

Rapid Rewards Members Are Furious

Multiple reports confirm A-List Preferred members—who previously enjoyed automatic priority boarding—are now being assigned to Groups 5-6. That’s worse treatment than they received under open seating, where A-List Preferred guaranteed you a spot in the first 15 to board.

Southwest’s research claimed 80% of customers wanted assigned seats. What the airline apparently didn’t model: how many of those 80% were loyal customers versus price-shopping occasional flyers who’d choose Frontier if fares dropped $20.

The Points/Miles Angle

If you’re earning Southwest Rapid Rewards points (or frequently transfer points to them from Chase), this should concern you. Southwest Companion Pass holders and credit card users relied on consistent boarding priority to make the most of their benefits. Now you’re paying annual fees for status that delivers worse boarding positions than you got 30 days ago.

The Rapid Rewards Business card ($199 annual fee) and Rapid Rewards Performance Business card ($199 annual fee) both offer A-List Preferred after spending thresholds. Those perks just lost significant value if you’re stuck in Group 5.

What Southwest Says

Spokesperson Chris Perry claims they’re making “early adjustments” based on customer feedback. Translation: they launched without adequate testing and are now troubleshooting in production with paying passengers as guinea pigs.

Are you sticking with Southwest Rapid Rewards, or is this the push you needed to switch your loyalty to a carrier that figured out assigned seating decades ago?

Author

Mitch

Follow Me
Other Articles
Previous

AA’s New 787 Cabins Launch Amid CEO Crisis

Next

Amex Gold Reality Check: Who Actually Benefits?

Points Analyst

The Travel Industry Moves Fast. We're Helping You Stay Ahead.

Copyright 2026 — Points Analyst. All rights reserved. Blogsy WordPress Theme