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Passenger Says Family Blocked His Paid Exit-Row Legroom for Most of 4-Hour Flight

A viral Facebook post is focusing attention on how cabin crews police space around exit rows when airlines sell those seats as an added perk.

Overview

  • The traveler, flying with his sister and niece, said they paid about €30 each for extra-legroom seats on a roughly four-hour European flight.
  • He reported that a father and two children stood at the emergency-exit window near their row for much of the flight, leaning over and occupying the space he paid for.
  • The group said they summoned a flight attendant three times, and by the third visit the attendant warned the family it would be the last reminder to sit down.
  • The account, posted to the Dull Men's Fun Club on Facebook with a photo, drew hundreds of reactions and comments before being widely covered by multiple outlets.
  • Coverage highlighted calls for firmer enforcement of paid seat boundaries and noted exit-row clearance expectations, with no airline response or policy change reported.