True That Airlines Are Shrinking Economy Cabins To Chase Wealthy Vacationers Instead Of Business Travelers?
The question of whether airlines are shrinking economy cabins to chase wealthy vacationers instead of business travelers is addressed through a look at how carriers are reshaping aircraft revenue models. The article argues that global network airlines are permanently reassessing cabin layouts to increase revenue density by removing lower-yield coach seats. Instead of focusing on maximizing total passenger volume, fleet managers are optimizing the mix toward higher-margin premium products, with changes described as structural rather than temporary responses to post-pandemic travel. It cites trends on major carriers, including configurations with historically low economy seat counts and expanded premium economy or business class footprints on key transpacific and transatlantic corridors. The article suggests corporate travel demand has diverged from premium leisure demand, with premium cabins increasingly targeting passengers paying out of pocket. It references airlines such as American Airlines and discusses private-suite features, but does not provide specific, route-by-route seat counts.





