Emirates’ 615-seat A380 was the densest jet in commercial service. They just ripped out 46 seats. The premium economy math finally beat yield.

The dense A380 was Emirates’ yield weapon on price-sensitive leisure routes. Bangkok, Bali, Mauritius, Kuala Lumpur, and a rotating cast of secondary European cities ran the 615-seater. The math was simple: pack as many bodies as physically possible onto a long-haul widebody and ride the per-seat operating cost down. For two decades, that math worked but that appears to no longer be the case.
This is a reversal of two decades of dense-pack dogma, holding the line, though just on this small subfleet. The industry has been postured for years that premium economy is a niche product for North Atlantic. Emirates has come to the conclusion this is global. Perhaps it is. Premium economy has come a long way since its first iterations, now more akin to domestic first class and with its own cabin rather than situated at the front of economy.
A great solo travel tip spotted this week on Live and Let's Fly.


