United Airlines says it is working on a new economy cabin setup that removes the middle seat from use, and aviation analysts believe the idea offers more than just extra comfort for passengers.
Few flying experiences are as widely disliked as being stuck in the middle seat. For most travelers, it is the one place on a plane they would rather avoid than anywhere else.
Sharing armrests with strangers on both sides and sitting boxed in for an entire flight has long made it one of the least popular spots in commercial aviation.
That is why travelers reacted so enthusiastically when reports surfaced on Reddit suggesting United Airlines was considering a layout that would permanently eliminate some middle seats in economy.
The carrier later confirmed to aviation publications including The Points Guy that it is examining the idea for its new long-range Airbus A321XLR aircraft. United took delivery of its first A321XLR in June 2026, and the aircraft is expected to enter service later this year.
The proposal centers on a fixed tray table known as the ‘perma-tray’, which would be installed over the middle seat. That would leave the aisle and window seats without anyone between them, while also creating a larger shared surface for items like drinks, snacks, and laptops.
At first glance, the plan appears to offer an unusually attractive comfort boost for economy passengers.
But specialists in the airline industry say the design may also help solve an important staffing issue tied to federal safety rules.

The additional space is likely to appeal to customers, but the concept may serve another equally valuable purpose for the airline.
Under Federal Aviation Administration rules, airlines must provide at least one flight attendant for each 50 passenger seats on an aircraft. That means an airplane with 150 installed seats requires four flight attendants, while a configuration above that threshold would require a fifth.
United’s incoming Airbus A321XLR jets are expected to focus heavily on premium seating and operate longer services to smaller destinations in Europe and South America.
By attaching the ‘perma-trays’ over a limited number of middle seats, United could keep the aircraft’s certified seating capacity at exactly 150 passengers.
That would allow the carrier to stay within the FAA staffing bracket that calls for four flight attendants rather than five. In practice, that can matter for operating cost, scheduling flexibility, and aircraft weight.

The idea takes inspiration from the “Eurobusiness” format often used on short European flights, where airlines such as British Airways and Lufthansa leave the center seat empty in a standard row and market that section as business class.
The difference is that European carriers usually handle that arrangement temporarily through their booking systems, allowing them to change cabin allocation when needed. United’s version would physically block the seat instead, permanently reducing the official seat total for regulatory purposes.
For passengers, a lower number of people on board could bring several practical benefits as well.
With fewer travelers on the aircraft, boarding and disembarking could move more quickly, cabin congestion would likely ease, restroom queues could be shorter, and passengers might have a much better chance of finding room for carry-on bags in the overhead bins.
United has not yet announced where these ‘perma-tray’ rows would operate or how they would be priced. The airline has also not said whether the feature will appear across all of its A321XLRs or only in certain rows, but it has said it is actively exploring the concept. If it reaches service, travelers may soon see whether the added space becomes one of the airline’s most talked-about new economy features.

