“Two Pilots Are Deadheading” — Why Alaska Bumped Paid First Class Customer to Coach on 8-Hour Flight

There’s a lot of frustration among frequent flyers when they’re first on the upgrade list but they get skipped over to seat an employee up front. And it starts vigorous debates. It’s now standard for pilots traveling to another city to work a flight to get first class before customers.

However, we don’t usually see pilots bumping paying first class passengers down to coach so that they can sit up front. But that’s what happened to one Alaska Airlines customer flying from Liberia, Costa Rica to Seattle.

I bought a class C first class return ticket from LIB Costa Rica to SEA Seattle. This is an 8-hour international flight. Was really excited to treat myself after not traveling for years due to an accident.

Checked in the evening before no problem. Arrived at airport and checked my bag no problem. Flight starts boarding and I hear my name being called. Go to gate agent and am told that 2 pilots are dead heading and I’m being pushed to regular economy on a completely full flight.

I was told my status was low and that’s why I was moved. On the flight I asked if my selected breakfast was still available as I hadn’t eaten and they said no. I asked if I could buy a Mediterranean snack pack and they said I didn’t preorder and there were none. They had a ham box but I’m vegetarian and couldn’t eat it.

I’m stuck on an 8-hour flight starving and haven’t been offered any food besides 1 biscoff cookie or ham and wasn’t offered any special drink or snack. I’d planned to be sitting in first enjoying a shakshouka and a nice mimosa and instead I’m starving and feeling like I wasn’t worthy of the seat I paid for after working two jobs and saving up for a big trip to celebrate my medical recovery.

And, in fact, this is how things work at Alaska Airlines! According to their pilot deal,

  • First Class is mandatory if any single deadhead segment is scheduled to exceed 5 hours and this one is 8 hours.

  • First Class is mandatory for all segments when consecutive deadhead segments are scheduled to exce.ed 5 hours total and the pilot is flying a segment immediately in the same duty period.

At under 5 hours first class is offered when available, but they don’t actually bump revenue passengers to provide it. In recent years, with a pilot shortage, rising pilot wages, and a strong bargaining position first class deadheading has become standard although the Alaska language that forces bumping paid first class passengers to coach to make room is unusual.

United gave their pilots first class deadheading during the pandemic, to get the union to agree to allow them to keep all pilots current and flying and not have to issue pilot furloughs. Then the 2023 collective bargainin agreement locked this in.

  • First class at booking. If First isn’t available, then the pilot is set to auto-upgrade ahead of all upgrading passengers if First later opens up, unless the deadhead booking is made within 3 hours of departure (then it follows the normal upgrade process).

  • For long haul flights, revenue passenger downgrades can happen. United can overbook the premium cabin to accommodate a pilot in some cases, and when overbooked the pilot must be boarded in the premium cabin and may not be downgraded to economy.

  • Pilots are ahead of complimentary upgrade passengers for downgrades to coach. If first class is oversold, or a plane is swapped to one with a smaller first class cabin, complimentary upgrade passengers have to be downgraded before pilots.

  • Customers rarely see this play out. Because pilots riding up front gets driven by booking logic and auto-processing, elites experience it as “upgrades were never available” rather than “a pilot jumped ahead of me and took my upgrade.”

Delta also gives priority to deadheading pilots, offering business class (or first if no business cabin) on international and transoceanic flights. Domestically, they get “Comfort Plus if available at time of booking” and first “for 3-hour or greater flight segment preceding a working flight segment or a redeye.”

If the required seat class isn’t available when the deadhead is created, a pilot is automatically upgraded before any passenger if higher class becomes available.

Interestingly, most of the attention has gone to pilots upgrading to first class on American Airlines, and that’s probably because of the visible way they do it.

  • American Airlines deadheading pilots get business class for transoceanic and coach for domestic.

  • At the gate, though, deadheading pilots are placed at the top of the upgrade queue. They clear ahead of elites for upgrades.

  • Given the timing, and where customers see available seats and where they are on the list, it’s obvious that a pilot is taking the seat they expected to receive. Passengers literally watch the pilot upgrade happen.

Here’s the American Airlines policy which implements its 2023 contract:

Ironically, the least pilot-friendly on paper policy for ‘pilots trump passengers in first class’ is American’s because the default is coach travel on domestic flights, with premium cabin access comin out of what’s left of available seats at the airport. But because the process is visible to customers, American gets more heat for this than others.

Readers are often sympathetic to pilots traveling up front because they ‘want well-rested pilots’ but I would point out that is what FAA rest rules are for, and time spent deadheading counts as duty time. It’s time they could otherwise be flying a plane in the cockpit.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. The question is can the passenger asked to be reaccommodated on a flight(s) that has first open if bumped. Granted that might not always be practical for time sensitive travel.

  2. I didn’t see it in the article, but I suspect Alaska Airlines would have done something to compensate the passenger for being downgraded on an 8-hour full flight. I have been a loyal Alaska customer for 12 years (after many years with American), and I have found Alaska to be reasonable and in most cases quite generous in situations where they screw up. And I would have expected compensation including not only the fare differential, but also some sort of “apology” compensation over and above that. Did they do something for this customer? (Sorry if I missed that in the article.)

  3. I spent $400,000 per year on their card in order to be eligible for upgrades. Do restaurants give employees the best table in the house? What about a Concerts? Do they give employees the front row? The obvious answer is no because other companies respect their customers.

  4. It sounds like the first class seats should be called pilot seats instead so that they are not being falsely marketed. Maybe have them available as last minute upgrades instead, if they are not being filled by dead heading pilots. With such a long time to when those deadheading pilots were needed on their next flight piloting, the airline should have shuffled pilots elsewhere.

  5. I agree that a rested pilot is important if they are flying to an immediate assignment, but if they are flying to a city where they have a 12 hour layover, that logic goes out the window.

  6. Have we considered air passenger rights legislation that would properly compensate passengers for involuntary downgrades, excessive delays, and other harms under the control of airlines? Oh, no, we prefer bootlicking? Ah, got it. Throw-in some bashing of workers. Classic. Now everyone’s upset. Who’s even still ‘winning’ here? Management? Shareholders? Probably.

  7. @Johhny – I agree chasing top status isn’t usually worth it unless you get it by just flying your preferred airline (usually with OPM). I’m lifetime mid-tier on AA and DL (Platinum on both) and low level lifetime on UA (Silver). I rarely get an upgrade so just pay for it (or the upgrade) if I want that but do like the baggage fee waiver, ability to book extra legroom seats (UA only at check in for Silver but other 2 at time of booking) and boarding a little earlier. However, upgrades based on status are rare unless you are very high up (like EP with a massive amount of Loyalty Points to put you ahead of other EPs).

    However, I will point out that, per the passenger, the reason he got bumped was he was partly due to his low elite status so having at least mid tier likely would have protected him. I don’t need highest level, just not the lowest. Like the 2 guys in the woods talking about what they would do if a bear chased them. One said he would run and the other stated he couldn’t outrun the bear. The other guy said “you are right but I just need to outrun you”.

  8. @ Doug S — Of course they did. The article wouldnt be as pearl-clutching if that were included.

    @ Donald — If you actually spend $400,000 per year on an Alaska card, you might need to read this blog more frequently.

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