Best Seats Guide Part 6 of 20

Best Seats on Airbus A320neo

What's new in the A320neo cabin and how to pick the best seat, including Airspace interior differences and exit row analysis.

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Contents

Overview

The Airbus A320neo (new engine option) is the updated successor to the A320ceo, entering service in 2016. Powered by either CFM LEAP-1A or Pratt & Whitney GTF engines, the neo burns about 20% less fuel and produces significantly less noise — a benefit passengers feel most acutely in the rows adjacent to the engines.

The A320neo seats 150–194 passengers in a 3-3 configuration with pitch and width comparable to the outgoing model: typically 30–32 inches pitch and 17.2–18 inches width. However, airlines fitting the neo with Airbus's new Airspace cabin see meaningful improvements in ambiance, overhead bin space, and ventilation.

Airspace Cabin Differences

The Airbus Airspace cabin is the neo's answer to Boeing's Sky Interior. Not every A320neo has it — it depends on the airline's cabin specification. When it's present, you'll notice:

  • Larger overhead bins: The new pivot-bin design holds approximately 40% more luggage per row than the classic A320 bins. This meaningfully reduces gate-checked bag incidents.
  • LED mood lighting: Full-spectrum LED adjustable to simulated dawn/dusk cycles. Better for circadian rhythm on red-eye flights.
  • Wider-feel aisle: The sculptured sidewall panels give a 5-centimeter wider feel even though the fuselage width hasn't changed. The overhead bins open without jutting as far into the aisle.
  • Better ventilation: Improved air nozzle design at each seat position. Less dry-air discomfort on longer sectors.
  • Connectivity: Most new Airspace installations include USB-A and USB-C charging at every seat, sometimes with AC power.

Airlines with full Airspace interiors on their A320neo fleets include Lufthansa, Finnair, Air Asia, and TAP Air Portugal.

Best Economy Picks

Seat selection on the A320neo follows the same logic as the classic A320, with a few neo-specific tips:

  • Rows 10–14 (window): Behind the forward galley noise, ahead of the engine mounting point. On the neo, the LEAP engines are quieter, so the noise penalty for engine-adjacent rows is less severe — but these rows are still the best compromise.
  • Exit row window seats: Typically rows 11–12 or 14–15. With the neo's quieter engines, exit row seats feel even better — extended legroom without the engine roar that plagued the ceo exit rows.
  • Row 1 bulkhead (on carriers without business class): IndiGo, Cebu Pacific, and Air Asia often configure the A320neo as single-class 186-seat layouts. Row 1 is the only bulkhead row — book it for the extra legroom, but expect to stow your bag overhead.
  • Seats 1A, 1C (IndiGo XL): IndiGo's XL seats in rows 1–6 offer 30-inch pitch in a 28-inch-pitch config — the difference is substantial on any flight over 90 minutes.

Exit Row Pros/Cons

The A320neo's over-wing exits work the same as the classic model but feel different due to the neo's larger LEAP engines:

  • Pro — More legroom: Exit rows consistently offer 34–38 inches of pitch, compared to 30 inches in standard economy.
  • Pro — Quieter than ceo: The GTF engine's geared turbofan technology reduces high-frequency engine noise by 15–20 dB. Exit-row occupants on the neo notice this improvement most acutely.
  • Con — No recline: Exit row seats are blocked from reclining on every A320neo configuration worldwide.
  • Con — No under-seat storage: Your personal item goes overhead. If you travel with a laptop you need mid-flight, this is inconvenient.
  • Con — Emergency responsibility: Exit row passengers must acknowledge they are capable of opening the emergency exit. Families with young children are seated elsewhere.

Seats to Avoid

  • Last two rows: No recline (final row), lavatory proximity, last to deplane on an aircraft type known for slow aft-door deplaning.
  • Row immediately before exit row: Cannot recline. You lose your recline ability with none of the legroom upside.
  • Window seats at wing root: On some neo configurations, seats in the over-wing area (rows 15–18) have the window entirely blocked by the wing root. Check your specific seat map before booking.
  • Seats next to the galley at row 1: On budget carriers with galley partitions at row 1, the constant clatter, coffee smells, and crew activity make this less desirable than it first appears.

Airline Comparisons

AirlineTotal SeatsPitchBest SeatNotes
Lufthansa16531 inRow 11A (Airspace cabin)Full Airspace, USB-C
IndiGo18628 inRow 1A (XL seat)High density, XL rows available
TAP Air Portugal17430 inExit row windowAirspace on most frames
Air Asia18629 inRow 1 Hot SeatHot Seats = extra legroom fee
Finnair16531 inRow 10AAirspace, strong Wi-Fi