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Which USA airlines offer lie-flat seats to Hawaii?

Friday newsletters always feature luxury travel conteststipsseries, or news.

Today (November 17, 2017): Which airlines offer lie flat seats to Hawaii?

Although an exotic trip to the incredible scenery of Hawaii ranks among the ultimate holidays of a lifetime, getting there can be an exhausting experience. The Hawaiian Islands are located in the middle of the vast Pacific Ocean and although they’re often wrongly labeled as the most remote landmass on earth – that claim to fame belongs to Chili’s Easter Island – the Hawaiian archipelago is still one of the islands farthest away from any continental land mass. Flights from the USA to the idyllic archipelago take at least 5 hours from the West Coast but the time in the air can add up to 12 hours when you are leaving from the USA Coast, and that’s only for when the USA is your point of departure. When I recently flew to Hawaii from central Europe, it took me more than 24 hours to get there.

To ease the misery of the journey, you can either spend big dollars on a seat in a carrier’s Business Class cabin or be smart and use miles to book one for free. It’s important to keep in mind that Business Class is labeled ‘First Class’ for domestic flight within the USA, such as from the USA mainland to/from Hawaii. Although different airlines offer different kinds of First Class seats, your comfort at 40,000 feet en route to Hawaii will not so much depend on the carrier but rather on the aircraft type. Yes, you read that right! These days, the market between Hawaii and the USA mainland is dominated by narrow body planes (e.g. Boeing 737s, Boeing 757s, and Airbus A320s) and that’s not a good thing for First Class travelers since all narrow body aircraft to Hawaii feature recliner seats or angled lie-flat seats rather than fully flat beds. So if you’re heading to Hawaii, make sure you book a seat on a wide body aircraft with lie-flat seats in First Class (e.g. Boeing 777, Boeing 767, or Airbus A330). It’s a bit complicated though since some airlines clearly state when a flight offer flat beds but some do not and in addition, some carriers operate a mix of wide and narrow body aircraft on the same route, offering different types of First Class products.

To help you, I have compiled a list list of all airlines and routes that offer lie-flat seats between the USA mainland and Hawaii. My main advice though is to always check the aircraft type (on the airline’s booking website) and the seat map (on seat guru) to make sure that you will enjoy indeed the best seats en route to paradise. 

Which airline do you prefer to fly to Hawaii? Leave a comment or take my poll below!


UNITED AIRLINES

The Hawaiian Islands are an important part of United’s history. With the maiden departure of a United DC-6 Mainliner from San Francisco to Honolulu in May 1947, United played a major role in helping to make Hawaii an easily accessible destination for tourism and business. In fact, United’s West Coast hubs in Los Angeles and San Francisco remain the USA’s largest gateways for connecting passengers to Hawaii.

Currently, United flies from the following USA key cities to Hawaii with a mixed fleet of Boeings B737, B757, B767 and B777:

The domestic First Class product offered by United on its wide body fleet is quiet decent:

Recently, United announced a considerable increase of service on several routes connecting the continental U.S. and Hawaii (beginning December 20th, 2017), offering customers more flights between the mainland and the Hawaiian Islands than any other carrier:


DELTA AIRLINES

Delta – officially known as Delta Air Lines – also flies from multiple getaways on the USA mainland to the Hawaiian Islands:

Delta operates a not so consistent domestic First Class product on its wide-body fleet:

So basically, when you want a lie-flat seat, you’re safe on Delta’s A330 but the carrier’s B767 are a more risky choice. However, Delta makes it very easy to search for flights with lie-flat seats by adding a bed icon as an amenity in the search results (although there’s always the risk of course of a last-minute aircraft change).

DELTA A330 FIRST CLASS SEAT

AMERICAN AIRLINES

The Boeing B757 used to be the workhorse for the USA’s largest carrier on Hawaii bound routes, especially for flights departing from the West Coast. However, that era came to an end since American replaced its aging B757 fleet by brand new Airbus A321 planes, capable of flying the non-stop route between the West Coast and Hawaii, although the carrier messed up at the start of the A321 operations by accidentally flying a non-ETOPS certified and thus unsafe plane to Hawaii. Unfortunately, the A321s operating on the Hawaii route are not the same as the A321s that fly the transcontinental route between Los Angeles and New York, featuring American’s excellent First Class seats. If you want to fly in a lie-flat seat of American Airlines to Hawaii, you only have three options:

The variation in hard product offered onboard American’s wide-body fleet is a bit similar to what you find on Delta (cf above):

The goods news is that – contrary to Delta – all of American’s B767s that are still in operation have all been refurbished (the older planes with angled seats have been retired), so as long as you fly in one of American’s wide body aircraft to Hawaii, you are sure to get a lie-flat First Class seat.


HAWAIIAN AIRLINES

Hawaii’s flagship carrier offers flights between the tropical islands and New York-JFK, Oakland, Phoenix, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Portland, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco, San Jose and Seattle. At the moment, Hawaiian only flies wide body aircraft to/from Hawaii, although that will change soon since they have ordered several A321 planes to be operated on these routes. Despite its current all wide body aircraft operations to/from the Hawaiian islands, the product offered by Hawaiian Airlines is a mixed bag at best:


OTHER CARRIERS

Alaska Airlines, Virgin America, and Allegiant Air also offer direct flights between the USA mainland and Hawaii, but these carriers only operate narrow body aircraft that feature recliner seats in their First Class cabins.

When your’re departing from Canada, you’ll be flying with either Westjet or Air Canada Rouge, which do not offer lie-flat seats.


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