Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate?

Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate? - White Airplane Under Black Clouds

Every time I come to the airport and arrive to the boarding gate, the same scenario occurs. All passengers are sitting in the area, until boarding is announced. Then, mostly everyone queue up.

I prefer remaining seated until the queue is depleted since it is not a pleasant thing, especially when it was already done at check-in and security.

Also, once in the jet bridge, queuing continues, especially when the staff requires passengers to gate check carry-ons. Then, inside the plane, traffic jams continue as people try to cram their luggage into the overhead bins, aisle-seated passengers get up to give way to others, last-minute re-seating arrangements happen...

A few years ago, when boarding a Virgin America flight at SFO, I had a much more pleasant experience. The gate access was already open long before departure time, and passengers leisurely showed up at the counter, had their boarding passes scanned and headed to the jet bridge. No line or big group of people; it happened like if it was train waiting to depart at a terminus station. In fact, after we boarded, other passengers continued to show up on board, in small groups or by themselves, during the next 20 minutes that led to the actual departure.

Why does not this process get applied to other airlines as well? There is no waiting at all and the experience is much better, in comparison to the traditional "wait until the last minute and call everyone at the gate" method.



Best Answer

There are two main reasons.

  1. Most people don't want to spend any more time sat on a plane than necessary. Would you really want to spend an extra hour sat in one of those tiny seats?
  2. It takes a lot of time to get a plane ready. The airline wants to minimise the amount of time the aircraft is idle at the gate. As soon as the passengers have left, the entire plane needs to be cleaned and restocked - that can't be done with passengers on board. It also needs refuelling - which may or may not be legal to do with passengers on board.

Every minute the plane is on the ground is seen as lost revenue for the airlines. To have the plane idle on the ground while new passengers wander on and off the plane just isn't efficient.




Pictures about "Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate?"

Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate? - Photo of People Boarding Airliner
Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate? - People Walking Towards White Plane
Why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate? - People Walking Inside Airline



Why do people queue at the gate?

Race to the gate To you, it's a race - whoever reaches the gate first gets the comfiest seats. Still, sitting on the floor is not too bad, especially when you're close to the power sockets. As you wait, you wonder whether that's your plane moving near the boarding area.

Why do airlines change gates last minute?

The usual culprits, such as mechanical problems or late arrivals, can force airport operations to shift things around. Throw in some unpredictable weather, and you may be carrying that cinnamon roll a bit longer than you planned. Airports operate two different kinds of gates.

Why do people wait in line to board a plane?

James said: 'When we have a purpose, time goes faster. 'This is why an hour can feel like three weeks if you're bored, but an hour can also feel like five minutes when you have to get up in the morning. 'So queueing for the boarding gate can make it feel like the time is going faster than if you are lounging around.

Can you board a flight last minute?

While flights have a scheduled departure time, there is an unwritten final-boarding rule. The gate agent will often close the door to the plane ten minutes before departure, which, depending on what side of the door you're on, can either mean a huge sigh of relief or a delayed or even ruined trip.



Flight Secrets That Are Never Told To Passengers




More answers regarding why is plane boarding done at the last minute, with everyone suddently queueing at the gate?

Answer 2

You realize a jet airplane costs hundreds of millions of dollars, right? Every moment it spends parked at a gate, instead of racking up revenue-miles, is a dead loss.

The airline wants to turn around every plane (that is, land; park; disembark all the old passengers; clean, refuel, and restock the aircraft; embark all the new passengers; and get back in the air) as quickly as humanly possible.

If a plane is sitting at a gate for an hour or two, that's a mistake, and costly one. It's a mistake that you, as a passenger, may benefit from, in the sense you can board at your leisure, but passengers as whole end up paying higher ticket prices because of mistakes like that.

Once a plane is cruising, the costs of going slow -- the use of the aircraft, the salaries of the crew, and the patience of the passengers -- have to be balanced against the costs of going fast -- the increased consumption of fuel per unit distance and the additional strain on the airframe, but the costs of a plane on the ground aren't balanced by anything but the practical difficulties of quick turnaround.

Answer 3

I know this is an old question but the answer is very simple. In an aircraft's daily schedule, the boarding window is only ~20 min per departure and it's not at the last minute, its when the flight is scheduled to open which is when everyone begins to work that departure. In most cases, immediately after the previous flight closes.

Even if the previous flight closes early, because the aircraft arrived early, operations on the next flight likely cannot begin since crews, ground, cabin and gate, aren't scheduled to work that flight until a certain time.

Answer 4

Some points are already covered by other responders but there is at least one more point that is missed and I'd like to cover that (esp contrasting priorities as I'll explain).

  1. In terms of maintenance and fueling, they have to do that and pass the plane as inspected and still good to go before deciding to continue as the next flight.
  2. In terms of liability, the airlines want to minimize impact to them. Also general safety guidelines dictate that all the work is done before letting humans on board (in a confined space). There are a million problems that could occur starting from the terminal to take off to landing to terminal again. But the best chance of escape or reasonable rescue effort still would be in the terminal if not outside the airport. So again, less time in the aircraft means lower risk
  3. Here is the conflicting priority to the above two. Airlines is a low profit margin business. As such any opportunity to increase profits shouldn't be missed. Business and First class are the money makers for the airlines. They'd rather jump multiple hoops to satisfy one such traveler than 3 or 5 economy passengers. By starting off a queue with the moneymakers going in first, the attendants get a chance to let them settle, offer drinks/food and make sure they are fine. Then they could board others based on other priorities (perhaps economy-plus, perhaps upgraded comfort seats, old persons, pregnant women, etc).

If you remove any sort of priority from the above and put aside the maintenance work then the logical thing to do to expedite the boarding process (with a front boarding scenario) is to actually start boarding from the last row (tail side) first and proceed towards the beginning. This way, the ones in the last row won't prevent the previous row from boarding and settling while they are still adjusting their bags and carry-ons.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Daniel Kist, Longxiang Qian, Stas Knop, Markus Winkler