Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 28
United Gives $650 Voucher for Broken $7,388 Polaris Seat on 14-Hour China Flight
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 28

United Gives $650 Voucher for Broken $7,388 Polaris Seat on 14-Hour China Flight

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 28
  • $650 in travel vouchers was the final compensation United gave a passenger whose $7,388 Polaris seat malfunctioned on a San Francisco-to-Beijing flight, after initial offers of $150 and then $350.
  • About 90 minutes after dinner, the business-class seat stopped responding, was manually forced flat, and left the passenger unable to access her seatbelt for most of the 14-hour trip despite turbulence warnings.
  • No alternate seat was available, and the passenger had sought 250,000 miles—about $3,000—arguing the voucher offer was far below the value of the disrupted premium fare.
  • United spokesman Charlie Hobart said the airline considered the outcome fair and more than typical for such complaints, while the case reflects a broader pattern of business-class seat failures drawing only limited compensation.
As airlines expand premium cabins, is a broken $7,388 seat truly worth only a $650 voucher?
With its new flight attendant contract, will United change how it compensates its most valuable passengers?
When a seat failure blocks a seatbelt for hours, is it a service issue or a safety violation?