Premium Economy has increasingly become the sweet spot for long-haul flyers who want a genuine comfort upgrade without paying business-class prices. In this article, we compare five leading premium economy products from British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines to identify which cabins offer the most comfortable experience for passengers. We use seat pitch as a principal metric for comfort ranking, as it is the most straightforward and comparable measure of personal space and legroom offered across airlines in the North Atlantic.
We supplement this with two additional data points to provide a comprehensive comparative reading across the five carriers that offer service across the North Atlantic, with seat width and aircraft coverage being our two secondary metrics. These figures are taken directly from airline specification pages and recent product briefings, focusing on standard long-haul configurations rather than one-off layouts. Where these kinds of ranges exist (airlines have marginally different products across different aircraft with premium economy cabins), we highlight the typical comfort levels that passengers are the most likely to encounter. We do not factor in soft-product elements such as food, service, or amenity kits, which can vary significantly by either route or season. We analyze these through a strict hard-product comparison that focuses on identifying the maximum available in-cabin comfort.
Virgin Atlantic's Premium Seat pitch: ~38 inches (96 cm)
The Virgin Atlantic Premium cabin has quietly become one of the benchmark products in the premium economy market, and the airline's hardware explains why. Seats offer a generous 38-inch pitch across the fleet, with a seven- to eight-inch recline and leather upholstery, putting legroom on par with domestic first class in the United States. Seat width ultimately varies by aircraft, with it exceeding 20 inches on the Airbus A330 and the Boeing 787-9. While the Airbus A350-1000 offers slightly weaker width, even tighter layouts still offer a noticeable step-up in terms of comfort over what is offered to passengers traveling in the standard economy class cabin.
Category
Specification
Seat width
Up to 21 in (53 cm)
Aircraft offering this cabin
Airbus A350-1000 Airbus A330-300 Airbus A330-900neo Boeing 787-9
Power outlets, USB ports, and large seatback screens, some of which are as large as 13.3 inches, make the cabin feel closer in terms of comfort to a cut-down business-class cabin than to a glorified extra-legroom row. The dedicated Premium cabin, which seats between 35 and 56 in its own zone between Upper Class and economy, adds to an overall sense of separation and calm. The airline's soft product is another one of its strengths, with Virgin Atlantic winning Skytrax's 2025 award for Best Premium Economy Class Cabin and topping the rankings in terms of catering.
This reflects Virgin Atlantic's continued focus on offering an elevated level of passenger service in its premium cabin, including welcome drinks and attentive service. The principal drawback is ultimately inconsistency in terms of seat width and the lack of legrests, which some passengers notice on overnight flights. Overall, Virgin's Premium cabin strikes one of the best balances of space, ambience, and perks in the market, especially on flagship Airbus A350 and Airbus A330neo routes where the newest seats and entertainment systems have already been installed.
United Airlines' Premium Plus Seat pitch: ~38 inches (96 cm)
United Airlines' Premium Plus cabin product feels like a solid, more comfortable version of economy that leans heavily on offering customers additional space and improved practicality as opposed to a flashy design. The core win is the impressive pitch and elevated seat width, which collectively deliver a meaningful step up from United's standard economy class and extra-legroom economy-class products. On aircraft like the Boeing 787-9, Collins MiQ seats in a 2-3-2 layout pair that are spaced with up to six inches of recline, alongside legrests, footrests, and large high-definition viewing screens.
Category
Specification
Seat width
~18.5-19 in (~47-48 cm)
Aircraft offering this cabin
Boeing 767-300ER Boeing 777-200ER/300ER Boeing 787-8/9/10
These comforts make long overnight flights more manageable, even without the comfort of a lie-flat seat. The separate cabin, which is usually just a few rows between Polaris and economy, helps with noise and traffic. The product is now available on most long-haul Boeing 767, Boeing 777, and Boeing 787 services, in addition to premium transcontinental operations. Where United Premium Plus stands out is in the bundled extras, with two checked bags, Premium Access check-in, and priority boarding.
The airline also offers enhanced meals with complimentary beer, wine, and spirits, alongside upgraded bedding and amenity kits on many flights, alongside discounted club access. The main drawbacks are inconsistency across airframes, including older Boeing 767s and Boeing 777s, which feel noticeably more dated. Pricing can also creep close to discounted business class seats on peak days. Still, for travelers who value hard-product comfort, United's Premium Plus cabin is one of the more compelling business class options on most international flights to and from the United States, especially on the Dreamliner fleet.
Related The Airlines That Offer Plenty Of Premium Economy Seats On US Flights To Europe
While premium economy isn't everyone's cup of tea, it certainly represents an important market on the transatlantic corridor.
Posts 2 By Jake Hardiman Feb 7, 2025 American Airlines' Premium Economy Seat pitch: 38 inches (96 cm)
American Airlines' Premium Economy is a very by-the-book implementation of this particular cabin, which offers competitive comfort and is made widely available to passengers all across the airline's network. With a headline pitch that offers some solid passenger comfort and width that sits at the higher end of most specification charts (specifically on the Boeing 777 and the Boeing 787 Dreamliner fleets), this is undoubtedly a premium product. The real bump in comfort offers a better experience on overnight sectors to Europe, South America, and Asia compared with Main Cabin Extra. The airline's hardware is consistent, with a 2-3-2 or 2-4-2 layout, depending on which specific Boeing 777 or Boeing 787 model the airline is choosing to deploy it on. All models are fitted with large seatback entertainment screens and solid personal storage.
Category
Specification
Seat width
~18.5-19 in (~47-48 cm)
Aircraft offering this cabin
Boeing 777-200/-300ER Boeing 787-8/9 Airbus A321XLR
Soft-product upgrades are where American Airlines continues to add value. Premium Economy tickets now include a pair of checked bags, priority check-in, and better meals served on porcelain, alongside complimentary beer, wine, and spirits on most international routes. Amenity kits and upgraded pillows, and blankets nudge the experience towards something similar to what one would find in business class.
Coverage is another place where American Airlines continues to demonstrate its advantage in premium economy. The cabin is now standard on all Boeing 777-200, Boeing 777-300, Boeing 787-8, and Boeing 787-9 models. American Airlines is also planning to extend a small forward cabin to the Airbus A321XLR, which is set to feature 12 seats.
British Airways' World Traveller Plus Seat pitch: 38 inches (96 cm)
British Airways World Traveller Plus is one of the more mature cabins within the premium economy market, having been in service for well over a decade. This cabin has been clearly designed as a step-up from the main cabin rather than a slightly nicer economy attachment. Seats, in general, offer generous pitch and width, providing the passenger with significantly more room to spread out. This translates directly into more breathing room on overnight flights compared to those that have dense 3-3-3 or 3-4-3 layouts.
Category
Specification
Seat width
~18.5-19 in (~47-48 cm)
Aircraft offering this cabin
Boeing 777-200/-300 Boeing 787-8/9/10 Airbus A380 Airbus A350-1000
The recline is deeper, with adjustable headrests and footrests or legrests depending on which row, and each seat gets a larger high-definition television screen, in-seat power availability, and USB port access. The cabin itself is usually on the smaller side, being a self-contained zone between Club World and World Traveller cabins. This helps reduce noise and foot traffic while making the experience feel more separate than some competitors.
The airline's soft product steadily continues to improve, with meals closer to business-lite than economy, with upgraded presentation and complimentary bar service, alongside better pillows and blankets on overnight sectors. The principal drawbacks are that some older Boeing 777s and Boeing 787s have slightly tired interiors, and British Airways' pricing can fluctuate widely. On core routes from London, World Traveller Plus remains an appealing middle ground between tight economy-class seats and those in Club World.
Delta Premium Select Seat pitch: 38 inches (96 cm)
Delta Air Lines Premium Select is a textbook example of what premium economy should be, and it is a clear, tangible upgrade in both space and amenities that keeps passengers from straying into business-class pricing. Seats offer industry-leading pitch and width, with as much as seven inches of recline, alongside adjustable legrests and footrests on most widebody models, according to the carrier's website.
Category
Specification
Seat width
~18.5-19 in (~47-48 cm)
Aircraft offering this cabin
Airbus A350-900 Airbus A330-900neo Airbus A330-300 Boeing 767-300ER/400ER
This combination makes a large difference when it comes to long-haul flights, especially when compared with the Main Cabin's pitch or even that of extra-legroom economy, which Delta markets as Delta Comfort+. The product is now found on key long-haul models like the Airbus A350-900 and the Airbus A330-900neo.
Retrofitted Boeing 767-300ER and Boeing 767-300ER models offer exceptionally comfortable premium economy cabins as well. Beyond the seat itself, Premium Select customers can also access SkyPriority check-in and boarding, alongside upgraded multi-course meals with complimentary drinks, improved bedding, and branded amenity kits. The principal drawbacks include cabin inconsistency and the 2-4-2 layout that is present on some aircraft.