Air France Airbus A220-300 seat map
Seat map
Hover or tap any seat to see its rating and details.
Tap or hover a seat for its rating and details. On a phone, pinch to zoom and drag to pan.
Best & worst seats
Our rating engine's picks for this cabin layout — see any seat's full reasoning in the map above.
- 1A — Faces the forward lavatory — possible noise and queueing.
- 1C, 1D, 1E — Bulkhead row — no seat ahead, so carry-ons must go in the overhead bin for taxi, take-off and landing.
- 1F — Faces the forward galley — light, noise and crew activity during service.
- 30A — Last row: the seatback is close to the rear wall and reclines little.
Cabins
Air France Economy / Business (movable Eurocabin curtain)
- Pitch
- 30"estimated
- Width
- 18.9"published
- Seat
- Standard seat
- Power
- USB-A · USB-C
Air France publishes the seat width as 48 cm (18.9 in) — "the widest on the market" — and states the seat reclines to 118 degrees, but does not publish seat pitch on the A220; the pitch value is an estimate pending a citable source.
Onboard facilities
Drawn on the interactive map above — hover a monument to confirm its position.
3 lavatories · 2 galleys · 3 door pairs
Amenities
Sources
Every measurement and claim on this page traces back to one of these. Last verified Jul 14, 2026.
- Air FrancePRIMARY SOURCERetrieved Jul 14, 2026
Air France A220-300 cabin: 148 seats in a 2-3 layout giving ~80% of customers a window or aisle seat; two cabins (Business and Economy) with a movable front curtain; the widest economy seat on the market at 48 cm; reclines to 118 degrees; adjustable headrest, leather upholstery, tray table, seatback tablet/smartphone holder, USB-A and fast USB-C ports; Air France Connect Wi-Fi; largest windows in the class and up to 20% more overhead stowage; 3 lavatories.
corporate.airfrance.com returns HTTP 403 to direct curl/WebFetch and the Claude browser was not connected, so no byte snapshot could be captured; the cited figures are Air France's own press-release text as surfaced by web search. The seat-count, layout and dimension figures are corroborated by the neutral Wikipedia fleet snapshot below.
https://corporate.airfrance.com/en/press-releases/air-france-unveils-its-first-airbus-a220-300 ↗ - Air FrancePRIMARY SOURCERetrieved Jul 14, 2026
Air France A220-300 entered commercial service on 31 October 2021 (first flights Paris-CDG to Berlin and Venice); reiterates the two-cabin 148-seat A220-300 cabin, USB power, seatback device holder and Air France Connect Wi-Fi.
corporate.airfrance.com returns HTTP 403 to direct curl/WebFetch and no browser was available, so no byte snapshot was captured; content is Air France's own press-release text via web search. Used for the entry-into-service timeline and to corroborate the cabin description.
https://corporate.airfrance.com/en/press-releases/air-frances-airbus-a220-300-enters-commercial-service-and-takes-berlin-and-venice ↗ - WikipediaINDEPENDENT SOURCERetrieved Jul 14, 2026
Air France fleet table: 57 Airbus A220-300 in service, single-class 148-seat (all-Economy) configuration, ordered to replace the A318 and A319.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_France_fleet ↗
PUBLISHED (Air France press releases "Air France unveils its first Airbus A220-300" and "…enters commercial service"): 148 seats in a 2-3 layout (5 abreast) giving ~80% of customers a window or aisle seat; the widest economy seat on the market at 48 cm (18.9 in); adjustable headrest, leather upholstery, a tray table, USB-A and fast USB-C (60 W) ports and a tablet/smartphone holder in the seatback; Air France Connect Wi-Fi; the largest windows in the class (~11 in wide x 16 in tall) and up to 20% more overhead stowage; and 3 lavatories (one forward reserved for Business, two in the aft galley). Two cabins — Business and Economy — are created with a MOVABLE curtain at the front of a single physical 2-3 deck; the Business block is sized by demand up to a maximum of ~23 seats (8 rows) with the two adjacent seats in each business row (columns C and E) kept free. PUBLISHED (Wikipedia, Air France fleet): 57 A220-300 in service, single-class 148-seat (all-Economy) configuration replacing the A318/A319. MODELING (AUTHORING.md 6): because the seats are identical Economy hardware and no fixed cabin boundary exists, this is ONE economy cabin (canonicalTier economy) with Business expressed as a demand-dependent ZONE (representative maximum rows 1-8); no seat is assigned a Business tier, so cabinSummary carries no J token and all 148 seats sell as Economy on a full-economy flight (nothing marked bookable:false). COLUMN LETTERING: Air France letters the 2-3 as A,C (pair) | D,E,F (triple), skipping B; this is what makes "seats C and E are not sold in Business" the two Euro-Business empty seats (aisle-of-pair C and middle-of-triple E), and yields the published 80% window/aisle share (A,C,D,F window/aisle; only E middle). DERIVED / no published Air France seat map: the row grid (rows 1-30), the single over-wing exit row (row 12, with the two window seats A and F removed for the exit passage per standard A220-300 door geometry), the wing extent (rows ~11-16, over_wing), the forward Door 1 / galley / Business-lavatory monuments, and the aft Door 2 / galley / two lavatories are reconstructed from A220-300 geometry and the golden A220 exemplar (dl-223-130), not read from an airline LOPA. Row 1 (bulkhead) and row 30 (last row, aft galley/lavatories) carry the usual bulkhead/rear-monument drawbacks. Seat pitch is not published by Air France and is an unsourced estimate; recline is published only as "reclines to 118 degrees" (kept in the seat description, not forced into a numeric recline-travel field). windowAlignment is "unknown" for every window seat: no A220 window-belt engineering grid exists and there is no published Air France map, so no full/partial/none is asserted. Exit-row seats have more legroom (flagged extra_legroom, rated good) but are NOT modeled as a separately-sold extra-legroom product (no Air France source brands an A220 extra-legroom fare), so they remain Economy (Y) rather than an N tier.
What changed
- Jul 14, 2026Initial creation of the Air France A220-300 148-seat single-class config (148Y). Layout derived from Air France press-release counts (148 seats, 2-3, 48 cm width, 3 lavatories) + Wikipedia fleet (57 aircraft) and the golden A220 exemplar geometry; forward Business modeled as a demand-dependent movable-curtain zone with no J token (Euro pattern).