Rare pappy1022 Posted September 16, 2022 #1 Share Posted September 16, 2022 I have always been lucky to have direct flights from Dallas to my Regent port of origin and back again. It looks like my upcoming trip that starts in Copenhagen will require either a US domestic city stop or a stop in London or other European city. I understand that if I stop in a US city that Regent Air for that leg is not business class. What if the stop is in London and then off to Copenhagen. Do I get business class the entire way or is the London to Copenhagen leg considered “domestic”? Most of the airlines now charge a fee for selecting seats ahead of time, including business class seats. Do we get to choose seats ahead of time with Regent air at no cost or is there a fee that we pay for to get that “benefit”, or do we not get to choose seats ahead of time? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
papaflamingo Posted September 16, 2022 #2 Share Posted September 16, 2022 I always deviate even though I live in a major hub (Atlanta), so I can pick my own flights. Since we try to always fly Delta, it's no problem reserving our seat at time of the reservation. Additionally, as I understand it, if you are booked on a single airline you should get First Class for the U,.S. domestic leg,. As for Europe, many airlines "first/business class" inter-Europe" is really coach seating in the front rows with the middle seat blocked out. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wcsdkqh Posted September 16, 2022 #3 Share Posted September 16, 2022 Papa is correct. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RJ2002 Posted September 16, 2022 #4 Share Posted September 16, 2022 I also agree with @papaflamingo . Would recommend that you research some of your preferred routings and deviate. Even though the recent chaos at the major European hubs seems to have improved, I would still avoid a connection at airports such as LHR, AMS, CDG, FRA, MUC, and connect in the US somewhere. If you are booked on the same carrier, you'll more than likely have domestic first class seating from AUS or DFW to your longhaul connection city. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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