I used this trick to figure it out for a recent flight:
That means that there were only 9 seats left on this flight. Should be able to use this trick on most website’s although it is not 100% perfect. There are other reasons why seats might not be available, but this will give you a very good idea.
There are several tools you can use to find out about load. Many frequent fliers will choose their flight not based on convenient times, but on likelihood of getting an upgrade, for example.
I have never used either, but on the FlyerTalk forums, people used to always paste KVS results and these days they seem to mostly post expert flyer results when they’re helping each other plan something epic. There could easily be more tools, these are just two I have heard of. There is a big list on flyaow.com which is a site I used to use to check availability, but which doesn’t offer that any more.
Back when I had status, my dream flight was super full in economy (no more seats for sale, or less than 9 in the top few buckets, 0 in the lower buckets, meaning it’s overbooked) and wide open in business. That is a flight where op-ups will be happening if all the economy people show up. And yes, I have chosen flights based on that (or chosen for another reason but then monitored my flight), seen that pattern, and got an op-up. But that was long ago.
Partial answer:
Airlines that allow you to select seats during booking show how many seats are available, I’ve used this myself. However the further ahead of the flight you book the more likely it is that more passengers sign up.
That said, you can check the same flight for a number of days coming up after the current date and you should get a good idea of the average. This has worked great for me.
But do note that this does indeed take some time, especially if you are comparing different airlines on the same stretch. But if you’ve got 20-30 spare minutes, it works.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024