Seat position
Understand likely window, aisle, and middle positions from the seat letter and cabin block.
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Preparing live flight tools, airport boards, and seat map information.
Seat map checker
Enter an aircraft type and optional seat number to preview a generic cabin layout. AeroTrack highlights whether the seat is likely to be a window, aisle, or middle seat and gives quick context for common Airbus and Boeing aircraft families.
Seat map
Open aircraft cabin view and highlight a seat
Enter an aircraft type
Try A320, B777, B787, A350, A380, A321, or B737.
Understand likely window, aisle, and middle positions from the seat letter and cabin block.
Compare common narrow-body, wide-body, and double-deck aircraft family layouts.
Use the map as planning guidance and confirm exact layouts with the operating airline.
Supported aircraft
A320
Typical 3-3 narrow-body layout used on short and medium haul routes.
A321
Longer narrow-body cabin with more rows and similar seat lettering.
B737
Common 3-3 single-aisle layout across domestic and regional networks.
B777
Wide-body cabin with left, center, and right seat blocks.
B787
Wide-body cabin with long-haul seat blocks and large windows.
A350
Modern wide-body cabin often used on long international routes.
A380
Large double-deck aircraft previewed with a main-deck economy layout.
Dedicated aircraft pages
Seat map search coverage
AeroTrack supports common seat-selection searches for aircraft cabin maps, airplane seating charts, economy layouts, window seats, aisle seats, middle seats, exit rows, bulkhead rows, wide-body cabins, and narrow-body aircraft families.
Cabin knowledge
Usually the outermost letters in each row, useful for views, leaning against the cabin wall, and minimizing disturbance.
Seats beside the aisle, useful for passengers who want easier movement, quicker exit, or less climbing over others.
Seats between two passengers or between a window and aisle; usually less preferred on economy layouts.
Rows near emergency exits that may offer extra legroom but can include safety requirements, fixed armrests, or storage rules.
First rows behind a cabin wall or divider; they may have extra knee space but different screen and tray-table positions.
Food-preparation areas that can bring more light, crew activity, noise, and foot traffic on long flights.
Convenient for access but sometimes busier because passengers queue nearby.
The distance between one point on a seat and the same point on the seat in front, often used as a legroom indicator.
How to use it
1. Enter aircraft type such as A320 or B787.
2. Add a seat number such as 12A or 24C.
3. Review the highlighted seat position and cabin row.