A Southwest Airlines customer claims she was shamed before boarding the plane.
Erika, a self-professed frequent flyer, was allegedly subjected to size-discrimination by a Southwest gate agent, who tried forcing the Nebraskan to purchase an extra seat due to her full figure ahead of a recent flight to Las Vegas.
“The agent said something like, ‘Are you interested in extra room?’” Erika, a hairdresser, recalled in a viral vid with over 1.1 million views. “And I go, ‘Wait, do you mean like an extra seat?’ And she goes, ‘Yeah.’ And I go, ‘Oh no, I don’t need an extra seat.’”
Erika, who was traveling to Sin City with her best friend to catch a Backstreet Boys concert, conceded that although she is considered “bigger, plus size, overweight, fat or whatever you wanna call it,” the brunette claims to have never needed more than one airplane seat.
“I go, ‘Wait, are you saying I need an extra seat because I’m bigger,’” Erika continued. “And she goes, ‘It’s for the safety and of other passengers.’”
The comment not only stunned Erika, but also ruffled the feathers of seething social media commenters for whom corporate body-shaming just won’t fly.
Representatives for Southwest Airlines did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for a comment.
The company did, however, enact a new, controversial policy that raises ticket prices for plus-size passengers at the dawn of 2026.
Its “Customer of Size” regulations read, “Customers who encroach upon the neighboring seat(s) should proactively purchase the needed number of seats prior to travel to ensure the additional seat is available,” per the website.
“The armrest is considered to be the definitive boundary between seats,” the policy continues, “In addition, Southwest may determine, in its sole discretion, that an additional seat is necessary for safety purposes.”
Elsewhere on the site, the company reemphasizes its size guidelines.
“If you did not purchase an additional seat in advance and our Employees determine that a second seat is needed,” it states, “You will be required to purchase an additional seat and pay any applicable seat fee at the airport (at the applicable fare available on the day of travel).”
Still, appalled online audiences blew a fuse over the seemingly fat-phobic treatment.
“Sounds like Southwest is profiling and discriminating against customers just to make more money,” raved an incensed viewer beneath Erika’s post.
“It seems subjective,” another wrote. “Your size is going to be based on whoever is looking at you.”
“This practice is extremely discriminatory and embarrassing,” spat an equally outraged onlooker.
“I sat next to a guy with muscles who didn’t fit in his seat, [the customer size policy was] not enforced there,” alleged another critic.
Erika is far from the only plus-size jet-setter to find themselves at the center of an airline uproar. While some rush to put commercial carriers on blast for their fat-shaming antics, others simply ignore the extra seat drama altogether.
But Erika wasn’t about to let the sky-high shade slide.
After the intense incident with the Southwest gate agent, she claims to have boarded the flight, sat down and touched down in Vegas sans incident. She even bragged, “Guess what, my fat a– fit in the seat.”
In a follow-up clip, the triggered tripper claimed she’d received a full refund for the flight based on “how poorly” her situation was handled.
“Southwest,” she directed at the company, “it’s still not okay.”
“Do better.”
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