AITA for trying to go to the front of the plane?

A traveler on a short flight, seated in the aisle with just a small carry-on, stood up after the seatbelt sign turned off and casually walked forward as passengers ahead fumbled with bags—nothing aggressive, no shoving.

Suddenly, someone barked that it’s basic “plane etiquette” to never pass rows in front, waiting strictly for your turn. The poster, caught off guard, had never heard this rule and wondered if they’re clueless or if the yeller overreacted.

‘AITA for trying to go to the front of the plane?’

The flight was short, with the poster in an aisle seat and minimal luggage:

A few months ago I was on a short flight and had an aisle seat with a small carry-on.

As the plane landed, I figured I could get up and try to save some time waiting for people by walking down the aisle as people started dealing with their...

The seatbelt light was already off and I didn't push through people or anything.

They moved forward politely:

As I was making my way, someone from an aisle seat yelled at me to stop and informed me that it is "plane etiquette" to never cross people sitting in...

I never heard or this before. Is this some common knowledge I'm ignorant to? Am I the a__hole for going to the front?

Deplaning etiquette varies by culture and region, but no universal hard rule mandates strict row-by-row exit. In many places—especially Europe, Asia, Australia—passengers often move forward if the aisle clears, prioritizing efficiency without aggression.

In the US, some expect “zipper” merging or waiting turns, viewing forward movement as line-cutting, akin to queue-jumping frustration. Flight attendants rarely enforce it unless safety issues arise, focusing on orderly flow.

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The yeller’s reaction escalated a gray-area preference into absolute law, ignoring context like short flights or ready passengers. Politeness matters: no shoving, helping with bags if needed.

Ultimately, minor infractions like this rarely make someone an asshole—intent and disruption count more. Awareness grows with travel; next time, gauge the vibe or ask crew for local norms.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

Redditors split roughly down regional lines, with strong opinions on both sides no clear majority, but plenty calling it cultural rather than universal:

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Many said YTA or soft YTA, viewing it as basic courtesy like not cutting queues:

HolidayAbrocoma - YTA, albeit unintentionally. You're basically cutting the line. You don't think all those people in front of you want to get off just as badly as you do?

not3catsintrenchcoat - YTA. You are supposed to until it's your row's turn, unless you are rushing to make a connecting flight. Consider the people in front of your with bags...

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Bonfire0fTheManatees - YTA. Unless the plane is late and you have a super tight connection or something, people exit by row order. If you’ve flown more than two or three...

But whether or not you didn’t know, your decision failed the basic a__hole litmus of: “If everyone behaved the way I did, would the world be a better or worse...

Others called NTA, saying it’s not a real rule and move if clear:

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wrracct - NTA. As someone who traveled twice a week 50 weeks of the year, not a thing. When folks are stuck (not moving) then yes, you deplane in zipper...

CunningStuntTeam - NTA I’ve never heard of that either. You have to wait? Even though you’re ready and have your bag? Simply because it’s not your turn? ?? Imagine if...

[Reddit User] - NTA. Zipper formation (in my mind) is only applicable for people who have to stand up and get their luggage from OH. If there’s no one in...

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Mac4491 - NTA What? ! So long as you're not getting in someone's way as they try to get their stuff from the overhead lockers then you're good.

[Reddit User] - NTA, it's different if you pushed passed people to get to the front but imo there's no reason to wait for slow people just because they happen...

DirtyBirdDawg - NTA. I've flown close to a dozen times in a bunch of different countries and I have never heard of this "rule. " If someone sitting behind is...

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TheSmallestTopo - NTA. I'm reading a lot of people saying that you should wait for everyone in front of you. I have done a lot of travelling in Australia, Europe...

tenminutesbeforenoon - NTA. You didn’t know and you didn’t do it on purpose... Soooo apparently it’s etiquette in America...

A few went NAH or noted cultural splits:

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SillyMidOff49 - NAH You didn’t know. But yes, pretty common plane etiquette...

littlethreeskulls - NTA, I've flown between canada and the us multiple times a year for 8 years and have never heard anything like that before...

RaggyGsy - NTA I’m adding mine in here, because there really does seem to be a split. I’m UK based... But we don’t “zipper” out of a plane...

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NotAnotherThrowback - There's something off with your story. I've never been on a plane where the aisle is completely empty...

No consensus—etiquette seems regional, with Americans leaning stricter row order and others more go-with-flow if clear. The poster didn’t shove or disrupt, just moved politely, so hardly a major jerk move. Ever gotten called out for plane habits you didn’t know? What’s your deplaning style—strict rows or free-for-all when possible? Debate below!

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