The Bangkok Airways ATR 72-600 seats 70 passengers across 1 cabin. Every row below is rated on legroom, location and distance from galleys and lavatories.
Verified by John McKeanLast verified 7 July 2026Single source
The Bangkok Airways ATR 72-600 carries 70 passengers across Economy only. Every seat is rated below, so you can see which have the legroom, the window alignment and the quiet — and which sit next to a galley or lavatory.
The seats rated best on this map are 1A, 1C, 1D, 1F. Look for 4 extra-legroom seats for the most room.
Seats rated avoid on this map are 18A, 18C, 18D, 18F, 19A, 19C. These are usually the back rows near the galley and lavatories, or middle seats with no window or aisle.
A short, low-altitude turboprop hop in a two-by-two cabin where every seat is a window or an aisle. Service stays in keeping with the airline's boutique habits, scaled to sectors that are often under an hour.
The front row, facing the bulkhead. The cost is a tray in the armrest and nothing at your feet during take-off, but the floor space itself is the most on the aircraft.
Depends what you value. The rear boards and exits first through the aircraft's back door; the front has the legroom, less lavatory traffic and a longer walk out. The seat beside the rear lavatory is the one to trade away.
Bangkok Airways letters its ATR with window and aisle codes borrowed from its Airbus jets, so four seats across use non-consecutive letters. Nothing is missing; the lettering keeps windows and aisles consistent across the fleet.
70Economy70Total