The Boliviana de Aviación Boeing 737-800 seats 168 passengers across 1 cabin. Every row below is rated on legroom, location and distance from galleys and lavatories.
Verified by John McKeanLast verified 8 July 2026Single source
No standout or problem seats in this cabin.
The Boliviana de Aviación Boeing 737-800 carries 168 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.
No seats are individually rated best on this configuration yet. The front rows of each cabin usually give a small legroom edge and clear quickest on arrival.
No seats are flagged to avoid on this configuration. As a rule, the last rows of Economy, seats beside a galley or lavatory, and middle seats are the ones travellers skip first.
No, the Boliviana 737-800 is single-class economy from front to back. There is no business or premium economy section on this aircraft. Only the A330-200 widebody carries a business cabin in the fleet.
The exit rows give the most legroom, and the forward economy rows leave the aircraft first. On the longest of the three 737 cabins that forward position saves the most time. The seat map shows where the exit rows sit.
Rows backing onto a galley or lavatory wall can limit recline and sit near cabin traffic, so check them first. The rearmost rows are closest to the rear galley and the furthest walk on exit. The notes flag these positions where they apply.
It shares the same single-class economy product as the -300 and -700, so the seat itself is comparable. The main difference is cabin length, which makes seat position more important on the -800. Check the specific map for the exit rows and service walls.
168Economy168Total