The Bulgaria Air Airbus A319-100 seats 140 passengers across 2 cabins. Every row below is rated on legroom, location and distance from galleys and lavatories.
Verified by John McKeanLast verified 8 July 2026Single source
Avoid 24A, 24F (No window at this seat position — wall only); 24B, 24C (Near lavatory (behind) — some queuing traffic and noise); 24D, 24E (Near galley (behind) — expect noise and bright light during meal prep)
The Bulgaria Air Airbus A319-100 carries 140 passengers across Business + Economy. 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.
Seats rated avoid on this map are 24A, 24B, 24C, 24D, 24E, 24F. These are usually the back rows near the galley and lavatories, or middle seats with no window or aisle.
Yes. The Business seats at the front are wider recliners with the middle of each pair left clear, not the same economy seat sold with an empty neighbour. Expect a comfortable short-haul seat, elbow room and early boarding rather than a lie-flat bed.
Economy is the standard six-abreast three-three arrangement, with three seats on each side of a single aisle. It is the familiar European short-haul layout rather than the roomier five-abreast cabin found on the airline's A220s.
A forward row boards and leaves first and sits away from the galley bustle at the back. Window and aisle seats are the pick over the middle, and it is worth avoiding the last few rows nearest the toilets and galley.
The A220 is the more comfortable aircraft where the schedule offers it, thanks to its five-abreast economy layout, bigger windows and quieter cabin. The A319 is a solid six-abreast jet for the short hops it flies, with the same wider Business cabin at the front.
8Business132Economy140Total