The Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 seats 189 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
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Avoid 12A, 12F (No window at this seat position — wall only); 14A, 14B, 14E, 14F (Seat may not fully recline — exit row behind requires clear path); 30A, 30B, 30C, 30D, 30E, 30F (Near lavatory (behind) — some queuing traffic and noise); 31A, 31B, 31C, 31D, 31E, 31F, 32A, 32B, 32C, 32D, 32E, 32F (Immediately adjacent to lavatory (behind) — expect noise, odors, and queuing traffic)
The Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 carries 189 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, 1B, 1C, 2D, 2E, 2F. Another 12 seats are rated best or good. Look for 18 extra-legroom seats for the most room.
Seats rated avoid on this map are 12A, 12F, 14A, 14B, 14E, 14F. Another 18 seats are rated avoid. These are usually the back rows near the galley and lavatories, or middle seats with no window or aisle.
Not on this version, which is a single economy cabin throughout. A smaller set of Jeju's 737s carries a genuine two-by-two Bizlite cabin at the front, so check the layout for your flight rather than assuming either way.
The over-wing exit rows for legroom, and the forward rows for a quieter ride and the quickest exit. A window or aisle beats a middle everywhere, and on these dense holiday routes the good rows go early.
The last few rows, which sit against the rear galley and lavatories, collect the queue on a full flight and deplane last. Middles mid-cabin are the standard fallback rather than a genuine problem.
For the single-class MAX 8, yes, seat for seat: same three-by-three cabin, same exits, same rear-row caution. The MAX is the newer, quieter airframe, so between the two it is the better ride in the same map.
189Economy189Total