Back to news
airlinesJun 2, 2026

Southwest Companion Pass 2026: Assigned Seating Impact

Southwest's January 2026 assigned seating and 8-group boarding rollout reshaped the Companion Pass. Here's what stayed, what changed, and the fastest path to 135K.

Event date: Jan 27, 2026 · By Oleg Manko, Editor-in-Chief

Some card links on this page are affiliate links. CreditPoints may earn a commission when you apply via these links. This does not affect our editorial coverage; our full affiliate disclosure explains how we choose what to cover.

Narrow-body Boeing 737-style aircraft parked on tarmac at dawn

Quick summary

Southwest's January 27, 2026 assigned-seating launch reshaped the Companion Pass without touching the 135,000 qualifying-point math.

The companion still flies for taxes (about $5.60 each way domestic) for the rest of the qualifying year plus the full following year.

What changed: the new 8-group boarding system and a "highest benefit wins" rule that actually makes the pass more valuable in practice.

Note

📌 Note — three distinct Southwest events to keep straight: Jan 27, 2026 (assigned seating + 8-group boarding), April 9, 2026 (bag fee INCREASE to $45/$55), and July 29, 2025 (same-fare-class rule).

What happened

For nearly two decades, the Southwest Companion Pass was the best deal in domestic travel — and the most theatrical.

You'd earn 135,000 qualifying points or 100 one-way flights in a calendar year, then a designated companion flies free with you for the rest of that year and all of the next.

Both passengers would line up at the gate, A-list cardholder first, scan a boarding pass, and physically race down the jet bridge to claim a row.

That race ended on January 27, 2026. The 135K math is unchanged. Almost everything else around it is different.

Southwest 2025-2026 change timeline

DateEvent
May 28, 2025Bag fees FIRST introduced ($35 first / $45 second)
July 29, 2025Same-fare-class booking rule for Companion Pass
January 27, 2026Assigned seating + 8-group boarding launches
April 9, 2026Bag fees INCREASED to $45 first / $55 second

The 135K math survived — barely

Start with what didn't change: 135,000 qualifying points or 100 paid one-way flights, earned in a single calendar year, still triggers the pass.

Qualifying points include points earned from flights, Southwest co-branded credit card spend (including welcome bonuses), and base credit card purchases. Transferred Chase Ultimate Rewards points still don't count toward the threshold — that's the rule that's tripped up Chase enthusiasts since 2018.

The companion still flies for just taxes and fees (typically $5.60 each way domestic), and the pass is still valid for the remainder of the qualifying year plus the full following calendar year.

Earn it in February and you get nearly two full years.

The July 29, 2025 same-fare-class tightening

What did quietly tighten was the same-fare-class booking rule that Southwest rolled out July 29, 2025, ahead of the seating launch.

When you book the primary ticket and then add the companion, the companion must be booked in the same fare class as the primary at the time of booking.

If the primary's fare class has sold out by the time you add the companion, you have to upgrade the primary's fare (or wait and hope inventory opens). Minor irritation for most trips, but it can bite during peak windows.

Warning

⚠️ Warning — Companion Pass = 135K qualifying points OR 100 paid flights. Chase UR transfers to Rapid Rewards still don't count toward that threshold.

What the new boarding actually looks like

Southwest replaced open seating with assigned seats and the famous A/B/C numbered cattle call with eight numbered boarding groups.

Pre-boarding still exists for ADA needs. After that:

  • Groups 1-2: Extra Legroom seats, A-List Preferred, Business Select equivalents
  • Groups 3-4: A-List, top-tier cardmembers, Wanna Get Away Plus fares with paid upgrades
  • Groups 5-6: Standard economy by check-in or seat selection time
  • Groups 7-8: Basic economy and last-minute bookings

You pick your seat at booking (or pay to pick one in a better zone), and you board with whichever group your seat or status assigns you.

The A1-15 "buy-up" trick — paying $30-50 at the gate to jump to the front and save a row — is dead. There is nothing to save anymore.

This sounds like a downgrade, and for solo flyers used to gaming open seating, it is. For Companion Pass holders, it's actually a meaningful upgrade — once you understand the "highest benefit wins" rule.

The "highest benefit wins" rule changes the value equation

This is the single most important rule change for Companion Pass holders in 2026, and it's the one most articles have glossed over.

Under the new system, the companion inherits the primary traveler's highest applicable benefit for seating and boarding.

In plain English: if you're A-List Preferred and your companion is a basic Rapid Rewards member, the companion now boards in your group and can sit in the same seating zone you can — without paying for an upgrade.

The companion gets the seat-selection window the primary gets. If the primary holds a Southwest co-branded card with priority boarding, the companion inherits that too.

Before vs after January 27

Before January 27, the companion had to fend for themselves in open seating. They might end up in row 28 middle while you stretched out in row 5 aisle.

Now they're literally next to you, in the zone your status earned.

The 2026 math on this:

  • Extra Legroom + window for two: roughly $40-80 per flight saved on paid upgrades, depending on route
  • Free seat selection in the front zone: $15-30 per segment saved
  • Boarding group inheritance: intangible, but ends the "we got separated" risk completely

Multiply across 30-50 Companion Pass flights a year (typical for someone earning the pass) and the functional value of the pass actually went up in 2026, even though the headline rules didn't change.

If you're new to Chase Ultimate Rewards as a sidecar strategy here, our Chase Sapphire trifecta 2026 breakdown is the place to start.

The fastest path to 135K in 2026

There are three viable paths to 135K in a calendar year, and most successful pass-earners use a combination of two.

Path 1: Two Chase Southwest cards in one year

This is the classic. Open a personal Southwest card (Plus, Premier, or Priority) and a Southwest Performance Business card in the same calendar year.

Welcome bonuses from both — typically 75K-85K combined when both are at high offers — plus organic spend gets you to 135K without flying a single mile.

The SW Priority is the personal card most pass-chasers default to. The $75 annual travel credit and 7,500 anniversary points materially offset its annual fee, and every qualifying dollar counts toward the pass.

Path 2: Flight-heavy mix

If you already fly Southwest 20+ times a year for work, you're getting partway there on flight earnings alone.

Add one Southwest card welcome bonus, and you finish. Cheapest path for road warriors.

Path 3: Strategic Q1 timing

Earn the pass by March 31, and you've got the pass for the remainder of 2026 plus all of 2027 — 21 months.

Earn it in October, and you've effectively burned six months of pass time. Almost all dedicated pass-chasers target a January or February pass.

Note

📌 Note — Chase UR transfers are still useless for the 135K threshold itself. Points transferred from a Sapphire Preferred or Sapphire Reserve to Southwest don't count as qualifying points.

UR transfers are still extremely useful for burning Southwest points on flights once you've earned the pass, especially during transfer bonuses. Our best transfer bonuses of 2026 roundup tracks which Chase transfer bonuses are currently live.

Where the Companion Pass loses ground

It's not all upside. Three real losses in 2026:

  • Same-fare-class lock can force you to upgrade the primary's fare just to add the companion if inventory tightens. On peak holiday weekends, this is a real cost.
  • End of standby flexibility. Open seating used to mean a flexible standby companion just walked on with you. With assigned seats and confirmed boarding groups, standby is now formal and structured — no more "we'll just board together and figure it out."
  • Extra Legroom is now a paid product. Open seating's exit rows were free for whoever got there first. Now they're a buy-up, and Companion Pass holders who want them have to pay for the primary's seat (and the companion inherits it via the highest-benefit rule — small consolation if you're already paying $50 each way).

Who wins

  • Couples earning the pass for the first time in 2026 — boarding inheritance is a real upgrade
  • A-List Preferred holders with non-status companions — companion now boards with you
  • Q1 pass-earners — 21-22 months of validity vs ~12 months for October earners
  • Chase Southwest two-card stackers — combined welcome bonuses still close the 135K gap

Who loses

  • Peak-holiday Companion Pass users — same-fare-class rule forces fare upgrades
  • Casual standby companions — formal standby workflow ends the walk-on era
  • Open-seating gamers — A1-15 buy-up trick is gone
  • Solo Southwest business flyers — pass has no value if you don't fly with someone

How this stacks against Delta, United, American partners

Southwest's Companion Pass is still the best companion benefit in the US airline industry, and the 2026 changes didn't dent that.

  • Delta: companion certificate on the Reserve cards is a one-trip-a-year benefit
  • United: a single round-trip
  • American: doesn't have a true equivalent on its co-brands

The Companion Pass remains a calendar year of unlimited flights for one fee. Even at $5.60 per segment in taxes, a New York-to-Las-Vegas-monthly couple saves more than $4,000 a year.

If you're optimizing a broader portfolio around this, our best travel credit cards 2026 guide walks through how the Southwest Priority slots in alongside a transferable-points anchor like Sapphire Preferred or Sapphire Reserve.

Tip

💡 Tip — Southwest is not a Chase UR transfer partner. The Sapphire cards are useful for the portfolio-level redemption flexibility around Companion Pass travel, not for direct point transfers into Rapid Rewards.

What should you do now

If you and your designated companion fly together six or more round trips a year on Southwest routes (mostly domestic, mostly point-to-point, mostly leisure), the pass remains the single highest-ROI loyalty benefit any US airline offers.

The 2026 changes made the experience of using it dramatically better thanks to seat and boarding inheritance.

The caveat: if you fly Southwest mostly for business solo, the pass has nothing for you. Spend your Chase cards on transferable-points cards instead and use them for international premium cabins. Our Chase Ultimate Rewards transfer partners 2026 reference covers all 14 transfer options.

Bottom line

For everyone else, January-February 2026 is still the optimal earning window for 2027 coverage. The math hasn't changed. The seats just got better.

For broader context on what else Southwest changed this year (including the April 9, 2026 checked-bag fee increase to $45 first / $55 second), see our biggest credit card and travel changes of 2026 retrospective and the state of travel rewards in mid-2026.

Get the next News drop

One weekly email. Issuer changes, transfer bonuses, and award-chart updates — fact-verified, no fluff. Unsubscribe in one click.

~4 issues/month · Free · Sponsored content always disclosed.

More on this story

Frequently Asked Questions

Did Southwest change the 135,000-point threshold for Companion Pass in 2026?

No. The qualifying threshold is still 135,000 qualifying points or 100 paid one-way flights earned in a single calendar year. What changed is the boarding and seating experience — not the earning math.

Do Chase Ultimate Rewards transfers count toward the 135K Companion Pass requirement?

No. Transferred points from Chase cards like the Sapphire Preferred or Sapphire Reserve do not count as qualifying points. Only points earned directly from Southwest co-branded cards, flights, and partners count toward the pass.

What is the "highest benefit wins" rule?

Under the 2026 system, your companion inherits your highest applicable boarding and seating benefit. If you're A-List Preferred or hold a top-tier Southwest card, your companion boards in your group and can sit in the same zone you can — at no extra cost.

Can my companion still fly standby with me?

Yes, but standby is now formally structured rather than the casual open-seating walk-on it used to be. You'll need to add the companion to the standby list officially and wait for confirmation.

What is the same-fare-class rule that started July 29, 2025?

When you add a companion to a primary ticket, the companion must be booked in the same fare class the primary is in at the time of booking. If that fare class has sold out, you may need to upgrade the primary's fare to add the companion.

Which Southwest credit card is best for earning the Companion Pass in 2026?

The Southwest Priority is the most popular personal card for pass-chasers because its annual travel credit and anniversary points offset most of the annual fee. The strongest strategy is opening a Southwest personal card and the Performance Business card in the same calendar year to stack welcome bonuses.

How long is the Companion Pass valid?

The pass is valid for the remainder of the calendar year in which you earn it, plus the entire following calendar year. Earning it in January or February maximizes total pass time at roughly 22-23 months.

Did Extra Legroom seats replace the exit row free-for-all?

Yes. Exit rows and other premium-pitch seats are now part of the paid Extra Legroom product, included in Groups 1-2 boarding. Under "highest benefit wins," a companion inherits these if the primary purchases them.

Is the Companion Pass still worth it compared to Delta or United companion benefits?

Yes, for couples and frequent-companion flyers. Delta's and United's companion benefits are limited to one trip or one round-trip per year. The Southwest Companion Pass is unlimited for the validity period, which is unmatched.

Can I change my designated companion during the pass period?

Yes. Southwest allows you to change your designated companion up to three times per calendar year, though the exact mechanics involve calling or using the website to update.

Fact Verification

Every critical claim in this article has been independently verified against a primary source. We use issuer newsrooms, official airline and hotel announcements, SEC filings, and press releases as the source of truth — never blog summaries.

ClaimSourceVerifiedConfidence
Southwest launched assigned seating and 8-group boarding on January 27, 2026, ending the legacy open-seating + A/B/C systemSouthwest customer enhancements page Jun 2, 2026high
Companion Pass qualifying threshold remains 135,000 qualifying points OR 100 paid one-way flights in a calendar year (unchanged by 2026 boarding overhaul)Southwest Companion Pass official page Jun 2, 2026high
Companion Pass validity: remainder of qualifying year + entire following calendar yearSouthwest Companion Pass official page Jun 2, 2026high
Companion taxes/fees: approximately $5.60 per segment domesticSouthwest Companion Pass terms Jun 2, 2026high
Chase Ultimate Rewards transfers to Southwest do NOT count toward the 135K qualifying-points threshold for Companion Pass (only direct earnings from Southwest co-brand cards + flights qualify)Southwest Companion Pass qualifying-points definition Jun 2, 2026high
"Highest benefit wins" rule under the new boarding system: companion inherits the primary traveler's tier/cardmember/fare boarding+seating benefit (and vice versa)Southwest customer enhancements page Jun 2, 2026high
Same-fare-class booking rule for Companion Pass holders took effect July 29, 2025 (pre-boarding-overhaul tightening): companion must be booked in the same fare class as the primary at time of bookingSouthwest Companion Pass policy update Jun 2, 2026high
Cardholder may change designated companion up to 3 times per calendar yearSouthwest Companion Pass policy Jun 2, 2026high
Southwest Priority annual fee is $149 (current Chase Southwest co-brand)Chase Southwest Priority application page Jun 2, 2026high

Additional Reading

Secondary sources we read while researching this story. Primary verification sources are in the Fact Verification table above.

Cards Mentioned

Southwest Rapid Rewards Priority Card

Chase

SW Priority

Chase Sapphire Preferred

Chase

Sapphire Preferred

Chase Sapphire Reserve

Chase

Sapphire Reserve

Related Guides

More airlines news