Boeing · Narrowbody jet
The Boeing 737 MAX 8 is a single-aisle airliner cruising near FL390. With a 3.54 m cabin you feel small disturbances more directly than on a widebody, but it sits in the smoothest narrowbody altitude band.
Smoothest seats
Seats above the wing root sit at the aircraft's pivot point. Pick rows in the over-wing exit area or just forward of it — that's the area of smallest amplitude when the aircraft pitches in response to a gust.
Most amplified
On a shorter aircraft like the Boeing 737 MAX 8 the worst zones are the very last rows and the very front rows — both ends of the lever. The asymmetry isn't as pronounced as on a long jet, but you'll still notice more motion at either end than over the wing.
An airliner pivots around its centre of lift, which sits roughly above the wing root. Seats over the wing are at that fulcrum, so they see the smallest amplitude of motion when the aircraft is gusted. Move forward or aft and you're further out on the lever — your vertical motion when the aircraft pitches gets amplified. The Boeing 737 MAX 8 has a medium-length fuselage (39.5 m) and a mid-width cabin (3.54 m). Shorter airframes feel more symmetric — the lever is shorter at both ends. The mid-width cabin sits between the two: not as damped as a widebody, not as direct as a regional jet.
Typical for modern narrowbodies. Bumpier than widebodies of the same generation, smoother than regional jets and turboprops.
Seat advice gets you the smoothest cabin position. Combine it with a real forecast to know whether to expect a smooth, light, or moderate ride on your route.
Entered service: 2017. Specifications above are typical/approximate; minor variant differences (winglet vs sharklet, engine option, IFE configuration) don't materially change the ride characteristics described.