Review: Lufthansa A350 Allegris business class suite
Was Lufthansa’s radical new approach to business class worth the wait?
Executive Traveller exclusive
Lufthansa’s new Allegris business class presents a very different way to think about your travel experience.
There’s not just one Lufthansa Allegris business class seat, but as many as eight – although these are essentially variations of a ‘core’ product with the same solid set of shared features.
Do you want more privacy? Extra legroom? More space to work or relax? How about sharing a pair of middle seats with your partner?
Those are all part of the Allegris puzzle, although Lufthansa sees this more as a solution to avoid the sameness of business class and letting travellers choose a seat to suit their needs beyond ‘window or aisle’.
Read more: Your guide to Lufthansa’s new A350 business class
But the prize pick will be the private suites in the very first row of the business class cabin – and that’s where I found myself when Executive Traveller joined the inaugural flight of the first Lufthansa A350 with Allegris business class (as well as next-gen premium economy recliners and refined economy seats).
Lufthansa A350 Allegris suite: what’s different?
The Allegris suites are differentiated from other Allegris business class seats in five key ways:
- 140cm-tall walls and a sliding door for privacy
- a larger footprint, delivering more space plus better legroom for sleeping
- 27” (68cm) video screen, compared to the usual 18” (45cm) panels (note that the solo or ‘throne’ seats also sport a 27” monitor)
- personal wardrobe
- additional storage pockets, including a ‘mini-bar’ compartment that’s really just a non-chilled nook for two bottles of water (as seen below)
Given all these extras, it’s understandable that as the Allegris rollout gathers speed Lufthansa will charge extra to choose these suites – as it will for most other Allegris variants, with entry-level fares assigned to the aisle-adjacent ‘window’ seats.
The airline has yet to reveal how much more you’ll pay for the suite life, or even if these will be primo private pews will be complimentary for its top-tier Senator and HON Circle frequent flyers.
But for now, at least, every type of Allegris business class seat is free for passengers to choose when making their booking or any time after.
There are four Allegris business suites in the front row of each business class cabin, delivering eight suites on the A350 (which has two business class cabins) and four on the single-cabin Boeing 787.
Each row has two single suites by the window, while the middle pair sports a divider which can be slid out of the way for sociability and sharing the journey with your partner.
While this creates a very open ‘double suite’ mode, you don’t get the ‘double bed experience’ of Singapore Airlines’ equivalent A380 business class seats or Qatar Airways’ Qsuites.
Of course, there’s no constraint on choosing either of these middle suites if you’re travelling solo: just keep that divider closed and things will be as private as you’ll get without being in first class.
And yes, the A350 will have its own Allegris first class cabin sitting just ahead of business class, with three fully-enclosed suites – including a spacious ‘double suite’ designed for couples traveling together.
However, those suites are awaiting certification from the European aviation regulator, so they won’t be seen on the A350s until the end of this year.
Lufthansa A350 Allegris suite: first impressions
On Lufthansa’s inaugural Allegris A350 flight, I was assigned seat 2D – one of the middle Allegris suites – and as I settled into the suite, I was immediately struck by the sheer amount of space.
There’s insane legroom for anybody but a professional basketballer, and even with the door facing the aisle closed I didn’t feel hemmed in or claustrophobic – instead, my suite was more like a cosy little cocoon above the clouds.
As I explored the Allegris suite, it became obvious how well all this space has been used.
That’s actually a central theme of Allegris: Lufthansa has tapped the entire width of the aircraft cabin and even leveraged the relationship between the seats to customise the basic business class seat design at least a half-dozen different ways.
In the case of the Allegris suites, there are handy cupboards and compartments for keeping assorted personal items – laptops, tablets and phones, headphones and cables, books and magazines, reading glasses, amenity kits – close at hand yet out of the way until you need them. It’s a clutter-free approach to make Marie Kondo proud.
It’s also worth noting that the first of the A350’s two business class cabins, although not the second, does away with the central overhead bins to emphasise the jet’s roominess. Thankfully the above-window bins have ample room for everyone’s carry-on bags.
And while the suites at either side (the A and K suites) have a personal wardrobe at the front of the suite, next to the video screen...
... the wardrobe for each of the two middle suites (D and G) is found outside the suite, being built into the wall between business and first cabins.
Let’s hope Lufthansa cabin crew don’t mistake this as a closet for hanging the coats of other Allegris passengers.
Directly ahead of each Allegris suite passenger is that massive 27” monitor pumping out the pixels at a vivid super-sharp 4K.
This screen, like the removable touchscreen tablet mounted in the wall next to the seat, also drives seat settings such as recline and cushion firmness, lighting within the suite and even the clever automotive-derived heating and cooling system – more on that in a moment.
However, while the screen showed Lufthansa’s rich inflight entertainment library to best effect, the live feed from the A350’s external cameras proved disappointingly choppy and out of sync.
While the supplied AEG headphones do the job for sound quality and noise cancellation, it’s far more rewarding and quite effortless to pair up your own noise-cancelling headphones or earbuds via Bluetooth.
Other tech tricks of Allegris business class include sensibly-located AC, USB-A and USB-C sockets plus a wireless charging pad built into the bench.
With the USB-C outlet rated at 60 watts it’s sufficient to charge up a 13” laptop, although larger notebooks will simply hold their battery level when in use, or slowly and slightly recharge at other times.
Should you wish to join your laptop in sleep mode during your flight, Allegris business class will get you from A to B with plenty of Zzz’s.
Every Allegris business class seat folds down to become a 2m long bed, with extra room at either end of the suite setup, while the ‘extra-long’ seat nestled behind each solo throne seat gives you 2.2m from head to toe, as well as more width if you’re a side-sleeper.
There’s less wiggle-room in most other Allegris business class seats, and any footwell tucked under the seat in front can be tight-fitting, with the actual size and shape of this space depending on the seat variant.
Again, this is where the bulkhead-facing suites come out trumps.
Lufthansa’s bedding kit includes a mattress pad (on flights over 10 hours), soft blanket and large pillow, and oddly, you’re handed a cotton-blent ‘sleep shirt’ pullover but no PJ bottoms.
To help you stay really comfortable, each Allegris seat includes an impressive temperature control system which especially in the suites pretty much creates a personalised micro-climate.
There are no overhead air vents: instead, a small directional nozzle is set into one side of each Allegris business class seat, with responsive touch controls for the speed of a diffused airflow.
Meanwhile, the seat itself can also be kept cool or warm, again adjusted to your preference.
Lufthansa A350 Allegris suite: the verdict
Lufthansa’s front-row Allegris business class suite is in the same vein as other ‘business plus’ offerings from Air New Zealand and Virgin Atlantic, and soon American Airlines.
And while lacking companion seating, it’s got just about everything else for the most premium experience possible in a business class cabin.
David Flynn travelled to Germany as a guest of Lufthansa
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer P1
23 Aug 2014
Total posts 144
Great article with a lot of useful detail
Their previous J was so awful I had never considered it as an option, choosing instead to fly their roomy "old style" F
However, reading this makes the prospect of flying them in J long haul much much appealing
Singapore Airlines - The PPS Club
21 Feb 2022
Total posts 4
There appears to be a lot to like about the Allegris seat and it is a huge leap forward from the current LH business class offering...however I'm not enamoured by the multiple configurations, especially if I'm late in making a booking. I suspect the customer experience will be quiet mixed over time. At least with other airlines offerings I only have to choose window or aisle with perhaps additional legroom in the first row of business class. Hoping to experience LH Allegris in the coming months.
09 May 2024
Total posts 1
Surprised that you describe the new Lufthansa first class double suite as 'spacious'------ everything i read and see about it suggests an UNCOMFORTABLE space for two people----and more[FAR] more suitable for one person. i really dont understand the drastic reduction in the number of First class seats. And it is ABSURD to offer so many different business class options. Much as my natural inclination would be a first class ticket, i'd happily settle for one of these new business suites------although Nothing less.
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