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I know, this is a funny/sort of stingy question, but the last time I took a plane, after having the meal they serve, I was still kind of hungry so my girlfriend told me to ask for another one. I didn't do it but I kept wondering if it was possible.

Is there anyone that works on an airline that could confirm how it works for these cases?

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  • 56
    No harm in asking.
    – A E
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 17:23
  • 43
    Some airlines won't even give you the first one unless you pay extra.
    – kasperd
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 18:26
  • 9
    It's one of those things that used to be commonplace and no problem. You'd just say "can I have another" and the staff would say "sure, if there is one remaining we will give it to you." You know? Quite simply, it's very much less likely to happen today.
    – Fattie
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 18:47
  • 48
    At most airlines, questions to the staff are not billed separately. If you are unsure whether your airline bills extra for questions, ask them. ;-)
    – Alexander
    Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 10:42
  • 50
    @Alexander I imagine Ryanair charges per word...
    – A E
    Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 12:55

7 Answers 7

150

A cabin crew member here...

In general, flight attendants will be happy to give you the extra meal after the service is done, because they know it will be thrown after landing anyway. Out of experience, there are always some extra meals, at least one or two. Sometimes passengers simply do not take a meal, some other times there's just an extra meal or two loaded for whatever reason. In some other flights, there's a shortage actually. They usually cover for this by using the crew meals, and this is rare anyway.

Is it ok?

Yes, nothing wrong with it, flight attendants will not think badly of you. As long as you ask nicely, of course. One more thing, all the meals usually get heated at the same time. Once heated they are good to be eaten for a certain time, then they can't be served to passengers. So, if you feel you want an extra meal, ask for it. I have seen so much food being wasted while I was sure many people were hungry but were shy just like you.

When to ask

When they are serving you, give them a hint that you would love to have an extra meal if it's possible after they are done. Personally, when this happens I might give them right away if I know that there are extra meals. Otherwise, I will just wait until service is done and then come back with the extra meal, or apologize if I couldn't find any.

Note: I am talking about full-service airlines. For budget airlines where food is bought onboard, you can pay extra and get more food. That's a different story.

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  • 12
    "I have seen so much food being wasted while I was sure many people were hungry but were shy just like you." Aw. :( Are you not allowed to ask passengers if anyone wants extra food?
    – user541686
    Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 4:35
  • 68
    @Mehrdad what happens when 50 of them say Yes? Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 6:10
  • 32
    And in the real world ? :) make 48 otherwise fine people upset about the airline thinking if they didn't have plenty why did they ask everyone? Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 9:33
  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 14:38
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Yes you can ask. And I have successfully asked for extra food in the past (i.e. over the last five years and as recent as a month ago). One time when asking for a second sandwich I was even proactively offered a third one later on. I also typically ask for two beverages and never had that refused.

Of course they have no obligation to give you extra food but on a full service airline they are usually happy to. (Since you mention a first meal I assume you are on a full service airline. If you had to pay for your first meal, you'll have to pay for the second as well.)

A good strategy is to ask when they have just finished distributing meals and you have already finished yours or if you already know to be hungry, you could tell them when you get the meal that you would be interested in a second serving.
Be nice, don't interrupt and you have good chances.

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  • 1
    I've done this as well. They wanted to make sure they has enough meals to go around so they gave me a second meal after serving everyone else. This was maybe 16 or 17 years ago, though, and the flight wasn't close to being full. These days flights are more likely to be full, it seems.
    – phoog
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 17:52
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    The overwhelming reality is that "this was 15 years ago"! You know guys, you might as well say "Can I get a flight upgrade by wearing a nice suit and asking politely?!" Sure - that happened 30 yrs ago in the 1980s. I feel it's very unlikely these days.
    – Fattie
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 18:48
  • 14
    It's not that unlikely. Sometimes people don't take meals or there are extras. If you ask, and one is available, cabin crew are unlikely to refuse randomly. It's worth asking, and the worst case scenario is that you're told no. Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 21:35
  • 5
    @JoeBlow Which is it: "overwhelming reality" or "I feel it's very unlikely"? Are you saying you've asked plenty of times relatively recently and had no luck? The answers don't say anything about this only applying in the past.
    – Cascabel
    Commented Jun 13, 2016 at 1:54
  • 1
    hi @PLL, sorry if I wasn't clear. Indeed, in my experience, it rarely/never works today. I observe that usually, there's someone or other nearby you in the cabin, who, asks if they can have an extra food service. I'd say these days (for ten+ years) half the time the answer is a flat "we can't do that" {perhaps there's some reg/policy issue} or if not that the other half of the time "it's probably not possible, we'll see" and then, no! That's my experience.
    – Fattie
    Commented Jun 15, 2016 at 17:05
14

Nothing wrong with asking - treating cabin crew as humans (be nice, be polite, don't stress them if you see they are busy, wait for your turn) will get you a long way. You'd be amazed what is possible. One nice passenger offsets many rude ones - be the nice one!

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  • 1
    Sadly I've typically heard it said as "one rude passenger can ruin the flight for everyone".
    – Lilienthal
    Commented Jun 14, 2016 at 21:04
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After seeing the comments here, I tried it myself.


Can you get it? - Yes you can, still today.

I asked in China Eastern and Korean Air, both in economy and large cabin, in 2016.

You can ask an attendant once you finish eating, and he/she kindly starts to check if they can serve it for you.

However, whether it is only a main dish or whole dish depends on the airline (and attendant oneself and also random chance). In China Eastern I only got a main dish, but I didn't like to bother to complaining about it (and it was enough), so didn't make any further actions.

When you ask, the tips by other answers would likely work to your favor; be polite, wait for the end of the distribution of meal, and don't disturb. However, I want to add one more tips; you shouldn't ask it shortly before the start of collections of finished meal. In this case, attendants have to care about only you once after they finish collecting all the other passangers' meal. So make sure your second meal is going to be collected with others'.

However, some airlines don't allow it for whatever reasons. I asked at Asiana Airlines a few times (different flight, route, and crew) but I got declined in all of them. In fact when I asked one attendant she immediately got to ask a more elderly attendant (maybe a chief) and the answer was NO. So in these airlines, you could never get an extra meal, unfortunately...

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There are "extra" meals so you can certainly ask.

If you are say, a first class passenger, the extra meal will be given to you almost as a matter of course if requested. You have "first dibs" on this (and other) privileges.

If you are "coach" class, your request will be granted more often than not. A problem might arise if first class, or other coach passengers asked ahead of you, and they're "out." This might be particularly true of a certain meal, as opposed to "meals" generally.

The alternative to giving away an extra meal is that it is thrown away. Most attendants would rather give the meal to someone than to discard it. You will not be charged.

Note: This answer does not apply to "food for purchase" situations. Then you do have to pay for each meal that you eat.

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  • 3
    What airline serves the same meal to first / business class and coach? In my -- I admit, very limited -- experience, if the flight is long enough to have a proper hot meal then the airline will try to make a point of their excellent chef as a reason to pay for the expensive class.
    – user4188
    Commented Nov 27, 2016 at 5:57
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I recall once that a special-order meal got mixed up and there weren't enough of them (vegetarian), so the cabin crew scrounged around and came up with a couple meals' worth of snacks and the safe sides of extra meals for that person, instead... and with the offer of more, if they were still hungry after.

Obviously this was something of a special circumstance, but the point is that those snacks would still have been on the plane, if the original meal hadn't been mixed up. If someone asked politely, there's a pretty good chance those extra snacks, or the other portions of the extra meals, could still have gone to someone else if they were still hungry even on that flight.

The cabin crew usually do their best to accommodate requests like that if you ask politely. They may be willing to put in a little more effort, like borrowing snacks from a higher class, if they know there is a reason for the request - something like a person being hungrier because they couldn't eat before the plane for whatever reason, or needing a larger meal to balance their blood sugar or to replace part of the meal they cannot eat. It might matter how long the plane ride is (and thus, how long until they know you can find something else), or probably a whole host of reasons based on how someone looks or asks, and how urgent or casual the crew thinks the request is.

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Airlines: Emirates Route: Dubai to India (CCU) Well, I got encouraged by the answers here and asked. The answer was a "No".

In the airlines defense, I asked for a Hindu meal, which maybe was limited in number. But, guess what my co-passenger told me. If you had asked it in your flight from Dubai to some western country they would be more than willing to serve you.

But here you are going back to the third world. You are lucky the "No" was not a rude one. Ouch... :(

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  • What would a rude "No" be like? "No, you idiot!"? Why would anyone talk like that to a customer? To me, "No!" sounds like a perfectly valid answer, but perhaps that's just the proverbial Dutch bluntness in action…
    – TooTea
    Commented Jun 11, 2020 at 13:19
  • I have no idea why this correct answer (from a new contributor) was voted down. Great answer. (Actually the only strictly factual answer here!)
    – Fattie
    Commented Jun 11, 2020 at 13:59
  • @Fattie The first half of the answer is factual, the other half is a pure rant. (The downvote isn't mine.)
    – TooTea
    Commented Jun 11, 2020 at 14:40
  • @TooTea - i guess that's reasonable. I have a short attention span so I only read the first part :) However, on this site, if we downvoted every answer that contains a little bit of an extra rant, we'd wear out the down-vote buttons! :)
    – Fattie
    Commented Jun 11, 2020 at 14:43

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