What You Need to Know About Phones Slipping Between Airplane Seats
Why You Should Never Reach for Your Phone on an Airplane
On today’s episode of the GoNOMAD Travel Podcast, we’re unpacking a safety warning you’ve heard on every flight but may not have taken seriously: don’t reach for your phone if it slips between the airplane seats — call a flight attendant instead.
It sounds like a small thing, but as we explore in this episode, it’s a rule written in fire. Literally.
This story comes from reporting in Afar Magazine, and it reveals just how dangerous a crushed smartphone can be inside an aircraft cabin.
🔥 What You’ll Hear in This Episode
• Why a dropped phone can become a fire hazard
When a phone gets wedged in the seat’s mechanical components, it can be crushed if the seat moves. That’s when the lithium battery can overheat and enter thermal runaway, a chain reaction where the battery “rapidly heats up, releases flammable gases, and can ignite.”
• Real incidents that forced emergency landings and evacuations
We highlight several dramatic examples, including:
- A Southwest flight where a crushed phone ignited a seat at the gate, forcing all 108 passengers to evacuate via emergency slides.
- A Hawaiian Airlines flight that declared an emergency after a trapped phone began emitting a burning smell near landing.
- An Alaska Airlines flight that returned to the airport after a phone and portable battery pack ignited in the cabin.
• What the FAA data reveals
FAA records show 106 verified incidents between 2006 and early 2026 involving lithium batteries in phones overheating, smoking, or catching fire — with 21 incidents in 2025 alone.
• Why flight attendants insist you call them
Airline reps explain that crews are trained to access the tight, complex seat mechanisms safely. As American Airlines notes, “seats can vary between aircraft,” and flight attendants know how to retrieve a device before it becomes a hazard.
Delta adds that calling a crew member also prevents passengers from injuring themselves: “Those seats are tight. We’d rather get your phone out for you rather than have you potentially jam your finger.”
• What happens if the phone starts to smoke
If a device becomes hot or begins emitting fumes, the crew can immediately activate fire‑safety protocols — another reason they want to know right away.
✈️ The Big Takeaway
That quick line in the safety briefing isn’t just airline over‑caution. It’s a real, documented risk. If your phone slips into the seat, don’t reach for it — call a flight attendant. As the article concludes, “now you know, they weren’t kidding when they warned you about that.”
🔗 Links from Today’s Episode
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• GoNOMAD Travel https://www.gonomad.com
• GoNOMAD Podcast Page https://www.gonomad.com/category/podcasts
• Max’s Travel Writing on GoNOMAD https://www.gonomad.com/author/max-hartshorne (gonomad.com in Bing)
• Subscribe to the GoNOMAD Travel Podcast Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen
Transcript
Today on GoNomad, we're taking a look at something every airline tells you when you board their aircraft.
Speaker A:From Afar magazine, we have an answer to why you should never try to retrieve your phone when you lose it in the airplane seat.
Speaker A:If you fly often, you've likely heard the line in the pre departure safety briefing advising passengers to alert a flight attendant if their phone slips between the seats, rather than trying to retrieve it themselves.
Speaker A:It may feel instinctive to to reach into the narrow gap and just grab it, but experts say that attempting to retrieve it without assistance can create safety risks for both yourself and the whole plane.
Speaker A:According to the faa, smartphones that fall between airplane seats can become lodged in the seat's mechanical components.
Speaker A:If the seat's reclined or adjusted while the phone is trapped, the device can be crushed.
Speaker A:That's a concern because when damaged, the lithium batteries inside phones can overheat and enter what's known as thermal runaway, a chain reaction where the battery rapidly heats up, releases flammable gases and can ignite.
Speaker A:It's part of the same reason why you can't put power banks, computers, e cigarettes and other electronic devices in your checked bag.
Speaker A:ing from Denver to Houston in:Speaker A:Although the phone caught fire while the plane was still at the gate, it ignited the seat and all 108 passengers had to evacuate the plane via the plane's rear entry slides while the crew extinguished the Blaz.
Speaker A:In:Speaker A:Near the end of the flight, the pilot declared an emergency, which granted the plane priority, landing at Haneda Airport in Tokyo.
Speaker A:And earlier this year, an Alaska Airlines flight from Wichita to Seattle returned to the airport after a passenger's phone and portable battery pack ignited in the cabin, sending several people for medical evaluation.
Speaker A:fied incidences between March:Speaker A:happened in the year:Speaker A:The reason it's important to notify a crew member is because they know the seats and device before it becomes a safety issue.
Speaker A:Seats can vary between aircraft, and as part of this training, flight attendants are informed of the various operational intricacies of each seat that customers may not be aware of, and they can safely help the customers should their phone fall between the seats.
Speaker A:A spokesman from Delta echoed that sentiment, saying, there are different seat modifications between cabins and planes, so flight attendants are going to be able to retrieve the phone much more easily.
Speaker A:They added that if the phone's really stuck in there, flight attendants can call the destination airport, where someone will be dispatched to meet the plane, and use tools if necessary, to retrieve the phone.
Speaker A:If the phone gets too hot, starts to smoke or becomes inflamed, it's good for the inflight team to know early so they can prepare fire safety protocols.
