Flying may be the fastest way to travel, but for some, it’s anything but convenient. While many of us complain about tiny seats or limited legroom, one plus‑sized influencer says that every time she travels, she faces a challenge that goes far beyond discomfort.
In a now‑viral TikTok video, a plus‑sized influencer highlighted a problem few people talk about but millions quietly deal with: airplane bathrooms are simply too small. And not just for people with disabilities, but for plus‑size travelers as well.
“Forget the difficulty of having to get two seats to fly, accessibility is the number one roadblock for me, especially when it comes to long‑distance travel,” Bo Berry said in her clip, “Flying while fat – lavatory edition.” “I don’t fit in the standard airport lavatory at all.”
And she’s not alone. Many others have echoed similar frustrations, pointing out that modern airplane design prioritizes profits over people — squeezing more seats into limited space while overlooking the needs of travelers who don’t fit the average mold.
Shrinking bathrooms
In fact, the Los Angeles Times reports that as airlines try to boost profits amid rising labor costs and fuel prices, they’re turning to a new strategy: shrinking lavatories to add an extra row of seats.
According to Gary Weissel, managing director of Tronos Aviation Consulting Inc., American Airlines could earn an extra $400,000 a year for each additional seat it adds to a plane.
“Even with passenger complaints on these lavs, I don’t see airlines pulling them out,” Weissel told the publication. “The revenue generated from being able to get an additional row of seats in there is too great.”
Jimmy Walton, a pilot with the airline, calls the shrinking bathrooms “the most miserable experience in the world.”
“You’ve added 12 more seats, no more lavatories, and you’ve shrunk that lavatory to 75% of what it was before,” Walton said. “I can’t turn around in it.”
‘Super close to having an accident’
For Bo, flying has become a logistical nightmare. She has to turn sideways just to move down the aisle, careful not to bump into seats or passengers.
And she refuses to use the bathroom — even in an emergency.
“I can’t use the bathroom, and my maximum flight time is about six hours. I’ve never had a problem with that before except once I came super close to having an accident on a flight from San Francisco to Chicago,” the influencer said in the clip, which has been viewed 2.7 million times. “There was some bad weather and my plane was rerouted; they tacked on an extra two hours to the flight and things got a little sketch.”
‘Aisles aren’t the problem’
Bo Berry’s honesty sparked a wave of mixed reactions online, igniting a heated debate over whether personal size should influence airline design — or whether expecting such changes is unreasonable.
“When you’re the only one on the plane affected by the narrow aisles, the aisles aren’t the problem,” one Facebook user wrote in response to Bo’s story. “Diet and exercise seem a bit more logical than redesigning aircrafts,” another added, while a third commented, “Oh ok — let’s widen aisles — it’s easier than going on a diet.”
Another wrote, “We are not going to rebuild airplanes because someone refuses to do the work to be at a healthy and reasonable size. Childish, egocentric and selfish attitudes will argue and disagree.”
What’s your take on this issue? Have you experienced similar struggles on a flight? Join the conversation and share your thoughts!







