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Home » United Airlines » United Airlines Flight Diverts After Dog Defecates In First Class Cabin
United Airlines

United Airlines Flight Diverts After Dog Defecates In First Class Cabin

Matthew Klint Posted onApril 9, 2024April 9, 2024 27 Comments

a yellow substance on a surface

Weeks after a similar incident, another dog defecated on the floor of the forward lavatory and first class cabin on a United Airlines flight, forcing a costly diversion. Isn’t it time to require dogs to be kept in cages if they must fly?

Dog Accident Forces Another United Airlines Diversion

As shared on reddit—with photo evidence—the incident occurred on a flight from Houston (IAH) to Seattle (SEA) on Saturday, April 6, 2024:

Dog had messy accident in the aisle right in first class. Plane diverted to DFW. Ground crew spent over 2 hours cleaning carpets with paper towels. Smell made me ill. Gate agents kept yelling at passengers and the cabin crew. The smell never quite went away. First class toilet declared unusable as the dog mess was apparently unresolved in there. Food went bad while on the ground so very few snacks left.

a yellow crumbs on the floor

a yellow substance on a surface

a pile of white paper towels on the floor
all images from reddit

So let’s recount what happened:

  • Dog has an accident in lavatory
  • The accident continues after stepping out of the lavatory, with a splattering of loose stool on the floor of the first class cabin
  • Overwhelmed by the bad smell, the flight diverts to Dallas-Forth Worth (DFW)
  • At DFW, cleaners spent two hours trying to clean the smell but failed
  • The flight took off again for SEA but the first class lavatory was closed
  • Due to the ground delay in DFW, the first class meals spoiled

Look, I feel bad for the dog…I’m sure it was feeling rather miserable to have such an accident. But incidents like this offer a poignant reminder of why it is time to reconsider dogs in cabins… particularly those who are not service animals. 

The trouble, of course, is that this may well have been a service animal…all you need to do is “attest” your dog is a service dog and it can fly with you at no fee and not be constrained to a pet carrier.

There really is no easy solution, but somehow the rest of the world manages to travel without their pets, unlike the United States.

For the sake of the common good, isn’t it is time to further restrict dogs on planes? Regulators should grant airlines broad discretion to decide whether to transport dogs…or not…and the paperwork required in order to do so.

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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27 Comments

  1. Maryland Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 12:58 pm

    Um. One photo probably would have been enough. As a dog owner I can understand this mess is difficult to clean and deodorize. People getting away this without footing the entire cost to the airline and passengers offended must end.

    • Mr. Marcus Reply
      April 9, 2024 at 6:13 pm

      Lol… I had the same thought– was the zoomed in third shot provided for those of us out here who weren’t quite sure after the first two images?

  2. Dick Bupkiss Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 1:01 pm

    The dog’s owner should be put in a shit-filled cage and forever fly in the cargo hold, too.

    It’s complete idiocy that non-humans are allowed to fly in the cabin. Certified service dogs…MAYBE but there needs to be strict rules and equally strict enforcement. You and your emotional support iguana can fly in the cargo hold together, or take the aptly-named “dog bus.” No exceptions.

    We are a nation of morons.

  3. Derek Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 1:46 pm

    my full fare J, O, Y idea looks better every day

    Would be very very few dogs flying if one was required to buy a seat at full fare for them

  4. David Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 1:47 pm

    Mine looks like that too after I eat the food they serve.

  5. derek Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 2:00 pm

    The dog owner should be liable for the damages. At the very least, if not compensated, the owner should be banned from United Airlines for up to 7 years. This is also why I am opposed to an industry no fly list controlled by flight attendants. The owner should not be put on a national no fly list.

    At the very least, the owner should be liable for clean up costs, which should be pegged at a few hundred dollars.

    If you accidentally run over someone, you still are liable even if you didn’t do it on purpose. If you did it on purpose, it would/should be prison time for a criminal act.

    • Porter Nelson Reply
      April 10, 2024 at 10:37 am

      A few hundred dollars?! I think not. The owner should be responsible for the FULL cost of not only having to divert the aircraft, the delay and the food, but passengers having to continue on the flight w/the reeking odor. Expensive? Most certainly.

      THAT will make them think twice about bringing Flying Fido again.

  6. Batchcaloupe Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 2:02 pm

    This shit ( pun intended) will keep on happening since 95% of these are fakes, phonies and frauds.

    • Maryland Reply
      April 9, 2024 at 2:08 pm

      Real service dogs have both food and water withheld many hours before travel. Evidence suggests this did not happen.

  7. Santastico Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 2:03 pm

    “I feel bad for the dog.” Me too. For the dog to be forced to enter a closed metal tube for hours by its stupid owner. The owner should be the one cleaning that mess.

    • DavidM Reply
      April 9, 2024 at 3:06 pm

      Santastico, dogs are everywhere now, at least in SoCal. Hardware stores, grocery stores, department stores – more and more dog owners seem to elect those places to walk their dogs. And of course, the seniors with their little Muffies who have never had any training but are treated as children. Planes are not the only places for these problems…

      • Santastico Reply
        April 9, 2024 at 3:56 pm

        I see what you are saying but in any of the places you mentioned, if something goes wrong you have an easier solution. A dog goes crazy inside a store, you can get that dog out. On a plane at 30k ft???? Dogs pooping is one thing but what would they do if suddenly the dog goes wild and attacks someone inside a plane? Most places here are very clear that unless it is a service animal you cannot bring it inside any store.

  8. ed lewis Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 3:09 pm

    why couldn’t the owner simply clean it up?
    and considering the state of the dog’s intestines, even locked in the underseat bag the dog poop would have occured regardless of free or caged and permeated almost front to back.

  9. Chi Hsuan Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 4:29 pm

    Can you imagine the smell in that cabin when it happened? It makes me laugh.

  10. dee Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 4:38 pm

    It also happens in the terminals and they just walk on with their dog..Ignoring the mess that then get tracked with roller bags all over the place..The other thing that is interesting is having the dogs sit on the couch in the SC’s and feeling them from the buffet.

  11. jeffk Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 5:47 pm

    1st – I feel sorry for the dog. 2nd – We have no idea if this was a true service dog or not. 3rd – It cost the airline money to divert but, they make tons of money on transportation of pets, so I don’t fee bad for them at all. 4th – I feel bad for all the passengers who missed their connections or appointments, etc. 5th – One would think, with all the cats and dogs flying, that each airplane would carry solvents and other equipment to clean up messes like this. 6th – Even humans have these types of accidents on planes, especially if they are undergoing medical treatments that cause a person to not to be able to control their bodily functions well.

  12. Tony N Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 6:00 pm

    If you want to bring your dog you have to assume there might be a mess!

  13. rich Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 6:20 pm

    People just don’t care anymore. Nothing is there fault and if you try to hold them accountable they will say you are violating their rights.

    When we were in Vienna recently I point out to my wife how well behaved the dogs we saw were. There were walking with their owners, not pulling ahead on the lease, they weren’t barking at everyone/everything they saw, etc. They seemed to be properly trained unlike the average dog in the US where people seem to think they are people and not a dog.

    The number of dogs on planes is out of control. I’m sorry but especially large dogs have no business being on a plane.

  14. William Reply
    April 9, 2024 at 8:40 pm

    Why that nonsense of flying with dogs there in the US?

  15. HarperLedpole Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 10:42 am

    “…but somehow the rest of the world manages to travel without their pets, unlike the United States.”

    The “rest of the world” isn’t populated by self-absorbed, entitled, snowflakes.

  16. James Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 12:47 pm

    Guarenteed that dog was medicated for the flight which is against FAA regulations. Was this a service dog? Not an emotional support animal, but a SERVICE DOG?

  17. RIc Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 12:53 pm

    If the airlines ask for proof – it’s called discrimination. Ludicrous !
    FAA should pass a rule – you prove the dog is a service dog (Guide Dog for blind, diabetes dog etc.) with certified doctor’s note, license, etc.
    All other dogs not allowed. Anyone that brings a genuine service dog onboard signs something that they take 100% responsibility and has pet insurance that covers accidents etc.
    This would DRASTICALLY reduce numbers of fake service dogs on Board.

    Other foreign carriers – how do they deal with this ? Why in the USA different rules ?
    See what happens on a Gulf carrier !

  18. Aaron Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 3:13 pm

    Not a dog owner here, but I am curious, can dogs not wear diapers for that long on a plane or something?

  19. Madge Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 4:47 pm

    In all fairness, dog poop looks for appetizing than the slop served on United

  20. Live and Let's Fly Respector Reply
    April 10, 2024 at 9:00 pm

    Once again Mr. Klint,

    You have my sincere appreciation for continuing to write about the numerous issues with dogs on planes. I am hoping that regulators will take note. And thank you for doing this with civility and clear prose.

  21. Lukas Reply
    April 11, 2024 at 3:37 am

    100% agreed. I travel internationally every month and I have never seen an uncaged dog in the cabin on any non-US airline and never seen an uncaged dog in an airport lounge led by anyone else than an American (and I love both Americans and the US) 🙂

    Surely, the owner must be responsible for their so called service dogs, and thus liable for the entire cost of the diversion, cleaning, etc.

    Except for professionally trained service dogs for physically challenged individuals (e.g. blind), it goes without saying that dogs should not be allowed to roam freely in a confined cabin. Just imagine what would happen in case of an actual emergency. All other countries understand this.

    • Live and Let's Fly Respector Reply
      April 11, 2024 at 8:52 am

      Lukas,

      I say this as a proud American: thank you for noting the uniquely-American nature of this issue! And thank you also for pointing out the potential problems with dogs during emergency situations.

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