What is first class on a one-hour United Airlines flight actually like? I recently flew from Burbank to San Francisco to find out.
Flight Review: A One-Hour First Class Flight On United Airlines A320
To begin my United trip to East Asia, I flew from Burbank (BUR) to San Francisco (SFO), a route that I have flown for 20 years from an airport that is quite close to my home.
There is no lounge here and the facilities are very poor, particularly the B gates where United flies from, though a new terminal is scheduled to open in October 2026.


Just a fun piece of history. United mainline flew to Burbank until 2011 (one of the many horrific decisions during the Jeff Smisek era) and the terminal had these cool charging station signs hearkening back to pre-bankruptcy days:

Mainline returned in 2018 and the airport is mostly served exclusively by mainline now (it helped that Southwest Airlines launched service on this route as well, which keeps pricing in check and forced United to up its game).
There are no jet bridges at Burbank..an endearing feature of the airport is that you board by ramp.



Anyway, on to the flight.
UA 488
Burbank (BUR) – San Francisco (SFO)
Thursday, January 29
Depart: 07:17 AM
Arrive: 08:53 AM
Duration: 1hr, 36min
Distance: 326 miles
Aircraft: Airbus A320
Seat: 1F (First Class)
My focus here is not on the hard product…I’ve written a more detailed United A320 first class review here (and for my readers outside the USA, yes, this is a business class product but U.S. carriers use “first class” branding on domestic flights, for some reason).
Rather, I want to contrast what United offers on a one-hour flight versus its competitors. In the USA, expect a snack backs on any other carrier of a similar length…including Alaska, American, and Delta. Here, choices included almonds, cookies, potato chips, gummy bears, and a couple bananas.

A drink was also offered…being 7:30 am, I had a cup of illy coffee.

It’s quite a contrast to flying a one-hour flight in Europe or Asia in business class, where you receive a full meal, like this plate I received on a Lufthansa flight half the length of this flight up the California coast:

But of course on the flip side, on this flight you far better seat compared to European competitors:


Fly almost any European carrier and the best you’ll receive is a blocked middle seat. This is business class on a Lufthansa A320:

So yeah, I’d love a fresh meal onboard, but I’ll take the bigger seat please.
Wi-Fi worked well on the flight and I always choose an F seat (window seat, starboard side) when flying from BUR-SFO so that I can look down on Apple HQs in Cupertino…it’s just become a fun tradition, as inconsequential as that is (but hey, I’ve been using Apple products since the IIe when I was a kid).


Beyond Apple, it was a pleasant day to look out the window:







Flights attendant are pleasant and drinks were refilled…there’s also a dedicated lavatory in first class in the front of the cabin (that still had the classic wallpaper from the 1990s that I oddly really like, for nostalgia reasons).


CONCLUSION
“First Class” on a one-hour flight (our actual flight time was 54 minutes) in the USA is generally not something to get excited about, regardless of the carrier. Even so, I appreciate being able to sit up front and sip coffee from a “real” cup instead of a plastic one, and of course the larger seat is a nicest part of the experience.
I don’t think this seat is worth a huge premium, but it’s certainly an upgrade.




A better comparison migjt be with domestic flights in Canada and Australia, where you get the same seat, lounge access if there is a lounge available, and maybe the food as well (do those countries serve meals on one hour flights?).
And yes I know there was no lounge at this airport but your ticket would not have gotten uou loonge access on the return flight.
That’s a very reasonable point (and yes, AC would serve a meal on a 1hr domestic flight, see link below):
https://liveandletsfly.com/air-canada-a321-business-class-review/
Wow, that is a gorgeous meal. Well done, Air Canada.
Indeed, from YYZ-YUL, a 316-mile flight.
If you live in Toronto, this is a great added reason to visit Montreal, and if you live in Montreal, this is one more great reason to visit Toronto.
The meal service in business class is a reason for residents in one city to visit the other? Really?
“It’s quite a contrast to flying a one-hour flight in Europe or Asia in business class, where you receive a full meal…”
PREACH.
It’s the same in Australia, where on a one hour trip in biz you’ll enjoy the four-abreast seating and a choice between two meals (on Qantas, at least). They’re branded “refreshments” outside official meal service hours but there’s almost always a hot & a chilled option, as well as sparkling wine for breakfast if you’re in the mood.
Thats not First class on UA, they need to call it bus. class; such a small serving on that plate; only reason they don’t use a saucer & spoon w/ cup of coffee, so they can sell advg. on that napkin; its all about revenue.
I have flown a shorter flight in F on UA, and it wasn’t on a disgusting Airpus: ORD-ATW. I did get a beverage service, but there wasn’t much time for it. I give them credit for doing it, though.
Yup, it means a better seat, priority boarding and a high likelihood you won’t have to gate-check your bag. Which, for a usually small premium, may be worth the price. Intra-EU/UK business class may include a nice meal on even short flights plus lounge access, but without a better seat, it’s just a totally different product.
Old Frontier served steak & lobster with Mateus after pass with beverage cart on 737s MCI-DEN flights which weren’t much longer than an hour.
How long ago was that?!
That was the Frontier that existed before deregulation. It was a great airline in those days!
Must have cost a fortune in inflation-ajdusted dollars.
Snack basket is fine for a sub 1hr flight honestly. Where united (and others) really suck are the 8-900 mile flights that get the same service such as ORD – DEN/BOS/MSY, etc, and the carve out flights that used to get meals like ORD-LGA/EWR.
100% agree on the 800-900 miles flights…but wouldn’t it be nice if UA served a hot croissant in the morning and warmed mixed nuts the rest of the day on these very short flights? Would be a minor expense but really add value.
I’m actually shocked that UA or AA has not reintroduced something like that on ORD-LGA/EWR given the ORD competition right now. Easy differentiator on a competitive route. Even if it was mixed nuts and a warm croissant / muffin or whatever.
~25-30 years ago, UA used to serve hot meals on this route (and many others of similar distances) in F. I think it was just drinks and snacks in Y, though.
On any flight in EU even an hour you get a real meal and drinks. The 45-55 minute flight I take from ATL to JAX does not even give you a bottled water!! if you are not in FC or C-
Your fault for flying the evil repulsive Delta.
A problem-free, comfortable flight on one of UA’s 67 A320-200 jets (average age: 24.6 years) in its fleet.
Incidentally, one of the article’s photos shows a UA jet parked at SFO, a 24.6-year-old A319-100.
Who cares?
Is United mainline’s shortest flight between Guam and Saipan and if yes, is there beverage service?
Since the ~130-mile flight’s duration is less than an hour (~45 minutes), a full hot meal service is not provided in Business Class on the UA GUM – SPN flights. Passengers are generally offered snacks such as nuts, cookies, and crackers. However, all alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages are served free of charge. Passengers state that they choose Business Class tickets on these flights not for a luxurious meal or a sleeper seat, but for priority service, comfortable seating, and time savings during boarding/disembarking. Upgrading to Business Class using miles or points is seen as a much more sensible option by travelers, rather than paying high cash fares for a 45-minute flight. In Economy Class, there is no free meal or snack service, but passengers are offered free basic non-alcoholic beverages.
It looks OK for a quick hop, and substantially easier than schlepping over the hills to the miseries of LAX.
As others have said domestic business in Australia and Canada give you the same seat plus a meal on flights of this length. And lounge access, where available.