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Airline’s controversial new fine for this common plane habit

Turkey just put a price on impatience—and if you’re the first one out of your seat when the wheels kiss the runway, you might be the first one paying for it.

The country’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), led by Kemal Yüksek, has told cabin crews to start reporting passengers who jump the gun during taxi and deplaning. The idea is simple: if you ignore the seatbelt sign, stand up while the aircraft is still moving, pop bins early, or muscle past rows ahead of you, you can be flagged and fined under Turkey’s aviation regs. Reports in major outlets put the administrative penalty at roughly 2,603 Turkish lira—about $67 USD—for the most common “aisle rushing” behaviors.

Why Turkey cares (and why you should too)

This isn’t just about etiquette. It’s safety:

  • Sudden stops happen. Aircraft can brake sharply on the taxiway. If you’re standing with a roller bag in your hand, you become a projectile, and so does your luggage.

  • Overhead bins are booby traps in motion. Opening bins while the plane is still rolling can send heavy items onto heads and shoulders.

  • Crew workload spikes during taxi. Flight attendants are still performing required checks, coordinating with the cockpit, and preparing doors and equipment. A cabin full of standers makes that harder and riskier.

  • Orderly flow matters. When everyone waits for their row, the aisle moves like a zipper. One line-cutter can stall the whole cabin.

What now counts as fine-worthy behavior

Turkey’s guidance to crews focuses on moments we’ve all witnessed:

  • Unbuckling seatbelts before the light turns off

  • Standing during taxi or before parking brakes are set

  • Opening overhead bins prematurely

  • Rushing the aisle ahead of your row, ignoring those in front of you

  • Ignoring crew instructions to remain seated or wait your turn

Cabin crew won’t be writing tickets on the spot; they document the incident and pass it to airport authorities, who can issue an administrative fine.

“But my connection!” — common questions, answered

What if I have a tight connection?
Ask the crew before landing whether they can facilitate an early exit. Many airlines will move tight-connection passengers to the front or ask others to let them pass—after the seatbelt sign is off. Jumping up on your own still risks a fine.

I stood to grab my jacket as we parked. Is that illegal?
If the seatbelt sign is still on or the aircraft is still moving, yes—you’re not permitted to stand or open bins. Wait for the chime and the sign to extinguish.

Someone cut ahead of me—can I report them?
Let the crew handle it in the moment. They’re the ones empowered to warn, reseat, or document behavior for authorities.

Do kids or elderly passengers get leeway?
Crew routinely show discretion for medical needs, mobility issues, or caregiving (e.g., comforting a crying toddler). The line Turkey is drawing is willful disregard for safety instructions, not genuine needs.

What about business class deplaning first?
Priority deplaning set by the airline (front-to-back, by cabins, or by rows) is the “order” you’re asked to respect. Cutting within that system is what can trigger reports.

How to avoid a fine (and everyone’s side-eye)

  • Stay buckled until the light is off. The ding you’re waiting for isn’t imaginary—it’s the legal green light.

  • Open bins only when parked. If the aircraft’s still rolling, keep them closed.

  • Let the row ahead clear first. Move like a zipper: aisle seat, then middle, then window; then the next row.

  • Prep early. With 10 minutes to landing, put your phone, passport, and essentials into a pocket or personal item so you’re not digging around at the last second.

  • Ask for help with connections. Tell crew early; they’ll do what they can.

  • Be vocal (politely) with cutters. A calm, “We’re deplaning by rows—please let the front go first,” often works, especially backed by crew.

What this means for visitors transiting Turkey

If you’re flying to or through Istanbul, Ankara, Antalya, or other Turkish airports, assume these norms are being actively enforced. That doesn’t mean every impatient passenger gets fined—but it does mean crews have clear backing to escalate beyond a gentle reminder. Consider it like speed limits: most people slow down when the radar gun comes out.

The crew’s perspective (why they’ll push this)

Cabin crews carry legal responsibility for the cabin from door-close to door-open. They’re trained—and obligated—to keep passengers seated and bins closed until it’s safe. Turkey’s policy gives them sharper teeth: instead of re-asking the same handful of people to sit down, they can document and elevate.

How this compares elsewhere

Plenty of countries already treat early standing and noncompliance as offenses under broader safety rules (e.g., “failure to follow crew instructions”), which can lead to fines or bans. Turkey is unusual mainly for explicitly calling out rushing the aisle and disembarkation order. The message is cultural as much as legal: patience is part of safety.

Credit: Robert Alexander / Getty.

If things go sideways

  • Stay calm. Arguing loudly or refusing instructions can escalate to larger penalties than the original infraction.

  • Accept the direction. Sit back down, buckle up, close the bin. You can address concerns after arrival.

  • If you receive a notice. You can ask the carrier or airport authority about the process to contest an administrative fine; keep your boarding pass and note the flight number, date, and seat.

A quick etiquette checklist for your next landing

  • 10 minutes to touchdown: stash loose items, stow your tray, shoes on, belt tight

  • After touchdown: hands off bins, phone on airplane mode if required, listen for instructions

  • At the gate, ding sounds, sign off: stand, collect items without blocking, let the row ahead clear

  • In the jet bridge: keep walking—don’t stop to re-pack right outside the door

Bottom line: that extra 60–90 seconds of patience is now worth real money in Turkey—and it makes the cabin safer and saner for everyone. If you’re an “aisle dasher,” this is your sign to retire the habit. If you’re not, enjoy the rarest in-flight luxury: a calm, orderly exit.

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