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I flew on Boeing 737 Max aircraft from United and American and found one airline to be a lot more transparent than the other - here's how the two compare

  • American Airlines and United Airlines were the first US carriers to resume passenger flights on the Boeing 737 Max.
  • I flew on Max aircraft from both airlines to see how each was handling the return to service.
  • American did the least to inform flyers that they were booked on a Max while United was proactive.

The Boeing 737 Max is back and here to stay.

Boeing has reported thousands of passenger flights have already been flown with the aircraft and more airlines are resuming service every month.

Its troubled past aside, the Max is still a groundbreaking aircraft and offers attractive amenities for airlines and passengers alike. Airlines love the aircraft's cost-saving economics while passengers will enjoy the ultra-modern onboard amenities like Boeing's "Sky Interior" complete with mood lights and larger overhead bins.

American Airlines and United Airlines were the first US two carriers to resume flying aircraft after a 20-month grounding imposed by the Federal Aviation Administration. In February, I took flights on each of the airlines' Max aircraft to see how each airline was handling the delicate return to service, especially as passenger confidence in the aircraft plummeted after the crash of Ethiopian Airlines flight 302.

On American, I flew from New York to Miami, the same route on which the aircraft made its second debut post-grounding. And on United, I flew from Denver to Houston, Texas on the airline's very first Max flight since the grounding.

Both airlines had a similar onboard offering but the difference largely came down to how both informed passengers that they'd be flying on the infamous aircraft.

Read more: Boeing may have to shell out billions to airlines after regulators erased one of the 737 Max's key selling points

Here's how the two compare.

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