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AF vs U2

Air France vs easyJet 2026: Is AF Worth It Over easyJet?

Both fly Paris CDG and strip the cheapest fare to no-overhead-bag. AF wins on long-haul A350 business class. easyJet wins on bag-bundle math and price.
By Caden Sorenson Sourced from official Air France & easyJet policy pages

Quick verdict

Carry-on
easyJet wins
Checked bag
Tie
Basic economy
easyJet wins
Overall: It depends on your priorities

easyJet wins on free cabin bag size (45 by 36 by 20 cm at 15 kg vs Air France Light which now strips the cabin bag entirely on short-haul), on large bag bundling via FLEXI or easyJet Plus membership, and on Paris CDG arrival in a less complicated booking flow. Air France wins on long-haul (easyJet does not fly long-haul), on the new A350-900 business class rollout (40 A350s in service, full standardization across the fleet by December 2026 with reverse-herringbone 1-2-1 layout and sliding privacy doors), on Flying Blue loyalty value via SkyTeam and the new Flying Blue Visa Signature Card launched January 21, 2026, and on cabin product consistency. Pick AF for long-haul, premium cabins, and SkyTeam loyalty earn. Pick easyJet for short-haul intra-Europe value with the larger free bag.

Air France vs easyJet specification comparison
Spec Air France easyJet
Carry-on (in) 21.7 x 13.8 x 9.8" 22 x 17.7 x 9.8"
Carry-on (cm) 55 x 35 x 25 cm 56 x 45 x 25 cm
Carry-on weight 12 kg (26.5 lb) 15 kg (33 lb)
Carry-on fee Free From $13
Personal item 15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9" 17.7 x 14.1 x 7.9"
1st checked bag $60 Not published
2nd checked bag Not published Not published
Basic economy Light Standard (default)
Gate-check risk Medium High

Air France and easyJet share an airport (Paris Charles de Gaulle), share a customer base (CDG-bound short-haul intra-Europe travelers), and now share a cabin baggage philosophy at the cheapest fare: both Air France Light and easyJet Standard strip the overhead bag, leaving only the personal item. The 2025 Air France Light fare change converged AF’s bottom rung with the ULCC pricing model, but with a SkyTeam flag carrier wrapper. easyJet has run the bag-as-add-on model for years but with a more generous free under-seat allowance (45 by 36 by 20 cm at 15 kg) than the Ryanair-style ULCC.

Short version: easyJet wins on the cheapest one-bag short-haul trip because the free under-seat bag is larger and the optional overhead bag is bundled into FLEXI fares or easyJet Plus annual membership without separate add-on creep. Air France wins on long-haul (easyJet does not fly long-haul), on the new A350 business class rollout (full fleet standardization by December 2026), on Flying Blue’s SkyTeam earn, and on the cabin product consistency that comes with a full-service carrier. Both fly Charles de Gaulle, so the Heathrow-vs-Stansted secondary-airport math from the BA-vs-Ryanair comparison does not apply.

What I weighed for this comparison

These two airlines are converging in pricing but diverging in product. The criteria need to focus on the actual decision a traveler makes:

  • Cheapest-fare cabin baggage, where both have stripped the overhead bag at the bottom tier
  • Free under-seat bag dimensions, where easyJet is materially more generous than Ryanair and meaningfully more than Air France’s personal item
  • Large overhead bag bundling, where easyJet’s FLEXI and Plus membership compete with Air France’s mid-tier fare add-on math
  • Long-haul access, where Air France is the only option (easyJet is short-haul only)
  • The A350 cabin rollout, since Air France’s business class hard product changes materially through 2026
  • Flying Blue loyalty depth versus easyJet Plus membership value
  • Paris CDG hub experience for both carriers and the connection math for AF

The free under-seat bag gap is the practical 2026 starting point

easyJet’s free under-seat bag is 45 by 36 by 20 cm at 15 kg, and it is genuinely usable. This bag fits a 3-night packing list for a single traveler with no overhead bag needed. The dimensions allow most small backpacks (28-35L) and most laptop totes. The 15 kg weight cap is not enforced as strictly as Ryanair’s hard caps; easyJet’s gate culture is closer to “if it fits, it flies” than the gate-sizer-or-gate-fee Ryanair experience.

Air France Light short-haul includes only the personal item at 40 by 30 by 15 cm, materially smaller than easyJet’s free bag. The full cabin bag (55 by 35 by 25 cm, 12 kg combined with the personal item) costs roughly 25 to 50 EUR per leg to add. The Air France personal item template is also notably tighter on depth (15 cm vs easyJet’s 20 cm).

Practical effect for a 3-night Paris-to-Madrid trip with a small backpack and a packed roller:

  • easyJet Standard: small backpack fits the 45 by 36 by 20 cm under-seat allowance free. The roller is in the hold or you add the large cabin bag for 6-35 GBP.
  • Air France Light: small backpack must fit the 40 by 30 by 15 cm personal item allowance (most do not, particularly the depth). Add 25-50 EUR per leg for the overhead bag, or check the roller.

The easyJet free bag is the kind of unsung 2026 advantage that does not show up in marketing copy.

Winner: free under-seat bag size
easyJet / 45 by 36 by 20 cm vs Air France personal item 40 by 30 by 15
Winner: free bag weight cap
easyJet / 15 kg vs Air France no specific cap on personal item alone
Winner: cheapest-fare overhead bag cost
easyJet / 6-35 GBP at booking vs Air France's 25-50 EUR per leg
Winner: personal item enforcement
easyJet / less strict gate culture than Ryanair-style ULCC

Is Air France or easyJet the right pick for short-haul to Charles de Gaulle?

Both fly CDG. The secondary-airport math from BA-vs-Ryanair does not apply here. The decision is purely fare structure, bag policy, and what cabin product the traveler values.

For a Paris-to-Madrid weekend:

  • Air France Light from CDG to Madrid: roughly 100 to 160 EUR round-trip. Add the overhead bag: 50 to 100 EUR per leg total. Add a checked bag: 60 EUR online or 80 EUR at the airport. Total for one cabin bag + one checked bag: roughly 280 to 380 EUR.
  • easyJet Standard from CDG to Madrid: roughly 60 to 120 EUR round-trip. Add the large cabin bag: 6 to 35 GBP per leg. Add a checked bag (15 or 23 kg): 7 to 40 GBP per bag per leg. Total for one cabin bag + one checked bag: roughly 110 to 250 EUR.

easyJet wins on the bag-included trip by 100 to 200 EUR for the weekend. The gap closes on premium-fare itineraries where Air France’s Standard or Flex fare includes more by default and competes with easyJet FLEXI on a per-leg basis. Where easyJet does not win: any trip with a connection (Air France-KLM partner hubs in CDG and AMS), any long-haul leg (easyJet does not fly long-haul), or any trip where Flying Blue mile earn is a real line item.

Winner: raw round-trip sticker fare
easyJet / 30-50 percent below Air France Light on typical short-haul
Winner: all-in cost with one carry-on + one checked bag
easyJet / typically 100-200 EUR cheaper for a weekend trip
Winner: cost on a connection-required itinerary
Air France / easyJet does not connect through SkyTeam
Winner: predictability of booking-time pricing
Air France / easyJet's bag add-on pricing creeps up day-of-travel

Long-haul: only Air France flies there

Air France is the only carrier in this comparison that flies long-haul. The A350 business class rollout has materially improved Air France’s premium hard product, and the rollout completes by December 2026.

By the numbers, Air France operates 40 A350-900 aircraft in service as of mid-2026. About half currently fly the new business class with reverse-herringbone 1-2-1 layout, fully-flat 2-meter bed, sliding privacy doors, and a partition that can be lowered between adjacent seats for a quasi-couple configuration. The remaining A350s are scheduled for retrofit through 2026. Air France’s stated target by December 2026: A330s retired, 777-200ERs retired, and almost all 777-300ERs sharing the new reverse-herringbone seat as well. This means by year-end the long-haul Air France business class is materially consistent across the fleet.

The Air France new business class is broadly competitive with the global premium-carrier set: Cathay Aria Suite, Qatar Qsuite, BA Club Suite, and Lufthansa Allegris. The Air France version has the partition-lowering feature for adjacent travelers, which Cathay does not offer. The sliding door is full enclosure, similar to BA Club Suite.

For long-haul travelers, the easyJet vs Air France comparison is essentially Air France vs no easyJet at all. The choice is which onward carrier from CDG to your destination on the Air France-KLM-SkyTeam network.

Winner: long-haul cabin product
Air France / easyJet does not fly long-haul; A350 business class is competitive globally
Winner: cabin product consistency
Air France / full fleet standardization by December 2026
Winner: First Class option
Air France / La Premiere with full suite; easyJet has nothing equivalent
Winner: short-haul Economy product
Tie / both are unremarkable 3-3 economy seating

Is Flying Blue or easyJet Plus the right loyalty pick?

Different programs for different travelers.

Flying Blue is the joint loyalty program of Air France, KLM, and Transavia, with full SkyTeam alliance integration across approximately 18 partner airlines. Earning miles and status on Air France credits at Delta, Korean Air, Garuda, Vietnam Airlines, Aerolineas Argentinas, and the broader SkyTeam set. Gold members earn 7 Flying Blue miles per euro spent on Air France-KLM operations and get SkyTeam lounge access on international flights. Platinum bumps that to 8 miles per euro. Flying Blue launched the new Flying Blue Visa Signature Card on January 21, 2026 with up to 50 percent enhanced earning on everyday spending. Air France-KLM also opened a Flying Blue status match in April 2026 specifically to poach elite flyers from competing alliances.

easyJet Plus is an annual membership program at around 215 GBP per year. The benefit set: the large cabin bag included on every flight, dedicated bag drop, priority security, free seat selection. It is not a loyalty program in the alliance sense; it earns no transferable currency and confers no partner reciprocity. For a high-frequency easyJet flyer (roughly 15 to 20 short-haul trips per year), the 215 GBP pays for itself in saved cabin-bag fees alone. For a once-a-year easyJet flyer, the membership is worse than just paying the per-leg add-on.

The choice is structural: Flying Blue rewards travelers who fly across multiple SkyTeam carriers and value premium cabin redemption math. easyJet Plus rewards travelers who fly easyJet frequently and want to avoid the cabin-bag add-on at every booking. They are not in competition; they reward different patterns.

Winner: alliance integration
Flying Blue / SkyTeam with ~18 partner airlines
Winner: credit card transfer paths in the US
Flying Blue / American Express Membership Rewards, Chase Ultimate Rewards, Citi ThankYou
Winner: value for a frequent easyJet-only flyer
easyJet Plus / 215 GBP pays for itself in saved cabin-bag fees at ~15 flights per year
Winner: premium cabin redemption value
Flying Blue / easyJet has no equivalent

Paris CDG: shared hub, different terminals

Both airlines operate from Paris Charles de Gaulle, which makes this comparison rare in the legacy-vs-budget space. Most ULCC-vs-legacy matchups split airports.

Air France operates from CDG Terminal 2E, 2F, and 2G for short-haul, plus 2E for long-haul and SkyTeam partner connections. The hub is purpose-built for AF and SkyTeam, with the Air France Salon La Premiere and Salon Business lounges in 2E being among the best-rated airport lounges in Europe.

easyJet operates from CDG Terminal 2D (along with limited Air France short-haul). The terminal is smaller and the experience is more functional than premium, but it is still the primary Paris airport.

For a Paris-arriving traveler with a connection beyond Paris, Air France’s Terminal 2E offers genuine intra-terminal SkyTeam connections to Delta, Korean Air, China Eastern, and others. easyJet’s Terminal 2D does not have meaningful onward connection options; passengers transit out and re-check in for any non-easyJet onward flight.

For a Paris-arriving traveler whose destination is Paris itself, the terminal difference matters less. Both terminals are accessible by the RER B train to central Paris (50 minutes, 11.45 EUR) and by taxi (45 to 60 EUR, 45-60 minutes depending on traffic).

Winner: primary-airport landing
Tie / both fly CDG; this is the unusual feature of this comparison
Winner: terminal connection quality for onward SkyTeam
Air France / Terminal 2E is built for the connection; easyJet's 2D is not
Winner: lounge access for premium-cabin pax
Air France / Salon La Premiere and Salon Business are among Europe's best
Winner: ground transit to central Paris
Tie / RER B from both terminals to central Paris

Who should pick Air France

  • You are flying long-haul (the US, Asia, Africa, South America, Australia), since easyJet does not fly long-haul
  • You want a real business class with the new A350 hard product (reverse-herringbone, sliding door, fully-flat bed)
  • You are connecting onward at CDG to a SkyTeam partner (Delta, Korean Air, China Eastern, KLM)
  • You collect Flying Blue miles and value SkyTeam redemption flexibility
  • You can apply for the new Flying Blue Visa Signature Card with its January 2026 launch benefits
  • You are a high-frequency or premium traveler where loyalty earn compounds over the year
  • You want full-service short-haul experience (real meal service, predictable cabin product) even on a Light fare with a separately purchased bag

Who should pick easyJet

  • The sticker fare savings on short-haul intra-Europe are material and you can fit a 45 by 36 by 20 cm under-seat bag
  • You travel frequently enough on easyJet that easyJet Plus membership (215 GBP per year) pays for itself in saved cabin-bag fees
  • You can plan the cabin-bag add-on at booking time when it is cheapest (6-15 GBP)
  • You value easyJet’s larger free under-seat bag (45 by 36 by 20 cm) vs Ryanair’s tighter 40 by 25 by 20 cm
  • You do not need a connecting flight, an onward train, or any itinerary protection from an alliance
  • You are flying intra-Europe only and short-haul, with no premium cabin requirement
  • You want the less-brutal-ULCC experience: easyJet’s gate culture is more forgiving than Ryanair’s and the secondary-airport math does not apply (easyJet flies primary airports)

The Bottom Line

Air France and easyJet are not the same product, but they are closer in 2026 than they were before AF stripped the cabin bag from Light fares on short-haul. Both fly Charles de Gaulle. Both run no-checked-bag cheapest-fare structures. The difference is what each carrier offers above the floor.

For long-haul, Air France is the only option among these two. The A350 business class rollout completing by December 2026 produces the most consistent Air France long-haul cabin in over a decade, and the new reverse-herringbone seat with sliding door is broadly competitive with the global premium-carrier set.

For short-haul one-bag travelers, easyJet’s free 45 by 36 by 20 cm under-seat bag is the practical advantage that decides most trips. The Air France Light personal item at 40 by 30 by 15 cm is materially smaller, and adding the overhead bag on Air France costs roughly 4-5x what easyJet charges at booking.

For short-haul with checked baggage or a premium cabin requirement, Air France’s Standard and higher fares compete on bundled benefits and on cabin product. The all-in cost gap narrows when both itineraries include a checked bag and seat selection, sometimes flipping in Air France’s favor.

For loyalty, the choice is structural. Flying Blue rewards frequent or premium SkyTeam-network travelers. easyJet Plus rewards frequent easyJet-only travelers who want to avoid the cabin-bag add-on at every booking.

For Paris-bound trips where the destination is Paris itself, easyJet usually wins on cost with no real airport tradeoff. For Paris-as-connection trips or premium-cabin trips, Air France is the natural pick.

Pick by cabin allowance, connection need, and frequency of travel. The shared CDG hub is the unusual feature of this comparison; pick on bag policy and loyalty math, not on airport choice.

For more European-cohort context, see Lufthansa vs Ryanair for the German legacy-vs-ULCC equivalent, or British Airways vs Ryanair for the UK version. For the full per-airline baggage policies, see Air France carry-on size and easyJet carry-on size.

Frequently asked questions

Is Air France or easyJet the better deal for intra-Europe in 2026?
easyJet on the cheapest fare for one-bag travelers, Air France for almost everyone else. Both carriers fly Paris Charles de Gaulle, so the primary-airport advantage that separates BA from Ryanair does not apply here. easyJet's free under-seat bag is 45 by 36 by 20 cm at 15 kg, which is materially larger than Ryanair's 40 by 25 by 20 cm and is enough for a 3-night packing list. Air France Light fares now strip the cabin bag on short-haul, leaving only the personal item. To get the overhead 55 by 35 by 25 cm cabin bag back on Air France costs roughly 25 to 50 EUR per leg. easyJet's equivalent overhead 56 by 45 by 25 cm bag costs 6 to 35 GBP per leg if added at booking, or is bundled into FLEXI fare or easyJet Plus annual membership. The math usually favors easyJet on the cheapest one-bag short-haul trip and Air France on the trip where the loyalty earn, the connection, or the cabin product matters.
Did Air France strip the cabin bag from its Light fare?
Yes, on short-haul. Air France Light fares on intra-Europe routes no longer include the full overhead cabin bag, only the small personal item (40 by 30 by 15 cm). Adding the 55 by 35 by 25 cm overhead cabin bag costs roughly 25 to 50 EUR per leg depending on the route. This is a 2025 change that converged AF's cheapest fare structure with the ULCC pricing model. Air France long-haul fares (Light included) on routes to the US, Asia, Africa, and Australia retain the full cabin bag plus personal item on Economy and add a 23 kg checked bag on most cabins. The strip is specifically short-haul Light.
Which fare on easyJet includes the large cabin bag?
easyJet's Standard fare includes only the small 45 by 36 by 20 cm under-seat bag. The 56 by 45 by 25 cm large overhead cabin bag is included with: Standard Plus fares, FLEXI fares, easyJet Plus annual membership (around 215 GBP/year), or as a paid add-on at booking for 6 to 35 GBP per leg. Note that Up Front and Extra Legroom seats no longer include the large cabin bag, a change easyJet made in June 2023 that catches travelers who booked premium seats expecting the legacy benefit. The Hands Free service is a separate add-on where easyJet takes the cabin bag at check-in for a fee and returns it at the destination as checked baggage, useful when you do not want to wrestle with the overhead but want to avoid the larger checked bag fee.
Is Air France business class on the A350 worth booking?
Yes, if the route flies the new cabin. Air France has 40 A350-900 aircraft in service as of mid-2026. About half of those fly the new business class with reverse-herringbone 1-2-1 layout, fully-flat 2-meter bed, sliding privacy doors, and a partition that can be lowered for travelers in adjacent seats. The remaining A350s are scheduled for retrofit through 2026. Air France's stated target is full fleet standardization by December 2026: A330s gone, 777-200ERs retired, and almost all 777-300ERs featuring the same new reverse-herringbone seat. The new product is broadly competitive with Cathay Aria Suite, Qatar Qsuite, and BA Club Suite. To verify the cabin on a specific flight, check the seat map at booking; the new product is the 1-2-1 layout with door, while the older product is 2-2-2 or 1-2-1 without the door.
Is Flying Blue or easyJet Plus the better loyalty program in 2026?
They are not the same thing. Flying Blue is the joint loyalty program of Air France, KLM, and Transavia, with full SkyTeam alliance integration across roughly 18 partner airlines. Status earning and redemption span Delta, Korean Air, Garuda, Vietnam Airlines, and others. The 2026 Flying Blue Visa Signature Card launched January 21, 2026 with enhanced earning on Air France-KLM spend. Air France-KLM also opened an aggressive Flying Blue status match program in April 2026 to poach elite flyers from competing alliances. easyJet Plus is an annual membership (around 215 GBP per year) that gives the member the large cabin bag included on every flight, plus seat selection, priority security, and dedicated bag drop. It is not a loyalty program in the SkyTeam sense; it earns no transferable currency and confers no status reciprocity. For a frequent intra-Europe traveler who buys easyJet often enough that the 215 GBP pays for itself in saved cabin-bag fees, easyJet Plus is a real value. For a traveler who flies across multiple airlines or wants premium cabin redemptions, Flying Blue is the program that matters.

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Caden Sorenson

Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer

Caden Sorenson runs Vientapps, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.

Last verified 2026-05-21 against official Air France and easyJet policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.