United Airlines has updated its Contract of Carriage, and buried inside the legal language is a rule that frequent travelers will read with quiet satisfaction.
Passengers who insist on playing music, videos, games, or whatever else on their phones without headphones can now be refused transport.
Yes, that means exactly what it sounds like.
If you sit on a plane blasting TikTok at full volume while everyone else pretends not to hear you, the airline now has the right to remove you.
The Rule Nobody Needed to Write
The new wording appears under Rule 21, the section that covers refusal of transport. Alongside obvious violations such as offensive behavior or improper attire, United now lists playing audio without headphones as a breach of contract.
It sounds ridiculous until you remember how often this actually happens.
Some passengers seem convinced that a shared cabin means shared soundtrack, and that the rest of the plane should enjoy whatever they happen to be watching, scrolling, or giving to their children as digital babysitters.
United has been asking passengers to use headphones for years, especially after offering free in-flight Wi-Fi. Still, polite requests only work with people who understand them.
The new rule is what happens when they do not.
The Problem Is not the Airline
According to surveys, loud audio on public transport is among the most common passenger complaints. Yet, most people avoid saying anything because nobody wants to start an argument at 30,000 feet.
So the result is always the same.
One person watches videos without headphones. Ten people suffer in silence. One flight attendant pretends not to notice.
United’s decision to actually enforce the rule may sound strict. For anyone who travels often, it feels less like punishment and more like basic hygiene.
Confined spaces only work when people remember they are not alone. That reminder now has to be written into the contract.