A Ryanair passenger who refused to move seats for a mum with a young baby - after paying for his seat - has divided opinion.
The passenger posted on Reddit he had paid specifically for the middle seat in a row for a two-hour flight and was seated next to a woman with her young baby.
The Reddit user, under the name u/aerdnaras, wrote that when he took his seat, the woman asked him he if would like to move to back of the plane to switch seats with her husband - which he turned down.
He wrote: "I bought my seat on row 4B which is in the middle, it may sound odd to buy a middle, but I wanted it to be as close to the exit as possible and there were no other seats available.
"The flight was landing on a minor secondary airport which has limited train connections so if I wanted to catch the best train, I'd have to run outside the plane and do passport control ASAP.
"If I missed that train, [the] other option was to wait an hour and a half, or get a $70 cab - so that's why I paid for that seat."
He added: "I board my flight, tired as hell, and I have this lady with her child of [a few] months quietly sleeping sitting in the window seat.
"She immediately asks if I can move to row 18 so she can sit with her husband. I just said I paid for the seat and I did not want to move.
"Whole row was looking at me and I could see the mother texting the husband about me. Eventually no one was sitting next to the husband so she moved down the plane."
After dividing opinion on the flight, he asked whether he was in the wrong as "everyone was judging him" despite other passengers refusing to help the mum.
The admission online has split opinion as most users were in favour of the man's decision and believe he had no obligation to move.
One person wrote: "It was your seat, you selected it. You have no obligations to give it up to anyone if you do not want to."
Another added: "You bought your seat, you didn't want to move. If I took a flight with my three kids and wife and we weren't all together, it wouldn't bother me. People are so entitled. You did nothing wrong."
And a third user said: "Their lack of preparation isn't your fault. They were cheap and hoping to con/cajole someone into moving."
Some users, however, thought the man should have thought of the mum's situation and paid her a favour by moving.
A user wrote: " "I get that you paid for That. Exact. Seat, but really? Why couldn’t you just do someone a favour? Have you ever been in a position that you needed a favor and that person just blew you off or was just plain rude?
"I just hope that in your future strangers are more considerate than you were."