it depends how the airline sets the layout, you may find on smaller companies there is no first class seats. normally there is about 20, 25, 30
The Airbus A320 is normally configured with three seats either side of the aisle, with 164 seats in 1-class configuration or 150 in 2-class.
The Airbus A320-200 has a maximum certified seating capacity of 180 seats. However it is usually configured for 150 seats in a 2 class layout and 164 seats in a single class layout.
The standard configuration is three seats either side of the aisle with 164 seats in 1-class configuration or 150 in 2-class.
30 in an all economy layout with the max number of seats, otherwise it depends on the airline
beatiful ones
As it is typically used on short-haul routes, most airlines configure the A320 as 2-class with just business and economy - no first. I have flown many times on the 2-class European British Airways A320, which I assume is typical of this type, and there is just a curtain between the two classes.
The Airbus A320-200 can carry a maximum of 180 passengers. Normal 1-class configuration is 164, 2-class is 150.
The seating for the A320 for US airlines is; 2-2 for Buisness class 3-3 for Economy class Economy Class has 2 center exit rows, typically seats in the first exit row do not recline. Bathrooms are in the rear of the airplane. Avoid these seats because fliers line up back here.
75 on each side 150 in total
The Airbus A320-200 can carry a maximum of 180 passengers with typical 1-class configuration of 164 and 2-class of 150.
Airbus International made the A320.
No, the A320 has a single passenger deck. The only two commercial airliners with multiple decks are the Boeing 747 (partial 2nd passenger deck behind the cockpit typically fitted for business/1st class) and the Airbus A380 which has a complete 2nd deck typically fitted for business and premium economy seats.