What It Actually Costs to Get In
On the SFO–IAH route, first-class fares — which is what gets you into a Polaris seat — start at $789 one-way, climbing noticeably in the opening weeks. Return fares from Houston open around $894 before settling to $744 in the second week of service. MileagePlus redemptions begin at 64,500 miles each way in first class, 21,800 in economy.

The SFO–IAD pairing is the sharper deal: the lowest first-class fare found was $884 each way — genuinely competitive for a transcontinental flight in a brand-new lie-flat suite. Award pricing starts at 80,000 miles in first, 33,400 in economy. Rates spike on peak days, so flexibility pays.

Here’s the part worth underlining: booking a first-class seat gets you access to a Polaris Studio at no extra charge. On the international routes launching later this month, United plans to levy a $499 upcharge each way for Studio access. Domestically, that surcharge disappears. The service itself will be scaled to a short domestic flight — no pajamas, no Perricone kits — but you’ll still be sitting in one of the most forward-thinking business-class seat designs flying today, for the price of a regular first-class ticket.
How to Confirm You’re on the Right Plane
When searching United’s site, filter for Boeing 787-9 service on your date, then click through to the seat map. The new Elevated interiors are identifiable by their dual Polaris cabin layout: rows 1–8 form the forward cabin, rows 9–17 the aft. In the forward section, middle seats angle toward each other — that’s where six of the Studio ottomans live. Aft middle seats angle away.
Regular new Polaris suites — the non-Studio version — come with closing doors and 19-inch screens. Those doors won’t be operational yet at launch, with no timeline given for activation. Premium Plus gets 16-inch 4K OLED screens and beefier privacy dividers. Economy screens land at 13 inches. Every cabin is a meaningful step up from what these routes currently offer.
The domestic window closes fast. Once the long-haul routes take priority after April 29, these jets won’t be parked on short hops anymore. For anyone who’s wanted to try United’s new flagship product without buying a ticket to Singapore, the next few weeks are the shot.