Yes, toothpaste counts as a gel, so carry-on tubes must be 3.4 oz (100 mL) or less and fit in your quart bag.
Toothpaste feels simple until you’re at the checkpoint with a full-size tube in your hand. The catch is that toothpaste is treated like a gel, not a solid. So the same size limits that apply to shampoo and lotion can apply to your toothpaste tube too.
This guide lays out what you can bring, what gets pulled aside, and the small packing choices that keep your bag moving. You’ll also get a few smart swaps for longer trips, plus a checklist you can use the night before you fly.
Can We Take Toothpaste In Flight? Carry-On Rules And Size Caps
If you plan to brush your teeth right after landing, the carry-on rule matters most. In the U.S., toothpaste falls under the liquids and gels screening limits. You can bring it through security in your carry-on when the tube is travel size and packed the right way.
What TSA Looks For With Toothpaste
TSA screeners apply the same screening logic to gels, creams, and pastes. Toothpaste is listed by TSA as allowed in carry-on bags when the container is 3.4 ounces (100 mL) or less. Anything larger belongs in checked baggage or it may be set aside at the checkpoint.
That size limit is about the container, not how much is left inside. A half-empty 6-ounce tube still counts as a 6-ounce container.
How To Pack Toothpaste In Your Quart Bag
Your checkpoint-friendly setup is simple:
- Use a tube labeled 3.4 oz (100 mL) or smaller.
- Place it in your clear, resealable quart bag with your other liquids and gels.
- Seal the bag fully so it doesn’t pop open in a bin.
If you’re tight on space, stand the tube upright in the bag and squeeze out extra air before sealing. That keeps the bag flat and easy to scan.
What Happens If You Forget And Pack A Full-Size Tube
If a tube is over the limit, you may be asked to step aside while your bag is checked. In many cases, the item won’t be allowed through the checkpoint. If you have a checked bag, put the full-size tube there before you reach security.
Checked Bag Toothpaste Rules For Longer Trips
Checked baggage is the simple path for big tubes and backups. TSA’s “What Can I Bring?” guidance lists toothpaste as allowed in checked bags. You can pack a regular tube, a spare tube, and extra dental items without the quart-bag limit that applies to carry-ons.
Checked bags get tossed around. A toothpaste cap that’s a little loose can turn into a mess inside your toiletry kit. A couple of small steps prevents that.
How To Stop Leaks In Checked Luggage
- Twist the cap tight, then add a small piece of tape around the seam.
- Slip the tube into a zip-top bag, even if it’s already in a dopp kit.
- Pack it near soft items like clothing, not against hard edges.
Carry-On Toothpaste Limits That Catch People Off Guard
Most toothpaste trouble comes from tiny details: tube size, label, and where you place it in your bag. These are the most common “wait, what?” moments.
Travel Size Is A Label, Not A Vibe
Stores often call a tube “travel size” even when it’s over 3.4 ounces. Check the printed ounces or milliliters. If the label is worn off, pick a different tube. A clear label makes screening smoother.
Multiple Tubes Are Allowed, Space Is The Limit
You can carry more than one small tube if they fit in your single quart bag with the rest of your liquids and gels. If you’re packing skincare, contact solution, and hair products too, toothpaste may be the item that pushes you over the space limit.
Powders, Tablets, And Solid Alternatives
Toothpaste tablets and tooth powder skip the gel rule because they aren’t treated as liquids or gels. They can be a clean option for long trips or anyone tired of quart-bag Tetris. If you go this route, pack them in a tight container so they don’t crumble.
Tablet labels vary. Some include fluoride, some don’t. If you’re picky about ingredients or sensitivity, test them at home before your trip so you’re not stuck with a taste you hate.
Toothpaste At Airport Security Step By Step
Security lines move fast when your bag is easy to screen. Here’s a simple flow that matches how most U.S. checkpoints operate.
- Before you enter the line, place your quart bag somewhere you can grab in one motion.
- At the bins, take out the quart bag if the officer asks for it.
- Lay the bag flat in the bin so the scanner gets a clear view.
- If your bag is pulled, stay calm. You’ll usually be asked to open it and point out the item.
- If the tube is too large, you may need to toss it or exit the line and repack.
TSA spells out the screening limits on its official liquids rule page. If you want the exact language from the source, read TSA’s liquids, aerosols, gels rule before you pack.
Table Of Toothpaste Packing Choices And What They Solve
Use this table as a fast decision tool when you’re packing for a weekend trip, a long stay, or a family flight.
| Packing Choice | Where It Works Best | What It Prevents |
|---|---|---|
| 3.4 oz (100 mL) tube | Carry-on | Checkpoint disposal |
| Full-size tube | Checked bag | Quart-bag squeeze |
| Two small tubes | Carry-on | Running out mid-trip |
| Toothpaste tablets | Carry-on or personal item | Gel limits and leaks |
| Mini tube + destination backup | Short trips | Overpacking toiletries |
| Tube sealed in zip-top bag | Checked bag | Mess in your toiletry kit |
| Cap taped for travel day | Checked bag | Cap loosening in transit |
| Travel-size refillable container | Carry-on | Oversize original packaging |
Special Cases: Kids And Medical Needs
Most travelers fit neatly into the standard gel limits. Some trips don’t. Families and travelers with medical needs can still keep things smooth with a little planning.
Flying With Kids And Extra Toiletries
Kids often need more wipes, creams, and backup items. Two moves help:
- Split items between adults so each person uses one quart bag.
- Put full-size backups in checked baggage and keep only what you need in the cabin.
Medically Necessary Items Over 3.4 Oz
Some travelers need dental gels, prescription pastes, or medical liquids that don’t fit the standard size. TSA allows certain medically necessary liquids in larger amounts when you declare them for screening. Pack them where you can reach them and keep labels intact.
What To Do When You Connect Or Fly Abroad
Many airports use similar 100 mL container limits and a clear bag. Rules can still vary by country and airport. If you expect a second security check, pack the strictest setup you’ll face that day: a labeled small tube in your quart bag, or tablets in your personal item.
Common Mistakes That Lead To Tossed Toothpaste
These are easy to avoid once you know what screeners tend to flag.
Spreading Toiletries Across Multiple Bags
People split toiletries across a backpack, tote, and roll-aboard, then forget where the quart bag is. Keep one liquids bag. Keep it reachable.
Relying On A Tube With No Size Marking
Some samples have tiny printing or no volume marking. If an item can’t be checked quickly, it can slow screening. Choose a tube with a clear size marking, even if it’s a little pricier.
Packing Toothpaste Loose Next To Electronics
A leaking tube can coat chargers, earbuds, or camera gear. Use a bag barrier each time, even for carry-on. It weighs nothing and saves you from sticky cleanup later.
Table Of Last-Minute Toothpaste Decisions Before You Leave
This table works as a quick checkpoint the night before your flight.
| If This Is True | Do This | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| You only have a full-size tube | Move it to checked baggage | Keeps your carry-on within gel limits |
| You’re carry-on only | Buy a labeled 3.4 oz tube | Matches checkpoint size cap |
| Your quart bag is stuffed | Switch to tablets | Frees space for other liquids |
| You’re traveling with family | Use one liquids bag per person | Spreads items without breaking the rule |
| You expect re-screening on a connection | Pack the strictest setup | Reduces surprises at a second checkpoint |
| You’ve had leaks before | Tape the cap and bag the tube | Stops mess in transit |
A Simple Packing Checklist You Can Reuse
Run this list once and you’re done:
- Carry-on tube is 3.4 oz (100 mL) or smaller.
- Toothpaste is inside one clear quart bag with other gels and liquids.
- Checked-bag tube is sealed in a zip-top bag.
- Cap is tight and taped if the tube is soft or nearly full.
- Backup plan: tablets or a second mini tube for long trips.
If you want a single, official line item for toothpaste, TSA’s own entry is clear: it’s allowed in carry-on bags within the standard size cap, and it’s allowed in checked bags too. You can check that on TSA’s toothpaste item page.
Pack it once, then stop thinking about it. The goal is to get through security without a slow-down, keep your bag clean, and still have what you need when you land.
References & Sources
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Liquids, Aerosols, Gels Rule.”Defines the 3-1-1 container and quart-bag limits used at U.S. checkpoints.
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Toothpaste.”Lists toothpaste as permitted in carry-on bags up to 3.4 oz and permitted in checked baggage.
