Yes, you can add a carry-on later, but the price climbs as you get closer to departure and some steps lock once you check in.
Allegiant’s low base fare works when you treat bags like an add-on, not a given. If you booked first and thought about luggage later, you’re not alone. The good news: you can still add a carry-on to most Allegiant reservations. The catch: timing matters, and the checkout button you click today can save you real money compared to paying at the airport.
This page walks you through what counts as a carry-on, how Allegiant prices it, where to add it, and the little trip-wreckers people forget—like printing a boarding pass too early or showing up with a “personal item” that’s secretly a carry-on in disguise.
Carry-on vs personal item on Allegiant
Start with the two-bag reality. On Allegiant, one small personal item can ride for free. A carry-on costs extra. The airline treats them as two different things with different size caps and different storage spots.
Personal item
A personal item is the small bag that goes fully under the seat in front of you. Allegiant lists a max size of 8 in. x 14 in. x 18 in., measured with wheels and handles. If it sticks out, it can get treated as a paid carry-on at the gate.
Carry-on bag
A carry-on is the bag that goes in the overhead bin. Allegiant lists a max size of 10 in. x 16 in. x 22 in., again counting wheels, pockets, and handles. You can purchase one carry-on per passenger.
That’s the baseline. Now let’s talk about the part you came for: adding the carry-on after you already booked.
Adding a carry-on to an Allegiant flight after booking
You can add bags after booking through Allegiant’s “Manage Travel” flow or in the app. Allegiant spells out a clear rule: you can add bags at any time as long as you have not already checked in at the airport or printed your boarding pass. Once one of those happens, your options get tighter and prices tend to jump.
Where to add it
Most travelers use the same two paths:
- Manage Travel on Allegiant’s site using your confirmation code and last name.
- The Allegiant app, which also lets you store a mobile boarding pass.
When to add it
If you know you’ll need the carry-on, add it as soon as you’re sure. Allegiant states that bag prices vary by route and by when you add the bag to your itinerary, and airport pricing runs higher than pre-purchase pricing. Waiting can turn a low-cost add-on into the priciest part of the ticket.
What can block you
Two actions can box you in:
- Checking in at the airport at the counter or kiosk.
- Printing your boarding pass after online check-in.
That second one surprises people. If you check in online, take a second and confirm your bag choices first. Allegiant’s own check-in guidance tells passengers to verify seat assignments and bag reservations before printing boarding passes. That’s not a throwaway line. It’s your warning label.
Bundles are a separate rule
If you skipped a bundle at checkout and now want the bundle later, Allegiant says no: bundles can only be purchased at the time of the original booking, and you can’t change your bundle after you book. You can still buy bags à la carte later, so focus on the bag add-on itself, not the bundle.
How much it costs to add a carry-on
Allegiant publishes a wide range for carry-on pricing because it depends on route and timing. On its fees page, the carry-on bag line shows $10.00 to $75.00 per segment. The same page also notes that baggage fees vary depending on route and when the bag is added.
In plain terms: the earlier you add the carry-on, the more often you land near the low end of the range. The later you add it, the more you drift toward the top end. Paying at the airport can also stack on airport-related bag fees, and oversized items can trigger extra charges.
If you want the official definitions and size limits straight from the airline, use Allegiant’s carry-on and checked baggage policy page as your baseline reference before you pack.
Steps to add a carry-on after you booked
This is the clean, repeatable workflow that avoids the usual traps.
Step 1: Pull up your reservation
Go to Manage Travel on Allegiant’s site or open the app. Use your confirmation code and last name. If you booked through a third party, you still manage bags with Allegiant once you have the Allegiant record locator.
Step 2: Find the bag section
Look for “Bags” or “Add bags.” You should see options for checked bags and carry-on bags. Make sure you’re choosing “carry-on” and not just adding checked luggage by accident.
Step 3: Add the carry-on to the right traveler
Allegiant sells carry-ons per passenger. If two people are on the booking and only one needs the overhead bin bag, attach it to that traveler. This matters if you split up at security or boarding, since enforcement happens at the passenger level.
Step 4: Save, pay, and confirm
Complete payment, then look for the updated trip summary showing the carry-on attached. If you use the app, refresh the itinerary screen so you don’t walk away with a stale view.
Step 5: Check in after the bag is added
Online check-in opens 24 hours before departure. When you check in online, confirm the carry-on is still listed before you generate a boarding pass. If you plan to print, pause and double-check first.
For the airline’s published fee ranges and service list, you can also review Allegiant’s optional services and fees page while you’re budgeting your trip.
Fee timing and risk points
Here’s the pattern most travelers run into: the bag itself is easy to add, yet the price and enforcement pain show up when you wait or when your bag is close to the size limit.
You can save stress by treating these as your trip checkpoints: add the bag early, measure the bag with wheels included, and keep your boarding pass workflow simple so you don’t lock yourself out of cheaper changes.
| When You Add The Carry-on | What You’re Paying For | What To Watch |
|---|---|---|
| During original booking | Lowest bag pricing most often | Pick the right passenger if only one needs it |
| After booking, weeks out | Pre-purchase pricing by route | Confirm it shows on the trip summary |
| After booking, close to departure | Higher pre-purchase pricing | Don’t wait until the travel day if you can avoid it |
| During online check-in window | Often near the high end of the range | Verify bags before generating any boarding pass output |
| After printing a boarding pass | Fewer low-cost change paths | Changes may push you toward airport pricing |
| At the airport counter | Airport-priced carry-on fees | Arrive early so you’re not rushed into bad choices |
| At the gate due to size or bin space | Gate handling and at-airport baggage fees | Oversize bags can get tagged and sent to baggage claim |
| Personal item turns out oversized | Oversize personal item fee range | “It fits if I squish it” can backfire when agents check |
Common mistakes that trigger surprise charges
These are the repeat offenders. Fix them before your ride-share pulls up.
Calling a carry-on a “personal item”
If your under-seat bag is over Allegiant’s personal-item size cap, you’re gambling. Gate staff can treat an oversized personal item as a carry-on with fees. Measure your bag at home with the wheels and handles included, not just the fabric box.
Checking in first, thinking about bags second
Online check-in is convenient, yet it can turn into a trap if you rush. Allegiant’s own wording tells you to verify bag reservations before printing boarding passes. Follow that sequence every time.
Forgetting pricing is per segment
Allegiant defines a segment as one takeoff and one landing. If you connect, that’s more than one segment. A carry-on fee can apply per segment, so the round-trip math can feel rude if you only budgeted for one direction.
Printing a boarding pass at the airport
Allegiant lists a boarding pass printing fee at select locations. If you can use a mobile boarding pass or print at home, do it. It’s one less line to stand in and one less fee to juggle while you’re already spending on bags.
Carry-on sizing and packing checks that save stress
Once you pay for the carry-on, the next goal is getting it on board without drama. Allegiant’s sizing is straightforward on paper, and enforcement happens in real life when the plane is full and the overhead bins are tight.
Measure the “real” outside of the bag
Allegiant measures exterior size including wheels, pockets, handles, and decorations. A bag that looks fine from the front can fail once you count the wheels and the stiff handle rails.
Keep the bag easy to lift
Allegiant publishes weight caps for checked bags, not for carry-ons on the same fee page. Still, you have to lift your carry-on into the overhead bin. Pack so you can lift it without a struggle, since flight crews can ask you to check it if it can’t be stowed safely.
Plan for the “no bin space” moment
If the overhead fills up, your carry-on can get gate-checked and sent to baggage claim at arrival. Allegiant recommends pulling out valuables, meds, keys, and items you’ll want during the flight before it leaves your hands. Build a small “grab pouch” so you can do that fast without unpacking your whole bag at the jet bridge.
| Bag Type | Max Size Allegiant Lists | Where It Must Fit |
|---|---|---|
| Personal item | 8 in. x 14 in. x 18 in. | Fully under the seat in front of you |
| Carry-on bag | 10 in. x 16 in. x 22 in. | Fully in the overhead bin |
| Checked bag | Up to 50 lb; 80 linear inches | Ticket counter bag drop and baggage claim |
Smart ways to decide if you should buy the carry-on
Sometimes the carry-on is the right call. Sometimes it’s the pricey call. Here are practical decision points that keep you from paying twice.
If your trip is two to four days
Try to win with a personal item first. A carefully packed under-seat bag can handle a long weekend if you skip bulky shoes, roll clothes, and use a slim toiletry kit. If you know you’ll bring gifts back, add the carry-on up front instead of hoping you’ll “make it work” on the return.
If you’re bringing structured items
Coats, boots, boxed items, and stiff camera cases can push a personal item over the size limit fast. In that case, paying for the carry-on often saves hassle at the gate.
If you hate baggage claim waits
A carry-on keeps you out of baggage claim and lowers the chance of delayed luggage. If you’re landing late or you’ve got a tight pickup plan, that convenience can be worth the extra spend.
If you’re traveling with kids
Allegiant allows certain items beyond the standard two items, like a diaper bag and a coat, and it also has rules for strollers and car seats. Even so, kid travel creates extra “stuff,” so decide early if the carry-on is part of your plan instead of trying to squeeze everything into a personal item and hoping nobody notices.
Pre-flight checklist for adding the carry-on without drama
- Add the carry-on in Manage Travel as soon as your packing plan is set.
- Confirm the carry-on is attached to the right passenger on the booking.
- Measure exterior bag size with wheels and handles included.
- Check in online after the bag is on the reservation.
- Verify bag reservations before you print or download boarding passes.
- Keep a small pouch for meds, chargers, keys, and snacks in case the bag gets gate-checked.
If you follow that list, you’re covering the two things Allegiant’s pricing system rewards: early add-ons and bags that stay within the published limits. That’s the simplest way to keep the trip smooth and keep your total trip cost from creeping up.
References & Sources
- Allegiant Air.“Carry-On and Checked Baggage Policy, Size & Fees.”Lists personal item and carry-on size limits and states bags can be added before airport check-in or printing a boarding pass.
- Allegiant Air.“Optional Services & Fees.”Provides published fee ranges for carry-on bags and explains that bag pricing varies by route and when the bag is added.
