Yes, most airlines let you add a lap infant or child seat later, though timing, fees, and document rules can change the process.
Plans shift. A baby arrives earlier than expected, a grandparent backs out, or you book in a rush and sort the family details later. That’s why this question comes up so often. In most cases, you can add an infant to a flight after booking. The catch is that “can” does not always mean “easy,” and it does not always mean “free.”
The right move depends on how the child will travel. A lap infant, a child with a paid seat, and an infant on an international ticket follow different rules. Airline systems also treat infant records in their own way. Some let you handle it inside your trip online. Some push you to reservations. Some ask you to finish the last step at the airport.
This is where parents get tripped up. They assume the booking is done, then reach the airport and learn the baby was never fully added to the reservation. A few minutes of cleanup before travel can save a nasty check-in delay.
Can You Add An Infant To A Flight After Booking On Most Airlines?
Yes. On many carriers, you can add an infant after the original booking, either online, by phone, through chat, or at the airport desk. That usually applies to a child under age two traveling as a lap infant. If you want the child to have a seat, the airline may need to reissue the booking or create a new ticket for that passenger.
Domestic and international trips are not the same. On many U.S. airlines, a lap infant on a domestic route can be added with no base fare. International travel is different. A lap infant may still need a ticket, taxes, or a percentage-based infant fare. That’s why a route that looks simple on your screen can turn into a reservation change behind the scenes.
Also, one adult can usually hold only one lap infant. If you’re traveling with twins and one adult, the second child often needs a paid seat and an approved restraint.
What “adding an infant” can mean
- Lap infant: The child flies without a seat and is linked to an adult’s booking.
- Infant with a seat: The child gets a ticketed seat, often with a car seat or approved restraint.
- International infant record: The child may need a separate ticket number, taxes, and passport details.
- Split booking fix: If the infant’s accompanying adult changes, the airline may need to rework the reservation.
When The Process Is Easy And When It Gets Messy
If your trip is a simple domestic nonstop on one airline, adding a lap infant is often pretty smooth. You pull up your booking, look for a traveler option, and attach the infant. Some airlines also let reservations handle it in minutes.
Things get trickier when your flight includes a partner airline, an award ticket, a long-haul international route, or a baby who will turn two before the return flight. Those cases can trigger fare recalculation, manual ticketing, or a fresh booking for one leg of the trip.
Seat selection can change too. If you add an infant later, the airline may block exit rows and some bulkhead seats, or move you to keep the adult and child in an allowed seating zone.
Cases that need extra care
- International flights with taxes or infant fare collection
- Codeshare itineraries booked through one airline and operated by another
- Award tickets that need agent handling
- Return trips that start before age two and end after the second birthday
- Bookings with one adult and more than one infant
The Federal Aviation Administration says the safest place for a child under two is an approved child restraint in a purchased seat, not on a lap. That matters if you were planning to add the baby later and were still torn between “lap infant” and “buy a seat.” The FAA’s child safety seat guidance lays out what restraint labels are accepted and why a separate seat gives better protection during turbulence and hard stops.
What You Need Before You Make The Change
Have the booking reference ready, along with the infant’s full name, date of birth, and the adult who will hold or sit beside the child. For international trips, have the passport details ready too. Some carriers will not finalize the infant record without them.
It also helps to decide your seating plan first. If you want a bassinet row, a window seat for a car seat, or family seating together, do that while the airline is already in the reservation. The U.S. Department of Transportation has a family seating page with airline commitments and tips for parents trying to sit beside young children. The DOT’s tips for families page is worth a quick read before you call or edit the trip.
| Situation | What Usually Happens | What To Check |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic lap infant | Often added after booking with no base fare | Infant age, one lap infant per adult, seat assignment changes |
| International lap infant | Often needs taxes, fees, or an infant fare | Passport details, country entry rules, ticket issuance |
| Infant with paid seat | Needs a separate ticket | Fare difference, car seat fit, approved restraint label |
| Award booking | Agent may need to add the infant manually | Partner rules, fees, infant record confirmed on all segments |
| Codeshare flight | Operating airline rules may control the last step | Which carrier checks you in, who collects infant charges |
| Infant turns two during trip | Seat may be required on one or more legs | Birthday date against each flight date |
| Two infants with one adult | One child may need a seat | Airline limit, restraint option, seating layout |
| Late airport add | Possible, though slower and riskier | Check-in line time, document checks, sold-out seating |
Best Order To Add The Baby Without Wasting Time
Start with the airline app or “manage trip” page. If there’s a clear infant option, use it. Some carriers now let you add a lap infant there after booking. Delta’s Children & Infant Travel page says parents can get help for an infant-in-arms through My Trips, which gives you a good clue about where to start on similar airline sites.
If you don’t see the option, call reservations before check-in opens. Ask the agent to do three things in one shot: add the infant, confirm the infant record is attached to every flight segment, and read back any fees or documents still needed. That last part matters. Some bookings show the child in the app but still need airport document verification before boarding passes are issued.
A clean step-by-step order
- Open the booking and try the airline’s self-service tools first.
- If the infant option is missing, call the airline that issued the ticket.
- Confirm whether the child is a lap infant or needs a paid seat.
- Ask whether any taxes, fees, or ticket numbers still need to be created.
- Check seating again after the infant is added.
- For international trips, verify passport name spelling before travel day.
Do not leave this until the last minute if the trip is international. Ticketing teams can be fast, though partner flights and manual fare collection may take longer than a normal seat change.
Lap Infant Or Paid Seat: Which One Makes More Sense?
A lap infant keeps the booking cheaper. That’s the main draw, and for a short domestic flight it may feel like the practical pick. Still, there’s a trade-off. The child has no dedicated seat, your hands are full the whole time, and sleep can be rough on longer flights.
A paid seat costs more but gives you a fixed spot for the child, more room to manage naps and feeding, and a safer setup when you use an approved restraint. This choice gets more attractive on longer trips, red-eyes, and flights with a high chance of delays on board.
| Option | Best Fit | Main Watchout |
|---|---|---|
| Lap infant | Shorter trips, tighter budget, one adult per child | Less space, no guaranteed seat for the child |
| Paid infant seat | Long flights, naps, approved car seat use | Higher fare and possible seat selection limits |
| Airport-only fix | Last-resort cleanup when online tools fail | Longer check-in, more room for ticketing errors |
Common Snags Parents Run Into
The biggest one is assuming the infant is “added” just because a name appears in the booking. For some trips, that only means a service note was created. It does not always mean the child has the right ticket or tax record. Ask the airline to confirm the infant is fully ticketed where needed.
Another snag is seat drift. You add the infant, then the system reassigns your seats or blocks a row that cannot be used with certain child setups. Check the map again right away.
Then there’s the birthday issue. If your child turns two before the return, the lap infant setup may stop working for that segment. That can force a paid seat even if the outbound was fine.
Smart checks before travel day
- Make sure the infant appears on every segment
- Verify names and birth date match travel documents
- Recheck seats after any infant change
- Bring proof of age if the airline asks for it
- For international trips, confirm passport and visa needs early
What To Do If The Airline Says No Online
Don’t panic. “No” online often means “agent required,” not “not allowed.” Call the ticketing carrier first. If the trip includes a partner airline, ask which carrier owns the infant step and who will collect any charges. Get the answer while you still have time to fix a broken segment.
If phone lines are jammed, try the airline app chat, social care channel, or airport desk before the travel rush kicks in. Morning contact attempts often move faster than evening ones on heavy travel days.
For most parents, the safest play is simple: add the infant as soon as the plan is firm, then recheck the booking one more time 24 hours before departure. That catches the small errors that tend to cause big airport stress.
References & Sources
- Federal Aviation Administration.“Child Safety Seat Tips.”Explains that the safest place for a child under two is an approved restraint in a purchased seat and lists accepted restraint labels.
- U.S. Department of Transportation.“Tips for Families and Links to Airline Webpages.”Provides family seating guidance and directs parents to airline-specific pages for booking and seating details.
- Delta Air Lines.“Children & Infant Travel.”Shows that infant-in-arms help can be handled through My Trips and outlines basic under-two travel rules.
