Yes, most portable chargers can fly in your carry-on, but lithium limits apply and you can’t pack them in checked bags.
You’re at the gate, your phone is at 12%, and your power bank is the only thing standing between you and a dead screen on a long flight. Then the doubt hits: will security take it, or will the airline make you toss it?
The good news is simple. In the U.S., power banks are usually allowed, as long as you pack them the right way and the capacity stays within the limits airlines follow. The bad news is also simple. Put one in a checked bag and you can end up re-opening luggage, missing a bag, or losing the charger.
Are Power Banks Allowed on Planes? Carry-On Vs Checked Bags
Power banks count as spare lithium batteries. Spare lithium batteries are allowed in carry-on bags and not allowed in checked bags on most passenger flights. Airlines follow this safety approach because lithium batteries can overheat, and a cabin crew can react faster if something goes wrong in the cabin than in a cargo hold.
So, pack the power bank in your carry-on or personal item. Leave it out of checked luggage, even if you plan to turn it off and bury it in clothes. If you’re forced to check a carry-on at the gate, pull the power bank out first and keep it with you.
Why Checked Bags Are A Problem For Power Banks
When a lithium battery overheats, it can vent hot gas and start a fire. A cabin crew can spot smoke, use onboard fire tools, and cool the device. In a checked bag, the battery sits out of reach, packed tight with fabrics that can feed a fire.
This is why airlines treat power banks like loose spare batteries, not like a built-in battery inside a phone or laptop.
What Counts As A Power Bank
Security staff use “power bank” as a catch-all for portable chargers with a built-in lithium battery. That includes:
- USB power banks (mAh labeled)
- AC outlet power stations that are still “portable”
- Battery cases that hold a spare cell
- Magnetic snap-on packs for phones
If it’s a removable battery you can carry separately, treat it like a spare lithium battery too.
Power Bank Size Limits That Decide If It Can Fly
The number that matters is watt-hours (Wh). Many power banks show milliamp-hours (mAh) on the shell, so you may need a quick conversion. Airlines also care about whether the battery is under 100 Wh, between 100 and 160 Wh, or above 160 Wh.
How To Convert mAh To Wh In One Line
Use this: Wh = (mAh × V) ÷ 1000.
Most phone-style power banks use a 3.7V lithium cell inside. If the label lists only mAh, you can estimate Wh by multiplying mAh by 3.7, then dividing by 1000. If the label shows Wh already, use that number and skip the math.
Common Limits You’ll See
On most airlines:
- Up to 100 Wh: allowed in carry-on for personal use, no airline approval needed in most cases.
- 100 to 160 Wh: often allowed in carry-on with airline approval, with a tighter quantity limit.
- Over 160 Wh: not allowed on passenger aircraft in most cases.
Packing Steps That Get You Through Screening With Less Drama
Power banks usually pass screening with no extra attention when they are easy to inspect and clearly labeled. These habits help:
Keep Terminals From Shorting Out
Short circuits happen when metal touches metal. Use the original plastic cap if your charger came with one. If it didn’t, wrap the USB outputs with a small strip of tape or store the charger in a small pouch so metal items and coins can’t touch the ports.
Carry It Where You Can Reach It
Put your power bank in a personal item pocket or a pouch near the top of your carry-on. If an officer wants a closer look, you can hand it over in seconds instead of unpacking your whole bag.
Airline And TSA Basics In One Table
Use this table as a packing checklist before you zip the bag. It summarizes the patterns used by U.S. screening and airline safety policies.
| Situation | What Usually Works | Notes To Avoid Problems |
|---|---|---|
| Standard phone power bank (under 100 Wh) | Carry-on or personal item | Keep it reachable in case your carry-on gets gate-checked |
| Large power bank (100–160 Wh) | Carry-on with airline approval | Call or message the airline before travel day |
| Power bank over 160 Wh | Leave it at home | Passenger flights usually won’t accept it |
| Power bank in a checked suitcase | Not allowed | Move it to carry-on before check-in |
| Spare lithium batteries for cameras | Carry-on | Cover terminals or store each battery in its own case |
| Carry-on forced to be checked at the gate | Remove power bank and spares | Keep them on your person for the flight |
| Damaged, swollen, or recalled power bank | Don’t travel with it | Airlines may refuse it even in carry-on |
| Loose metal items in same pocket | Separate them | Coins, metal items, and tools can short the ports |
For the U.S. baseline, read the TSA’s power bank entry, which spells out carry-on vs checked bag handling. TSA power bank screening guidance matches the carry-on-first approach most airlines use.
Label Checks That Prevent Last-Minute Confusion
If you travel with a small power bank, you can skip most of this. If you carry a big one, label details can decide whether you board with it.
What A Clear Label Looks Like
A clean label lists at least one of these:
- Watt-hours (Wh)
- mAh plus voltage (V)
- A model number you can match to a spec sheet
If your device shows only mAh and no voltage, expect questions on some routes. You can still carry it, but you may need to show the voltage on the manual, the brand spec page, or a product photo that shows the full label.
What If The Label Is Worn Off
When a label is missing, a strict airline can treat it as unknown capacity and deny it. Before travel day, take five minutes:
- Search the model number on the device shell or packaging.
- Save a screenshot of the spec page that lists Wh.
- Save that page on your phone.
Quantity Limits And Other Fine Print
Most travelers carry one or two power banks and never hit a limit. Still, airline policies often set a cap on the number of spares you can bring, and they can set tighter limits for higher Wh ranges.
Personal Use Vs A Bag Full Of Batteries
If you carry a stack of power banks, screeners may treat it like commercial quantity. If you’re traveling for work and need several, keep them organized, labeled, and packed so each one can be inspected. If you’re traveling with a companion, split them between carry-ons while staying within airline limits.
Damaged Or Bulging Devices
If a power bank looks swollen, smells odd, or shows scorch marks, don’t bring it. It can be refused at screening, and it can fail in flight. Replace it before the trip.
International Flights And Connecting Trips
U.S. rules are a solid baseline, yet you can run into stricter checks when you connect abroad. Some airports apply extra screening for large power banks, and some carriers set their own caps.
If you’re flying out of the U.S. and back, plan for the strictest segment. A power bank that passed on the outbound leg can still be questioned on the return if a label is hard to read.
Power Bank Scenarios And What To Do
These scenarios match what trips people up at airports.
Your Carry-On Gets Gate-Checked
This is the most common way a power bank ends up in the cargo hold by accident. When the agent hands you the tag, pull your power bank out on the spot. Put it in your jacket pocket or personal item, then hand over the bag.
You Packed A Power Bank In Checked Luggage By Mistake
If you catch it before you hand the bag over, fix it. If you realize after check-in, go to the airline desk and ask to retrieve the bag. It’s a hassle, yet it beats losing the device or delaying the flight.
You Want A Power Bank For A Laptop
Laptop-capable packs can push into the 100–160 Wh range. That’s where airline approval starts to matter. Check the Wh on the label and plan to show it. If the pack is above 160 Wh, choose a smaller model or split your charging plan between wall power and a lower-capacity pack.
Quick Capacity Reference Table For Common Power Banks
This table converts the sizes people buy most often into watt-hours, using a 3.7V cell as the baseline. Use it as a sanity check, then confirm your own label.
| Typical Label (mAh) | Typical Wh (3.7V cell) | Where It Sits In Airline Limits |
|---|---|---|
| 5,000 mAh | 18.5 Wh | Under 100 Wh |
| 10,000 mAh | 37 Wh | Under 100 Wh |
| 20,000 mAh | 74 Wh | Under 100 Wh |
| 26,800 mAh | 99.2 Wh | Right under 100 Wh |
| 30,000 mAh | 111 Wh | Often needs airline approval |
| 40,000 mAh | 148 Wh | Often needs airline approval |
| 50,000 mAh | 185 Wh | Often not accepted |
For the safety basis behind these caps, the FAA’s passenger guidance explains how spare lithium batteries and power banks should be packed and why size limits exist. FAA Pack Safe battery guidance is the page airlines point to when they write their own policies.
Checklist To Run The Night Before You Fly
- Power bank is in carry-on or personal item, not in checked luggage.
- Label shows Wh or mAh plus voltage, or you saved a spec screenshot.
- Ports are covered or separated from metal items.
- You can reach it fast if your bag gets gate-checked.
- Device shows no swelling, cracks, or heat damage.
Follow that list and you’ll clear screening with your charger, keep your devices alive during delays, and avoid the last-minute scramble at the gate.
References & Sources
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Power Banks.”States that portable chargers must be packed in carry-on bags and are not permitted in checked luggage.
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“Pack Safe: Batteries.”Explains lithium battery size limits and cabin-only packing rules that airlines use for spare batteries and power banks.
