Power banks must ride in your carry-on, and most airlines accept units up to 100 watt-hours, with larger ones needing airline approval.
A power bank feels like a travel cheat code: one brick, a few cables, and your phone stays alive through delays, layovers, and long rides to the hotel. The catch is that a power bank is a spare lithium battery. Airlines treat spare lithium batteries differently than a phone or laptop with a battery installed.
This guide walks you through the rules that matter at the airport, how to tell if your power bank is allowed, and how to pack it so you don’t get stuck at security or the gate.
Can I Bring A Power Bank On A Plane? Carry-on rules
Yes. You can bring a power bank on a plane when it’s packed in your carry-on bag or personal item, not in checked baggage. That rule is consistent across U.S. airport screening and most airline dangerous-goods policies because cabin crews can spot and handle a battery problem faster in the cabin than in the cargo hold. The TSA spells this out on its Power Banks item page.
Two details trip people up:
- Gate-checking a carry-on: If your carry-on gets tagged to go underneath at the gate, take the power bank out first and keep it with you.
- Battery size: Most travelers are fine, yet the size label decides whether you can bring one, bring one with permission, or bring none.
What “size” means for a power bank
Air rules use watt-hours (Wh). Your power bank box might brag in milliamp-hours (mAh). Both can describe the same battery, just in different units. What matters for flying is the Wh rating printed on the device or its packaging, or a Wh value you can calculate from the label.
How to find the watt-hour number on the label
Flip your power bank over and look for “Wh.” Many brands print it right next to the battery capacity. If you see only mAh, look for a voltage line like “3.7V” or “11.1V.” That voltage is what you need for the conversion.
How to convert mAh to Wh in one line
Use this equation:
Watt-hours (Wh) = (mAh ÷ 1000) × Volts (V)
Most power banks use a 3.7V lithium cell inside, even when they output 5V over USB. If the label lists 3.7V, use that number. If the label lists a different voltage, trust the label.
What the common thresholds mean
In passenger travel policies, 100 Wh is the line that covers the bulk of consumer power banks. Units between 100 and 160 Wh may be accepted with airline approval, often with a limit on how many you can carry. Anything over 160 Wh is generally not allowed in passenger baggage.
Rules you can rely on at U.S. airports
For flights touching the United States, the two most practical sources are TSA for screening and the FAA for hazardous materials packing rules. The FAA’s guidance for passengers says spare lithium batteries, including power banks, must be in carry-on baggage and must be protected from short circuit. It also calls out that if a carry-on is checked at the gate, spares must be removed and kept in the cabin. You can read it on the FAA’s PackSafe lithium battery page.
Airlines may add stricter limits. A carrier can refuse a power bank that looks damaged, has no capacity marking, or has a capacity that exceeds their policy.
Power bank limits by watt-hours
Use the table below to translate the label into a fast decision. The mAh numbers assume a 3.7V internal cell, which is common for many power banks. If your label lists a different voltage, use the Wh line from the label or calculate it with the voltage shown.
| Typical label or size | What it equals | What usually happens at the airport |
|---|---|---|
| 5,000 mAh (3.7V) | 18.5 Wh | Carry-on OK |
| 10,000 mAh (3.7V) | 37 Wh | Carry-on OK |
| 20,000 mAh (3.7V) | 74 Wh | Carry-on OK |
| 26,800 mAh (3.7V) | 99.2 Wh | Carry-on OK (common “max” size sold for flights) |
| 30,000 mAh (3.7V) | 111 Wh | May need airline permission |
| 40,000 mAh (3.7V) | 148 Wh | May need airline permission, often limited quantity |
| 45,000 mAh (3.7V) | 166.5 Wh | Not allowed on most passenger flights |
| Label says “100–160 Wh” | Within that band | Ask the airline before you fly |
How many power banks can you bring
Most U.S. carriers don’t publish a simple “X power banks” line on the public-facing page, since the number can depend on Wh and on whether the batteries are spares for personal devices. In practice, problems show up when someone carries a stack of large units or packs loose batteries without protection.
If you’re traveling with one or two normal power banks under 100 Wh, you’re in the common lane. If you’re packing multiple power banks, keep them organized, labeled, and protected, and be ready to show the capacity marking if an agent asks.
How to pack a power bank so it passes screening
Agents want to see that the battery can’t short out and that it is accessible if a bag can’t stay in the cabin. A few simple steps cut down on hassle.
Protect the terminals
If your power bank has exposed metal contacts, cover them. A small strip of electrical tape works. Many power banks have recessed ports that already reduce risk, yet a pouch still keeps metal items from pressing against the ports.
Use a case or pouch
Drop the power bank into a small fabric pouch, a hard case, or the box it came in. This keeps coins, metal clips, and adapters from rubbing against it in your bag.
Keep it where you can reach it fast
Put your power bank in an outer pocket of your carry-on or in your personal item. If the gate agent needs to check your carry-on, you can pull it out in seconds.
What to do if your carry-on gets gate-checked
Gate-checking feels random: a full flight, a small overhead bin, a late boarding group. If it happens, treat it like a mini safety drill.
- Take out your power bank and any spare lithium batteries.
- Put them in your personal item or jacket pocket so they stay with you.
- Close your carry-on and hand it over.
This is the moment when people lose a power bank, since the device is still inside the bag that gets sent to the cargo hold.
Using a power bank during the flight
Charging a phone from a power bank at your seat is normally fine, and it can save you when the seat outlet is dead. Use common sense: don’t wedge a charging brick under a blanket, don’t leave it charging in a stuffed pocket, and don’t charge a device that is hot to the touch.
If the power bank looks damaged
Skip the flight with it. Swollen cases, cracked shells, or scorch marks are a red flag. Airlines can refuse damaged lithium batteries, and you don’t want a battery problem in a pressurized cabin.
Edge cases that cause last-minute surprises
Most travelers run into trouble in the same few scenarios. If one of these fits your trip, plan for it before you leave home.
Power banks with no capacity marking
If the device has no Wh rating and no clear mAh plus voltage marking, an airline or security officer may treat it as unknown capacity and deny it. If your power bank’s label has worn off, bring a different one.
“Laptop power banks” and high-output models
Some USB-C PD power banks are built for laptops and can push past 100 Wh. They can still be allowed in some cases, yet you may need airline approval if they sit in the 100–160 Wh range. Check the printed Wh value before you rely on it for a work trip.
Smart luggage with a built-in battery
Many smart suitcases include a removable battery pack. If the battery can’t be removed, the bag can be refused. If it is removable, take the battery out and carry it with you like any other power bank.
Packing checklist for smooth boarding
This table turns the rules into a quick pre-flight check. It also helps when you’re repacking after security or swapping bags at the gate.
| Situation | What to do | Why it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Single power bank under 100 Wh | Carry-on, in an easy-to-reach pocket | Fast removal if a bag gets checked |
| Two power banks under 100 Wh | Separate them into two pouches | Reduces rubbing and clutter in a tray |
| Power bank between 100 and 160 Wh | Ask the airline and carry proof of the Wh rating | Avoids a gate denial after you’ve arrived |
| Carry-on might be gate-checked | Move the power bank to your personal item before boarding | No scrambling when your group is called |
| Power bank packed with metal items | Use a pouch and keep it away from coins and metal clips | Lowers short-circuit risk |
| Battery feels hot | Stop charging and let it cool in open air | Heat is a warning sign for failure |
| Label is missing or unreadable | Swap to a clearly marked unit | Agents can’t approve what they can’t verify |
Fast troubleshooting at the airport
If an agent questions your power bank, stay calm and keep it simple. Show the Wh number on the label. If you only have mAh, point to the voltage and do the quick math on your phone calculator.
If you’re told you can’t bring it, your options are limited once you’re airside. Some airports have mailing kiosks or lockers, yet many do not. The safer move is to sort out power bank size before travel, and to keep a smaller backup at home for trips with tight rules.
For most U.S. travelers, the sweet spot is a clearly marked power bank under 100 Wh, packed in a pouch, kept in a carry-on pocket, and removed before any gate-check. Do that, and your phone stays charged without drama.
References & Sources
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Power Banks.”States that power banks are prohibited in checked baggage and should be carried in carry-on bags.
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).“PackSafe: Lithium Batteries.”Explains carry-on-only handling for spare lithium batteries and removal steps during gate-checking.
