Most makeup is fine in a carry-on; liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and sprays need 3.4 oz (100 mL) or less per item inside one clear quart bag.
Yes, you can pack makeup in your carry-on on U.S. flights. The messy part is sorting what counts as “liquid-ish.” One tube of concealer can slide through, while a full-size foundation gets pulled, and you’re stuck repacking at the belt.
This guide gives you a simple sorting method, plus packing moves that stop leaks, protect powders, and keep security checks smooth. You’ll know what belongs in the clear bag, what can stay in your makeup pouch, and what’s better in checked luggage.
Can Makeup Go in Your Carry-On Bag? TSA carry-on rules in plain English
At screening, makeup usually falls into two groups:
- Liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and aerosols: these follow the liquids rule and go in one clear quart bag.
- Solids and most powders: these can ride outside that quart bag.
One more thing: an officer can take a closer look at any item that looks dense, messy, or unclear on X-ray. That isn’t a ban. It’s a cue to pack so you can pull the item out fast without dumping your whole carry-on.
How to tell if a makeup item counts as liquid
Ignore marketing names. Use a kitchen-counter test based on how the product behaves at room temperature.
Use a “pour, smear, spray” test
- If it pours: treat it as a liquid.
- If it smears: treat it as a gel or cream.
- If it sprays: treat it as an aerosol.
- If it stays solid and doesn’t smear: treat it as solid.
That means these usually go in the quart bag: liquid foundation, tinted moisturizer, primer in a tube, cream blush, gel eyeliner, liquid lipstick, mascara, brow gel, setting spray, and makeup remover.
These usually stay out: pressed powders, powder foundation, blush, eyeshadow, shimmer powder, stick contour, pencils, and brushes.
Watch for “liquid-ish” surprises
Some items feel solid until they warm up in a pocket. Balm sticks, soft cream pots, and gloss tubes can still count under the liquids rule if they smear. If you’d be annoyed to lose it, treat it as liquid-ish and place it in the clear bag.
Pack your carry-on so makeup survives the trip
Rules get you through screening. Smart packing keeps your kit usable when you land.
Split your kit into three parts
- Travel-day pouch: a few touch-up items you might use in transit.
- Clear quart bag: all liquid-ish makeup and toiletries that meet the size limit.
- Main makeup pouch: powders, brushes, pencils, and tools.
This setup keeps your carry-on neat. At security, you pull one bag. At your destination, you put all items back together in two minutes.
Stop leaks before they start
- Wipe bottle threads so caps seal cleanly.
- Place a small piece of plastic wrap under leaky caps, then tighten.
- Put oils and glosses in a tiny zip bag inside the clear quart bag.
- Keep sprays capped and store them upright when you can.
Protect powders and palettes
Pressed powders crack when they rattle against hard edges. Pack compacts in a padded pouch or between soft clothing. Keep palettes flat, away from laptop corners and water bottles.
Size limits that catch travelers
Security cares about container size, not how much is left. A half-used 6 oz bottle is still a 6 oz bottle, and it can be turned away at the checkpoint.
TSA describes the rule on its Liquids, aerosols, and gels rule page: each liquid-ish item in carry-on should be 3.4 oz (100 mL) or less, packed into one clear quart-size bag per passenger.
Three clean options for full-size favorites
- Decant into a travel container with a tight cap.
- Buy a travel size and keep it as your flight kit.
- Check it in a suitcase, packed to prevent leaks.
Big powders can slow screening
Most powders are allowed. Large containers can trigger extra screening. TSA’s Solid makeup entry notes that powder-like substances over 12 oz may need separate screening.
If you’re bringing a large loose powder, place it where you can lift it out in one motion. If you don’t need it mid-trip, put it in checked luggage and avoid the pause at the belt.
Makeup carry-on sorting table
Use this as a fast map while you pack. It’s based on how items behave at room temperature and how they’re usually grouped during screening.
| Makeup item | How it’s treated | Where to pack it |
|---|---|---|
| Liquid foundation, skin tint | Liquid | Clear quart bag |
| Concealer tube, cream blush | Cream/gel | Clear quart bag |
| Mascara, liquid liner | Liquid/gel | Clear quart bag |
| Lip gloss, liquid lipstick | Gel/liquid | Clear quart bag |
| Setting spray | Spray liquid | Clear quart bag |
| Pressed powder, eyeshadow | Powder | Main makeup pouch |
| Loose powder jar | Powder | Main pouch; easy to lift out if large |
| Stick foundation, contour stick | Solid | Main makeup pouch |
| Pencil liner, brow pencil | Solid | Main makeup pouch |
| Makeup wipes | Solid | Main makeup pouch |
What to do at the checkpoint
Even when you follow the rules, you can lose time if your bag is hard to read on X-ray. A few habits keep things moving.
Keep the clear bag easy to grab
Place it near the top of your carry-on. If an airport asks you to remove liquids, you won’t have to dig. If your airport lets liquids stay inside, the bag still keeps your items neat and visible.
Don’t overstuff the clear bag
A flat bag scans faster than a bulging one. If yours is packed like a plastic brick, items overlap, and that often leads to a hand check. Trim duplicates, swap in solids, or move non-essentials to checked luggage.
Pack dense powders where you can pull them out
Large compacts and big loose powders can look like a solid block on X-ray. Put them in an outer pocket or at the top of your main pouch. If asked, place the item in a bin and wait for the all-clear.
Special items people forget are makeup
These items cause most of the “Wait, that counts?” moments.
Pressurized sprays
Setting sprays and cosmetic aerosols fall under the liquids rule in carry-on. Stick to travel-size and keep them in the clear bag so there’s no guessing.
Makeup remover and micellar water
Remover is a liquid. Wipes save clear-bag space. If you prefer liquid remover, bring a small bottle and save the big one for checked luggage.
Tools with edges
Brushes are fine. Lash curlers are typically fine. Tiny scissors and sharp tools are where people get tripped up. If a tool has a blade or sharp edge, place it in checked luggage or swap it out for the trip.
Carry-on vs checked bag: choosing what goes where
Carry-on space is tight. Checked luggage gives you room for full-size products and backups. Use a simple rule: carry on what you can’t stand to lose, check what’s bulky and replaceable.
Better in your carry-on
- Travel-size liquid-ish makeup that fits your clear bag
- Any item you’d miss if checked luggage is delayed
- Pencils, brushes, and small powders
- A small touch-up pouch for travel day
Better in checked luggage
- Full-size liquids and creams you don’t want to decant
- Backups you won’t need during travel day
- Large loose powder tubs and refills
- Tools that might be questioned due to edges
Packing checklist before you zip up
Run this once. It catches the common mistakes that lead to a bin-side repack.
| Check | What you’re confirming | Fix if not |
|---|---|---|
| Container size | Each liquid-ish item is 3.4 oz (100 mL) or less | Decant, buy travel size, or check it |
| One clear bag | All liquid-ish makeup and toiletries fit in one quart bag | Swap in solids or move items to checked luggage |
| Caps tight | Threads are clean; lids are fully closed | Tighten; add plastic wrap under cap |
| Powders reachable | Large powders can be lifted out fast | Move them near the top |
| Fragile items cushioned | Palettes and compacts won’t rattle | Pad with clothing or a soft pouch |
| Tools safe | No blade-like tools in carry-on | Replace or pack in checked bag |
Make your next trip easier with a dedicated flight kit
If you fly a few times a year, build a small “flight only” set and stop repacking from scratch. Keep it stocked and ready, and you’ll zip up faster each time.
What to keep in the kit
- Mini foundation or decanted tint
- Travel mascara and one brow product
- One multi-use stick for lips and cheeks
- Pressed powder compact and a small brush
- Wipes and a small remover bottle
Common mistakes that waste time
- Bringing a full-size cleanser “since it’s half empty”
- Packing two clear bags and hoping it slides through
- Forgetting mascara and gloss count as liquid-ish
- Hiding sprays in side pockets instead of the clear bag
- Burying a big loose powder under chargers
Last check before you head out
Sort makeup by behavior: pour, smear, spray, or stay solid. Put the liquid-ish group into one clear quart bag with travel-size containers. Cushion powders and palettes, keep large powders reachable, and leave blade-like tools out of your carry-on. Your makeup gets through screening with less fuss, and you start the trip in a better mood.
References & Sources
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Liquids, Aerosols, and Gels Rule.”States the 3.4 oz (100 mL) limit and the one-quart-bag rule for carry-on liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and aerosols.
- Transportation Security Administration (TSA).“Solid Makeup.”Notes that powder-like substances over 12 oz may need separate screening and confirms solid makeup is allowed in carry-on and checked bags.
