Maximum hand luggage volume?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
What's the maximum hand luggage volume you can take with you to match all (or important) airline regulations considering only international connections?
In case my question is not clear, I'm looking for the one biggest carry-on bag that is accepted by all (or important) airlines on international connections. Accepted dimensions tend to be somewhat different on different airlines, meaning that a specific bag might be allowed on one airline, but not on another.
So, my question is what is the biggest bag that meets all (or important) airline requirements?
air-travel hand-luggage
|
show 2 more comments
What's the maximum hand luggage volume you can take with you to match all (or important) airline regulations considering only international connections?
In case my question is not clear, I'm looking for the one biggest carry-on bag that is accepted by all (or important) airlines on international connections. Accepted dimensions tend to be somewhat different on different airlines, meaning that a specific bag might be allowed on one airline, but not on another.
So, my question is what is the biggest bag that meets all (or important) airline requirements?
air-travel hand-luggage
3
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
1
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52
|
show 2 more comments
What's the maximum hand luggage volume you can take with you to match all (or important) airline regulations considering only international connections?
In case my question is not clear, I'm looking for the one biggest carry-on bag that is accepted by all (or important) airlines on international connections. Accepted dimensions tend to be somewhat different on different airlines, meaning that a specific bag might be allowed on one airline, but not on another.
So, my question is what is the biggest bag that meets all (or important) airline requirements?
air-travel hand-luggage
What's the maximum hand luggage volume you can take with you to match all (or important) airline regulations considering only international connections?
In case my question is not clear, I'm looking for the one biggest carry-on bag that is accepted by all (or important) airlines on international connections. Accepted dimensions tend to be somewhat different on different airlines, meaning that a specific bag might be allowed on one airline, but not on another.
So, my question is what is the biggest bag that meets all (or important) airline requirements?
air-travel hand-luggage
air-travel hand-luggage
edited Feb 28 '16 at 19:23
MastaBaba
asked Feb 28 '16 at 18:26
MastaBabaMastaBaba
19.6k5078
19.6k5078
3
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
1
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52
|
show 2 more comments
3
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
1
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52
3
3
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
1
1
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52
|
show 2 more comments
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
To calculate the maximum volume piece of luggage one has to determine what the minimum limit on length, width, and height of a piece of luggage across all the major airlines is. With the data of 35 major airlines from Carry On Guy, I determined the following:
- The minimum length limit of all these airlines is 18.9 inches (48 cm): Aurigny
- The minimum width limit of all these airlines is 13.5 inches (35 cm): Air France, Aurigny, Flybe, KLM
- The minimum height limit of all these airlines is 7.8 inches (20 cm): Icelandair, Lufthansa, RyanAir, Thomas Cook, Thompson
Therefore, the maximum volume of hand luggage you could take and still be able to bring that piece of luggage onboard any of these airlines is the product of these three dimensions:
18.9 × 13.5 × 7.8 = 1990.2 in3 or 1.15 ft3
Or for the metrically minded:
48 × 35 × 20 = 33,600 cm3 = 0.0336 m3 = 33.6 Litres
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
add a comment |
22" x 14" x 9" is used by American Airlines, Delta, United, Virgin Atlantic and probably quite a few more.
Ryanair is 55 cm x 40 cm x 20 cm that is 21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches. There are other low costs using this size. Note that many airlines use 55 x 40 x 23 but according to https://travel.stackexchange.com/a/30181/4188 the sizer is only 21.2cm so I would not expect a 23cm bag to work out with Ryanair. Of course unless you have a hard shell or packed your bag to the gills some squeezing might allow for a 23-thick-advertised bag to fit the sizer.
Therefore 21.5" x 14" x 7.8" / 55 cm x 35 cm x 20 cm is the biggest bag you can safely carry. This is the IATA recommendation as well per this 2015 June BBC article. The closest non-wheeled (because that's just extra weight which you don't need when you have a severe weight limit often anyways) I am aware of is the Magma Digi Control XL backpack is 54 x 35 x 20 cm which I just bought exactly because of this and also because I have a 19.5" monitor to carry on and it happens to fit into its laptop pocket which is pretty rare and it has a second laptop pocket which pushes it into unicorn territory. Has its own drawbacks: it doesn't open like a suitcase or a "convertible" backpack and also there is no size handle.
You might be able to get away with slightly bigger: the main US airlines' sizers are actually 23" x 15" x 10" United Delta so we can conclude that 15" instead of 14" is doable which increases your maximum bag to 21.5" x 15 " x 7.8" / 55cm x 38cm x 20cm. This is the size Emirates actually allows.
So if you want to go nuts, buy a 22 x 15 x 9 / 56cm x 38cm x 23cm duffel style bag if you can find one, pack lightly (8kg is not unheard of as a limit, 10kg is common) and prepare to squeeze. Perhaps you want the Red Oxx Medium Aviator Bag and a few of their luggage compression straps that you set up to cinch it to a width of 9" -- the other two sizes are just what you need, I have the Extra Small One, I find the price surprisingly low given the building quality. Of course, there's no structure but that's what you want from it. Get packing cubes :)
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
add a comment |
You definitely want to check out the Carry On Guy.
Ryan Air tends to have one of the smallest (by dimensions) carry-on luggage allowances and also have one of the strictest. 55x40x20cm (21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches) But they allow a generous weight of 10kg. The most restrictive weight allowance for a carry on seems to be about 5kg.
You can be pretty safe if you get a light bag that meets these dimensions. However another common dimension limit you will find is: 56x35x22cm (22 x 14 x 9 Inches)
This means to be absolutely sure, your bag should be at the most 55x35x20cm
EDIT:
To throw an extra spanner in the works. Wizz Air have a more restrictive "free carry on" luggage allowance, while charging a fee for the "Large cabin bag".
Small cabin bag (Free): 42x32x25cm
Large cabin bag: 56x45x25cm. - Online Price: €10 - €18 depending on route, Airport Price: €40
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
|
show 6 more comments
We have taken multiple airlines throughout Europe during 28-40 day trips over the past 2 summers. I did a lot of research and used the 55cm x 20cm x 14cm Cabin Max Lyon Wheeled Backpack Convertible carry-on packed to a max of 10kg (combined weight with my small personal item--in my case, my purse in my son's case, his laptop bag).
It was perfect for all flights. One of the airlines had a max weight of 8kg so I "sacrificed" our aqua shoes and a top and found I didn't need to do so because no one even looked twice--but better safe than sorry.
Just bought 2 new ones from Amazon for trip this summer. They are just about $70 each. The fabric did start to tear a bit on the bottom at end of last trip but still well worth the price for all the hassle we saved not checking baggage and not paying oversize fees. Happy Travels!
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f64422%2fmaximum-hand-luggage-volume%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
To calculate the maximum volume piece of luggage one has to determine what the minimum limit on length, width, and height of a piece of luggage across all the major airlines is. With the data of 35 major airlines from Carry On Guy, I determined the following:
- The minimum length limit of all these airlines is 18.9 inches (48 cm): Aurigny
- The minimum width limit of all these airlines is 13.5 inches (35 cm): Air France, Aurigny, Flybe, KLM
- The minimum height limit of all these airlines is 7.8 inches (20 cm): Icelandair, Lufthansa, RyanAir, Thomas Cook, Thompson
Therefore, the maximum volume of hand luggage you could take and still be able to bring that piece of luggage onboard any of these airlines is the product of these three dimensions:
18.9 × 13.5 × 7.8 = 1990.2 in3 or 1.15 ft3
Or for the metrically minded:
48 × 35 × 20 = 33,600 cm3 = 0.0336 m3 = 33.6 Litres
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
add a comment |
To calculate the maximum volume piece of luggage one has to determine what the minimum limit on length, width, and height of a piece of luggage across all the major airlines is. With the data of 35 major airlines from Carry On Guy, I determined the following:
- The minimum length limit of all these airlines is 18.9 inches (48 cm): Aurigny
- The minimum width limit of all these airlines is 13.5 inches (35 cm): Air France, Aurigny, Flybe, KLM
- The minimum height limit of all these airlines is 7.8 inches (20 cm): Icelandair, Lufthansa, RyanAir, Thomas Cook, Thompson
Therefore, the maximum volume of hand luggage you could take and still be able to bring that piece of luggage onboard any of these airlines is the product of these three dimensions:
18.9 × 13.5 × 7.8 = 1990.2 in3 or 1.15 ft3
Or for the metrically minded:
48 × 35 × 20 = 33,600 cm3 = 0.0336 m3 = 33.6 Litres
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
add a comment |
To calculate the maximum volume piece of luggage one has to determine what the minimum limit on length, width, and height of a piece of luggage across all the major airlines is. With the data of 35 major airlines from Carry On Guy, I determined the following:
- The minimum length limit of all these airlines is 18.9 inches (48 cm): Aurigny
- The minimum width limit of all these airlines is 13.5 inches (35 cm): Air France, Aurigny, Flybe, KLM
- The minimum height limit of all these airlines is 7.8 inches (20 cm): Icelandair, Lufthansa, RyanAir, Thomas Cook, Thompson
Therefore, the maximum volume of hand luggage you could take and still be able to bring that piece of luggage onboard any of these airlines is the product of these three dimensions:
18.9 × 13.5 × 7.8 = 1990.2 in3 or 1.15 ft3
Or for the metrically minded:
48 × 35 × 20 = 33,600 cm3 = 0.0336 m3 = 33.6 Litres
To calculate the maximum volume piece of luggage one has to determine what the minimum limit on length, width, and height of a piece of luggage across all the major airlines is. With the data of 35 major airlines from Carry On Guy, I determined the following:
- The minimum length limit of all these airlines is 18.9 inches (48 cm): Aurigny
- The minimum width limit of all these airlines is 13.5 inches (35 cm): Air France, Aurigny, Flybe, KLM
- The minimum height limit of all these airlines is 7.8 inches (20 cm): Icelandair, Lufthansa, RyanAir, Thomas Cook, Thompson
Therefore, the maximum volume of hand luggage you could take and still be able to bring that piece of luggage onboard any of these airlines is the product of these three dimensions:
18.9 × 13.5 × 7.8 = 1990.2 in3 or 1.15 ft3
Or for the metrically minded:
48 × 35 × 20 = 33,600 cm3 = 0.0336 m3 = 33.6 Litres
edited Feb 29 '16 at 13:29
answered Feb 28 '16 at 19:59
Harry VervetHarry Vervet
1,700820
1,700820
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
add a comment |
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
+1 and could be even better if you ad this information also in the metric system.
– mts
Feb 28 '16 at 22:06
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
Nice. Though this would be slightly too large to avoid Wizzair's large cabin bag fee.
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:58
add a comment |
22" x 14" x 9" is used by American Airlines, Delta, United, Virgin Atlantic and probably quite a few more.
Ryanair is 55 cm x 40 cm x 20 cm that is 21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches. There are other low costs using this size. Note that many airlines use 55 x 40 x 23 but according to https://travel.stackexchange.com/a/30181/4188 the sizer is only 21.2cm so I would not expect a 23cm bag to work out with Ryanair. Of course unless you have a hard shell or packed your bag to the gills some squeezing might allow for a 23-thick-advertised bag to fit the sizer.
Therefore 21.5" x 14" x 7.8" / 55 cm x 35 cm x 20 cm is the biggest bag you can safely carry. This is the IATA recommendation as well per this 2015 June BBC article. The closest non-wheeled (because that's just extra weight which you don't need when you have a severe weight limit often anyways) I am aware of is the Magma Digi Control XL backpack is 54 x 35 x 20 cm which I just bought exactly because of this and also because I have a 19.5" monitor to carry on and it happens to fit into its laptop pocket which is pretty rare and it has a second laptop pocket which pushes it into unicorn territory. Has its own drawbacks: it doesn't open like a suitcase or a "convertible" backpack and also there is no size handle.
You might be able to get away with slightly bigger: the main US airlines' sizers are actually 23" x 15" x 10" United Delta so we can conclude that 15" instead of 14" is doable which increases your maximum bag to 21.5" x 15 " x 7.8" / 55cm x 38cm x 20cm. This is the size Emirates actually allows.
So if you want to go nuts, buy a 22 x 15 x 9 / 56cm x 38cm x 23cm duffel style bag if you can find one, pack lightly (8kg is not unheard of as a limit, 10kg is common) and prepare to squeeze. Perhaps you want the Red Oxx Medium Aviator Bag and a few of their luggage compression straps that you set up to cinch it to a width of 9" -- the other two sizes are just what you need, I have the Extra Small One, I find the price surprisingly low given the building quality. Of course, there's no structure but that's what you want from it. Get packing cubes :)
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
add a comment |
22" x 14" x 9" is used by American Airlines, Delta, United, Virgin Atlantic and probably quite a few more.
Ryanair is 55 cm x 40 cm x 20 cm that is 21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches. There are other low costs using this size. Note that many airlines use 55 x 40 x 23 but according to https://travel.stackexchange.com/a/30181/4188 the sizer is only 21.2cm so I would not expect a 23cm bag to work out with Ryanair. Of course unless you have a hard shell or packed your bag to the gills some squeezing might allow for a 23-thick-advertised bag to fit the sizer.
Therefore 21.5" x 14" x 7.8" / 55 cm x 35 cm x 20 cm is the biggest bag you can safely carry. This is the IATA recommendation as well per this 2015 June BBC article. The closest non-wheeled (because that's just extra weight which you don't need when you have a severe weight limit often anyways) I am aware of is the Magma Digi Control XL backpack is 54 x 35 x 20 cm which I just bought exactly because of this and also because I have a 19.5" monitor to carry on and it happens to fit into its laptop pocket which is pretty rare and it has a second laptop pocket which pushes it into unicorn territory. Has its own drawbacks: it doesn't open like a suitcase or a "convertible" backpack and also there is no size handle.
You might be able to get away with slightly bigger: the main US airlines' sizers are actually 23" x 15" x 10" United Delta so we can conclude that 15" instead of 14" is doable which increases your maximum bag to 21.5" x 15 " x 7.8" / 55cm x 38cm x 20cm. This is the size Emirates actually allows.
So if you want to go nuts, buy a 22 x 15 x 9 / 56cm x 38cm x 23cm duffel style bag if you can find one, pack lightly (8kg is not unheard of as a limit, 10kg is common) and prepare to squeeze. Perhaps you want the Red Oxx Medium Aviator Bag and a few of their luggage compression straps that you set up to cinch it to a width of 9" -- the other two sizes are just what you need, I have the Extra Small One, I find the price surprisingly low given the building quality. Of course, there's no structure but that's what you want from it. Get packing cubes :)
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
add a comment |
22" x 14" x 9" is used by American Airlines, Delta, United, Virgin Atlantic and probably quite a few more.
Ryanair is 55 cm x 40 cm x 20 cm that is 21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches. There are other low costs using this size. Note that many airlines use 55 x 40 x 23 but according to https://travel.stackexchange.com/a/30181/4188 the sizer is only 21.2cm so I would not expect a 23cm bag to work out with Ryanair. Of course unless you have a hard shell or packed your bag to the gills some squeezing might allow for a 23-thick-advertised bag to fit the sizer.
Therefore 21.5" x 14" x 7.8" / 55 cm x 35 cm x 20 cm is the biggest bag you can safely carry. This is the IATA recommendation as well per this 2015 June BBC article. The closest non-wheeled (because that's just extra weight which you don't need when you have a severe weight limit often anyways) I am aware of is the Magma Digi Control XL backpack is 54 x 35 x 20 cm which I just bought exactly because of this and also because I have a 19.5" monitor to carry on and it happens to fit into its laptop pocket which is pretty rare and it has a second laptop pocket which pushes it into unicorn territory. Has its own drawbacks: it doesn't open like a suitcase or a "convertible" backpack and also there is no size handle.
You might be able to get away with slightly bigger: the main US airlines' sizers are actually 23" x 15" x 10" United Delta so we can conclude that 15" instead of 14" is doable which increases your maximum bag to 21.5" x 15 " x 7.8" / 55cm x 38cm x 20cm. This is the size Emirates actually allows.
So if you want to go nuts, buy a 22 x 15 x 9 / 56cm x 38cm x 23cm duffel style bag if you can find one, pack lightly (8kg is not unheard of as a limit, 10kg is common) and prepare to squeeze. Perhaps you want the Red Oxx Medium Aviator Bag and a few of their luggage compression straps that you set up to cinch it to a width of 9" -- the other two sizes are just what you need, I have the Extra Small One, I find the price surprisingly low given the building quality. Of course, there's no structure but that's what you want from it. Get packing cubes :)
22" x 14" x 9" is used by American Airlines, Delta, United, Virgin Atlantic and probably quite a few more.
Ryanair is 55 cm x 40 cm x 20 cm that is 21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches. There are other low costs using this size. Note that many airlines use 55 x 40 x 23 but according to https://travel.stackexchange.com/a/30181/4188 the sizer is only 21.2cm so I would not expect a 23cm bag to work out with Ryanair. Of course unless you have a hard shell or packed your bag to the gills some squeezing might allow for a 23-thick-advertised bag to fit the sizer.
Therefore 21.5" x 14" x 7.8" / 55 cm x 35 cm x 20 cm is the biggest bag you can safely carry. This is the IATA recommendation as well per this 2015 June BBC article. The closest non-wheeled (because that's just extra weight which you don't need when you have a severe weight limit often anyways) I am aware of is the Magma Digi Control XL backpack is 54 x 35 x 20 cm which I just bought exactly because of this and also because I have a 19.5" monitor to carry on and it happens to fit into its laptop pocket which is pretty rare and it has a second laptop pocket which pushes it into unicorn territory. Has its own drawbacks: it doesn't open like a suitcase or a "convertible" backpack and also there is no size handle.
You might be able to get away with slightly bigger: the main US airlines' sizers are actually 23" x 15" x 10" United Delta so we can conclude that 15" instead of 14" is doable which increases your maximum bag to 21.5" x 15 " x 7.8" / 55cm x 38cm x 20cm. This is the size Emirates actually allows.
So if you want to go nuts, buy a 22 x 15 x 9 / 56cm x 38cm x 23cm duffel style bag if you can find one, pack lightly (8kg is not unheard of as a limit, 10kg is common) and prepare to squeeze. Perhaps you want the Red Oxx Medium Aviator Bag and a few of their luggage compression straps that you set up to cinch it to a width of 9" -- the other two sizes are just what you need, I have the Extra Small One, I find the price surprisingly low given the building quality. Of course, there's no structure but that's what you want from it. Get packing cubes :)
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52
Community♦
1
1
answered Feb 28 '16 at 19:41
chxchx
39.2k485195
39.2k485195
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
add a comment |
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
This would incur the Wizzair large cabin bag fee, right?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
Yes, the Wizz Air free is way too small to be useful. The large cabin bag is, well, large: the 45 cm in the second dimension is useless as no other airline even with trickery above goes above 38 cm.
– chx
Feb 29 '16 at 22:55
add a comment |
You definitely want to check out the Carry On Guy.
Ryan Air tends to have one of the smallest (by dimensions) carry-on luggage allowances and also have one of the strictest. 55x40x20cm (21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches) But they allow a generous weight of 10kg. The most restrictive weight allowance for a carry on seems to be about 5kg.
You can be pretty safe if you get a light bag that meets these dimensions. However another common dimension limit you will find is: 56x35x22cm (22 x 14 x 9 Inches)
This means to be absolutely sure, your bag should be at the most 55x35x20cm
EDIT:
To throw an extra spanner in the works. Wizz Air have a more restrictive "free carry on" luggage allowance, while charging a fee for the "Large cabin bag".
Small cabin bag (Free): 42x32x25cm
Large cabin bag: 56x45x25cm. - Online Price: €10 - €18 depending on route, Airport Price: €40
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
|
show 6 more comments
You definitely want to check out the Carry On Guy.
Ryan Air tends to have one of the smallest (by dimensions) carry-on luggage allowances and also have one of the strictest. 55x40x20cm (21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches) But they allow a generous weight of 10kg. The most restrictive weight allowance for a carry on seems to be about 5kg.
You can be pretty safe if you get a light bag that meets these dimensions. However another common dimension limit you will find is: 56x35x22cm (22 x 14 x 9 Inches)
This means to be absolutely sure, your bag should be at the most 55x35x20cm
EDIT:
To throw an extra spanner in the works. Wizz Air have a more restrictive "free carry on" luggage allowance, while charging a fee for the "Large cabin bag".
Small cabin bag (Free): 42x32x25cm
Large cabin bag: 56x45x25cm. - Online Price: €10 - €18 depending on route, Airport Price: €40
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
|
show 6 more comments
You definitely want to check out the Carry On Guy.
Ryan Air tends to have one of the smallest (by dimensions) carry-on luggage allowances and also have one of the strictest. 55x40x20cm (21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches) But they allow a generous weight of 10kg. The most restrictive weight allowance for a carry on seems to be about 5kg.
You can be pretty safe if you get a light bag that meets these dimensions. However another common dimension limit you will find is: 56x35x22cm (22 x 14 x 9 Inches)
This means to be absolutely sure, your bag should be at the most 55x35x20cm
EDIT:
To throw an extra spanner in the works. Wizz Air have a more restrictive "free carry on" luggage allowance, while charging a fee for the "Large cabin bag".
Small cabin bag (Free): 42x32x25cm
Large cabin bag: 56x45x25cm. - Online Price: €10 - €18 depending on route, Airport Price: €40
You definitely want to check out the Carry On Guy.
Ryan Air tends to have one of the smallest (by dimensions) carry-on luggage allowances and also have one of the strictest. 55x40x20cm (21.5 x 15.7 x 7.8 Inches) But they allow a generous weight of 10kg. The most restrictive weight allowance for a carry on seems to be about 5kg.
You can be pretty safe if you get a light bag that meets these dimensions. However another common dimension limit you will find is: 56x35x22cm (22 x 14 x 9 Inches)
This means to be absolutely sure, your bag should be at the most 55x35x20cm
EDIT:
To throw an extra spanner in the works. Wizz Air have a more restrictive "free carry on" luggage allowance, while charging a fee for the "Large cabin bag".
Small cabin bag (Free): 42x32x25cm
Large cabin bag: 56x45x25cm. - Online Price: €10 - €18 depending on route, Airport Price: €40
edited Feb 29 '16 at 22:10
answered Feb 28 '16 at 19:36
EdmundYeung99EdmundYeung99
3,19611530
3,19611530
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
|
show 6 more comments
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
So, your calculations suggest 42x32x20, correct?
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:56
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba only if you take Wizz Air (often), you might want to consider going with the larger cabin bag at the cost of ₤9 if you don't take Wizz Air all that often. A backpack with dimensions of 55x35x20cm is much more "standard" and will allow you much more baggage space, especially if you don't have check-in luggage
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:02
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
@MastaBaba or you could buy a £9 backpack that you dedicate for Wizz Air travel
– EdmundYeung99
Feb 29 '16 at 22:04
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
My concern is primarily for when stringing a series of flights together, when you won't be able to swap bags mid-journey.
– MastaBaba
Mar 1 '16 at 16:57
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
@MastaBaba as I said, it depends how often you take Wizz Air flights, and how much you typically pack in your carry-on. But for most people, the small bag would not be enough for more than an overnight trip, and Wizz Air (based in Hungary) would not be the primary choice when making short continental trips
– EdmundYeung99
Mar 1 '16 at 20:02
|
show 6 more comments
We have taken multiple airlines throughout Europe during 28-40 day trips over the past 2 summers. I did a lot of research and used the 55cm x 20cm x 14cm Cabin Max Lyon Wheeled Backpack Convertible carry-on packed to a max of 10kg (combined weight with my small personal item--in my case, my purse in my son's case, his laptop bag).
It was perfect for all flights. One of the airlines had a max weight of 8kg so I "sacrificed" our aqua shoes and a top and found I didn't need to do so because no one even looked twice--but better safe than sorry.
Just bought 2 new ones from Amazon for trip this summer. They are just about $70 each. The fabric did start to tear a bit on the bottom at end of last trip but still well worth the price for all the hassle we saved not checking baggage and not paying oversize fees. Happy Travels!
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
add a comment |
We have taken multiple airlines throughout Europe during 28-40 day trips over the past 2 summers. I did a lot of research and used the 55cm x 20cm x 14cm Cabin Max Lyon Wheeled Backpack Convertible carry-on packed to a max of 10kg (combined weight with my small personal item--in my case, my purse in my son's case, his laptop bag).
It was perfect for all flights. One of the airlines had a max weight of 8kg so I "sacrificed" our aqua shoes and a top and found I didn't need to do so because no one even looked twice--but better safe than sorry.
Just bought 2 new ones from Amazon for trip this summer. They are just about $70 each. The fabric did start to tear a bit on the bottom at end of last trip but still well worth the price for all the hassle we saved not checking baggage and not paying oversize fees. Happy Travels!
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
add a comment |
We have taken multiple airlines throughout Europe during 28-40 day trips over the past 2 summers. I did a lot of research and used the 55cm x 20cm x 14cm Cabin Max Lyon Wheeled Backpack Convertible carry-on packed to a max of 10kg (combined weight with my small personal item--in my case, my purse in my son's case, his laptop bag).
It was perfect for all flights. One of the airlines had a max weight of 8kg so I "sacrificed" our aqua shoes and a top and found I didn't need to do so because no one even looked twice--but better safe than sorry.
Just bought 2 new ones from Amazon for trip this summer. They are just about $70 each. The fabric did start to tear a bit on the bottom at end of last trip but still well worth the price for all the hassle we saved not checking baggage and not paying oversize fees. Happy Travels!
We have taken multiple airlines throughout Europe during 28-40 day trips over the past 2 summers. I did a lot of research and used the 55cm x 20cm x 14cm Cabin Max Lyon Wheeled Backpack Convertible carry-on packed to a max of 10kg (combined weight with my small personal item--in my case, my purse in my son's case, his laptop bag).
It was perfect for all flights. One of the airlines had a max weight of 8kg so I "sacrificed" our aqua shoes and a top and found I didn't need to do so because no one even looked twice--but better safe than sorry.
Just bought 2 new ones from Amazon for trip this summer. They are just about $70 each. The fabric did start to tear a bit on the bottom at end of last trip but still well worth the price for all the hassle we saved not checking baggage and not paying oversize fees. Happy Travels!
answered Apr 21 '17 at 3:17
letsgolisaletsgolisa
111
111
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
add a comment |
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
1
1
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
Not all airlines allow a personal item on top of the carry-on. When they do not, you have to put your personal item in the carry on or pay hold luggage for one of them.
– Willeke♦
Apr 21 '17 at 17:50
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f64422%2fmaximum-hand-luggage-volume%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
3
Usually there is not a volume restriction, the limit is on linear dimensions. Unless this is a mathematical puzzle to optimize volume based on linear dimension restrictions?
– Harry Vervet
Feb 28 '16 at 18:48
Obviously, this involves mathematics. The point is that different airlines set different dimensions for hand luggage so that one particular bag might be allowed by one airline but not by another.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:21
1
Also, a few airlines with volume restrictions: Ryanair, Easyjet, Wizzair.
– MastaBaba
Feb 28 '16 at 19:35
Define 'important' airlines. Full service carriers tend to offer more generous bag sizes, budget airlines more restrictive. Airlines with one or two aircraft types tend to limit bags to what fits those planes, airlines with a variety of types tend to set bag size based on the aircraft with the smallest overhead bins in their fleet.
– user13044
Feb 29 '16 at 9:31
@Tom: All except when the calculation becomes too complicated or undefined, then as many as possible. (Yes, this is vague, but I am not aware of the exact decision space.)
– MastaBaba
Feb 29 '16 at 20:52