carry on luggage- question re liquids
#1
Original Poster
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carry on luggage- question re liquids
If I recall the restriction used to be "3-3-1"-- no more than 3 containers, less than 3 ounces in a 1 qt plastic ziploc bag. Has the number of items you can put in the ziploc bag changed? I'm flying to LA from the East coast for just a weekend and want to try to just bring a carry on. Am wondering how much I can bring when it comes to makeup, lotion, toothpaste, etc... TIA!
#3
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#5



Joined: Oct 2005
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Don't fixate on "3 ounces". Many travel sized containers are smaller than 3 oz. You can put as many 3 oz or smaller containers as you want inside that quart ziplok baggie as long as it still closes
I put between 10 and 15 separate products into the baggie -- mouthwash, toothpaste, mascara, lipgloss, face creams/cleansers, eye drops, woolite packet, etc. etc.
(for my packing class demo I actually squeeze in about 35 items - but that is overkill just to show what's possible)
I put between 10 and 15 separate products into the baggie -- mouthwash, toothpaste, mascara, lipgloss, face creams/cleansers, eye drops, woolite packet, etc. etc.
(for my packing class demo I actually squeeze in about 35 items - but that is overkill just to show what's possible)
#6
Joined: Aug 2007
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I fly a lot, most of it overseas on long flights! I think the 1 quart size bag is doable! I fit a lot of stuff in that bag and can live with it! Besides toothpaste and chapstick I put nasal sprays, Purell hand sanitizer, deodorant (in case the flight breaks down somewhere and you have to spend the night in a hotel) and any little liquid/cream thing that I may need for a 13 hr. flight.
It's a small price to pay for a little security!
It's a small price to pay for a little security!
#7



Joined: Oct 2005
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just a clarification of SirHalberd's post - solid products like Chapstick, solid deodorants, lipstick etc no longer need to be in the baggie. (they were included when the rules first came out - but have been allowed for several months now)
Liquid/gel deodorants and brush on or gel type lipgloss/lip conditioners still have to be in the baggie - but not solid chapstick and such.
Liquid/gel deodorants and brush on or gel type lipgloss/lip conditioners still have to be in the baggie - but not solid chapstick and such.
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#9


Joined: May 2003
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The items must be in a container that has a MAZIMUM 3 oz. capacity! Very improtant - you cannot take a 6 oz. tube of toothpaste that is half full. The container must be clearly marked in an amount 3 oz. or less or it will be tossed, even if in has only 1 glob of stuff in it.
Debi
Debi
#10

Joined: Mar 2005
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In the last 3+ mo I've found TSA at several airports to be more laidback about the 3-1-1.
It used to be that you must have the clear plastic bag out of your carryon and they inspected it by hand.
For example, Lately I've found that they don't care if it stays inside your luggage, they just x-ray it. On 1 trip I forgot to take it out and nobody said anything, and since then (6 times through security) I've just left it in my bag.
They also haven't cared that my gel deodorant wasn't in the bag when I left it elsewhere in my luggage by mistake.
You still need to comply with the 3-1-1 rules, but the TSA doesn't seem as hyper sensitive as they were 6mo ago.
It used to be that you must have the clear plastic bag out of your carryon and they inspected it by hand.
For example, Lately I've found that they don't care if it stays inside your luggage, they just x-ray it. On 1 trip I forgot to take it out and nobody said anything, and since then (6 times through security) I've just left it in my bag.
They also haven't cared that my gel deodorant wasn't in the bag when I left it elsewhere in my luggage by mistake.
You still need to comply with the 3-1-1 rules, but the TSA doesn't seem as hyper sensitive as they were 6mo ago.
#13
Joined: Jan 2003
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In several places on the TSA website, you see "3 ounces (100 ml)." I just noticed this week that the contact lens solution I've taken through security at lest 8 times(usually inside my carry-on) actually holds 3.5 ounces (104 ml) and has never been questioned.
Perhaps when it is one of a dozen small items in the baggie and looks vaguely to be within limits, no one stops to read the fine print on the label.
Perhaps when it is one of a dozen small items in the baggie and looks vaguely to be within limits, no one stops to read the fine print on the label.
#15
Joined: Jan 2003
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A couple months ago, I was lectured by a TSA employee for not pulling my zip lock out of my luggage for inspection. I appologized for forgetting to pull it out, but he apparently decided that I needed a "talking to" {eye roll}.
#16



Joined: Oct 2005
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well - since face powder is a powder and not a liquid -- why would it need to be in the bag?
You may have had good luck w/ mascara - but twice in the last 5 months I've observed agents finding mascara in handbags and taking it out. Don't know if it was discarded or if they were allowed to put them in the baggie after the fact . . . . .
You may have had good luck w/ mascara - but twice in the last 5 months I've observed agents finding mascara in handbags and taking it out. Don't know if it was discarded or if they were allowed to put them in the baggie after the fact . . . . .
#17

Joined: Mar 2004
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How strictly the rules are enforced and interpreted vary wildly from one airport to another. Although lipstick and deodorant are supposed to be ok outside the bag, I saw someone being "corrected" on this last week.
To save myself the hassle, anything that I think may be remotely "questionable" I put in the ziplock. The security lines are long enough without having my carryon pawed through.
To save myself the hassle, anything that I think may be remotely "questionable" I put in the ziplock. The security lines are long enough without having my carryon pawed through.
#20

Joined: May 2004
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Contact solution is NOT included in the three ounce rule. You can take a bottle of contact solution on the airplane, it should be in its own separate baggie. It is considered a medical necessary product and the TSA states this exception on its website.
So it frees up space in your baggie for other bottles of stuff.
So it frees up space in your baggie for other bottles of stuff.

