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Electronics

🔋 AA / AAA batteries

✋ Hand luggage

Yes

Permitted in carry-on. The 2-spare-battery limit applies to lithium-ion rechargeable batteries, not standard lithium disposable batteries.

🧳 Hold luggage

No

Spare/loose lithium batteries (including lithium disposable) are prohibited in checked baggage — must be in carry-on. Batteries installed in devices may travel in checked baggage.

Based on TSA guidance for United States. Official rules ↗

💡 Tip: Standard AA, AAA, C, D, and 9V alkaline batteries have no carry-on or checked baggage restrictions. Lithium AA/AAA batteries (not rechargeable) are permitted in carry-on and checked baggage within quantity limits.

AA / AAA batteries rules by country

How carry-on and checked-bag rules for aa / aaa batteries compare across the 14 countries we cover.

Country✋ Cabin🧳 Hold
🇺🇸United States
Yes
No
🇬🇧United Kingdom
Yes
Yes
🇪🇺Europe
Yes
Yes
🇦🇪UAE
Yes
Yes
🇦🇺Australia
Yes
Yes
🇧🇷Brazil
Yes
Yes
🇨🇦Canada
Yes
Yes
🇨🇳China
Yes
Yes
🇮🇳India
Yes
Yes
🇮🇱Israel
Yes
Yes
🇲🇽Mexico
Yes
Yes
🇳🇿New Zealand
Yes
Yes
🇷🇺Russia
Yes
Yes
🇿🇦South Africa
Yes
Yes

Common questions

Standard alkaline AA and AAA batteries have no quantity limits and are permitted freely in both carry-on and checked baggage — screeners will not stop you regardless of how many you bring. Lithium disposable AA/AAA batteries are also permitted, but TSA limits spare lithium batteries to two in carry-on. Alkaline batteries are the most common type and carry no such restriction.

Yes, and it matters. Alkaline AA and AAA batteries — the standard type found in most grocery stores — have no restrictions anywhere in carry-on or checked baggage. Lithium disposable AA/AAA batteries, which are less common but used in high-drain devices, are restricted to a maximum of two spare batteries in carry-on under TSA rules. Both types are permitted in checked baggage, though the lithium limit still applies as a spare carry-on maximum.

X-ray images do not always make it easy to identify battery chemistry, so a screener may ask to inspect your batteries if they are unsure. Keeping batteries in their original packaging, which clearly labels them as alkaline or lithium, helps resolve any question quickly. Loose batteries mixed together in a bag are harder to identify and more likely to prompt a manual check.

Store batteries in their original retail packaging or a dedicated battery case to prevent accidental discharge from contact between terminals. Alkaline batteries can go in either carry-on or checked baggage without any restriction. If you are bringing lithium AA batteries as spares, keep them in your carry-on where the two-battery limit for spares applies, and make sure the terminals cannot short-circuit against metal objects.

Based on official United States security guidelines. Rules vary by airline and route — always verify with your carrier before travel. · Rules last verified May 2026.

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