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Electronics

〰️ Hair straightener / flat iron

Rules differ by region: Gas-powered (butane) cordless straighteners are restricted: one permitted in carry-on with the safety lock in place. They are prohibited in checked baggage in all regions.

💼 Cabin bag

Yes

Electric models: permitted. Butane cordless models: one permitted with safety catch engaged.

✈️ Hold (checked)

Yes

Electric models: permitted. Butane cordless models: prohibited in checked baggage.

💡 Tip: Standard electric straighteners have no restrictions. Cordless gas (butane) straighteners are treated as pressurised flammables — only one per passenger in carry-on with the safety catch engaged.

Airline-specific rules

🌍All airlinesElectric hair straighteners are permitted in cabin and hold; ensure they are cool before packing.

Common questions

A standard electric hair straightener will be waved through without comment — it is fully permitted in carry-on baggage. A cordless butane (gas-powered) straightener is a different matter: if you bring one through without engaging the safety lock, a screener may confiscate it or require you to check it, because the gas canister is treated as a pressurised flammable.

No — cordless gas-powered straighteners are prohibited in checked baggage in all regions, not just the US. They must travel in carry-on only, with the safety catch engaged to prevent accidental ignition. Electric models face no such restriction and can go in either carry-on or checked baggage.

Officers are trained to look for the gas canister housing typical of butane cordless models, and X-ray images often reveal the pressurised cylinder. If stopped, be upfront about which type you have and show that the safety catch is engaged — this is the condition under which one butane unit is permitted in carry-on.

Pack the butane straightener in carry-on — never in checked baggage — and ensure the safety lock is engaged before you leave home. Carry only one unit per person, as the rules allow a maximum of one gas-powered straightener in carry-on baggage.

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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