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Food

🍫 Chocolate

✋ Hand luggage

Yes

Permitted without restriction.

🧳 Hold luggage

Yes

Permitted without restriction.

Based on TSA guidance for United States. Official rules ↗

💡 Tip: Chocolate and confectionery are universally permitted with no restrictions.

Chocolate rules by country

How carry-on and checked-bag rules for chocolate compare across the 14 countries we cover.

Country✋ Cabin🧳 Hold
🇺🇸United States
Yes
Yes
🇬🇧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

Chocolate is universally permitted in carry-on and checked baggage with no restrictions, so screeners will not stop you for it. However, a very large quantity may draw curiosity at customs on arrival, particularly in countries with agricultural import rules. Security screening itself is not an issue anywhere.

Chocolate is treated as a processed food product and is not subject to agricultural restrictions in the way that fresh produce or dairy is. No major destination imposes carry-on or checked-bag limits on chocolate. You can bring it freely on flights to and from the US, UK, EU, Australia, Canada, and other common destinations.

Chocolate can occasionally produce a dense image on older X-ray equipment, but screeners know the product and will quickly clear it. If you are carrying a large quantity, keeping it in its original packaging helps the screener identify it instantly and move on.

There are no security packing requirements for chocolate, but for practical reasons it is worth keeping it in your carry-on rather than checked baggage, where hold temperatures and rough handling can cause damage. If you are travelling to a warm destination, insulated pouches or placing the chocolate near a cool pack can help during the journey.

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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