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Medical

👂 Hearing Aid

✋ Hand luggage

Yes

Always permitted — assistive devices are never restricted.

🧳 Hold luggage

Yes

Permitted without restriction.

Based on TSA guidance for United States. Official rules ↗

💡 Tip: Hearing aids can stay in during security screening. Spare batteries (including lithium button cells) are permitted in the cabin.

Hearing Aid rules by country

How carry-on and checked-bag rules for hearing aid 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

You can keep your hearing aid in during security screening — it will not trigger the metal detector in any meaningful way, and screeners are trained to expect medical devices. You do not need to remove it or declare it unless you want to. If you do set off an alarm, simply tell the officer you are wearing a hearing aid and they will adjust their screening approach.

Hearing aids are universally permitted in cabin and checked baggage with no restrictions anywhere in the world. Spare hearing aid batteries — including lithium button cells — are also permitted in carry-on across all major regions. There are no regional differences to worry about for this item.

Airlines do not require any special declaration for hearing aids, and cabin crew are used to passengers who wear them. If you let the airline know at booking that you use a hearing aid, they can note it on your booking so crew are aware and can communicate with you appropriately — but this is a service consideration, not a requirement.

Spare batteries, including lithium button cells used in many hearing aids, should go in carry-on baggage. Lithium batteries in general are better transported in the cabin where any thermal event can be quickly managed. There is no quantity restriction for personal-use hearing aid batteries in carry-on.

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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