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Electronics

🔌 Travel adapter / plug

✋ Hand luggage

Yes

Permitted. No restrictions.

🧳 Hold luggage

Yes

Permitted. No restrictions.

Based on TSA guidance for United States. Official rules ↗

💡 Tip: Travel adapters have no security restrictions anywhere. They carry no battery and pose no threat. Pack wherever is most convenient.

Travel adapter / plug rules by country

How carry-on and checked-bag rules for travel adapter / plug 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

Airline-specific rules

🌍All airlinesTravel adapters are permitted in cabin and hold with no restrictions on any major airline.

Common questions

Nothing at all — travel adapters are permitted everywhere and attract no security concern. They carry no battery and are treated like any other electronic accessory. Pack it wherever is most convenient.

No — travel adapters face no restrictions in carry-on or checked baggage in any region. Unlike power banks or chargers with built-in batteries, a passive plug adapter has no components that raise safety or security issues. You can pack it in your checked bag, your carry-on, or your personal item without any concern.

Multi-plug adapters and travel surge protectors occasionally produce a slightly complex X-ray image, and a screener may pull the bag for a quick look. Once they identify it as a passive adapter with no battery, it goes through without issue. If your surge protector also functions as a power bank with a built-in battery, that battery element is what determines the rules — not the adapter itself.

Either works fine, but carry-on is often the more practical choice since you may want the adapter at your destination before your checked bag arrives at the carousel. There is no security or regulatory reason to prefer one over the other — the decision is purely about convenience.

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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