Are Carry-On Sizes The Same For All Airlines? | Smart Cabin Guide

No, carry-on sizes and weight limits vary by airline, route, fare, and cabin class, so one bag rarely fits every carrier.

Short answer: carry‑on rules are not one‑size‑fits‑all. Airlines set their own limits for overhead bin bags and under‑seat personal items, and those limits can change with the aircraft, the fare brand, and where you fly. Many U.S. network carriers publish 22 × 14 × 9 in (about 56 × 36 × 23 cm) for an overhead bag, while low‑cost and several international lines use tighter shapes or strict weight caps. This guide gives you clear, practical ways to choose a bag, measure it the right way, and pack so you glide past sizers and scales.

Carry‑On Limits By Region: The Pattern At A Glance

Use this quick grid as a starting point. Treat it as a trend map, not a promise. Always check your airline’s live baggage page before you fly.

Region or MarketCommon Max SizeCommon Weight Limit
United States (large network)22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight; must lift to bin
United States (low‑cost)22–24 × 16–18 × 10 inOften no set weight; size enforced at gate
Canada55 × 40 × 23 cmUsually no set weight; lift test applies
UK & Ireland (legacy)56 × 45 × 25 cmCommonly 23 kg cap on cabin bag
Europe (legacy)55 × 40 × 23–25 cm8–12 kg cap is common
Europe (low‑cost)55 × 40 × 20–23 cm with paid upgrade8–10 kg; small free under‑seat bag only
Middle East50–55 × 37–38 × 20–25 cm7 kg in economy is typical
Asia‑Pacific55–56 × 36–40 × 20–23 cm7 kg in economy is typical
Australia & NZ56 × 36 × 23 cm7 kg in economy; higher in premium cabins
Latin America55 × 35–40 × 20–25 cm8–10 kg on many carriers

Are Cabin Bag Sizes The Same Across Airlines? Myths Vs Reality

It feels like cabin bags should follow a single template. They do not. Every airline writes its own cabin baggage standard, even inside alliances. Aircraft cabins differ, overhead bins vary, and operational needs push policies in different directions. Some carriers limit only the box size and leave weight to staff judgment. Others set firm kilogram caps and weigh at the gate. Low‑cost models also use bag rules to segment fares, so a stricter free allowance nudges many travelers into paid add‑ons.

What “Carry‑On” Usually Means

Two items, two spaces. An overhead bin bag sits above you and must fit the airline’s sizer, including wheels and handles. A personal item slides under the seat in front of you and should not crowd your feet or block the aisle. A laptop bag, small backpack, or compact tote fits that role on most lines.

Why The Numbers Differ

  • Cabin layout and bins: Narrow‑body jets and regional aircraft have tighter bins, so tall or thick cases fail the sizers on certain routes.
  • Safety and speed: A slim, consistent bag shape speeds boarding and keeps aisles clear during evacuations.
  • Fare brands: Basic fares often shrink the free allowance or remove the bin bag entirely, while standard fares restore it.
  • Weight control: Many lines in Europe and across Asia set 7–10 kg caps to keep bins within limits.

Security agencies govern what you may bring, not the size of the bag. For allowed items, see the TSA “What Can I Bring?” list.

Are Carry‑On Dimensions Standard On Every Airline? What Changes Most

Dimensions drift by a few centimeters or an inch here and there, and the cut that matters most is the thickness. That 20–23 cm limit across Europe and much of Asia catches many hard cases designed for 23 cm in the U.S. Weight caps also swing the outcome. A featherweight soft bag with the right footprint flies through checks while an overweight roller of the same size gets tagged.

U.S. Majors: The Common Box

American, Delta, United, Alaska, and JetBlue publish the familiar 22 × 14 × 9 in limit for the overhead bag. Southwest uses a box stated as 24 × 16 × 10 in. Spirit and Frontier allow a paid overhead bag with dimensions near those boxes; their free allowance is an under‑seat item sized roughly 18 × 14 × 8–10 in. Weight is rarely listed in the U.S., but gate agents can still assess whether you can lift the case into the bin without help.

UK and Europe: Shape + Weight

Legacy carriers across the region lean toward 55 × 40 × 23–25 cm, with a bag weight cap between 8 and 12 kg. British Airways stands out with a wider cabin bag and a generous cap tied to a single‑bag weight, while Lufthansa and many peers post 8 kg. Low‑cost brands split the allowance: a small under‑seat bag comes with the base fare; a bin‑sized case requires priority or a bag add‑on and often tops out at 10 kg.

For UK screening rules on liquids and sharp items, see guidance from the UK Civil Aviation Authority.

Middle East and Asia‑Pacific: Mind The Kilograms

Emirates, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, Qantas, Air New Zealand, ANA, and JAL cluster around 55–56 cm × 36–40 cm × 20–25 cm with weight caps of 7–10 kg in economy. Premium cabins often permit an extra piece or a higher combined weight. Staff at the check‑in area or the gate may weigh cabin bags with portable scales.

Quick Reference: Sample Airline Carry‑On Specs

Numbers below reflect widely published cabin bag limits for an economy fare. Rules change. Always confirm on your airline’s site before you pack.

AirlineMax Overhead SizeCarry‑On Weight
American Airlines22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight
Delta Air Lines22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight
United Airlines22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight
Southwest Airlines24 × 16 × 10 in (61 × 41 × 25 cm)No set weight
JetBlue22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight
Alaska Airlines22 × 14 × 9 in (56 × 36 × 23 cm)No set weight
Air Canada55 × 40 × 23 cmNo set weight
British Airways56 × 45 × 25 cmUp to 23 kg
Lufthansa55 × 40 × 23 cmUp to 8 kg
Air France55 × 35 × 25 cmUp to 12 kg
KLM55 × 35 × 25 cmUp to 12 kg
Ryanair (priority)55 × 40 × 20 cmUp to 10 kg
easyJet (large cabin bag)56 × 45 × 25 cmNo stated cap; gate checks apply
Wizz Air (priority)55 × 40 × 23 cmUp to 10 kg
Emirates (economy)55 × 38 × 20 cmUp to 7 kg
Qatar Airways (economy)50 × 37 × 25 cmUp to 7 kg
Singapore Airlines (economy)55 × 40 × 20 cmUp to 7 kg
ANA (economy)55 × 40 × 25 cmUp to 10 kg (combined)
JAL (economy)55 × 40 × 25 cmUp to 10 kg (combined)
Qantas (economy)56 × 36 × 23 cmUp to 7 kg

How To Measure Your Bag The Way Airlines Do

Use the full outside box. Place the suitcase on the floor and measure length, width, and depth from edge to edge, including wheels, feet, handles, and any bulges. Collapse telescoping handles and compress outer pockets before you measure. If your hard case is labeled 22 in but the molded corners add a ridge, the real depth might tip past the sizer.

  • Softside cases flex into tight bins; hardside shells keep their boxy depth.
  • Slim footprints load faster in single‑aisle cabins, which keeps boarding smooth.
  • Pack heavy items low in the case so you can heave it into the bin safely.

Weight Checks, Scales, And Gate Sizers

In markets with kilogram caps, staff use handheld scales near the gate or at check‑in. In the U.S. and Canada, size sizers do most of the work, and a casual “lift test” decides the rest. If your bag must be tagged, remove batteries, valuables, meds, and travel documents before it goes below.

Personal Item Rules: Under‑Seat Space Matters

An under‑seat bag should slide cleanly beneath the seat without lifting the cushion. Common size boxes include 18 × 14 × 8 in in the U.S. and 40 × 30 × 20 cm on European low‑cost lines. Look for bags with a slim profile, a sleeve for your laptop, and a trolley strap so it rides on top of your roller. On small regional jets, the under‑seat box shrinks, so taller daypacks might need a quick repack.

Fare Type, Route, And Aircraft Can Change The Deal

  • Basic fares: Some U.S. and EU brands restrict the bin bag on entry‑level fares. Pay close attention to fare details during booking.
  • International legs: Long‑haul cabins sometimes allow a second piece or a higher combined weight, even in economy.
  • Regional jets and turboprops: Overhead bins are shallow. Expect gate‑check for many hard cases even if they meet the stated box.
  • Codeshares: The operating carrier’s rules usually win at the gate.

Choosing A Bag That Works Across Most Airlines

  • Pick a slim depth: A 20–22 cm shell covers both U.S. and many EU sizers.
  • Go metric and inch: Look for tags that show both units, which reduces guesswork.
  • Favor softside or hybrid: A little flex helps in tight bins and on small jets.
  • Keep it light: An empty weight near 2–3 kg leaves room under 7–10 kg caps.
  • Mind the handles: Flush‑mount handles add less thickness than big external housings.
  • Try before you buy: Drop the case into a store sizer and check the third dimension with a tape.

Common Pitfalls That Trigger Bag Checks

  • Overstuffed front pockets: A bulging pocket can add 3–4 cm and break the sizer fit.
  • Rigid laptop sleeves on the outside: They add depth where you least want it.
  • Heavy wheels and frame: Fancy spinners eat into weight caps fast.
  • Expandable zips left open: One pull can push a compliant 22 cm case past 25 cm.
  • Ignoring the personal item: Cramming a giant backpack under the seat draws quick attention.

Packing Strategies That Pass Bag Checks

  • Pick the footprint: A 55 × 35 × 22 cm softside roller threads most sizers on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Control the depth: Keep the third dimension to 20–22 cm when you can; that is the number that fails most often.
  • Weigh at home: A small luggage scale saves drama where 7–10 kg caps apply.
  • Use the personal item wisely: Shift dense items to a slim under‑seat bag to meet a cabin‑bag weight cap.
  • Compression without bulk: Use flat packing cubes or a neat roll; skip vacuum bags that turn soft items into a rigid brick.
  • Mind the contents: For screening rules on liquids and aerosols, follow the 3‑1‑1 liquids rule.

If Your Bag Is Too Big Or Too Heavy

Stay calm and move fast. Pull out laptops, cameras, meds, passports, and keys. Keep a light nylon tote inside your case so you can split items if staff offers a free gate‑check for the roller. If a fee applies, paying at booking costs less than a surprise charge at the gate.

Who Wrote This, How It Was Created, And Why It Exists

Who: This guide is produced by our editorial team with a travel editor who reviews cabin baggage pages from major airlines and regulators on a rolling schedule.

How: We compile published size boxes and weight caps, group them by region, and sanity‑check the shapes against common luggage designs sold in both inch and metric markets. Policy pages change, so we refresh this page and the tables on a regular cadence.

Why: Bag rules feel messy across carriers. A clear, side‑by‑side view helps you choose luggage that works across trips and avoid last‑minute fees.

Last updated: September 4, 2025

About The Author

Editorial Team, Articles — Content reviewers cross‑check airline pages and regulator guidance before each refresh. Feedback on accuracy is welcome via our contact page.