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Why and How I Never Check Luggage, Even for International Trips

by on Jun 12, 2018

Photo: Francesca Tirico

In the last five years or so, I’ve been fortunate to go on several international trips. Even though it would be free to check a bag on those flights, I never do, and it has saved me so much time and trouble that I can’t imagine doing it any other way. If you’re doing any air travel, internationally or not, I’m here to tell you why and how you should avoid checking luggage.          

 

Why to Avoid Checking Luggage

I’m an impatient person, and standing around waiting for my luggage to come around on a carousel is not my idea of a good time. It becomes extra annoying when I’ve just disembarked from a long international flight and all I want to do is sleep/eat/shower/collapse. And if you’re a worrier like me, if you avoid checking luggage, it’ll also save you from the anxiety that your stuff will disappear in transit (my sister had fancy chocolate stolen from her checked bags). Skipping the baggage arrival area and just walking out of the airport is surprisingly liberating, and definitely worth hauling a bag onto a plane.

If simple convenience isn’t enough to convince you, the most important benefit I’ve found from living the carry-on-only-lifestyle is that it has saved me from missing connections. Exhausted from already having spent 17+ hours in transit, my husband and I arrived in Sydney, Australia later than scheduled, and were told we’d be missing our final flight. When the gate agent asked if we had checked luggage, though, and we told her we only had carry-ons, she said that if we just hurried over to the gate we’d have no problem. On the way home from this same trip, another delayed flight meant we would have missed our connection if we’d had to wait for our luggage to carry through US customs. (Speaking of customs, the fewer/smaller bags you travel with, the less hassle it generally is.) We’ve had similar situations on other flights since then. 

A bag sitting in the middle of an airport with no one around.

Another plus to packing just what you can carry with you onto a plane is that it can make your transit cheaper and more convenient once you get to your destination. Your carry-ons will be easier to wrangle on public transport or on foot than a big, bulky checked suitcase, saving you the money you might otherwise have had to spend on cabs. In a big city with lots of traffic, this can be a considerable savings. Add in the money you’ll save on checked bag fees over the years, and a nice compact rolling suitcase may pay for itself pretty quickly. 

The bottom line: Checking luggage slows you down, makes you more likely to miss connections, and costs more. 

How to Avoid Checking Luggage

Before you can pack your carry-ons, you need the right bags. You get two, one that fits in the overhead bins, and one that can fit on the floor in front of your seat. Choose wisely, and maximize them both. If you must bring a purse for daily use on the trip, make it a small one that can fit into one of those bags. Having tried a bunch of different combinations, I recommend investing in a good roller bag with spinner wheels for the overhead bin, and a backpack for down below.

suitcase

This lightweight Lipault bag is my personal choice for a carry-on that fits in overhead bins. Colors other than black are easier to spot if you do end up having to gate-check a bag on a small aircraft.

Don’t try to save money on cheaply-made versions, because you’ll likely regret it and end up having to replace them. Buy the most sturdy, best-reviewed, comfortable-but-still-lightweight versions you can find. Sore muscles from hauling around a heavy, ill-fitting bag just aren’t worth it (believe me, I did it too many times before I upgraded my gear). 

If you want to maximize the amount of stuff you can bring, packing cubes are the way to go. The budget version is resealable plastic freezer bags. Your stuff stays organized, compressed, and with fewer wrinkles.

Packing cubes

Packing cubes come in a ton of different sizes and configurations, you just have to figure out which ones work best for you and your suitcase. These packing cubes are available on Amazon.


If I’ve helped motivate you to avoid checking luggage and pack lighter instead – but you’re not sure how – I’ve written about some of the reasons why I used to over-pack, and how to overcome them. Curbly published Faith Provencher’s tips for packing light, many of which are the same ones that I use. It might take a couple of trips to figure out what works best for you, so don’t be too hard on yourself, and try to learn from each trip. Every time I travel, I make small tweaks, and realize that I need less stuff than I did the last time. 

Why and how I avoid checking luggage, even for international trips

Photo: Rachel Jacks

 

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2 Comments

  1. Great so people like you with your huge carry on bags that won’t check them are the reason I end up with no leg room even though I check my bag. Either my handbag & jacket won’t fit in the overhead compartment so have to get shoved on the floor by my feet taking or have to be stuffed so many rows from my seat I risk someone trying to steal my bag like the last time I flew, when some guy tried to convince the air steward that my leopard print tote bag was his. Thanks. Glad you don’t have to wait 10 minutes for your bag to appear on arrival, my Deep Vein Thrombosis thanks you too.

  2. Hi @wwaxwork –

    I’m sorry to hear that you struggle with deep vein thrombosis. It sounds very painful, and that it makes air travel even more unpleasant.

    But your comments are not constructive nor germane to the topic of this post. The airlines set very strict standards for the size of carry-on luggage, and the personal items that can be stored under seats. I’m not sure if you read the post, or are just responding to the title, but the author does not, in any way, recommend violating those standards. In fact, the very thesis of this post is designed to help readers pack less and lighter, goals it seems you’d want to promote.

    Paying passengers who choose to use carryon luggage are not the cause of someone trying to steal your bag. They are simply trying to make the hassle of airline travel as streamlined as possible for everyone. And, since it sounds like you fly often, you must know the risk of checked luggage is not just waiting ten minutes for your bag to appear. Checking luggage costs, at minimum, $50 additional dollars to the already expensive cost of travel, and makes you vulnerable to being stuck on a foreign continent without any of your belongings.

    This post was intended to help readers pack lighter, travel more thriftily, and take up LESS space. Not more. Curbly will continue to provide quality, helpful content to improve the lives of everyone. We are in this together against the unfortunate control that a small group of corporate airlines have over travel opportunities. You are opposed to them, not the ideas in this post. Please keep comments constructive and on-topic.