Avoiding Overweight Baggage Fees

Avoiding Overweight Baggage Fees
Avoiding Overweight Baggage Fees
Written by Harry Johnson

Excessive airline baggage fees have become an integral way for air carriers to generate more revenue from passengers

Serial overpackers and savvy travelers hoping to avoid being stung with dreaded overweight baggage fees are being offered advice to cut down on the heavy travel bags.

Low-cost airlines are particularly notorious for stinging their passengers who are over the suitcase or hand luggage allowance with large fees.

Baggage fees have become an integral way for airlines to generate more revenue from flyers, with the cost sometimes trumping the actual flight cost.

Money-saving travelers who opt for free baggage, which must be small enough to fit under the seat, are often told they must pay for an extra carry-on or checked-in luggage if it doesn’t fit the strict dimensions or weighs too much.

Each airline is different, but air carriers are always pursuing new revenue opportunities and charging extra for baggage has proved to be profitable.

Some airlines regularly change their bag and weight limits which can catch people out. When this happens the changes can still catch ‘none the wiser’ holidaymakers out several years later.

With a little bit of imagination, there are many hacks that holiday-goers can try to sneak a little extra on board without paying any more.

From packing clothing within a pillowcase to using duty-free bags to sneak in extras, travelers who want to keep costs down when traveling have some inventive options.

It is easy to overpack and fill bags to the brim, so holidaymakers should think twice about what they truly need because there is no worse start to a holiday than unexpected and unwanted charges.

To make it worse, over packing and having to take a hold bag can also seriously delay the arrival experience because of waiting times at the baggage carousel, so to avoid inconvenience, people should avoid over packing at all costs and stick to hand luggage on shorter trips.

The rules surrounding cruise luggage are far simpler and more straightforward than what you’ll find on a flight; most cruise lines have a 90kg limit. For cruises which leave a home port with no flights, this can be welcome news.

However, if flying to get to a port, holidaymakers will need to limit their packing to keep to the strict airline limits.

Hacks to avoid overweight baggage fees:

The pillow trick

This hack involves bringing a pillowcase full of clothes to disguise as a comfy pillow on the aircraft. Many travelers have said they have successfully used this trick to avoid fees for overweight baggage. A former flight attendant’s viral TikTok makes this hack famous, and there is now concern that airlines could stop letting people bring on their pillows as more customers brag online about beating the system.

Utilize duty-free bags

Duty-free bags don’t count as carry-on baggage, so if passengers buy something in a duty-free shop, they can use the bag they provide to add in their extra heavier items. This hack is great for people who want to bring an additional item on-board without breaking the strict one-small-bag rule. Simply wear layers through security and then place them in a duty-free bag afterwards.

Travel in the heaviest clothing

Perhaps one of the oldest tricks in the book, wearing the heaviest clothes while traveling is a great way to keep to weight restrictions. Holidaymakers who wear their bulkiest items, like hoodies, coats, and heaviest shoes, will make more room in their case and keep extra warm on the plane. Travelers should use the pockets of their bulky clothing to stash more items if they are still concerned about the weight of the case.

Invest in a Travel Vest

About the author

Harry Johnson

Harry Johnson has been the assignment editor for eTurboNews for mroe than 20 years. He lives in Honolulu, Hawaii, and is originally from Europe. He enjoys writing and covering the news.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Share to...