
Anyone who has ever tried stuffing a fortnight’s worth of optimism into one wheelie case will know that hand luggage size rules easyJet are less a guideline and more a blood sport conducted beside Gate 12. One minute you are feeling smug with a clever packing cube system, the next you are trying to zip up a bag while a stranger from Bury St Edmunds sits on it like a nightclub bouncer.
By Our Entertainment Editor: Arthur Pint
To be fair to easyJet, the rules are not mysterious. They are just the sort of thing people glance at once, ignore completely, and then blame on modern society when their bag is judged to be the size of a modest orangery. If you want to avoid that little moment of public humiliation at the airport, it helps to know what the airline actually allows, what it means in practice, and where people usually come unstuck.
What are the hand luggage size rules easyJet uses?
At the basic level, every passenger can bring one small cabin bag on board. That bag must fit under the seat in front of you, which is the key detail people hear and then immediately challenge with a rucksack the size of a garden shed. The commonly stated maximum size for that free small bag is 45 x 36 x 20 cm, including handles and wheels.
That last bit matters. Wheels count. Handles count. The little bulging front pocket packed with emergency crisps also counts, no matter how emotionally attached you are to it.
If you want to bring a larger cabin bag as well, that usually depends on the fare you have bought, the seat you have selected, or whether you have added the relevant baggage option. In plain English, if you have paid a bit more, easyJet is generally far more enthusiastic about your luggage ambitions.
The free bag everyone focuses on
The free under-seat bag is the rule that catches most people out, partly because the phrase “small personal item” has convinced half the nation that they are starring in a legal drama and can argue the definition. You cannot, sadly, persuade airline staff that your expanded gym holdall is technically a handbag because it contains a cardigan and a packet of Percy Pigs.
A genuinely suitable free bag is usually a small backpack, compact holdall or laptop bag. If it is soft-sided, you have a little bit of wiggle room because it can squash into the sizing gauge more easily. If it is hard-sided and built like a filing cabinet, you need to be far more precise.
This is where many travellers make life harder for themselves. They buy a cabin case labelled “approved” by some mysterious online seller, only to discover that “approved” appears to mean approved by no airline operating anywhere in Europe.
When you can take a larger cabin bag
easyJet does allow a larger cabin bag for some passengers, but this is where the detail matters. A larger cabin bag is typically allowed if you book an Up Front or Extra Legroom seat, or if your fare or add-on specifically includes it. The size usually given for that larger bag is up to 56 x 45 x 25 cm, including wheels and handles.
That sounds generous, and often it is enough for a short break without checked luggage. It is the classic Friday-to-Monday case, the kind of bag full of two jumpers, one pair of shoes you will regret packing, and toiletries decanted into tiny bottles with the optimism of a chemistry teacher.
But there is a catch, because there is always a catch. Overhead locker space is limited, and larger cabin bags are typically managed in line with boarding arrangements and availability. So while the allowance may be valid, that does not mean the process will feel spiritually uplifting.
Why people still get caught out
The main reason is not that the rules are impossible. It is that people rely on vibes. They stand in the kitchen, look at a bag, and decide it feels “about right”, which is exactly how British DIY projects, coalition governments and barbecue weather forecasts also begin.
The second problem is expansion. Bags are sold with zips that promise extra capacity, as if this were a charming bonus rather than a trap laid by capitalism. The moment you expand the bag, you are no longer travelling with a neat cabin case. You are transporting a fabric warning sign.
Then there is shopping. A bag that fitted perfectly on the outbound journey can become suspiciously pregnant on the way home after a spree involving airport Toblerone, duty free aftershave, and a jacket you insisted was a bargain in Milan even though it now makes you look like a regional magician.
Measuring properly, which nobody enjoys
If you are serious about getting this right, measure the bag when it is packed, not when it is sitting empty and behaving itself in the hallway. Use a tape measure and check height, width and depth, including protruding bits.
That means wheels, rigid corners, chunky handles and overstuffed pockets. Airlines are not measuring the spiritual essence of your luggage. They are measuring the actual object that will be wedged into a metal frame while you mutter that it fitted last time.
Soft bags do offer a practical advantage because they can compress. That said, there is a difference between a bag that can squash a bit and one that requires the strength of three departing stag-do attendees to force it into place.
Seat choice and baggage – the bit people skip reading
A lot of easyJet confusion comes from the relationship between seating and baggage. People focus on the flight price, then click through the booking screens with the urgency of someone trying to skip online terms and conditions for a kettle. Later, they are amazed to learn that seat selection and luggage allowances are linked in certain cases.
If you have booked a standard fare with no extras, assume the free small under-seat bag is your allowance unless your booking clearly says otherwise. If you have selected one of the seat categories that includes a larger cabin bag, check the confirmation carefully and save it somewhere easy to access. Airport arguments are rarely improved by scrolling through seventeen screenshots while standing next to a Pret.
What happens if your bag is too big?
Usually, this is where the cheerful economy of budget travel becomes noticeably less cheerful. If your bag does not meet the allowance you have paid for, you may be charged to put it in the hold. That tends to cost more at the airport than if you had sorted it in advance, which is the aviation equivalent of paying six quid for a bottle of water because you forgot one at home.
It is not just the money either. It is the ceremony of it. The public inspection. The brief queue-side theatre in which fellow passengers pretend not to watch while absolutely watching.
No one wants to be the person redistributing socks, chargers and a paperback into coat pockets like a smuggler at Stansted.
Liquids, laptops and the rest of the faff
Bag size is only part of the story. Even if your luggage meets the dimensions, you still need to think about what is inside it. Airport security rules on liquids and electronics can make a perfectly compliant bag feel far less practical if you have packed it like a chaotic raffle hamper.
Keep liquids where you can reach them without unpacking half your wardrobe. Put electronics in a sensible place. If your bag opens like an intricate Victorian puzzle box, you may save two centimetres of space but lose ten minutes of dignity at security.
For shorter trips, a well-packed under-seat bag can genuinely be enough. For anything longer, the decision becomes more personal. Do you want to travel light and wash things away, or do you want the comfort of options? There is no moral victory in wearing the same emergency black T-shirt for four consecutive evenings just to avoid paying for a bigger bag.
The sensible way to avoid airport melodrama
The best approach is mildly boring, which is why so few people do it. Check the allowance attached to your specific booking. Measure your bag while packed. Leave a little spare room rather than treating the zip like the final boss in an action film.
If you know you are a chronic overpacker, be honest early. Paying for the right baggage option in advance is usually cheaper than discovering at the gate that your “minimalist” packing strategy has somehow produced enough luggage for a touring theatre company.
It also helps to remember that airline staff did not personally invent geometry to ruin your city break. They are enforcing a system designed to keep boarding moving and stop overhead lockers becoming a live-action episode of Gladiators.
So, are the rules unreasonable?
Mostly, no. They are strict, but not absurd if you understand what you are buying. The real issue is that travellers often compare what they wish the rules were with what the rules actually are. That gap – between fantasy and dimensions – is where the trouble starts.
For most passengers, the easiest win is choosing the right bag rather than trying to outwit the policy. A compact backpack that fits the free allowance will save hassle. A proper cabin case that fits the larger allowance will save guesswork. A mystery bag bought online because the reviews said “worked for me x” is how legends of airport misery begin.
If you treat easyJet baggage like a game of technicalities, the airport will usually win. If you treat it like a simple bit of planning, you can get through with your dignity, your toiletries and perhaps even enough room left for a sandwich from Boots.




