
You're in the security line, and the bag in front of you just got pulled. Someone's unpacking a quart bag onto the steel table while a TSA officer holds up a bottle of sunscreen that's clearly too big. The line stops. Everyone sighs.
Here's the thing — almost nobody gets stopped because the rule is hard. They get stopped because they didn't check one bottle, or assumed a half-empty tube counts as small.
I’m Mary, and as a frequent flyer who used to be the one holding up the line, I learned the hard way that surviving airport security isn’t about luck—it’s about a system. So this is about traveling with liquids on a plane without that moment: what the official rule actually says, which items quietly break it, and a 60-second pre-security check that catches the bottle you'd otherwise lose. The rules can shift, so I'll point you to the official source to confirm before you fly.
Short version: Verify the current liquids rule on the official site before you pack. Travel-size containers go in one clear quart bag; medications and baby liquids are exceptions you declare separately. Keep the same toiletry kit every trip so "did I pack a too-big bottle" stops being a question.

The U.S. rule is the one most people half-remember: the TSA's "3-1-1." As of 2026 it hasn't changed — liquids, gels, aerosols, creams, and pastes go in containers of 3.4 ounces (100 ml) or less, all fitting in one clear quart-size bag, one bag per passenger. Anything bigger goes in checked luggage.
Two details trip people up. First, the airport liquid limit is about the container, not what's left inside — a 6-ounce bottle with a teaspoon of shampoo still gets pulled, because TSA reads the size printed on the bottle. Second, the travel liquid container size cap of 3.4 oz is non-negotiable per item; "I'll just bring one big bottle" doesn't work, even if it's the only liquid you have.
One genuinely current wrinkle worth knowing: many major airports now use 3D CT scanners, and at those lanes you may not need to remove your liquids bag from your carry-on. That changes the screening routine, not the size limit — 3.4 oz per container still applies. There's also been on-and-off talk of relaxing the limit in the future.
That last part is exactly why I won't hand you numbers as if they're permanent. Liquids rules and airport screening both move, and they differ outside the US. Before any trip, confirm the current rule on the official TSA guidance — or your departure country's authority — rather than trusting a blog post or your memory from last year.
The rule sounds simple until you realize how broadly "liquid" is defined. If you can pour it, pump it, squeeze it, smear it, or spray it, TSA treats it as a liquid — which catches a lot of things that don't feel like liquids.
These are the usual casualties.
Makeup splits in two. Solid or powder makeup — pressed powder, blush, stick lipstick — has no size limit and can go anywhere. Liquid and cream makeup — foundation, concealer, liquid lipstick, mascara, setting spray — counts as a liquid and has to fit the quart bag. Mascara surprises people every time.
Deodorant depends on form: solid stick deodorant has no size restriction, but gel or spray deodorant follows the liquid rule. Toothpaste is a paste, so it counts — and a standard tube is usually over 3.4 oz, which is why the full-size one from your bathroom gets confiscated. Sunscreen counts too, lotion and spray alike, so the big beach bottle belongs in checked luggage or gets bought at the destination.
The clean fix for most of these is solid swaps. A solid deodorant, a shampoo bar, toothpaste tablets, a stick sunscreen — none of them count against your quart bag at all. When you're unsure about a specific product, the TSA's "What Can I Bring?" tool settles it item by item, which beats guessing at the bin.

Once you know what counts, the decision for each liquid is simple: does it fit the carry-on rule, or does it ride in checked luggage?
Small daily toiletries go carry-on, in the quart bag. Full-size anything — the shampoo you don't want to rebuy, the nice sunscreen, a bottle of something from the trip — goes checked, where the liquid limit doesn't apply. If you're only traveling carry-on, that's the whole tension: travel sizes or solid swaps, because there's no checked bag to absorb the big stuff.
Two categories sit outside the quart bag entirely. Medically necessary liquids — prescription and over-the-counter medications in liquid form — are allowed over 3.4 oz; you declare them at the start of screening and keep them accessible. Baby formula, breast milk, and toddler drinks are also exempt in larger quantities and don't have to fit the quart bag, and you don't need the child present to carry breast milk. The TSA spells out these exceptions on its official pages, and the CDC echoes the medical-liquid guidance for nursing travelers.
A small caution: these are declared, screened-separately items, not a loophole for regular liquids. Pull them out, tell the officer, and give yourself a little extra time at the checkpoint.

The reason people get caught isn't ignorance of the rule — it's the rush. You pack at midnight, grab the wrong bottle, and don't notice until the belt. A tiny, repeatable check the night before fixes almost all of it.
Mine is four steps, and it takes about a minute. Lay out every liquid, gel, and cream you're bringing. Check each container's printed size, not how full it is. Confirm they all fit — zipped closed — in one quart bag. Set aside any medications or baby liquids to declare separately.
The trick that made this stick for me: I keep one standing toiletry kit that already holds travel-size versions of my routine, so the night-before check is mostly confirming it's stocked, not rebuilding it. The mistake I made for years was packing fresh each time and grabbing the full-size toothpaste straight from the bathroom — which is exactly the bottle that gets tossed.

The ones that don't feel like liquids: toothpaste, mascara and liquid makeup, gel or spray deodorant, sunscreen, and spreadable foods like peanut butter. People pack carefully and still get caught because they didn't count these as liquids. When in doubt, treat anything pourable, squeezable, or spreadable as one.
Keep one standing toiletry kit stocked with travel-size versions of your daily routine, and run the same short check before every trip — lay out, check sizes, fit the bag, set aside exceptions. The consistency is the point: when the kit and the steps don't change, there's almost nothing left to forget.
Container sizes (the thing TSA actually measures), that everything zips into one quart bag, and that any medications or baby liquids are accessible to declare. And, because rules and screening change, glance at the official TSA page or your departure airport's guidance for anything that's been updated since your last trip.
Whenever a container is over 3.4 oz and isn't a medical or baby exception. Full-size toiletries, beverages, and gel-like foods belong in checked bags. If you're traveling carry-on only, the answer is to downsize or switch to solids before you leave, since there's no checked bag to fall back on.
You're not going to memorize every edge case, and you don't need to. The officer measuring a bottle isn't testing your knowledge — they're checking one number, and so can you, the night before, in a minute.
Traveling with liquids on a plane stops being stressful the moment it becomes a routine instead of a gamble. Verify the current rule, keep the same kit, and let the check be boring. Boring is what gets you through the line without a second glance.