24 answers

Air Travel Security

Hello Moms!
Could you give me an idea of what I can bring on the plane in regards to juice and food?
I have a one year old who is still nursing/bottle feeding with formula. I thought I could make up bottles and have the Flight Attendant put in warm water. What about juice, applesauce, etc... Thanks!

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

The TSA has a web site that outlines exactly what you can and can't bring on the airplane.

http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/prohibited/permitt...

also this link covers liquids

http://www.tsa.gov/311/index.shtm

It specifically says that baby formula is allowed in reasonable quantities exceeding 3 ounces.

1 mom found this helpful

Every time I've traveled with an infant, you can bring anything you need for the baby. Water, liquid formula, diaper rash ointment, applesauce, crackers, anything. They're very good about it. As long as you have the baby with you!

I just traveled with my then 3 month old and 2 1/2 yr old and the TSA was wonderful! They allowed me to take 3-4 bottles of unopened water and snacks, and soy milk for my older son who is lactose intolerant. They never asked any questions and were very helpful with getting us through the line with what felt like 2 million items!! Just take it slow and be diligent and put EVERYTHING in the bins! I did forget to take out my just in case baby med bag and they just reminded me when I got through and re-ran it, they totally understood in my rush to get everything on the belt and in the bins I forgot! Happy travels!!

D.

More Answers

The TSA has a web site that outlines exactly what you can and can't bring on the airplane.

http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/prohibited/permitt...

also this link covers liquids

http://www.tsa.gov/311/index.shtm

It specifically says that baby formula is allowed in reasonable quantities exceeding 3 ounces.

1 mom found this helpful

You can bring formula made up if you want (or have them put water in it on the plane) You can also bring juice in a sippy cup or bottle (but save yourself the trouble - bring an empty cup and let the flight attendants fill it with their juice - they can even do a juice/water mixture if you want). I travel frequently (at least once/month) with a now three year old, and have never had a problem with food for him - even liquid things like applesauce...Just be sure to tell them at security that it is for your child. You may want to avoid slurpy foods though for the plane, they are pretty messy!

1 mom found this helpful

If it is for the baby, you can pretty much bring anything through security. Just take all the liquids out and show them to the TSA before you put them on the xray. I just travelled with my son last week, and I brought juice, pediasure and a bunch of medicines through and they didn't even give it a second look. Have fun!!!

1 mom found this helpful

I took the little single serve applesauce and had no problem. I'd recommend putting it in a ziploc bag just in case it breaks open with the air pressure or if it gets squashed. If you look at the TSA or SeaTac website it spells out pretty clearly that you can take a reasonable ammount of food for kids. Just make sure that you have any liquids available for the security people to check if they want. I didn't have any problems with it, but it's better to tell them you have it than it is for it to show up on the x-ray thingy. Also, big airports like LAX are more likely to be difficult than littler airports. My experience is also that the flight attendants are busy on midlength flights and are less available to help with stuff. Also, depending how long your flight is, your kiddo may sleep much of the way.

I recently flew with my family from Long Beach to Sea-Tac. When I went through security, TSA confinscated yogurt and a small tub of cream cheese. I brought bagles, fruit, cream cheese, and yogurt to feed my kids for dinner (it was a 7 pm flight with no meal service). My poor kids were pretty hungry, but did well (my 1-year-old was nursing still). I was very upset that they were so harsh about bringing food for the kids on a meal-less flight. I do realize they have a job to do, but it makes it hard to plan. I would go on the TSA website and look at the liquid guidlines (they considered both the yogurt and cream cheese "liquids"). Bring lots of DRY munchies and fresh fruit for snacks. Formula powder should be fine and you can get water on the plane.

Good luck with the flight.

You can bring whatever food you want, but liquids have to be purchased once you've passed the security checkpoint. So you can't pre-make the formula. I suggest purchasing a box of the pre-measured formula tubes for traveling. It's way easier for traveling. You can find them in any store.

Hi,
We have traveled quite a bit with our two (4 & 2 now), and have found that all airports, and even security people are different. What you can do is plan for the best case senario, and bring what you need. Place all items in separate zip locks. BE SURE to remove them from your carry on and set them in a bin together. The guards get vary upset and strict when they have to pull you aside. That said, I have gotten through with 4 juice boxes, 4 milk (liquid) bottles, and some food items. They may ask you if it is for the baby, and disallow water or items you can get on the flight. If they try to take your juice for that reason, push for bringing it. Restock for your trip home either from checked luggage or in local stores. Don't forget to put your bottom cream in a zip lock & the bin, too!

Take dry formula mix and an empty bottle. Once you pass thru security, you can go to Starbucks and have them give you some hot water to mix your first bottle for take off. Make sure you take enough formula to last your return trip as well. The flight attendants can mix more formula on the plane, warm/hot water is their's for the use. Applesauce is messy, first sign of turbulence and you'll both be wearing it. Cheerios or Goldfish in a ziplock bag. I would strongly suggest flying red eye, your toddler will be able to sleep and give you some much needed rest. A pacifier is a must to help relieve the ear pressure. They will wake up screaming if they don't do something to equalize the pressure. So a bottle or a pacifier if they're sleeping.

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