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The Airlines That Allow Adults to Only Have 1 Kid With Them

a close up of a child

Families with children come in all different shapes and sizes. A child, or children, may have one mom and one dad. Or they may have one mom and her new husband, and one dad with his new wife. A family might be one or more kids, plus two moms, or two dads. And some families may include just one parent from the very start, or that’s how it eventually turned out because of reasons.

So it’s not all that unusual for an adult to be in charge of 2 kids or infants (read: age 2 and under) while on a plane. As it turns out, some countries have specific rules about that very situation.

We discovered this because a single mom, Amanda Leigh Vienno Bailey, recently tried to fly Canadian airline Flair with her twin infants, and found out the hard way that it’s against the rules to do so.

“It sucks being a single mom,” Amanda Leigh Vienno Bailey says in her TikTok video. She continued that she was “super disappointed” after confirming with Flair several times that she could fly with her 3 month old twins. The mom says she was all packed and got her hopes up about the trip after telling herself, “I can do it.”

But once she got to the airport, she was told that, as per Canadian Aviation Regulations, an adult passenger can only be responsible for one child under the age of 2. Even if you buy seats for infants, they must be accompanied by another adult.

All in the name of safety, of course.

@amandaleighvienno

♬ original sound – Amanda Leigh Vienno Bailey

(As a side note, Bailey had been posting about her upcoming trip with her kids for a while and some people had already commented that the airline wasn’t going to allow her to bring 2 babies onto the flight by herself. But she said that Flair told her multiple times that she could, so…I dunno.)

Anyway, the rule is not Flair’s…it’s Canada’s. And it’s apparently been a part of Canadian Aviation Regulations for forever. This is how it’s worded:

For the safety of both adults and children, the Canadian Aviation Regulations require that no passenger can be responsible for more than 1 infant (child under the age of 2). If you are travelling with children under the age of 2, a passenger must accompany each of your children, even if you buy seats for them.

Of course, as someone living in the U.S., my first question was,

What’s the rule for the United States?

Fortunately, it’s not as stringent. According to the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) safety requirements, an adult passenger must accompany each lap child (well that’s good. Otherwise whose lap would they be sitting on, a stranger’s???). Babies/infants under age 2 can sit on the lap of a ticketed adult, but it’s recommended (albeit not required) that they instead be restrained in their own approved car seat attached to the seat. If you’re flying with two infants, you can keep one on your lap and buy a seat for the additional child (for them to sit in their approved car seat). No additional adult is required to accompany the additional child

So whether you fly Delta, Jetblue, Spirit, Southwest, etc., you’re safe – 2 babies, no problem (but one will have to be in an approved car seat).

What about other countries?

Not surprisingly, it depends.

I’ll be honest, it’s hard to tell what official regulations are from country to country because official safety requirements are usually written in the country’s official language. And frankly, as a native English speaker whose last high school Spanish class was sometime in the late 20th century, my French, Vietnamese, Portuguese, etc., are pretty darn limited ;-). But we can always check to see what the rules for specific airlines are…

Note: there are plenty of other rules about how young an infant can be, if an “infant” can sit up by themself and Icelandic’s rule that, “it’s not possible to book a ticket for an unborn child” (I assume they mean for a future flight after the baby has been born, but it still made me giggle a little). When it comes to “how many infants can one person travel with?” the correct answer appears to be, “it depends on the airline.”

Feature Image (cropped): Eugenio “The Wedding Traveler” WILMAN / Flickr / CC BY-SA 2.0

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