There are plenty of things on the TSA’s list of prohibited items that make sense for not being allowed to bring them in your carry-on or personal bag due to, among other things, concerns about using them as a weapon or as part of a bomb.
- Guns
- Night sticks
- Peanut butter (if you can spill it, spray it, spread it, pump it or pour it, it can’t be in your carry-on bag. Peanut butter can spread)
- Utility knives
Many items that aren’t allowed in your carry-on or personal bag though, are perfectly fine in your checked bag. Yet others aren’t even allowed in your checked bags (usually due to concerns of fire or explosion). Some examples of those would include:
- Alcohol spirits over 140 proof
- Fireworks
- Bear spray
- Dynamite
And then there are items you’re not allowed to have in your checked luggage that are OK to bring in your carry-on or personal bags. They would include:
- Anything with a lithium battery
- Butane-powered cordless curling irons
Most are international
Most items that are prohibited in one country are going to be prohibited in another. I mean, you’re not going to find ANY country that allows people to carry guns or knives with them on a commercial flight. However, there will be a couple of things that may be prohibited in one country that are perfectly fine in another. Or you may be able to bring them in your checked bag in one country but not in another.
Take marzipan, for example.
Marzipan???
Yes, marzipan.
(thanks, Wikipedia!)
What’s wrong with marzipan?
In the US? Nothing. The TSA doesn’t include marzipan in its list of things you can’t bring, either carry-on or checked bags.
But in other countries, apparently, marzipan can be an issue.
According to “John,” a worker at Dublin Airport, the treat tends to set off an alert when it’s in checked bags. The almond paste confection can be read to the scanners as an explosive because the two have the same density (roughly 8 to 11 ounces per cup).
“Don’t ever pack Marzipan in your luggage. It has the same density as some explosives so your bag will be removed and you’ll be called from the plane for a bag search,” he told RSVP Live earlier this year.
Invented in 1958, Semtex, a general-purpose plastic explosive, was popular with the IRA and Arab terrorists in the late 1900s. And apparently, it’s similar in density and appearance to marzipan. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Why doesn’t the TSA have issues with marzipan?
No idea. Again, “snacks” are apparently A-OK.
I suppose it could be as simple as the fact that marzipan isn’t as much of a “thing” in the U.S. as it is in Europe. But if you decide to travel with marzipan, it might be a better idea to put it in your carry-on so you can at least explain it if and when the scanner thinks you’re carrying plastic explosives.
Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved.
Want to sponsor a post, write something for Your Mileage May Vary, or put ads on our site? Click here for more info.
Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and sign up to get emailed notifications of when we post.
Whether you’ve read our articles before or this is the first time you’re stopping by, we’re really glad you’re here and hope you come back to visit again!
This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary
8 comments
I had some beef jerky in my carry-on bag one time on a trip to South Korea. Then I heard an announcement before we landed that beef products are not allowed in the country. I promptly declared I had beef sticks in my bag upon arrival so they diverted me to an area, where they check my bags. The lady there treated me like a criminal asking me why I would try to bring illegal products into their country. I tried to explain that I wasn’t trying to do it as I had declared the items, but she seemed quite miffed at me For whatever reason. I regretted I ever declared them. Really, packaged beef jerky?
It’s usually illegal to bring meat products from one country to another.
What country can you bring beef products into? Isn’t this pretty much universally prohibited? I understand that you didn’t know, but I think most people do. And you can’t bring in items that are prohibited just by declaring them – they needed to be disposed of before you reached customs.
You can bring beef sticks into the Philippines and I expect many more countries. And yes you can declare you have prohibited items at customs.
Don’t buy any yogurt before TSA either – unless you plan on eating it right there and then.
Of course not; it’s a thick liquid. It’s pourable and spreadable.
I have packed marzipan in checked and carry-on luggage on flights from Germany to the US for many years. Never had a problem.
You are allowed to have certain devices with a lithium battery in checked baggage. What you can not bring in checked baggage is a SPARE lithium battery, i.e. not installed in a device.