HowTo: Travel Edition

Pack Desk / Carry-On / L3 Mini-Hub 007

The Liquids Rule

A carry-on liquids guide: the 3-1-1 rule, medication exceptions, international security differences, duty-free bags, and how to pack liquids without losing the trip.

Clear travel bottles and toiletries arranged for packing.
3-1-1, medicine, security, destination rules

The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning.

The liquids rule is a packing system, not a trivia question. It decides what goes in the cabin, what goes in checked baggage, what needs proof, and what should be bought after arrival.

This L3 page is built as a static mini-hub: it gives the reader a complete editorial brief now, then reserves deeper L4 how-to paths for the narrower questions that deserve their own articles. The point is not to inflate a category page. The point is to give search engines and readers a real, differentiated body at the URL.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

The baseline

For U.S. TSA screening, the familiar 3-1-1 rule means liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and aerosols in travel-size containers of 3.4 ounces or 100 milliliters, placed in one quart-size bag. Other countries may use similar but not identical screening rules, so international return flights deserve a second check.

For U.S. TSA screening, the familiar 3-1-1 rule means liquids, gels, creams, pastes, and aerosols in travel-size containers of 3.4 ounces or 100 milliliters, placed in one quart-size bag. Other countries may use similar but not identical screening rules, so international return flights deserve a second check. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

What counts

Travelers often lose items because they think only obvious liquids count. Toothpaste, gel deodorant, sunscreen, mascara, hair products, creams, and spreadable food can all trigger the rule. If it pours, smears, sprays, squeezes, or gels, assume it belongs in the system.

Travelers often lose items because they think only obvious liquids count. Toothpaste, gel deodorant, sunscreen, mascara, hair products, creams, and spreadable food can all trigger the rule. If it pours, smears, sprays, squeezes, or gels, assume it belongs in the system. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

Medication

Medically necessary liquids can be treated differently, but they should be declared and packed clearly. Prescriptions, labels, and a simple note can reduce friction. Do not bury critical medication in checked baggage if missing it would harm the trip.

Medically necessary liquids can be treated differently, but they should be declared and packed clearly. Prescriptions, labels, and a simple note can reduce friction. Do not bury critical medication in checked baggage if missing it would harm the trip. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

Duty-free and transfers

Duty-free liquids can be allowed in secure tamper-evident bags under specific conditions, but transfers complicate the story. A bottle bought airside before one flight can become a problem at the next screening point. Know the route before buying liquid souvenirs.

Duty-free liquids can be allowed in secure tamper-evident bags under specific conditions, but transfers complicate the story. A bottle bought airside before one flight can become a problem at the next screening point. Know the route before buying liquid souvenirs. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

Destination rules

Security screening is only one layer. Destination customs, airline hazardous-material rules, and local restrictions can matter for aerosols, alcohol, medicines, and specialty products. Verify restricted or prohibited items with the airline and destination customs before flying.

Security screening is only one layer. Destination customs, airline hazardous-material rules, and local restrictions can matter for aerosols, alcohol, medicines, and specialty products. Verify restricted or prohibited items with the airline and destination customs before flying. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Liquids Rule / Field Note

The mistake

The common mistake is packing a full-size product because it feels essential. Essential cabin liquids should be decanted, documented, or bought after arrival. Everything else belongs in checked baggage or at home.

The common mistake is packing a full-size product because it feels essential. Essential cabin liquids should be decanted, documented, or bought after arrival. Everything else belongs in checked baggage or at home. In practice, the traveler should translate this into one visible decision before moving on: what gets booked, what gets verified, what gets saved offline, and what can safely remain flexible. That discipline is what turns a travel topic from inspiration into an operating plan.

Next layer

Eight deeper guides reserved under this topic.

  1. 01 3-1-1 packing method How to build a compliant liquids bag that still covers the trip.
  2. 02 Medicine in carry-on How to pack medically necessary liquids and documents.
  3. 03 Sunscreen and skincare What to decant, what to check, and what to buy on arrival.
  4. 04 Aerosols Deodorant, hairspray, shaving foam, and airline limits.
  5. 05 Makeup liquids Mascara, foundation, primer, and the products travelers forget count.
  6. 06 Duty-free liquids Tamper-evident bags, transfers, and when not to buy.
  7. 07 International security Why the return flight may not behave like the outbound.
  8. 08 What to check The liquids that are better in checked baggage or not packed at all.

Editorial slots

The L4 article queue.

01 / Reserved L4

3-1-1 packing method

How to build a compliant liquids bag that still covers the trip.

02 / Reserved L4

Medicine in carry-on

How to pack medically necessary liquids and documents.

03 / Reserved L4

Sunscreen and skincare

What to decant, what to check, and what to buy on arrival.

04 / Reserved L4

Aerosols

Deodorant, hairspray, shaving foam, and airline limits.

05 / Reserved L4

Makeup liquids

Mascara, foundation, primer, and the products travelers forget count.

06 / Reserved L4

Duty-free liquids

Tamper-evident bags, transfers, and when not to buy.

07 / Reserved L4

International security

Why the return flight may not behave like the outbound.

08 / Reserved L4

What to check

The liquids that are better in checked baggage or not packed at all.

The deeper map this page creates.

The L3 page has to do two jobs at once: answer the broad query today and create enough editorial gravity for future L4 articles. The child routes below are reserved article surfaces with a specific reason to exist, a parent topic to inherit, and a narrower reader problem to solve.

That is the difference between a topic cluster and a pile of links. The parent page carries the thesis, the decision order, the official-source discipline, and the internal linking structure. The child pages can then go deep without having to re-explain the entire lane.

L4 expansion / 01

3-1-1 packing method

How to build a compliant liquids bag that still covers the trip. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the 3-1-1 packing method leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 02

Medicine in carry-on

How to pack medically necessary liquids and documents. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the Medicine in carry-on leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 03

Sunscreen and skincare

What to decant, what to check, and what to buy on arrival. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the Sunscreen and skincare leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 04

Aerosols

Deodorant, hairspray, shaving foam, and airline limits. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the Aerosols leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 05

Makeup liquids

Mascara, foundation, primer, and the products travelers forget count. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the Makeup liquids leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 06

Duty-free liquids

Tamper-evident bags, transfers, and when not to buy. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the Duty-free liquids leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 07

International security

Why the return flight may not behave like the outbound. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the International security leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

L4 expansion / 08

What to check

The liquids that are better in checked baggage or not packed at all. This future article should not be a thin answer. It should open with the decision pressure, name the traveler who needs it, give the exact verification or booking move, then show how the wrong version of the decision fails in the real trip.

For this Liquids Rule cluster, the What to check leaf should inherit the parent logic: The memorable thing: the rule is small, but the failure is public. Pack liquids so security never becomes the most dramatic part of the morning. The child page should go narrower without becoming smaller. It should include official-source checks where rules can change, clear internal links back to Carry-On, and a practical final action that tells the reader what to do before they leave the page.

The decision matrix.

The following gates translate the editorial issue into actions. They are written into the body because search engines need to see the practical depth of the page, and readers need a way to move from reading to doing.

Decision matrix / 01

Use containers no larger than the rule allows.

Use containers no larger than the rule allows. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Decision matrix / 02

Pack all small liquids in one clear bag where required.

Pack all small liquids in one clear bag where required. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Decision matrix / 03

Keep medicine accessible and labeled.

Keep medicine accessible and labeled. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Decision matrix / 04

Separate baby/medical exceptions for declaration.

Separate baby/medical exceptions for declaration. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Decision matrix / 05

Check return-flight security rules.

Check return-flight security rules. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Decision matrix / 06

Be careful with duty-free on connections.

Be careful with duty-free on connections. is not a decorative checklist item. It is a decision gate. If the reader can complete it, the trip gets simpler; if the reader skips it, the trip carries hidden risk into booking, packing, arrival, or entry. The page treats it as a working action rather than a reminder.

The editorial standard is to make the action visible in the moment it matters. The traveler should know where to verify it, what proof to save, what fallback to use, and when to stop researching. That is how this page earns its place in the static hierarchy instead of behaving like a short summary card.

Reader action

The practical checklist.

Verification

Official and authority checks.

Use these sources for rules that can change or affect boarding, entry, safety, insurance, or legal compliance. Editorial judgment helps frame the decision; official sources control the rule.

FAQ

The questions readers ask before committing.

What is the TSA 3-1-1 rule?
TSA describes the baseline as travel-size containers of 3.4 ounces or 100 milliliters in one quart-size bag.
Does toothpaste count?
Yes. Toothpaste is usually treated as a paste or gel and belongs in the liquids system.
Can I bring liquid medicine?
Medically necessary liquids may be allowed in larger amounts, but declare them and keep documentation where possible.
Do rules differ internationally?
Yes. Similar rules exist in many places, but details and enforcement can differ.
Can I bring duty-free alcohol through a connection?
Sometimes, if packed in an approved secure bag and documentation remains intact. Connections can still create problems.
Should I pack full-size toiletries?
Only in checked baggage when allowed. For carry-on, decant, buy on arrival, or reduce the product list.

The editorial standard for this page.

The Liquids Rule is built to be more than a card in a grid. It is a substantial L3 surface with a visible editorial issue, a crawlable hidden body, real anchors, official-source links where the topic touches rules, and a clear parent-child relationship inside the Travel Edition hierarchy.

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