Useful Tips For Air Travel With Ski Equipment

By Paul Aderly


Having difficulty working out the simplest way to travel with your ski/snowboard luggage? Here's some tips which will make the trek less of a challenge.

1) If paying for an additional bag, ensure that it's paid for as a sports bag and use all your supplementary weight allowance.

It isn't uncommon for you to want to purchase an extra bag if you're going for a longer ski vacation. In the event you purchase a supplementary bag, most airlines provide rate reductions when your additional bag is a snowboard bag. It's generally about half of your regular supplementary bag fee.

Pay for your supplementary bag listed as being a snowboard bag, then fill it to the top. You are likely to only have about 15 kg of actual snowboard equipment, so look to find out how much weight is authorized inside your snowboard bag. Next, put clothes and other things you want, up to the point your snowboard bag hits the free allowance cap.

2) Carry a copy of the luggage allowance restrictions

Be sure to bring a copy of the current baggage allowances whenever you fly on an airline. You will find that quite a few check in clerks will not even know their own baggage rules, particularly when you take advantage of discounts and other weight tricks with sports bags.

If they ever try to charge you extra, present them their own weight allowances, and don't forget that whenever flying to/from international locations, you're allowed to include bags based on international flight baggage limits. Don't allow the airline to charge you domestic fare charges.

3) Better not carry base cleaner, if you don't want to lose it

Base cleaner might get taken away at the airport. Do not bring it! It's flammable, so even though it gets beyond security checks, it's risky to pack in your luggage.

4) Don't take any baggage over 32 kg (70 lbs)

It's illegal for the majority of airports to permit luggage over 32 kg, because of safe practices and polices for the baggage handlers. Never pack any luggage over 32 kg or the airline will most likely not let you check it in, even if you try to pay for any additional weight.

5) Never forget to get luggage and receipts tagged to the last destination

When travelling over multiple flights, specifically international to domestic transfers, always get your bags tagged all the way up to your last destination. Every time you check in for your first flight, ensure you tell them to ticket your bags right through to your last destination, and make sure that any extra luggage or overweight charges you've paid has each destination listed on the invoice.

Check in employees could very well try to charge you additional fees and penalties at your various other destinations if the first flight check in failed to ticket your luggage for the entire journey. It is far from a pleasant conversation to have and you will end up needing to talk to a supervisor to have it fixed, so prevent missed tagging when possible.




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