7 Best Carry-On Size Checkers in 2026 (Free & Tested)

We tested 7 free carry-on size checkers for airline coverage, accuracy, and personal item support. Find out if your bag fits before you get to the gate.

· · 9 min read · Verified April 23, 2026

I’ve had a bag pulled out of line exactly once. It was a Frontier flight out of Denver, and the gate agent was using one of those metal sizer bins that every budget airline keeps next to the jet bridge. My bag fit, barely, but the two people behind me weren’t as lucky. One of them paid $99 at the gate for a bag that would’ve been fine on Delta. That’s the kind of thing a carry-on size checker prevents.

The problem is that “carry-on size” means different things on different airlines. Southwest gives you 24 x 16 x 10 inches. Ryanair’s free cabin bag is 40 x 20 x 25 cm. A bag that clears every US carrier might get flagged on half the airlines in Europe. The best carry-on size checkers let you enter your bag dimensions once and see which airlines accept it across the board. The best free carry-on size checker in 2026 is our own Carry-On Size Checker because it combines verified dimensions for 75+ airlines with gate-check risk ratings, personal item limits, and per-airline detail pages you won’t find elsewhere. Full disclosure: it’s our tool. I’ve ranked it honestly, and the #2 pick, CarryFit, covers more airlines.

What We Looked For

A good carry-on size checker saves you from a surprise fee at the gate. Here’s what separated the useful tools from the noise:

  • Airline coverage, because checking against six US carriers doesn’t help when you’re flying Wizz Air or AirAsia
  • Personal item support, since budget airlines enforce personal item limits just as strictly as carry-on limits
  • Data accuracy and freshness, because airlines change dimensions more often than you’d expect (Ryanair alone has adjusted its cabin bag rules three times since 2023)
  • Bag orientation handling, meaning the tool should sort your dimensions automatically so you don’t have to guess whether to enter length or height first
  • No signup or paywall, because checking a bag size should take ten seconds, not a registration form

1. Vientapps Carry-On Size Checker

Carry-On Size Checker is a free tool that checks your bag against 75+ airlines and shows which ones accept it, which ones don’t, and which ones are borderline. Enter your dimensions in inches or centimeters, and you get a pass/fail result for every airline with a single click.

Pros:

  • Covers 75+ airlines including budget carriers (Spirit, Frontier, Ryanair, Wizz Air, AirAsia, Cebu Pacific) and premium international airlines
  • Separate personal item size checker for under-seat bags, not just carry-ons
  • Gate-check risk ratings for every airline (High, Medium, Low) so you know how strictly your bag will actually be enforced
  • Per-airline detail pages with full baggage policy, carry-on fees, weight limits, and basic economy restrictions
  • Five bag presets (standard roller, compact roller, weekender duffel, travel backpack, underseat bag)
  • Every dimension is hand-verified against the airline’s official policy page with a “last verified” date
  • Region and airline category filters to narrow results
  • Also available as a free embeddable widget for travel blogs

Cons:

  • 75+ airlines is solid but less than CarryFit’s 172
  • No AR camera measurement; you need to know or measure your bag dimensions
  • Web only, no native mobile app

Pricing: Free. No paid tier. Platforms: Web (works on mobile browsers) Best for: Travelers who want verified data with context, not just a pass/fail, plus gate-check risk ratings that tell you how likely enforcement actually is.

2. CarryFit

CarryFit is an open-source carry-on size checker covering 172 airlines worldwide. Enter your bag dimensions, and it shows a compliance percentage for each airline. Toggle “soft bag” mode if your bag has some give, and filter by region to narrow results.

Pros:

  • 172 airlines, the largest coverage of any carry-on size checker I found
  • Checks both carry-on and personal item dimensions
  • Open source on GitHub, so the data and code are transparent
  • Soft bag toggle adjusts results for flexible luggage
  • Region filtering across 7 geographic zones
  • Links to each airline’s official policy page
  • Free, no signup

Cons:

  • Does not include gate-check risk ratings or enforcement context
  • No per-airline detail pages; it’s strictly a dimension checker
  • Does not track weight limits (only dimensions)
  • Results are described as “guidance, not a promise” with no verification dates on the data

Pricing: Free, open source. Platforms: Web Best for: Travelers who want the widest airline coverage possible and just need a quick pass/fail on dimensions.

3. TravelClosely

TravelClosely offers separate carry-on and personal item checkers covering 120+ airlines. Enter your dimensions (the tool reminds you to include wheels and handles), select a region, and get instant compatibility results.

Pros:

  • 120+ airlines, good coverage between the top two picks
  • Dedicated personal item checker as a separate tool, not just an afterthought
  • Reminds users to measure with wheels and handles included, which catches a common mistake
  • Region filtering to narrow results
  • Also offers airline-specific strictness guides, a volume calculator, and a luggage size chart
  • Free, no signup

Cons:

  • Tools are embedded in blog posts rather than standalone pages, which makes them harder to bookmark or share
  • Published in late 2025; I could not verify how frequently the airline data is refreshed
  • No gate-check risk ratings or enforcement data
  • No weight limit information

Pricing: Free. Platforms: Web Best for: Travelers who want both carry-on and personal item checking with solid airline coverage and don’t mind the blog-format presentation.

4. SizeGraf

SizeGraf is one of the few tools that distinguishes between domestic and international routes and lets you check all three bag types: carry-on, checked, and personal item. Select your unit system, route type, airline, and bag category, then enter dimensions and weight.

Pros:

  • Distinguishes domestic vs. international routes, which matters because some airlines have different limits for each
  • Supports all three bag types (carry-on, checked, personal item) in one tool
  • Includes weight checking, not just dimensions
  • 99 airlines for international travel, 13 for US domestic
  • Free, no signup

Cons:

  • You have to select one airline at a time rather than checking against all airlines at once
  • 13 US domestic airlines is limited if you fly regional carriers
  • Interface is more form-based than visual, no at-a-glance pass/fail grid
  • No verification dates on the data

Pricing: Free. Platforms: Web Best for: Travelers on a specific airline who want to check all their bags (carry-on, checked, and personal item) against that one carrier’s rules, including weight.

5. SizeFit

SizeFit is a carry-on size checker with a separate personal item comparison chart and airline-specific carry-on rule guides. Enter your dimensions in inches or centimeters, and it checks against its dataset.

Pros:

  • Dataset last updated April 5, 2026, with a stated 90-day review cycle, one of the freshest update policies I found
  • Dedicated personal item comparison chart as a separate resource
  • Airline-specific carry-on rule guides provide context beyond just dimensions
  • Unit conversion between inches and centimeters
  • Free, no signup

Cons:

  • Exact airline count is not stated; the site references “all airlines” without a specific number
  • Self-describes as “a planning helper,” not definitive
  • No gate-check risk ratings or enforcement context
  • No weight checking

Pricing: Free. Platforms: Web Best for: Travelers who value data freshness and want supplementary guides on specific airline carry-on rules.

6. CarryOnSize.us

CarryOnSize.us covers 44+ airlines and stands out for its reverse search feature: instead of just checking one bag against airlines, you can find all airlines that accept a given bag size. It also includes cabin class selection (Economy, Business, First) and a baggage fee calculator.

Pros:

  • Reverse search finds airlines that fit your bag, useful when you haven’t booked yet and want to choose an airline based on your existing luggage
  • Cabin class selection adjusts results, since Business and First often have larger allowances
  • Built-in baggage fee calculator for 11+ airlines
  • Data updated weekly per the site
  • 50+ baggage policy guides for individual airlines
  • Free, no signup

Cons:

  • 44 airlines is on the lower end of coverage
  • No personal item checking
  • No weight limit data
  • Fee calculator covers only 11 airlines

Pricing: Free. Platforms: Web Best for: Travelers who want to choose an airline based on their existing bag, rather than buy a bag to fit a specific airline.

7. Away Airline Comparison

Away’s airline comparison page is a brand-specific tool that checks whether Away’s carry-on luggage products (Carry-On, Bigger Carry-On, Softside, Aluminum) fit a given airline’s limits. Search by airline name and see which Away bags are approved.

Pros:

  • If you own or are considering an Away bag, this is the fastest way to check compatibility
  • Covers about 40 airlines
  • Clean interface with per-bag results for each Away product
  • Free, no account needed

Cons:

  • Only checks Away’s own products, not arbitrary dimensions
  • About 40 airlines is limited compared to general-purpose tools
  • The site notes some airlines were “not verified by our testing in 2025,” so 2026 changes may not be reflected
  • Useless if you don’t own or plan to buy an Away bag

Pricing: Free. Platforms: Web Best for: Away luggage owners who want a quick compatibility check before a flight.

The Bottom Line

If you want to check your bag against airlines with the most context, our Carry-On Size Checker pairs verified dimensions with gate-check risk ratings, personal item limits, and per-airline detail pages that explain enforcement, weight rules, and basic economy restrictions. It covers 75+ airlines and every dimension links back to the airline’s official source. Yes, it’s our tool. I still think the combination of verified data and enforcement context makes it the most useful option for travelers who want to understand the full picture, not just a pass/fail.

If raw airline count is what matters, CarryFit covers 172 airlines, and the open-source code means the data is transparent. It’s a great pure dimension checker with personal item support. For 120+ airlines with a dedicated personal item tool, TravelClosely is the middle ground. And if you haven’t booked yet and want to find airlines that fit your existing bag rather than the other way around, the reverse search on CarryOnSize.us is a feature nobody else has.

A note on mobile apps: dedicated carry-on measuring apps like BagSizer and Luggage Fit exist on iOS, but both haven’t been updated since 2019-2020 and have poor reviews. Southwest and easyJet have AR bag sizers in their apps, but those only check one airline. For now, web-based tools running in your phone’s browser are the most reliable option.

If you’re specifically wondering whether a standard 22-inch suitcase will work, we have an airline-by-airline breakdown of where it fits and where it fails. For airlines that charge extra for overhead bin access, see our guide on which airlines charge for carry-on bags. And if you want to know how likely your bag is to get pulled at the gate, the gate-check risk guide rates every airline.

Quick Comparison

Free carry-on and personal item size checker for 75+ airlines with gate-check risk ratings, weight limits, and verified dimensions.

Visit site
#2 CarryFit ★★★★½

Open-source carry-on size checker covering 172 airlines worldwide with personal item support and region filtering.

Visit site
#3 TravelClosely ★★★★☆

Carry-on and personal item checkers for 120+ airlines with region filtering and strictness guides.

Visit site
#4 SizeGraf ★★★★☆

Luggage size checker that distinguishes domestic vs. international routes and supports carry-on, checked, and personal item bag types.

Visit site
#5 SizeFit ★★★½☆

Carry-on size checker with personal item comparison charts and airline-specific size rule guides. Updated April 2026.

Visit site
#6 CarryOnSize.us ★★★½☆

Carry-on checker for 44+ airlines with a reverse search that finds airlines accepting your existing bag size.

Visit site
#7 Away Airline Comparison ★★★☆☆

Interactive tool that checks whether Away luggage products fit specific airlines. Covers about 40 carriers.

Visit site

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the standard carry-on size for most airlines? +

The most common carry-on limit is 22 x 14 x 9 inches (56 x 36 x 23 cm), used by Delta, United, American, JetBlue, and Alaska. Southwest allows slightly larger bags at 24 x 16 x 10 inches. European budget carriers like Ryanair and Wizz Air have smaller limits, often around 55 x 40 x 20 cm or smaller. There is no universal standard, which is why a size checker matters.

Will a 22x14x9 bag fit as a carry-on on all airlines? +

No. A 22x14x9 inch bag fits most major US airlines but fails on many international carriers. European airlines with 55 cm height limits reject it because 22 inches converts to 55.88 cm. Airlines like Ryanair, Wizz Air, and Qatar Airways have even smaller free cabin bag limits. Our airline-by-airline 22-inch suitcase guide breaks down exactly where it fits, where it's borderline, and where it fails.

Do airlines actually measure carry-on bags at the gate? +

It depends on the airline. Budget carriers like Spirit, Frontier, Ryanair, and Wizz Air routinely use sizer bins and sometimes automated scanners at the gate. Legacy US carriers like Delta, United, and American rarely measure unless the bag is obviously oversized. European low-cost carriers are the strictest enforcers globally. If your bag is even slightly over, budget airlines will charge you $25 to $99 at the gate.

What happens if my carry-on bag is too big? +

On most airlines, you'll be asked to gate-check it. On budget carriers, this comes with a fee ranging from $25 to $99. On legacy US airlines, involuntary gate checks are usually free but your bag goes under the plane and comes out at baggage claim. Some airlines like Spirit and Frontier charge the full carry-on fee at the gate if you didn't prepay for bin access.

Is there an app that measures carry-on luggage size? +

Dedicated luggage-measuring apps like BagSizer and Luggage Fit exist on iOS but haven't been updated since 2019-2020 and have poor reviews. Southwest and easyJet have AR bag sizers built into their own apps, but those only check against one airline's limits. For multi-airline checking, web-based tools like Vientapps, CarryFit, and TravelClosely work on any phone browser and cover 75 to 172 airlines.

C
Caden Sorenson

Senior Staff Engineer and Indie Developer

Caden Sorenson is a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools. He holds a Computer Science degree from Utah State University and runs Vientapps, an indie studio based in Logan, Utah, where he ships small, focused tools and writes about every build in public.

Stay in the loop

Get notified when I publish new posts. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.