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Common items not allowed in Ryanair hand luggage and they're not even liquids

Common items not allowed in Ryanair hand luggage and they're not even liquids

With the summer holiday season in full swing, thousands of Irish travellers are preparing to jet off in search of sun, sea and relaxation. And with the cost of living still biting, many are choosing to skip checked bags altogether and stick to hand luggage to avoid extra fees.
Ryanair, known for its low-cost flights, lets passengers bring one small bag on board for free - as long as it fits under the seat in front. But before you start stuffing everything into your carry-on, it's worth double-checking what you're actually allowed to pack.
While liquids over 100ml are the obvious no-go, Ryanair also bans a list of everyday items from cabin bags - and some of them might surprise you.
From razors and lightbulbs to Christmas crackers and lighters, a number of common items could get flagged at airport security or even confiscated before you board. In some cases, they're not allowed in checked baggage either.
To save you from last-minute airport stress, here's a quick look at what Ryanair passengers can't bring in their hand luggage for 2025. Ryanair banned hand luggage items for 2025
A Ryanair spokesperson said: "The following items are strictly prohibited on board and in checked baggage." Guns, firearms and other devices that discharge projectiles - devices capable, or appearing capable, of being used to cause serious injury by discharging a projectile
Stunning devices — devices designed specifically to stun or immobilise
Explosives and incendiary substances and devices
Ammunition
Blasting caps
Detonators and fuses
Replica or imitation explosive devices
Mines, grenades and other explosive military stores
Fireworks and other pyrotechnics
Smoke-generating canisters and smoke-generating cartridges
Dynamite, gunpowder and plastic explosives
Flammable liquids, flammable solids and substances that cause a chemical reaction
Paint, turpentine, white spirit and paint thinner
Alcohol with an ABV of more than 70% (140% proof)
Toxic or infectious substances (for example, acids and alkalis, 'wet' batteries, bleach, poisons, infected blood, and bacteria and viruses)
Radioactive material, including medicinal or commercial isotopes
Corrosives, including mercury, vehicle batteries, and parts which have contained fuel
More than one litre in total of edible oil (for example, olive oil)
Lithium ion battery-powered vehicles (including segways and hoverboards) other than any wheelchair or mobility equipment that meets our regulations
Smart bags which the lithium battery has not been removed from
Fire extinguishers (except as authorised by fire procedures and as emergency equipment on the plane)
Lighters and firelighters with a flammable liquid reservoir containing unabsorbed liquid fuel (other than liquefied gas), lighter fuel and lighter refills
'Strike anywhere' matches
Christmas crackers
Energy-saving light bulbs
Items with internal combustion engines
Items which are prohibited by a law, regulation or order of any country or state your plane is flying to or from
Items which we have good reason to believe are unsuitable for carriage because: they are dangerous or unsafe; of their weight, size, shape or character; or are fragile or perishable
Fish, birds or any animals killed and kept as hunting trophies.
Ryanair also has a list of items banned from cabin bags, but which can be packed in checked luggage. This includes objects with a sharp point or sharp edge, workmen's tools and blunt instruments, all listed below. Items designed for chopping, such axes, hatchets and cleavers
Ice axes, ice picks and ice skates
Razors and razor blades (except safety or disposable razors with enclosed blades and razor heads held in plastic compartments)
Box cutters
Knives with blades of more than 6cm, including lockable or flick knives, ceremonial or religious knives and hunting knives made of metal or any other material strong enough to be used as a potential weapon, craft knives and utility knives and scrapers,
Scissors with blades of more than 6cm, as measured from the fulcrum
Martial arts equipment with a sharp point or sharp edge, including throwing stars
Swords and sabres
Swordsticks, meat cleavers, machetes, Scalpels, crampons, grappling irons, hooked bars of iron and plates with iron spikes used in mountaineering
Harpoons and spears
Ski poles and walking or hiking poles
crowbars
drills and drill bits, including cordless portable power drills
tools with a blade or a shaft of more than 6 cm capable of use as a weapon, such as screwdrivers and chisels
saws, including cordless portable power saws
blowtorches
bolt guns and nail guns
hammers, pliers, wrenches and spanners
Baseball and softball bats
Clubs and batons, such as billy clubs, blackjacks and night sticks
Martial arts equipment (for example, knuckledusters, coshes, flails)
Tennis rackets, squash rackets and so on
Cricket bats
Hockey sticks, hurley sticks and lacrosse sticks
Kayak and canoe paddles
Skateboards
Billiard, snooker and pool cues
Darts
Fishing rods.
For more information on banned items, visit Ryanair's website here.
For more of the latest breaking news from the Irish Mirror check out our homepage by clicking here.
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