Child Meal on Flights: How to Order CHML

Updated: June 15, 2026

Child Meal on Flights: How to Order CHML and What Parents Should Check

You booked a flight with your child, but the airline may not automatically serve a kids meal just because the passenger is young.


Child meals on flights, often shown as CHML, usually need to be requested before departure through the airline’s special meal section, booking page, app or customer support. They are commonly meant for children, but the exact age range, menu, free availability and deadline vary by airline and route.


The biggest mistake parents make is assuming CHML is always vegetarian, always free, always loaded, or always suitable for picky eaters and allergies. Before travel, check the meal code, request deadline, child age rules, veg/non-veg option, and carry backup snacks in case the special meal is missed.

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Child Meal on Flights

A child meal on a flight is a special meal option designed for young passengers. Airlines may label it as CHML, kids meal, child meal, children’s meal or special meal for children. It is usually different from the standard adult meal because it may include simpler, familiar foods.

However, not every flight offers child meals. Short domestic flights, low-cost airlines, buy-on-board routes, code-share flights and last-minute bookings may not provide CHML. Even when available, parents normally need to request it before the airline’s meal deadline.

Main rule: do not assume your child will automatically get a kids meal. Request CHML or the correct vegetarian option before the airline’s deadline and carry backup snacks.

Quick Child Meal Rules Table

Risky Move Safer Move
Assuming every child ticket includes a kids meal Check whether your airline and route offer CHML
Thinking CHML is always vegetarian Choose vegetarian, vegan or allergy-suitable meals separately if needed
Requesting the meal at the airport counter Add it through booking or Manage Booking before the deadline
Relying only on airline food for a picky child Carry familiar snacks and safe backup food
Ignoring allergy or dietary needs Check airline allergen policy and carry safe food if needed
Assuming infant food and child meal are the same Check baby meal, infant food and CHML rules separately

Important: child meals can be missed because of catering errors, late requests, aircraft changes, route rules or booking issues. Always pack food your child can safely eat.

What Is a Child Meal?

A child meal is a pre-requested airline meal intended for young passengers who may not enjoy regular adult airline food. It is usually designed to be simpler, softer, milder or more familiar than the main cabin meal.

The menu depends on the airline, route, cabin class and catering station. It may include pasta, rice, vegetables, bread, fruit, dessert, sandwich, pancake, macaroni, cheese, nuggets, burger-style items or other child-friendly food.

What does a kids meal include?

A kids meal may include a main dish, side item, bread or roll, dessert, fruit, juice or packaged snack. Some airlines may serve the child meal before adult meals so parents can help the child eat first, but this is not guaranteed.

Menu warning: CHML tells the airline the passenger needs a child meal. It does not guarantee a specific dish, brand, cuisine, spice level or vegetarian menu.

How to Order a Child Meal

Most airlines require child meals to be requested before departure. The usual place to add it is the special meal section during booking or under Manage Booking after the ticket is issued.

  1. Open your booking: use the airline website, app or travel agent booking reference.
  2. Go to special meals: look for CHML, child meal or kids meal.
  3. Select for the child passenger: make sure the meal is attached to the child’s name, not the adult’s name.
  4. Check veg or non-veg option: choose vegetarian, vegan, Jain or other meal separately if needed.
  5. Save confirmation: take a screenshot showing the meal request.
  6. Recheck before travel: confirm again 24–48 hours before departure.
  7. Remind crew onboard: politely mention the child meal after boarding.

Ordering tip: add the child meal as early as possible. Many airlines require special meal requests at least 24 to 48 hours before departure.

CHML Meal Code

CHML is the common airline meal code for Child Meal. It helps airline catering identify that a child-friendly meal should be loaded for a specific passenger and seat.

CHML is not the same as a baby meal, infant meal, vegetarian meal, Jain meal, vegan meal or allergy-safe meal. If your child needs vegetarian, egg-free, Jain, gluten-free, diabetic or allergy-specific food, you must check whether the airline offers a separate special meal code that better matches the need.

Common meal codes parents may see

Meal Code Meaning Best For
CHML Child Meal Children needing a kids-style meal
BBML Baby Meal Infants or babies, if offered by the airline
AVML Asian Vegetarian Meal Indian or Asian-style vegetarian passengers
VGML Vegan Meal Passengers avoiding meat, fish, dairy and eggs
VJML Jain Vegetarian Meal Jain passengers with Jain dietary restrictions
GFML Gluten-Free Meal Passengers needing gluten-free food where available

Code warning: if your child must eat vegetarian food, do not rely on CHML alone unless the airline clearly confirms the child meal is vegetarian.

Is Child Meal Veg or Non-Veg?

A child meal can be vegetarian or non-vegetarian depending on the airline and the specific option selected. Some airlines offer only one standard CHML, while others separate child meal, vegetarian child meal, vegan meal or region-specific meals.

Standard child meals may include chicken, meat, fish, egg or dairy. Vegetarian child meals may include pasta, rice, vegetables, cheese, yogurt, bread or dessert. Vegan child meals may not be available as a child-specific option, so parents may need to choose VGML instead.

How to request a kids vegetarian meal

Log in to your airline booking and check whether the special meal list has a vegetarian child meal. If it does not, compare CHML with AVML, VGML or another vegetarian special meal option. For strict vegetarian children, confirm the meal directly with the airline before travel.

Vegetarian warning: CHML does not automatically mean vegetarian. For vegetarian children, confirm the exact meal type before departure.

Child Meal Age Rules

Airlines often treat a child passenger differently from an infant passenger. Many airline systems use child meal options for children with their own ticketed seat, while infants may require baby food, infant meal or parent-carried food.

Age rules can vary. Some airlines may use CHML for children around 2 to 12 years old, while infants under 2 may not automatically receive a meal unless they have a separate seat or the airline offers baby meals.

Common age-related checks

  1. Is your child travelling on a child ticket or infant ticket?
  2. Does the child have a separate seat?
  3. Does the airline offer CHML on your route?
  4. Does the airline offer baby meal or infant food?
  5. Is food included in your fare or sold separately?
  6. Does the meal need to be purchased instead of requested?

Age rule: do not assume “child meal” applies to infants. Check baby meal and infant food rules separately.

Air India and IndiGo Child Meals

Airline meal rules differ sharply between full-service airlines, low-cost airlines, domestic flights and international flights. Parents should not assume the same child meal process works across Air India, IndiGo or other airlines.

Air India child meal

Air India lists special meal options through its dining and special menu process. If you need a child meal, vegetarian child meal or specific dietary meal, check the latest Air India booking page or Manage Booking options and confirm the request before travel.

IndiGo kids meal and food

IndiGo is a low-cost airline where many meals and snacks are sold or pre-booked rather than served as a full-service complimentary meal on many routes. Parents should check IndiGo’s food menu, pre-booked meal options and rules for baby food before travel.

Domestic vs international flights

On short India domestic flights, free meals may not be included depending on airline and fare. On international flights, meal availability can depend on route, airline, fare, cabin and pre-order deadline.

Airline tip: check the exact airline page for your flight. “Child meal” on one airline may mean a free special meal, while on another it may mean a paid or pre-booked food option.

Useful airline pages include Air India special menu and IndiGo food menu.

Baby Food and Toddler Snacks

Parents should carry backup food even if a child meal is requested. Airline catering can miss special meals, children may reject the food, or the menu may not match dietary needs.

Solid snacks are usually easier to carry than liquids. Baby food, milk, formula and toddler pouches may be subject to screening and airport liquid rules, but many airports allow reasonable baby-related quantities with inspection. Always check the departure airport and airline rules.

Better backup snack choices

  1. Plain crackers or biscuits.
  2. Dry cereal or puffed rice snacks.
  3. Sandwiches without messy fillings.
  4. Cut fruit packed neatly where allowed.
  5. Small paratha, thepla or chapati rolls.
  6. Packaged baby snacks.
  7. Formula, baby food or toddler pouches where allowed.
  8. Empty water bottle to refill after security where available.

Snacks to avoid on a plane

Avoid messy, strong-smelling, spill-prone or allergy-risk foods when possible. Sticky sweets, liquid chutneys, oily snacks, open nut packets, runny yogurt, very crumbly foods and spicy foods can create trouble during turbulence or for nearby passengers.

Allergy warning: if your child has a serious allergy, do not depend only on airline meals. Carry safe food and speak to the airline before travel.

For allergy planning, read Peanut Allergies on India Flights: Safety Guide, Airline Policies & Travel Tips.

Children’s meals vary by airline and route, but parents often search for the same familiar foods. The same rule applies: the airline may offer a kids meal category, but it does not guarantee the exact food your child wants.

Common kids meal items

Examples include pasta, macaroni and cheese, rice, vegetables, sandwich, pancakes, bread roll, fruit cup, yogurt, dessert, juice, nuggets, burger-style items, meatballs, simple curry, noodles, potato snacks and packaged snacks.

Common vegetarian kids meal items

Vegetarian child-friendly options may include veg pasta, plain rice, dal-rice, vegetable pulao, paneer item, cheese sandwich, paratha, curd rice, fruit, bread, butter, dessert, biscuits or simple vegetable dishes depending on airline catering.

Common parent-carried foods

Parents may carry biscuits, crackers, cereal, dry fruits where suitable, cut fruit where allowed, sandwiches, thepla, paratha rolls, baby food jars, formula, milk, toddler pouches and packaged snacks.

Food tip: carry one familiar meal and two safe snacks your child already eats at home. A new airline meal is not the best time to test picky eating.

What Parents Should Check Before Travel

A child meal request is only useful if it is actually attached to the correct passenger and loaded on the correct flight. Parents should confirm the request at multiple points before travel.

Smart Moves

  • Add CHML during booking or Manage Booking.
  • Confirm the meal is attached to the child passenger.
  • Check whether CHML is vegetarian or non-vegetarian.
  • Save a screenshot of the meal confirmation.
  • Recheck 24–48 hours before departure.
  • Ask gate staff if the request is visible.
  • Remind cabin crew after boarding.
  • Carry backup snacks and safe food.

Risky Moves

  • Assuming a child ticket automatically includes CHML.
  • Requesting a special meal too late.
  • Assuming CHML is always vegetarian.
  • Ignoring allergy or medical restrictions.
  • Not checking low-cost airline food rules.
  • Depending only on onboard snacks.
  • Forgetting infant and child meals are different.
  • Not carrying familiar backup food.

Best parent rule: request the meal early, confirm it twice, and pack backup food as if the airline meal may not appear.

What If the Child Meal Is Not Loaded?

If the child meal is not loaded, tell the cabin crew politely as soon as possible. The crew may be able to offer fruit, bread, snacks, rice, dessert or another simple meal option, but choices are limited once the aircraft is in the air.

  1. Show the confirmation: use your screenshot or booking page if available.
  2. Ask if any CHML was loaded: it may be assigned to another seat by mistake.
  3. Request safe alternatives: ask for fruit, bread, rice, snacks or a simple vegetarian item.
  4. Use your backup food: do not wait too long if your child is hungry.
  5. Ask crew to note the issue: useful if you file a complaint later.
  6. Complain after landing: use airline feedback if a confirmed meal was not provided.

Complaint tip: if a confirmed child meal was missed, keep the booking screenshot, boarding pass, flight number and crew response before contacting the airline.

Helpful Airline Meal Guides

For general airline food and snack rules, start with these guides:

For vegetarian, vegan, Jain and religious meal choices, these pages may help:

For medical or special dietary meals, continue with these pages:

For airline-specific food availability, see Do India Domestic Airlines Provide Free Meals? and Is Food Free on IndiGo Flights?.

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

How do I add a kids meal to a flight?

Log in to the airline website or app, open Manage Booking, go to special meals, and select CHML or the child meal option for the child passenger before the deadline.

What is a child meal in-flight?

A child meal is a pre-requested airline meal designed for young passengers. It may include simpler foods such as pasta, rice, bread, fruit, snacks or child-friendly main dishes.

Is child meal veg or non-veg?

A child meal can be vegetarian or non-vegetarian depending on the airline and option selected. Parents should confirm the exact meal type before travel.

What does a kids meal include?

A kids meal may include pasta, rice, vegetables, sandwich, fruit, dessert, juice, bread, nuggets or other child-friendly food depending on the airline and route.

What age is considered for a kids meal?

Many airlines use child meal options for children with their own ticketed seat, often around ages 2 to 12, but age rules vary by airline.

What is a child meal in Indian flight?

On India-related flights, a child meal may be available as a special meal on some airlines and routes. Low-cost or short domestic flights may require paid pre-booked snacks instead.

Is baby food allowed on an IndiGo flight?

Baby food may be allowed, but parents should check IndiGo’s latest baggage and food rules before travel. Carry reasonable quantities and expect security screening.

What should I do if my child meal is not served?

Show your meal confirmation to cabin crew, ask for safe alternatives, use backup snacks, and file a complaint after landing if a confirmed meal was not loaded.

Battery Removed from Checked Bag: What Went Wrong?

Updated: June 13, 2026

Battery Removed from Checked Bag: What Went Wrong at Airport Security?

You opened your suitcase after landing and found a battery missing, a security inspection notice inside, or your checked bag delayed because something was flagged before loading.


The most common reason is simple: loose lithium batteries, power banks, spare camera batteries, e-cigarettes, vape devices and some high-capacity battery packs are not allowed in checked luggage because of fire risk. They must usually travel in cabin baggage, where crew can respond quickly if a battery overheats.

If airport security removed a battery from your checked bag, it was likely treated as a safety risk, especially if it was loose, uninstalled, damaged, swollen, high-capacity, or packed as a portable charger instead of installed inside a device.

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Battery Removed from Checked Bag

If a battery was removed from your checked bag, airport screening likely flagged it as a prohibited or risky battery item. This usually happens with loose lithium batteries, power banks, portable chargers, vape batteries, spare camera batteries, laptop battery packs, drone batteries or damaged batteries.

Checked bags are screened before loading. If a scanner detects an item that may violate dangerous goods rules, security staff may open the bag, remove the item, leave an inspection notice, or hold the bag for further checking. The passenger may not always be present when this happens.

Main rule: loose lithium batteries and power banks should go in cabin baggage, not checked luggage. Batteries installed inside devices may be allowed in checked bags if the device is fully powered off and protected.

Quick Battery Rules Table

Risky Move Safer Move
Putting a power bank in checked luggage Carry power banks in cabin baggage only
Packing loose camera or laptop batteries in suitcase Keep spare lithium batteries in hand baggage with terminals protected
Leaving a vape or e-cigarette in checked bag Carry vape devices in cabin baggage or on your person where allowed
Packing swollen or damaged batteries Do not fly with damaged, leaking, swollen or recalled batteries
Assuming installed batteries are always safe Turn devices fully off and protect them from accidental activation
Carrying high-capacity batteries without checking Wh rating Check Watt-hour rating and airline approval rules before travel

Important: battery rules can vary by airline, country and battery capacity. When in doubt, keep lithium batteries accessible in cabin baggage and check the airline’s dangerous goods page before travel.

Why Batteries Are Removed from Checked Bags

Lithium batteries can overheat, short-circuit and catch fire if damaged, poorly packed, crushed or defective. This risk is called thermal runaway. A battery fire inside the cabin can be handled by trained crew more quickly than a battery fire inside the cargo hold.

That is why spare lithium batteries and power banks are treated differently from many other travel items. Airport security is not removing them because they are expensive or unusual. They are removed because they can create a fire risk when packed incorrectly in checked luggage.

What happens during screening?

  1. Checked bag enters screening: your suitcase goes through X-ray or CT scanning.
  2. Battery shape is flagged: dense battery packs, cells or electronics may be detected.
  3. Bag may be opened: security staff may inspect the suitcase manually.
  4. Battery may be removed: prohibited or risky batteries can be taken out.
  5. Inspection notice may be left: some airports leave a notice inside the bag.
  6. Bag may be delayed: if inspection takes time, the suitcase may miss the original loading window.

Fire-risk logic: cabin baggage allows crew access. Checked baggage does not give the same quick access if a loose lithium battery overheats.

Batteries Not Allowed in Checked Luggage

The batteries most likely to be removed from checked baggage are loose, spare, damaged, recalled, high-capacity or portable charging batteries. These items should not be buried inside checked suitcases.

Common battery items that should not go in checked bags

  1. Power banks: portable chargers for phones, tablets or laptops.
  2. Loose spare lithium-ion batteries: spare camera, drone, laptop or gadget batteries.
  3. Loose lithium-metal batteries: spare non-rechargeable lithium cells.
  4. High-capacity batteries: larger batteries over normal consumer limits.
  5. Vape and e-cigarette batteries: devices with heating elements and lithium cells.
  6. Smart bag batteries: removable power banks built into luggage.
  7. Damaged or recalled batteries: swollen, leaking, crushed or unsafe batteries.
  8. Lithium-powered lighters: arc, plasma or electronic lighters may be restricted.

Simple answer: if the lithium battery is loose, spare, removable, used for charging, damaged or high-capacity, do not pack it in checked luggage.

Power Banks and Portable Chargers

Power banks are one of the most common items removed from checked bags. A power bank is treated as a spare lithium battery because it is not installed inside a device. That includes portable phone chargers, laptop charging banks, USB battery packs and magnetic phone battery packs.

Power banks should go in cabin baggage. Keep them easy to show at security, protect the ports from short circuit, and check the Watt-hour rating if the power bank is large.

Power bank examples

Examples include phone power banks, laptop power banks, MagSafe-style battery packs, USB-C portable chargers, solar power banks, camera charging banks, tablet power banks, jump-starter battery packs and large travel battery packs.

Power bank warning: do not place a power bank in checked baggage even if it is small. Airport security may remove it before the bag is loaded.

Spare Lithium Batteries

Spare lithium batteries are batteries not installed inside a device. These include loose rechargeable lithium-ion batteries and loose non-rechargeable lithium-metal batteries. They are usually required to travel in cabin baggage with terminals protected.

Loose battery terminals can touch metal objects such as keys, coins, chargers or tools. That can cause a short circuit. To reduce risk, keep batteries in original packaging, a battery case, plastic sleeve, or with terminals taped.

Examples of spare lithium batteries

  1. Spare phone batteries.
  2. Camera batteries.
  3. Drone batteries.
  4. Action camera batteries.
  5. Rechargeable flashlight batteries.
  6. Laptop replacement batteries.
  7. Power tool batteries.
  8. CPAP backup batteries.

Packing tip: never leave loose batteries rolling around in a bag. Protect each battery terminal separately before placing it in cabin baggage.

Laptops, Cameras and Installed Batteries

Batteries installed inside personal electronic devices are treated differently from loose spare batteries. A laptop, tablet, camera, watch, calculator or phone with the battery installed may be allowed in checked baggage in some cases, but cabin baggage is usually safer and more practical.

If a device with an installed lithium battery goes in checked luggage, it should be fully powered off, protected from accidental activation, and packed to prevent damage. Do not leave laptops in sleep mode if they are checked.

Installed battery examples

Examples include laptops, tablets, mobile phones, cameras, watches, calculators, headphones, Bluetooth speakers, electric toothbrushes, trimmers, handheld gaming devices and small consumer electronics with built-in batteries.

Installed battery rule: a battery inside a device may be treated differently from a loose battery, but the device must be switched off and protected from accidental activation.

High-Capacity Batteries

Battery capacity matters. Airline and aviation rules often use Watt-hours, written as Wh, to decide whether a lithium-ion battery can travel and whether airline approval is needed. Many normal consumer electronics are under 100 Wh, but larger batteries can exceed that limit.

Batteries between 100 Wh and 160 Wh may require airline approval and are usually limited in number. Batteries above permitted limits can be refused. Do not guess the capacity. Look for the Wh rating printed on the battery label or device documentation.

Common high-capacity battery examples

  1. Large laptop power banks.
  2. Professional camera batteries.
  3. Drone battery packs.
  4. Power tool batteries.
  5. CPAP backup batteries.
  6. Portable power stations.
  7. E-bike or scooter batteries.
  8. Large jump-starter packs.

Capacity warning: batteries over normal consumer limits may need airline approval or may be refused. Check Wh rating before packing.

E-Cigarettes, Vapes and Smart Bags

E-cigarettes and vape devices contain lithium batteries and heating elements. They should not be packed in checked baggage. Carry them in cabin baggage or on your person where allowed, and prevent accidental activation.

Smart bags can also create problems if the battery is not removable. Airlines may refuse smart luggage if the built-in lithium battery cannot be removed. If the battery is removable, remove it and carry the battery in cabin baggage.

Items to check carefully

  1. Vape pens.
  2. E-cigarettes.
  3. Rechargeable pod systems.
  4. Spare vape batteries.
  5. Smart bags with removable batteries.
  6. Smart luggage with GPS trackers or charging ports.
  7. Bluetooth tracking devices inside bags.

Smart bag rule: if the luggage battery is removable, remove it and carry the battery in cabin baggage. If it is not removable, the airline may refuse the bag.

Damaged, Swollen or Recalled Batteries

Damaged batteries are a serious safety issue. Do not fly with a battery that is swollen, leaking, crushed, hot, punctured, smoking, corroded or recalled by the manufacturer. These batteries can be refused even in cabin baggage.

If your device battery looks swollen, do not pack it for travel. Replace or dispose of it safely before the trip. A damaged battery inside a laptop, phone, drone, power bank or tool can create more trouble than the item is worth.

Do not fly warning: a swollen, leaking, crushed or recalled lithium battery should not be packed in either checked or cabin baggage.

Battery rules apply across many devices, not just phones and power banks. The same basic flight rule applies unless the airline says otherwise: loose lithium batteries and power banks belong in cabin baggage, while installed batteries must be protected and powered off.

Personal electronics

Examples include mobile phones, laptops, tablets, smartwatches, calculators, cameras, headphones, Bluetooth speakers, gaming consoles, e-readers, electric toothbrushes and small handheld gadgets.

Travel and work equipment

Examples include drone batteries, camera batteries, action camera batteries, power tool batteries, CPAP batteries, medical device backup batteries, rechargeable flashlights, GPS devices and portable Wi-Fi routers.

High-risk battery items

Examples include power banks, portable chargers, vape batteries, e-cigarettes, smart bag batteries, damaged laptop batteries, swollen phone batteries, jump-starter packs and large battery stations.

Search tip: if the item charges another device, treat it like a power bank. If it is a loose spare battery, keep it in cabin baggage.

What to Do If Your Battery Is Removed

If your battery was removed from checked baggage, recovery depends on the airport, airline and security process. Sometimes the item is discarded. Sometimes it may be held by airport security or airline baggage services. Act quickly because airports may not store prohibited items for long.

  1. Check your suitcase: look for a security inspection notice or written explanation.
  2. Check missing item details: identify which battery, power bank or device was removed.
  3. Contact airline baggage services: ask whether the item was held locally.
  4. Contact airport lost and found: some removed items may be routed there.
  5. Check security agency process: rules vary by country and airport.
  6. Do not expect guaranteed return: prohibited battery items may be disposed of.
  7. Pack correctly next time: keep power banks and spare batteries in cabin baggage.

Reality check: if a prohibited battery was removed before loading, the airport may not return it. Prevention is much easier than recovery.

How to Pack Batteries for a Flight

Good packing reduces the chance of battery removal, baggage delay or airport refusal. The goal is to keep spare batteries accessible, protected from short circuit and away from checked luggage restrictions.

Smart Moves

  • Carry power banks in cabin baggage.
  • Keep spare lithium batteries in hand baggage.
  • Protect battery terminals with tape, cases or original packaging.
  • Turn devices fully off before packing.
  • Check Watt-hour rating for large batteries.
  • Ask the airline before carrying 100–160 Wh batteries.
  • Remove smart bag batteries before check-in.
  • Keep damaged or recalled batteries out of all baggage.

Risky Moves

  • Putting power banks in checked suitcases.
  • Packing loose lithium batteries with keys or coins.
  • Checking vape devices or e-cigarettes.
  • Leaving laptops in sleep mode inside checked bags.
  • Carrying swollen or leaking batteries.
  • Hiding high-capacity batteries inside clothing.
  • Assuming all airlines allow the same battery limit.
  • Forgetting smart luggage has a built-in battery.

Best packing setup: power banks and spare lithium batteries in cabin baggage, terminals protected, devices switched off, and high-capacity batteries checked with the airline before travel.

Official Battery Rules

Battery rules are safety rules, so use official sources when you are unsure. Airline staff and airport security can apply stricter checks if an item looks risky, damaged or incorrectly packed.

Helpful Electronics and Customs Guides

For India flight battery and electronics rules, start with these guides:

For phones, customs and bringing electronics to India, continue with these pages:

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

What happens if you accidentally leave a battery in checked luggage?

If it is a prohibited battery, security may remove it, inspect the bag, leave a notice, delay the bag, or discard the battery depending on airport rules and the type of battery.

Do airports scan checked bags for batteries?

Yes. Checked bags are screened before loading, and scanners can flag batteries, power banks, electronics and other items that may need inspection.

What happens if you forget a power bank in checked luggage?

The power bank may be removed during baggage screening because portable chargers are treated as spare lithium batteries and should travel in cabin baggage.

Should you put batteries in checked bag or carry-on?

Power banks and spare lithium batteries should go in carry-on baggage. Batteries installed inside devices may be allowed in checked bags if the device is fully powered off and protected.

Can lithium batteries be X-rayed?

Yes. Lithium batteries can go through airport X-ray screening, but X-ray permission does not mean every battery is allowed in checked luggage.

Can power banks catch fire when not in use?

It is uncommon, but damaged, defective, short-circuited or poorly packed lithium batteries can overheat. That is why power banks are kept in cabin baggage.

Can I pack a laptop in checked baggage?

A laptop with an installed battery may be allowed in checked baggage in some cases, but cabin baggage is safer. If checked, it should be fully powered off and protected from damage.

Do lithium batteries go in suitcase or hand luggage?

Loose lithium batteries and power banks go in hand luggage. Devices with installed batteries may be packed differently, but airline and battery capacity rules still apply.

Can You Carry Agarbatti on Flights? India Rules

Updated: June 11, 2026

Can You Carry Agarbatti on Flights? Hand Baggage vs Checked Bag Rules

You packed agarbatti for pooja, gifting or daily prayers, but airport security may treat incense sticks differently from normal household items because they are meant to burn.


Agarbatti and incense sticks are not always treated the same at every airport or airline. In many cases, they are safer in checked baggage, especially when travelling from India or on international routes. The bigger problem is usually not the incense stick alone, but matchboxes, lighters, camphor, dhoop cones, flammable oils, powders, customs rules and destination-country biosecurity checks.


If you are carrying agarbatti on a flight, pack it clearly, keep it away from matches or lighters, avoid loose powdery packaging, and check both airline rules and destination customs rules before travel.

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Agarbatti on Flights

Agarbatti, also called incense sticks, is commonly carried by passengers for pooja, meditation, gifting, religious travel and home use. The item itself is usually a dry stick, but airport staff may still check it because incense is designed to burn and some types may include fragrant oils, resins, powders or flammable material.

For India flights, checked baggage is usually the safer place for agarbatti, especially if you are carrying a full box, multiple packets, dhoop sticks, incense cones or pooja items together. Small sealed packets may pass more easily, but final acceptance depends on airport screening, airline rules and destination restrictions.

Main rule: carry agarbatti in sealed retail packaging and prefer checked baggage when possible. Do not pack matchboxes, lighters or camphor with it.

Quick Agarbatti Rules Table

Risky Move Safer Move
Packing agarbatti with matchboxes Remove matchboxes and lighters before packing
Carrying loose incense powder in cabin bag Use sealed original packaging with a clear label
Assuming all countries allow incense Check customs and biosecurity rules before arrival
Carrying camphor with incense Check camphor separately because it can be more restricted
Hiding pooja items inside clothes Pack them clearly so screening staff can inspect them
Carrying large quantities for sale Keep travel quantities reasonable and declare if required

Important: agarbatti rules can vary by airline, airport and destination country. If airport security refuses the item, the screening decision will usually apply at that checkpoint.

Agarbatti in Hand Baggage

Carrying agarbatti in hand baggage can be allowed in some places, but it may also be questioned because incense is a burnable item. If you must carry it in cabin baggage, keep the quantity small, sealed and easy to inspect.

Hand baggage becomes risky when the incense is loose, powdery, oily, mixed with camphor, packed with matchboxes, or carried with other pooja items that may trigger extra screening.

Better cabin baggage choices

  1. Small sealed agarbatti packet.
  2. Original branded box with ingredients or label visible.
  3. Dry incense sticks without oil leakage.
  4. No matchbox, lighter or camphor in the same pouch.
  5. Reasonable personal-use quantity.

Cabin tip: if your agarbatti is part of a larger pooja kit, separate incense, camphor, coconut, oils and matches before packing because each item may be checked differently.

Agarbatti in Checked Baggage

Checked baggage is usually the better option for carrying agarbatti, incense boxes, dhoop sticks and multiple packets. It reduces cabin screening questions and keeps burnable or fragrant items away from hand baggage restrictions.

Even in checked baggage, pack incense carefully. Strong fragrances can spread inside your suitcase, sticks can break, and loose powder can spill. Do not pack matchboxes or lighters inside checked luggage with agarbatti.

Checked baggage packing tips

  1. Keep agarbatti in original retail packaging.
  2. Seal the box inside a plastic pouch or zip pouch.
  3. Wrap fragile incense sticks to prevent breakage.
  4. Keep it away from clothes that absorb strong fragrance.
  5. Do not pack complimentary matchbooks from the agarbatti box.
  6. Keep quantity reasonable for personal use.

Best packing rule: agarbatti in checked baggage, matches removed, packaging sealed, and destination rules checked before international travel.

Is Incense Considered Flammable?

Incense is made to burn, so airport and airline staff may treat it with extra caution. A dry agarbatti stick is different from petrol, fireworks or lighter fluid, but it is still a combustible item. Some incense products may also include oils, resins, charcoal, wood powder or other burnable ingredients.

Because of this, the final decision can depend on the product type, quantity, packing and airport screening rules. Dhoop cones, thick incense logs, camphor tablets and incense oils may be treated more cautiously than a small sealed packet of ordinary agarbatti sticks.

Simple test: if the item is meant to be lit, burned, smoked or ignited, expect security staff to inspect it more carefully.

Matchbox, Lighter and Camphor Warning

Many agarbatti boxes or pooja kits include a small matchbox. This is where passengers make a common mistake. Even if incense sticks are accepted, matches, lighters and camphor may follow different fire-safety rules.

Items to separate before packing

  1. Matchboxes: do not leave complimentary matchbooks inside agarbatti boxes.
  2. Lighters: check airline and airport rules before carrying any lighter.
  3. Camphor: may be treated as a flammable pooja item and can be restricted.
  4. Dhoop cones: may produce more smoke and may be checked more closely.
  5. Incense oils: may be treated as liquids or flammable fragrant oils.
  6. Charcoal-based incense: may raise more screening questions than plain sticks.

Fire-safety warning: do not pack matchboxes or lighters in checked baggage. If a pooja kit includes them, remove them before you travel.

For lighter-specific rules, read Can You Carry Lighters or Matches on Flights in India?.

International Travel and Customs

International travel adds another layer of risk. Even if airport security allows agarbatti at departure, the destination country may have customs, agriculture or biosecurity rules for plant-based, wood-based, herbal or scented products.

Countries with strict biosecurity rules may ask passengers to declare incense, wood items, plant material, herbs, seeds, powders or religious items. If you are flying to Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, the Gulf, Singapore or similar destinations, check the arrival rules before packing agarbatti.

When declaration may matter

  1. You are carrying plant-based incense, wood powder or herbal material.
  2. You are carrying a large quantity of incense packets.
  3. The packet is handmade, unlabelled or loose.
  4. You are carrying sandalwood, oud, herbs or natural resins.
  5. You are carrying pooja kits with multiple organic items.
  6. The arrival card asks about plant, wood, food or organic products.

Customs tip: when in doubt, declare incense on arrival. A truthful declaration is usually safer than trying to hide a plant-based or scented item.

For general U.S. screening information on flammable items, see the TSA flammables guidance.

Passengers may search for agarbatti by brand, fragrance, pooja use or product type. Airport rules usually depend less on the brand and more on whether the item is dry, sealed, burnable, oily, powdery, flammable or restricted by destination customs.

Common agarbatti and incense types

Examples include masala agarbatti, dipped agarbatti, dry incense sticks, dhoop sticks, dhoop cones, bamboo incense sticks, charcoal incense, resin incense, sandalwood incense, oud incense, loban, sambrani and handmade pooja incense.

Common fragrance examples

Popular fragrance terms include Nag Champa, sandalwood, rose, jasmine, lavender, mogra, kewda, chandan, oud, lemongrass, eucalyptus, pine, floral incense, herbal incense and woody incense.

Common use cases

Agarbatti may be carried for Hindu pooja, temple visits, meditation, yoga, spiritual practice, aromatherapy, gifting, housewarming ceremonies, religious travel or daily prayer use.

Selection tip: for flights, choose a small sealed packet of dry incense sticks instead of loose dhoop powder, oily incense, camphor-heavy kits or large bulk boxes.

How to Pack Agarbatti for a Flight

Good packing reduces both security questions and suitcase mess. The goal is to show that the item is a normal personal-use incense product, not loose flammable material.

Smart Moves

  • Use sealed retail packaging.
  • Prefer checked baggage for full-size boxes.
  • Carry only personal-use quantity.
  • Remove matchboxes from incense packets.
  • Keep camphor separate and check rules before packing.
  • Wrap fragile sticks to prevent breakage.
  • Declare incense if destination customs asks about plant or wood products.
  • Check airline dangerous goods rules before international travel.

Risky Moves

  • Packing loose incense powder in cabin baggage.
  • Leaving matchbooks inside agarbatti boxes.
  • Carrying camphor and incense together without checking rules.
  • Taking large quantities that look commercial.
  • Carrying unlabelled handmade incense internationally.
  • Assuming India, TSA, Gulf and Australian rules are identical.
  • Hiding pooja items deep inside clothing.
  • Arguing at security when staff refuse a burnable item.

Best travel setup: sealed agarbatti in checked baggage, no matches, no lighter, no camphor mixed in, and declaration ready for international arrivals if required.

What If Security Stops Your Agarbatti?

If security stops your agarbatti, stay calm and ask what part of the item is the problem. The concern may be the incense itself, the quantity, loose powder, a hidden matchbox, camphor, dhoop, oil or unclear packaging.

  1. Ask the reason: flammable concern, cabin baggage issue, matchbox, camphor, powder or quantity.
  2. Show the packaging: original branded packaging helps staff identify the item.
  3. Offer to remove matches: if the box contains complimentary matches, separate them immediately.
  4. Ask if it can go in checked baggage: this only helps if check-in is still open.
  5. Discard if needed: do not risk missing your flight over incense sticks.
  6. Pack differently next time: use sealed checked baggage and avoid risky add-ons.

Airport warning: security screening decisions can be stricter than general online advice. If staff refuse an item, you may need to surrender it.

Helpful Pooja and Baggage Guides

For pooja-related items, start with these guides:

For personal-care, liquids and grooming items, these pages may help:

For small tools, sharp items and food baggage questions, continue with these guides:

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

Does agarbatti be allowed in flight?

Agarbatti may be allowed on flights, but checked baggage is usually safer, especially in India or on international routes. Final acceptance depends on airline, airport and destination rules.

Are incense sticks allowed in checked baggage in Air India?

Incense sticks are generally safer in checked baggage, but passengers should check Air India’s latest dangerous goods and baggage rules before travel, especially for dhoop, camphor or large quantities.

Can I carry agarbatti in hand baggage?

A small sealed packet may be accepted in some cases, but hand baggage rules can vary. If you want fewer security questions, pack agarbatti in checked baggage.

Is incense considered flammable?

Incense is designed to burn, so it may be treated cautiously as a combustible item. Products like dhoop, camphor, incense oils and charcoal-based incense may be checked more strictly.

Do I need to declare incense when travelling internationally?

You may need to declare incense if the arrival country asks about plant, wood, herbal, organic or religious items. Countries with strict biosecurity rules may inspect incense products.

Can I carry matchboxes with agarbatti?

Do not pack matchboxes with agarbatti in checked baggage. If an agarbatti box includes a complimentary matchbook, remove it before packing.

Can I carry dhoop sticks or dhoop cones on a flight?

Dhoop sticks and cones may be checked more carefully because they are burnable and can be powdery or resin-based. Pack them sealed in checked baggage when possible.

What is the safest way to carry agarbatti on a flight?

Use sealed retail packaging, carry a reasonable personal-use quantity, remove matches or lighters, and place the agarbatti in checked baggage when possible.

Pickle Leaked in Checked Baggage: Can Airline Refuse It?

Updated: June 09, 2026

Pickle Leaked in Checked Baggage: Can Airline Refuse It?

A jar of pickle leaking inside checked baggage can turn into a bigger problem than stained clothes. If brine leaks through your suitcase, smells strongly, damages other bags, or creates a mess in the baggage system, the airline may refuse the bag, pull it for inspection, or require you to repack it before accepting it.


Yes, you can usually pack pickles in checked luggage, but the airline can still refuse a bag if the container is leaking, broken, poorly packed, or likely to spill. Carry-on rules are stricter because pickle brine is treated like a liquid, so large jars usually do not belong in hand baggage.


The safest approach is simple: avoid glass when possible, seal pickles in leak-proof containers, double-bag them, pad them well, and check customs rules before flying internationally.

Table of Contents

Quick Answer: Can the Airline Refuse a Bag With Leaking Pickle?

Yes. An airline can refuse a checked bag if a jar of pickle is leaking, smells strongly, appears broken, or could damage other luggage or baggage equipment. Pickles may be allowed in checked baggage, but allowance does not mean the airline must accept an unsafe or leaking bag.

Main Takeaway

Pickles are usually a packing problem, not a banned-item problem. The risk is the liquid brine leaking, the glass breaking, the smell spreading, or the food causing inspection or customs issues.

If your suitcase is already wet, dripping, or smelling of pickle juice at check-in, the airline may ask you to remove the item, repack it, wrap it better, or leave it behind.

Pickle Baggage Mistakes That Can Cause Problems

Mistake Do This Instead Why It Matters
Packing a glass jar loose in the suitcase Use a leak-proof plastic container or wrap the jar heavily Glass can crack under baggage pressure and rough handling.
Putting pickle directly beside clothes Double-bag it and place it inside a separate washable pouch Brine can stain clothes and leave a strong smell.
Carrying a large pickle jar in hand baggage Pack it in checked baggage or follow liquid limits Pickle brine is treated as a liquid for cabin screening.
Ignoring customs rules on international flights Declare food items when required and check destination rules Food rules vary by country and undeclared food can create problems.
Assuming the airline will pay for pickle damage Pack food so it cannot leak or damage your own belongings Airlines may deny claims caused by improperly packed food.

Can You Pack Pickles in Checked Luggage?

Yes, pickles can usually go in checked luggage if they are packed securely and allowed by your destination rules. The problem is not the pickle itself. The problem is the liquid brine, fragile jar, odor, pressure changes, and leakage risk.

Checked bags are stacked, moved, dropped, tilted, and exposed to pressure changes. A poorly sealed jar can open. A glass jar can crack. A plastic lid can pop loose. If pickle juice leaks outside your suitcase, the airline may treat the bag as a baggage-handling problem.

Best Checked Bag Option

Use a sturdy, leak-proof plastic container or sealed food pouch instead of a glass jar. If you must use glass, wrap it like a fragile bottle and double-bag it before placing it in the center of the suitcase.

Can You Carry Pickles in Hand Baggage?

Small amounts may be possible if they comply with liquid rules, but a regular jar of pickles usually does not work well in hand baggage because the brine counts as liquid. In many airport security systems, liquids, gels, pastes, sauces, oils, and similar wet foods are restricted in cabin bags.

The TSA’s liquid rule generally limits carry-on liquids to containers of 3.4 ounces or 100 milliliters that fit inside a permitted liquids bag. Pickles packed in liquid brine can be treated similarly to other liquids or liquid-heavy foods during screening.

For U.S. screening guidance on liquid food-style items, review TSA: Oils and Vinegars.

Carry-On Reality

Even if the pickle itself is solid, the brine is liquid. If the jar is larger than the cabin liquid limit, security may not allow it through in hand baggage.

Why Pickle Leaks Are a Baggage Risk

Pickle brine is salty, acidic, strongly scented, and messy. A leak can soak clothing, spread odor to nearby bags, damage documents, stain fabric, and create baggage-handling issues. Airlines do not want leaking food in the cargo hold, baggage carts, conveyor belts, or other passengers’ luggage.

What Can Go Wrong

  • The jar breaks inside the suitcase
  • The lid loosens during handling
  • Brine leaks into clothes
  • Liquid seeps outside the bag
  • Strong smell attracts inspection
  • Other passengers’ bags are affected
  • Security opens the suitcase for manual inspection
  • Customs questions the food item after arrival

Leak Warning

If pickle liquid leaks outside your suitcase, the airline may refuse the bag or require you to remove the item. “Allowed in checked baggage” does not protect you from poor packing.

How to Pack Pickles for a Flight

The goal is to prevent three things: breakage, leakage, and smell. Pack as if the container will be tilted, squeezed, and surrounded by other luggage.

Safe Packing Steps

  1. Choose the right container: Use a strong leak-proof plastic container or sealed pouch when possible.
  2. Avoid overfilling: Leave a little space in the container so pressure changes do not force liquid out.
  3. Tighten the lid: Make sure the lid is fully closed and not cross-threaded.
  4. Seal the lid area: Wrap the lid with plastic wrap or tape if needed, without making it difficult for inspection.
  5. Double-bag it: Place the container inside two heavy-duty resealable bags.
  6. Add absorbent material: Wrap the bags in paper towels, cloth, or an absorbent pad.
  7. Pad the container: Use clothes, bubble wrap, or a bottle protector around it.
  8. Place it in the center: Keep it away from suitcase edges, corners, and hard objects.
  9. Separate from valuables: Do not pack it near documents, electronics, shoes, or delicate clothing.
  10. Label if helpful: A simple food label can help if the bag is inspected.

Packing Tip

If you are packing homemade pickle, use a smaller container and split the quantity into two sealed bags. One large leaking jar can ruin the whole suitcase.

International Flight and Customs Rules

International flights add another issue: food import rules. A food item that is fine in your checked bag may still need to be declared at customs, and some countries restrict homemade, unpackaged, fresh, plant-based, meat-based, or dairy-based foods.

Pickle rules can vary depending on the destination, ingredients, packaging, and whether the pickle is homemade or commercially sealed. Spices, oils, vegetables, mango, lime, meat, seafood, or dairy ingredients may be treated differently by customs officials.

Customs Rule

When traveling internationally, declare food if the arrival country asks for food declaration. Fines and confiscation are usually worse than simply declaring the item and letting customs decide.

For India-focused guidance, see Can You Bring Pickles on Indian Flights? Achar Essential Tips and Traveling with Pickles: Essential Tips for International Flights.

Will the Airline Pay If Pickle Leaks?

Do not assume the airline will pay for damage caused by your own leaking pickle jar. If the leak came from an item you packed, the airline may treat it as improper packing rather than airline damage.

You may also be responsible if your leaking food damages other passengers’ bags or creates a baggage-handling issue. Airline liability rules vary, but food packed in a fragile or leaky container is usually a weak claim.

No-Guarantee Warning

If your own pickle jar leaks and ruins your clothes, shoes, documents, or suitcase lining, reimbursement is not guaranteed. Proper packing is your best protection.

The same packing risk applies to many wet, oily, salty, or brine-heavy pickle products. Whether the label says pickle, achar, chutney, relish, preserve, or marinated vegetables, the main concern is liquid leakage and customs compliance.

Common Pickle and Achar Types

  • Mango pickle or aam ka achar
  • Lime pickle or nimbu achar
  • Mixed vegetable pickle
  • Green chilli pickle
  • Garlic pickle
  • Gongura pickle
  • Carrot pickle
  • Gooseberry or amla pickle
  • Fish pickle
  • Prawn pickle
  • Meat pickle
  • Homemade achar in oil
  • Commercial sealed pickle jars
  • Pickle pouches
  • Relish or brined vegetables

Food Type Tip

Meat, seafood, dairy, fresh produce, and homemade foods may face stricter customs checks than commercially sealed vegetarian pickles. Check the destination country’s food rules before packing them.

What to Do If Your Bag Is Refused

If airline staff refuse your bag because pickle is leaking or poorly packed, stay calm and ask what must be fixed before the bag can be accepted. In many cases, the issue is the leak risk, not the food itself.

At-the-Airport Fixes

  1. Ask why the bag was refused: Confirm whether the problem is leaking, smell, broken glass, weight, or security concern.
  2. Remove the pickle if needed: Do not risk missing the flight over one jar.
  3. Repack if allowed: Use plastic bags, tape, padding, or airport wrapping services if available.
  4. Move it away from clothes: Keep the container isolated from fabric and valuables.
  5. Clean visible leakage: A wet or smelly bag is more likely to be rejected.
  6. Ask about disposal: If the airline will not accept it, dispose of it safely.
  7. Do not argue with security: Screening officers and airline staff have discretion when an item creates a safety or handling concern.

Use these guides to understand packing rules, liquids, fragile baggage, locks, and common items on India and international flights.

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

Can I put a jar of pickles in my checked luggage?

Yes, you can usually put a jar of pickles in checked luggage if it is securely packed and allowed by your destination rules. Use leak-proof packing because a broken or leaking jar can cause the airline to refuse the bag.

Can you take pickle in checked baggage?

Pickle is generally better suited for checked baggage than hand baggage because it often contains liquid brine or oil. Pack it in a sealed container, double-bag it, and pad it well to prevent leaks.

Can pickles go in hand baggage?

Large jars of pickles usually do not work in hand baggage because the brine counts as liquid. Small containers may need to follow the airport liquid limit, and final screening decisions can depend on security officers.

How do you pack pickles for an international flight?

Use a leak-proof plastic container or sealed pouch, double-bag it, add absorbent material, pad it in the center of the suitcase, and declare the food if the destination country requires food declaration.

Can the airline refuse my bag if pickle is leaking?

Yes. If pickle brine is leaking, smelling strongly, damaging the suitcase, or likely to affect other baggage, the airline can refuse the bag or ask you to remove or repack the item.

Will the airline pay if pickle ruins my clothes?

Payment is not guaranteed if the damage was caused by food you packed improperly. Airlines may reject claims for leaks from your own containers, especially if the item was fragile or poorly sealed.

Do I need to declare pickles at customs?

For international travel, declare food items when required. Pickle rules vary by country, ingredients, and packaging, so customs officers may inspect, allow, or confiscate the item.

Is homemade pickle allowed on flights?

Homemade pickle may be allowed in checked baggage on some flights, but it can create leak, odor, and customs issues. Commercially sealed packaging is usually easier to explain and inspect.

Vegetarian Meal Served Non-Veg on Flight: What to Do

Updated: June 09, 2026

Ordered Vegetarian Meal but Got Non-Veg on Flight: What Should You Do?

You pre-booked a vegetarian meal, but the tray in front of you has chicken, fish, meat or a non-veg label — and now you may be stuck hungry for the rest of the flight.


This is not just a food preference problem. For many passengers, a wrong meal can affect religious beliefs, medical needs, vegan or Jain restrictions, emotional comfort and the basic service they expected after booking a special meal correctly. The first step is to stop, return the tray immediately, and ask the cabin crew to verify your meal code before opening or eating anything.


If your vegetarian meal was not loaded, wrongly handed to another passenger, mislabeled, or replaced with a non-veg option, you should document the mistake, ask the crew to log the incident, request safe alternatives onboard, and file a clear airline complaint after landing.

Table of Contents

Vegetarian Meal Served Non-Veg

If you ordered a vegetarian meal but received a non-veg meal, do not eat from the tray, do not remove the meal label, and do not throw away the packaging. Politely call the flight attendant and ask them to verify the meal against your seat number, boarding pass and pre-booked meal request.

The mistake may be a wrong tray handover, missing special meal, incorrect loading by catering, passenger seat swap, meal code confusion, or misunderstanding between vegetarian, vegan, Jain, Hindu and Asian vegetarian meal categories.

Main rule: return the wrong meal immediately and ask the cabin crew to confirm whether your booked vegetarian meal was loaded for your seat.

Quick Wrong Meal Rules Table

Wrong Move Better Move
Eating part of the meal before checking Check the meal label, ingredients and tray before eating
Only telling crew “I am vegetarian” Show your pre-booked meal code or booking confirmation
Throwing away the meal tag Photograph the tag, tray and seat number if possible
Assuming HNML always means vegetarian Choose AVML, VGML or VJML based on your actual diet
Waiting until after meal service ends Call crew immediately while alternatives may still be available
Complaining without proof after landing Keep photos, boarding pass, PNR and crew incident note

Important: if the wrong meal affects religious, medical or allergy-related needs, tell the cabin crew clearly and ask for a safe alternative instead of guessing ingredients.

What to Do Immediately Onboard

The onboard response matters because once the meal service is over, alternatives may be limited. Be polite, firm and specific. The crew may be able to check the galley, swap an untouched meal, offer fruit, bread, salad, snacks, rice, dessert, or report the issue to the cabin manager.

  1. Do not eat the meal: stop as soon as you notice meat, fish, egg, non-veg gravy or wrong labeling.
  2. Call the flight attendant: say you pre-booked a vegetarian meal and received a non-veg tray.
  3. Show proof: show your booking, boarding pass or meal request screenshot if available.
  4. Ask them to check the galley: a correct special meal may be stored separately.
  5. Request safe alternatives: ask for fruit, bread, rice, packaged snacks, salad or vegetarian items if no special meal is left.
  6. Ask for incident logging: request the cabin manager to note the wrong-meal issue.
  7. Keep proof: photograph the tray label, meal, boarding pass and any written note.

Phrase to use: “I pre-booked a vegetarian meal, but this tray appears to contain non-veg food. Can you please verify my meal code and check if my special meal was loaded?”

Check Your Meal Code

Airlines use meal codes to identify special meals. If the wrong code was selected during booking, the airline may say it provided the meal that was requested. If the correct code was selected and the wrong meal was served, your complaint is stronger.

Common vegetarian-related meal codes

Meal Code Meaning Best For
AVML Asian Vegetarian Meal Indian or Asian-style vegetarian passengers
VGML Vegan Meal Passengers avoiding meat, fish, eggs and dairy
VJML Jain Vegetarian Meal Jain passengers with Jain dietary restrictions
VLML Vegetarian Lacto-Ovo Meal Vegetarian passengers who may consume dairy and eggs
HNML Hindu Meal Often non-beef and non-pork, not always vegetarian

Meal-code warning: vegetarian passengers should not rely on HNML unless the airline clearly states that its HNML is vegetarian. Many HNML meals may include chicken or fish.

Vegetarian Meal vs Vegan Meal

A vegetarian meal and a vegan meal are not always the same. A vegetarian meal may include dairy, butter, paneer, yogurt, cheese, egg or egg-based dessert depending on airline definition. A vegan meal is usually intended to avoid animal products, including dairy and eggs.

If you are strict vegetarian but also avoid egg, dairy or animal-derived ingredients, check the exact meal description before booking. If you need no dairy and no egg, VGML may be safer than a general vegetarian option.

Strict diet rule: choose the meal code based on your actual restriction, not just the word “vegetarian.”

Hindu Meal Confusion

Many Indian passengers choose Hindu Meal because it sounds familiar, but HNML does not always mean vegetarian. On many airlines, Hindu Meal means a meal that avoids beef and pork while still allowing chicken, fish or other non-beef meat.

If you ordered HNML and received chicken, the airline may consider the meal correct depending on its published definition. If you wanted vegetarian food, AVML, VJML or VGML may have been the better choice.

Common mistake: HNML can be a non-veg Hindu meal. Vegetarian passengers should verify the airline’s meal description before selecting it.

For more details, read Hindu Meal HNML Confusion: Why It May Include Chicken or Fish and What Is a Hindu Meal (HNML) on Flights? Food, Airlines & How to Order.

Proof to Collect Before Complaining

If you want the airline to take the wrong-meal complaint seriously, collect proof before the tray is cleared. A vague complaint after landing is much weaker than a complaint with meal label photos, booking confirmation and crew notes.

  1. Photo of the meal: show the non-veg item clearly.
  2. Photo of the meal tag: include seat number, meal code or tray label if visible.
  3. Boarding pass: keep flight number, seat number and travel date.
  4. Booking confirmation: show the pre-booked vegetarian meal request.
  5. Cabin crew response: note what staff said and whether alternatives were offered.
  6. Incident log: ask the cabin manager to record the issue onboard.
  7. Receipts: keep any paid meal receipts if you purchased food and did not receive it.

Proof tip: photograph the meal tag before the tray is removed. The tag may be the strongest evidence of what was loaded for your seat.

Complaint Template for Wrong Vegetarian Meal

Use this template after landing if your pre-booked vegetarian meal was missing, replaced with non-veg food, or wrongly served.

Subject: Pre-Booked Vegetarian Meal Served as Non-Veg – PNR [PNR]

Dear [Airline Name] Customer Support Team,

I am writing to report a serious meal service issue on flight [flight number] from [origin] to [destination] on [date]. I had pre-booked a vegetarian meal for my seat, but I was served a meal that appeared to contain non-vegetarian food.

Passenger Name: [Your full name]
PNR: [PNR]
Flight Number: [Flight number]
Seat Number: [Seat number]
Meal Requested: [AVML / VGML / VJML / other]
Meal Served: [Describe what was served]

I immediately informed the cabin crew and returned the meal. I requested my pre-booked vegetarian meal, but [explain whether it was unavailable, replaced, or whether only basic alternatives were offered]. The cabin crew was also requested to note the incident onboard.

This caused inconvenience and affected my dietary / religious / personal food requirements during the flight. I have attached photos of the meal, meal tag, boarding pass and booking confirmation showing my special meal request.

Please investigate why the correct meal was not served and confirm what corrective action or compensation can be provided for this service failure.

Regards,
[Your name]
[Mobile number]
[Email address]

Can You Get Refund or Compensation?

You can ask the airline for compensation, miles, voucher credit, apology, paid-meal refund or service recovery, but there is no automatic guarantee. The airline will usually look at whether the meal was pre-booked correctly, whether the correct meal was loaded, what was served, whether alternatives were offered, and whether the issue was logged onboard.

If you paid separately for a meal and did not receive it, your refund request may be stronger. If the meal was part of the ticket or a complimentary special meal, the airline may offer goodwill compensation instead of a fixed cash refund.

Compensation rule: your strongest case is when the correct vegetarian meal was confirmed before travel, the airline failed to provide it, and you have proof from the flight.

Passengers often use the word “vegetarian” differently, so airline meal codes matter. The same rule applies across airlines: choose the specific meal code that matches your diet, not the label that sounds closest.

Common vegetarian and religious meal examples

Examples include AVML Asian Vegetarian Meal, VGML Vegan Meal, VJML Jain Vegetarian Meal, VLML Vegetarian Lacto-Ovo Meal, HNML Hindu Meal, MOML Muslim Meal, KSML Kosher Meal, DBML Diabetic Meal and GFML Gluten-Free Meal.

Common food expectations

Passengers may expect dal, rice, vegetable curry, paneer, chapati, bread, salad, fruit, yogurt, vegan curry, Jain food without root vegetables, gluten-free items or diabetic-friendly meals depending on the meal code selected.

How the same rule applies

Airlines do not always serve the same food on every route. A meal code tells the airline your dietary category, but it does not guarantee a specific dish, spice level, cuisine or brand of food.

Selection tip: if your food restriction is strict, carry allowed backup snacks in case the special meal is missing, misloaded or not suitable.

How to Avoid the Wrong Meal Next Time

You cannot control airline catering completely, but you can reduce the risk of receiving the wrong meal by confirming early and keeping proof.

Smart Moves

  • Select the correct meal code during booking.
  • Recheck the meal request in the airline app.
  • Take a screenshot of the confirmed meal.
  • Confirm the meal again at check-in.
  • Ask cabin crew early after boarding.
  • Check the meal tag before opening the tray.
  • Carry safe snacks for strict dietary needs.
  • Report the issue onboard if the meal is wrong.

Risky Moves

  • Choosing HNML when you actually need vegetarian food.
  • Assuming the travel agent added the meal correctly.
  • Waiting until meal service to mention strict dietary needs.
  • Throwing away the tray tag after a mistake.
  • Eating from the tray before checking ingredients.
  • Complaining after landing without proof.
  • Assuming all airlines define vegetarian meals the same way.
  • Relying only on onboard alternatives for medical or religious diets.

Strict diet warning: if eating the wrong food could cause a medical, allergy, religious or severe dietary issue, carry safe backup food allowed by airport and airline rules.

Helpful Airline Meal Guides

For general airline food options, start with Airline Meals: What Foods Are Served on Flights? and Vegetarian In-Flight Meals: Codes, Options and Ordering Tips.

If you are comparing vegetarian, vegan, Jain or Hindu meal codes, these guides can help:

For medical or religious special meals, continue with these pages:

If you plan to carry your own food or snacks, read Are Snacks Allowed on Planes in India?, Must-Know Rules to Bring Food & Snacks to India Without Hassle, and Security Confiscated Your Food at Indian Airport.

For airline-specific food availability and duty-free food questions, see Do India Domestic Airlines Provide Free Meals?, Is Food Free on IndiGo Flights?, and How Much Chocolate Can You Bring to India Duty Free?.

Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s

What should I do if I ordered a vegetarian meal but got non-veg on a flight?

Return the meal immediately, ask the cabin crew to verify your meal code, request a safe alternative, photograph the tray label and ask the cabin manager to log the incident.

What is a vegetarian meal on a flight?

A vegetarian meal is a special meal requested before travel, but the exact ingredients depend on the airline and meal code. AVML, VGML, VJML and VLML can mean different things.

What does vegetarian meal mean on my ticket?

It means a vegetarian special meal request may be attached to your booking. Check the actual meal code, because vegetarian, vegan, Jain and Hindu meal codes are not the same.

What is the vegetarian meal code for airlines?

Common vegetarian-related codes include AVML for Asian Vegetarian Meal, VGML for Vegan Meal, VJML for Jain Vegetarian Meal and VLML for Vegetarian Lacto-Ovo Meal.

Is a Hindu meal vegetarian?

Not always. HNML may mean a Hindu meal that avoids beef and pork but may still include chicken or fish depending on airline rules. Vegetarian passengers should check the airline description.

Can I get compensation if my special meal was wrong?

You can request compensation, miles, a voucher, refund of a paid meal or service recovery, but approval depends on proof, airline policy and whether the correct meal was confirmed before travel.

What proof should I keep for a wrong meal complaint?

Keep photos of the meal, meal tag, boarding pass, booking confirmation, seat number, crew response and any incident note or complaint reference.

Should I carry snacks if I booked a vegetarian meal?

Yes, especially if your diet is strict. Carry allowed backup snacks because special meals can be missing, misloaded, mislabeled or unsuitable.

Child Meal on Flights: How to Order CHML

Child Meal on Flights: How to Order CHML and What Parents Should Check You booked a flight with your child, but the airline may not a...