An overweight bag fee is one of the most avoidable travel expenses there is — and one of the most common. The standard domestic weight limit is 50 lbs (23 kg). Go one pound over and you're looking at a $100 fee on most major US carriers. Go over 70 lbs and you're paying $200. Here's how the numbers break down and how to make sure you never pay them.

Overweight Baggage Fees by Airline

AirlineStandard Limit51–70 lbs71–100 lbsOver 100 lbs
Delta Air Lines50 lbs / 23 kg$100$200Not accepted
United Airlines50 lbs / 23 kg$100$200Not accepted
American Airlines50 lbs / 23 kg$100$200Not accepted
Southwest Airlines50 lbs / 23 kg$75$75 + handling feeNot accepted
Spirit Airlines40 lbs / 18 kg$30–60 overweightN/AN/A
Frontier Airlines40 lbs / 18 kg$75 overweight feeN/AN/A
British Airways23 kg / 50 lbs£65 per bagNot acceptedN/A
Lufthansa23 kg / 50 lbs€60–100 per bagNot acceptedN/A
Air Canada23 kg / 50 lbsCAD $100CAD $200Not accepted

Watch out: Spirit and Frontier have a lower standard limit of 40 lbs — not 50 lbs like the major carriers. Many travelers assume 50 lbs and are surprised at the counter.

The 50-Pound Trap

The 50 lbs / 23 kg limit is a hard cutoff. There's no grace zone — a bag at 50.5 lbs gets the same $100 fee as one at 69 lbs. This makes weighing before you leave home genuinely important, not just a nice-to-have.

The most common scenario: you packed carefully at home on your bathroom scale, showed 49 lbs, but airport scales read slightly higher. A 1–2 lb discrepancy between your home scale and the airport scale is common. Pack to 48 lbs if you're trying to stay under the limit.

How to Weigh Your Bag at Home

Bathroom scales alone aren't very accurate for luggage — the readings vary based on how you hold the bag and shift your weight. For a rough check they're fine, but for anything near the limit, use a dedicated luggage scale.

A luggage scale works like this: you clip it to the handle of your bag, lift both scale and bag off the floor, and let the digital readout stabilize. Good models are accurate to within 0.1–0.2 lbs. Take three readings and average them. Cost: $10–$20, and it pays for itself the first time it saves you a $100 overweight fee.

What to Do at the Counter If You're Overweight

Don't panic — you have options before handing over $100:

Ship Your Luggage Ahead Instead

For long trips, heavy gear, or trips where you don't want to deal with bags at all, luggage forwarding services are genuinely useful. Two main options:

For a ski trip with heavy gear, shipping may actually be cheaper than paying overweight fees plus the hassle of hauling everything through airports.

Best Luggage Scales to Own

The Freetoo Digital Luggage Scale is the most recommended option in the $15 range — accurate, durable, and switches between kg and lbs. The Travelon Digital Scale is slightly more compact. If you want a large display that's easier to read while holding a bag overhead, the RENPHO Luggage Scale is worth the extra few dollars. All three max out at 110 lbs and are accurate enough for practical use.

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Check Your Bag Weight Before You Go

Use our free Baggage Weight Helper to calculate your bag weight against your airline's limit and see how close you are.

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