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I have an overseas flight booked with Eurowings discover which includes a checked bag.

I plan on carrying a suitcase, which fits the dimensions of a carry-on and a rucksack, which is larger than the allowed size for the personal item. I do not plan on carrying a larger suitcase.

If I do not hand over my suitcase, but am forced to gate-check it because only one bag of that dimension is allowed on board, will I have to pay a fee?

EDIT: clarifications: I am allowed to bring

  • 1 piece of luggage (checked)
  • 1 carry-on suitcase
  • 1 personal item (significantly smaller than carry-on suitcase-size)

I want to bring

  • 1 carry-on suitcase
  • 1 rucksack that is larger than the allowed personal item

What I would like to know is: If I decide to not check my suitcase, but bring it on board with me, will I be forced to check it in at the gate (because I am only allowed one object on board that is larger than a personal item)? If so, do I have to pay for it to be checked-in (even though I have one checked bag free and haven't used that)?

Why I would want to do this? Because it saves me a lot of time at both airports.

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    I don’t quite understand… you are planning to take as a carry-on a bag which is larger than the maximum dimension for a carry-on? Where do you think it will fit?
    – jcaron
    Commented Jul 6 at 21:04
  • Can you clarify what the size of your bag is, and if you plan to purchase the two-bag option or a Smart or BIZClass fare?
    – jcaron
    Commented Jul 6 at 21:18
  • @jcaron That's not what the question states. Both bags are smaller than the maximum dimension for a large carry-on.
    – Relaxed
    Commented Jul 6 at 21:58
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    @Relaxed aaaah I think I got it, I had parsed it incorrectly, it’s (one bag which fits carry on size) + (one bag which doesn’t fit personal item size). Still over the limit, but not as much as I thought (and still requires the two-cabin-bags option)
    – jcaron
    Commented Jul 6 at 22:29
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    What's the point of this exercise? Even if it works the only benefit is that you don't have to wait for luggage, and it seems like a lot of hassle. Commented Jul 7 at 4:10

2 Answers 2

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While I haven’t found a page which states it explicitly in the case of Eurowings (it’s more explicit on some other airlines’ websites), generally the gate-check fee is independent of any purchased hold luggage: the fee for hold luggage is valid only if you drop the bag at check-in/baggage drop, not at the gate.

The price is actually quite different and much more expensive in the case of a gate check.

Note that:

  • This applies only if they notice you are over the limit. If you are not or they don’t notice and they are just running out of space, gate check is normally free.
  • I think this is implied in your question, but carry-on + personal item requires the “two cabin bags” option or one of the fares which includes it (Smart or Biz). Basic fares only include the smaller item.
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I have flown with Eurowings recently. I had purchased a ticket, which included checked in luggage, plus I had a backpack, about the size of allowed carry-on and another bag with sufficient food/entertainment/etc for 3 children, which was way bigger in size than the "personal" item allowance. Each of the children had their own carry-on backpacks.

At the gate, the agents asked me to put each of the bags (including children's backpacks) into the sizing frame for carry on - and then happily let us onto the plane. So, in short, they just checked that each item that was taken onto the plain was within the allocated size. To me it seemed that they just treated the allowance as "two carry-on items".

This happened on three out of four flights of the itinerary UK-DE-GE, then GE-DE-UK. The last DE-UK leg they didn't care about anything, as the flight was being delayed to accommodate the delay of our incoming flight, which had half the passengers of DE-UK leg, so they just rushed us onto the plain without checking anything.

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  • Enforcement of cabin luggage size varies a lot, even for the same airline. For instance I've had Easyjet flights CDG-NCE and ORY-NCE where they didn't care at all about anything, and flights NCE-CDG or NCE-ORY where they were actively checking bags over the allowance even before boarding started. Boy did they make extra money on those flights!
    – jcaron
    Commented Jul 8 at 10:19

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