You’re at the hotel sink, about to head to the airport, holding a razor in your hand, thinking: Can you bring a razor on a plane? Should you toss it in the carry-on and pray? Bury it in checked luggage and pray harder? The wrong choice means either explaining yourself to a TSA agent at dawn or arriving at that client dinner looking like you’ve been living in the woods. Apply, if you will, Occam’s razor to the airport version of the problem: The simplest setup that invites the fewest questions at the checkpoint usually wins. What works depends on the tool, the rules, and where you’re headed. That vintage straight razor your grandfather left you has a different story than the plastic Bic you grabbed at Walgreens. The double-edge safety razor that gives you the perfect shave? It plays by split rules that nobody explains until you’re standing at security, holding up the line.
The truth is, yes, you can bring a razor on a plane. Most of them, anyway. But the devil lurks in the details, and those details change depending on whether you’re talking about blades, handles, cartridges, or that fancy electric shaver you bought for exactly this problem. Here’s what actually flies and what gets tossed in the bin at Terminal B.
TSA rules for different razor types
Disposable and cartridge razors, whether you’re using generic or brands like Mach3 or Schick Hydro, are permitted in both carry-on and checked luggage, including removable heads, according to the Transportation Security Administration. Electric shavers and trimmers are permitted in either carry-on or checked luggage too.
Safety razors split the difference. The handle can travel in your carry-on, but the double-edge blades cannot, so stash any blades in checked baggage or buy them at your destination. Loose utility blades (like scary box cutters) and straight razors with exposed edges are prohibited in carry-on luggage. Check them and sheath anything sharp.
Kitsch
Perfect Glide safety razor
Gillette
Mach3 razor for men
Gillette
Venus Mini travel razor kit
Panasonic
ARC5 palm-sized electric razor
Carry-on vs. checked baggage liquid rules
For carry-on-only weekends, think in two rulebooks. TSA’s 3-1-1 for the cabin (carry-on) and the Federal Aviation Administration’s hazardous-materials limits for the hold (checked). In the cabin, anything that pours, pumps, sprays, or smears counts as a liquid. Yes, that includes shaving foams and gels. Each container must be 3.4 oz/100 ml or smaller, and all of them must fit inside one clear quart-size bag you can pull at security without a scavenger hunt.


