AirAsia battery policy summary
AirAsia treats power banks and spare lithium batteries as cabin baggage only items. The last dataset refresh for this page was Apr 10, 2026. Trippwiz compares your battery's watt-hour result with the airline's common lithium battery bands so you can check rules faster before packing.
Power bank
Up to 100Wh: Allowed
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Not allowed
100Wh to 160Wh: Allowed with airline approval
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Not allowed
Above 160Wh: Not allowed
Carry-on: Not allowed
Checked: Not allowed
Spare lithium battery
Up to 100Wh: Allowed
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Not allowed
100Wh to 160Wh: Allowed with airline approval
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Not allowed
Above 160Wh: Not allowed
Carry-on: Not allowed
Checked: Not allowed
Installed device battery
Up to 100Wh: Allowed
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Allowed
100Wh to 160Wh: Allowed with airline approval
Carry-on: Allowed
Checked: Allowed
Above 160Wh: Not allowed
Carry-on: Not allowed
Checked: Not allowed
FAQ
Can I carry a 20000mAh power bank on AirAsia?
A 20000mAh power bank at 3.7V is about 74Wh, which sits below the 100Wh threshold and is usually allowed in cabin baggage only.
Can AirAsia power banks go in checked baggage?
No. AirAsia guidance treats power banks and loose spare lithium batteries as carry-on only items.
Before you fly
- Match the Wh result on this page against the exact number printed on your battery if the label is available.
- Protect terminals, avoid loose batteries in checked bags, and switch devices off before checking them in.
- Use the official airline source again right before departure because airport and airline rules can change without notice.