Unforeseen change of route and airport security











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10
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Let's say I have a direct flight from San Francisco (SFO) to London (LHR), with no checked luggage.



I buy a bottle of expensive alcohol post-security at SFO, but my flight gets cancelled and I get re-routed via New York (JFK). All of a sudden I have to change terminals at JFK and clear security, with the stuff I bought at SFO.



Am I right thinking that my options at that point are either to discard the expensive bottle, or be prepared to check it in at JFK (allow extra time, carry a bag with sufficient padding etc)?



Does the fact that the change of route was effectively imposed upon me by the airline change anything?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
    – usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
    3 hours ago















up vote
10
down vote

favorite












Let's say I have a direct flight from San Francisco (SFO) to London (LHR), with no checked luggage.



I buy a bottle of expensive alcohol post-security at SFO, but my flight gets cancelled and I get re-routed via New York (JFK). All of a sudden I have to change terminals at JFK and clear security, with the stuff I bought at SFO.



Am I right thinking that my options at that point are either to discard the expensive bottle, or be prepared to check it in at JFK (allow extra time, carry a bag with sufficient padding etc)?



Does the fact that the change of route was effectively imposed upon me by the airline change anything?










share|improve this question




















  • 1




    At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
    – usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
    3 hours ago













up vote
10
down vote

favorite









up vote
10
down vote

favorite











Let's say I have a direct flight from San Francisco (SFO) to London (LHR), with no checked luggage.



I buy a bottle of expensive alcohol post-security at SFO, but my flight gets cancelled and I get re-routed via New York (JFK). All of a sudden I have to change terminals at JFK and clear security, with the stuff I bought at SFO.



Am I right thinking that my options at that point are either to discard the expensive bottle, or be prepared to check it in at JFK (allow extra time, carry a bag with sufficient padding etc)?



Does the fact that the change of route was effectively imposed upon me by the airline change anything?










share|improve this question















Let's say I have a direct flight from San Francisco (SFO) to London (LHR), with no checked luggage.



I buy a bottle of expensive alcohol post-security at SFO, but my flight gets cancelled and I get re-routed via New York (JFK). All of a sudden I have to change terminals at JFK and clear security, with the stuff I bought at SFO.



Am I right thinking that my options at that point are either to discard the expensive bottle, or be prepared to check it in at JFK (allow extra time, carry a bag with sufficient padding etc)?



Does the fact that the change of route was effectively imposed upon me by the airline change anything?







air-travel airport-security






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago

























asked 9 hours ago









NPE

329111




329111








  • 1




    At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
    – usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
    3 hours ago














  • 1




    At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
    – usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
    3 hours ago








1




1




At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
– usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
3 hours ago




At very minimum, if you are re-routed against your will, you should have all the right to explain the situation to the officers and present evidence of your purchase. Being it an exceptional event, they should be more willing to accommodate. Anyway, see the answer.
– usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
3 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
11
down vote













TSA in the United States, and airport security in some other countries, will generally permit liquids in a secured, tamper evident bag (STEB) with a duty free receipt from within the past 24 hours, even if they are larger than the ordinary liquid size limit.



However, according to the TSA's website this officially only applies to liquids purchased internationally that are being brought into the US. Practically, you very well may have a decent shot of having it accepted in a sealed bag even if it's from a domestic source, but it would be a gamble. And even with a STEB, the TSA can reserve the right to refuse it, so there's always some risk when carrying liquids.



Many connections in the US are now possible without going through security again, so if this comes up, it's worth asking the airline if you could be rerouted elsewhere to avoid the need for rescreening, if there's an itinerary that's reasonable. Duty free often isn't a great deal in US airports anyway (you still have to pay sales tax).



You do have one other option besides discarding or checking it if you happen to be flying JetBlue and it's beer or wine: drink it. You can't serve yourself, but you can hand the bottle to the cabin crew, and they'll serve you. If the bottle is going to waste anyway, make friends on the flight.






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    +1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
    – Burhan Khalid
    8 hours ago










  • Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
    – Zach Lipton
    8 hours ago






  • 3




    As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
    – FreeMan
    4 hours ago










  • I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
    – emory
    2 hours ago











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
11
down vote













TSA in the United States, and airport security in some other countries, will generally permit liquids in a secured, tamper evident bag (STEB) with a duty free receipt from within the past 24 hours, even if they are larger than the ordinary liquid size limit.



However, according to the TSA's website this officially only applies to liquids purchased internationally that are being brought into the US. Practically, you very well may have a decent shot of having it accepted in a sealed bag even if it's from a domestic source, but it would be a gamble. And even with a STEB, the TSA can reserve the right to refuse it, so there's always some risk when carrying liquids.



Many connections in the US are now possible without going through security again, so if this comes up, it's worth asking the airline if you could be rerouted elsewhere to avoid the need for rescreening, if there's an itinerary that's reasonable. Duty free often isn't a great deal in US airports anyway (you still have to pay sales tax).



You do have one other option besides discarding or checking it if you happen to be flying JetBlue and it's beer or wine: drink it. You can't serve yourself, but you can hand the bottle to the cabin crew, and they'll serve you. If the bottle is going to waste anyway, make friends on the flight.






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    +1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
    – Burhan Khalid
    8 hours ago










  • Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
    – Zach Lipton
    8 hours ago






  • 3




    As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
    – FreeMan
    4 hours ago










  • I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
    – emory
    2 hours ago















up vote
11
down vote













TSA in the United States, and airport security in some other countries, will generally permit liquids in a secured, tamper evident bag (STEB) with a duty free receipt from within the past 24 hours, even if they are larger than the ordinary liquid size limit.



However, according to the TSA's website this officially only applies to liquids purchased internationally that are being brought into the US. Practically, you very well may have a decent shot of having it accepted in a sealed bag even if it's from a domestic source, but it would be a gamble. And even with a STEB, the TSA can reserve the right to refuse it, so there's always some risk when carrying liquids.



Many connections in the US are now possible without going through security again, so if this comes up, it's worth asking the airline if you could be rerouted elsewhere to avoid the need for rescreening, if there's an itinerary that's reasonable. Duty free often isn't a great deal in US airports anyway (you still have to pay sales tax).



You do have one other option besides discarding or checking it if you happen to be flying JetBlue and it's beer or wine: drink it. You can't serve yourself, but you can hand the bottle to the cabin crew, and they'll serve you. If the bottle is going to waste anyway, make friends on the flight.






share|improve this answer

















  • 5




    +1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
    – Burhan Khalid
    8 hours ago










  • Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
    – Zach Lipton
    8 hours ago






  • 3




    As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
    – FreeMan
    4 hours ago










  • I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
    – emory
    2 hours ago













up vote
11
down vote










up vote
11
down vote









TSA in the United States, and airport security in some other countries, will generally permit liquids in a secured, tamper evident bag (STEB) with a duty free receipt from within the past 24 hours, even if they are larger than the ordinary liquid size limit.



However, according to the TSA's website this officially only applies to liquids purchased internationally that are being brought into the US. Practically, you very well may have a decent shot of having it accepted in a sealed bag even if it's from a domestic source, but it would be a gamble. And even with a STEB, the TSA can reserve the right to refuse it, so there's always some risk when carrying liquids.



Many connections in the US are now possible without going through security again, so if this comes up, it's worth asking the airline if you could be rerouted elsewhere to avoid the need for rescreening, if there's an itinerary that's reasonable. Duty free often isn't a great deal in US airports anyway (you still have to pay sales tax).



You do have one other option besides discarding or checking it if you happen to be flying JetBlue and it's beer or wine: drink it. You can't serve yourself, but you can hand the bottle to the cabin crew, and they'll serve you. If the bottle is going to waste anyway, make friends on the flight.






share|improve this answer












TSA in the United States, and airport security in some other countries, will generally permit liquids in a secured, tamper evident bag (STEB) with a duty free receipt from within the past 24 hours, even if they are larger than the ordinary liquid size limit.



However, according to the TSA's website this officially only applies to liquids purchased internationally that are being brought into the US. Practically, you very well may have a decent shot of having it accepted in a sealed bag even if it's from a domestic source, but it would be a gamble. And even with a STEB, the TSA can reserve the right to refuse it, so there's always some risk when carrying liquids.



Many connections in the US are now possible without going through security again, so if this comes up, it's worth asking the airline if you could be rerouted elsewhere to avoid the need for rescreening, if there's an itinerary that's reasonable. Duty free often isn't a great deal in US airports anyway (you still have to pay sales tax).



You do have one other option besides discarding or checking it if you happen to be flying JetBlue and it's beer or wine: drink it. You can't serve yourself, but you can hand the bottle to the cabin crew, and they'll serve you. If the bottle is going to waste anyway, make friends on the flight.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 9 hours ago









Zach Lipton

57.5k9174236




57.5k9174236








  • 5




    +1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
    – Burhan Khalid
    8 hours ago










  • Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
    – Zach Lipton
    8 hours ago






  • 3




    As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
    – FreeMan
    4 hours ago










  • I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
    – emory
    2 hours ago














  • 5




    +1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
    – Burhan Khalid
    8 hours ago










  • Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
    – Zach Lipton
    8 hours ago






  • 3




    As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
    – FreeMan
    4 hours ago










  • I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
    – emory
    2 hours ago








5




5




+1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
– Burhan Khalid
8 hours ago




+1 for makes friends on the flight. I like this option the best.
– Burhan Khalid
8 hours ago












Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
– Zach Lipton
8 hours ago




Only works on one of the few airlines that will serve passenger-provided alcohol though.
– Zach Lipton
8 hours ago




3




3




As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
– FreeMan
4 hours ago




As an option, you could make friends in the JFK terminal prior to clearing security again.
– FreeMan
4 hours ago












I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
– emory
2 hours ago




I would recommend against this approach - theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/25/…
– emory
2 hours ago


















 

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