Packing for a JetBlue flight and not sure what you can bring on board? Knowing the JetBlue carry-on rules before you get to the gate saves money, stress, and the dreaded last-minute repack at the counter. This independent guide explains what counts as a carry-on versus a personal item, the size limits that matter, and how to avoid surprise fees.
First, transparency: we're an independent travel agency and are not affiliated with or endorsed by JetBlue. We help travelers book smarter, and our agents can confirm the current JetBlue carry-on rules for your exact fare and route. Call +1 (855) 302-0422 (24/7) and we'll check before you pack.
JetBlue carry-on rules at a glance
On JetBlue standard economy, you typically get one carry-on bag for the overhead bin plus one personal item, both free. The important exception is basic economy: the cheapest fares sometimes allow only a personal item and exclude a full-size carry-on, so check your fare rules before you head to the gate. Because JetBlue carry-on rules and the exact size limits can change and vary by fare and aircraft, use the points below as a guide and confirm the current numbers for your specific ticket.
- Standard economy usually includes one free carry-on plus one personal item.
- Basic economy can exclude a full-size carry-on — verify before you fly.
- Your carry-on must fit the overhead-bin size limits; the personal item goes under the seat.
- If overhead space runs out, your bag may be gate-checked at no charge.
Carry-on vs personal item: what fits where
Most carry-on confusion comes from mixing up the two allowances. The carry-on goes in the overhead bin; the personal item goes under the seat in front of you. Exact dimensions vary, so we describe them as typical rather than hard numbers — always check JetBlue's current size limits for your route.
| Item | Typical size | Where it goes |
|---|---|---|
| Carry-on (overhead bin) | Roughly standard cabin-bag size — varies by airline | Must fit the overhead bin and the airport sizer |
| Personal item (under seat) | Smaller than the carry-on | Must fit fully under the seat in front of you |
| Wheels & handles | Counted in the total size | Included when the bag is measured |
| Soft vs hard shell | Either is fine | Soft-sided bags flex to fit tight bins |
How to avoid carry-on fees and gate-checks
- Check your fare type first. The same route can have fares with very different carry-on rules — the cheapest fare may not include an overhead bag.
- Measure your bag at home. Include wheels and handles; a bag that fits the sizer won't be flagged.
- Pay in advance if a carry-on costs extra. On airlines that charge for carry-ons, prepaying online beats the gate price every time.
- Board on time. Late boarders are most likely to have a bag gate-checked when bins fill up.
- Pack a smart personal item. A well-chosen under-seat bag can hold a surprising amount and is almost always free.
What happens if your carry-on is too big?
If your bag doesn't fit the sizer or the overhead bins are full, the gate agent will check it to the hold. On most airlines that's free at the gate, but on carriers that charge for carry-ons it can cost more than pre-paying. The fix is simple: know the size limit, measure before you leave, and confirm your fare's allowance. If you're not sure where your ticket stands, a quick call clears it up.
Need the full picture on checked bags too? See our companion guide to JetBlue baggage fees. And if you haven't booked yet, the best time to book a flight for the cheapest fare can lower your base fare before you ever worry about bags.
Booked but plans might change?
Carry-on rules are only part of a smooth trip. If your schedule could shift, it's worth knowing how to avoid flight change and cancellation fees so a date change doesn't cost more than the bags you saved on.
The fastest way to get JetBlue carry-on rules right is to let a person confirm them for your exact fare. Call +1 (855) 302-0422 and our agents will tell you what you can bring, what costs extra, and book or adjust your trip — available 24/7. We're an independent agency, not JetBlue.