Allowed
Allowed in carry-on. Final decision rests with airline and security staff.
Carry-on only — never in checked baggage.
Short answer: Allowed. Below is the citation-backed reasoning, the specific conditions if any, and what to do at security.
Allowed in carry-on. Final decision rests with airline and security staff.
Carry-on only — never in checked baggage.
“Power bank: ≤100 Wh carry-on permitted; >100 Wh but ≤160 Wh forbidden; >160 Wh must be carried as cargo.”
The rule path, citation freshness, and source-integrity checks behind this exact verdict.
CertiWatt evaluates the product capacity, departure jurisdiction, operating carrier, published dangerous-goods policy, and active recall evidence before returning a verdict.
These page-specific checks make this verdict about this model, this departure country, and this airline, not a generic power-bank answer.
Allowed in carry-on. Final decision rests with airline and security staff.
Lufthansa (LH) is a European Union-based carrier. Their dangerous-goods policy is published at www.lufthansa.com/us/en/dangerous-goods…
The verdict above is for the standard Anker 747 Power Bank (PowerCore 26K for Laptop). If your unit has a different serial number range — especially for recalled models — verify directly:
Informational only. Final decision rests with airline and security staff. Why we said this.
No. This is an informational verdict based on published sources. Airline and security staff retain final authority.
Power-bank rules combine global battery limits with country overlays, airline policies, storage rules, and recall notices.
Re-check close to departure, especially when the trip involves China, Thailand, Korea, a recalled model, or a battery near a capacity limit.