Verifier
CertiWattWh
en

Is the INIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1 allowed on Asiana Airlines flights from Singapore?

Short answer: Allowed. Below is the citation-backed reasoning, the specific conditions if any, and what to do at security.

Last reviewed
May 15, 2026
Ruleset
2026-05-15
Sources checked
4
Source integrity release gate
passed
Verdictvdt_K73JNJSNA3AS2DPH71YJ4ESCWE

Allowed

74.0WhINIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1

Allowed in carry-on. Final decision rests with airline and security staff.

Airline policy applied

Asiana Airlines OZ

Confidence

Airline official

Asiana is tracked from its official April 17, 2026 notice: power banks are prohibited in checked baggage, limited to two units, 100-160 Wh units require airline approval, over-160 Wh units are prohibited, and onboard use/charging plus overhead-bin storage are prohibited.

checked: 2026-06-10effective: 2026-04-20

Key constraints

Quantity
Up to two power banks.
Watt-hour limit
Power banks: plan around the 2026 passenger-facing 100 Wh limit. Generic 100-160 Wh lithium-battery approval language is not shown as a power-bank allowance unless the airline source explicitly says so.
Carry-on
Carry-on only and must remain accessible; do not store in overhead bins.
Checked baggage
Prohibited in checked baggage.
Conditions

Conditions that apply to this verdict.

  • Do not charge using the seat USB port.

  • Maximum 2 power banks per passenger.

  • Carry-on only — never in checked baggage.

  • Power bank must not be stored in the overhead bin. Keep it in your seat pocket, on your person, or under the seat.

Issued2026-06-13 · ruleset 2026-05-15

Sources · 4

  1. RegulatorMOLIT / Korea Policy BriefingKR

    South Korean carriers shall ban overhead-bin storage of portable battery banks effective 1 March 2025.

    m.korea.kr2026-05-15
  2. AirlineAsiana Airlines

    Power banks may not be used or charged onboard and must not be stored in overhead bins.

    flyasiana.com2026-05-15
  3. AirlineAsiana Airlines

    Power banks are limited to 2 units per passenger.

    flyasiana.com2026-05-15
  4. RegulatorIATA passenger guidance

    Power bank: ≤100 Wh carry-on permitted; >100 Wh but ≤160 Wh may be allowed with airline approval; >160 Wh must be carried as cargo.

    iata.org2026-05-15

Provenance audit trail

The rule path, citation freshness, and source-integrity checks behind this exact verdict.

release gate: passed
Verdict ID
vdt_K73JNJSNA3AS2DPH71YJ4ESCWE
Ruleset
2026-05-15
Last ingested
2026-06-07 16:05:24Z
Expires
2026-06-27 08:38:03Z

Applied rules

  • kr.molit.2025-03.no-overhead-bin
    KRstorage_restrictionprecedence 65active
  • oz.policy.2025.no-overhead-bin
    OZstorage_restrictionprecedence 65active
  • oz.policy.2026.max-2-banks
    OZquantity_limitprecedence 65active
  • iata.passenger-guidance.power-bank-threshold.2026
    internationalcapacity_thresholdprecedence 30active

Citation audit

Source integrity

green 26amber 0red 0total 26

Why this verdict

CertiWatt evaluates the product capacity, departure jurisdiction, operating carrier, published dangerous-goods policy, and active recall evidence before returning a verdict.

Decision inputs checked

Capacity evidence
74.0 Wh · 20000 mAh · 3.7 V
derived from nominal voltage
Route jurisdiction
Singapore → South Korea
SG departure overlay checked
Airline policy
Asiana Airlines (OZ)
flyasiana.com/C/US/EN/customer/notice/detail?id=CM202604100002528761
Recall intelligence
No active model-specific recall matched this verdict.
status: not_affected
Citation freshness
4 sources checked
Latest source update: May 15, 2026

Capacity math for this model

Recorded calculation
20,000 mAh × 3.7 V ÷ 1000 = 74.0 Wh
Threshold comparison
This is 26.0 Wh below the ordinary 100 Wh passenger power-bank limit.

Route-specific signals

These page-specific checks make this verdict about this model, this departure country, and this airline, not a generic power-bank answer.

  • INIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1 is recorded at 74.0 Wh and 20000 mAh, so the capacity check is tied to this exact catalog model.
  • Singapore is evaluated as the departure jurisdiction for country-specific power-bank overlays.
  • Asiana Airlines (OZ) is evaluated as the operating carrier, with its published dangerous-goods policy included in the citation set.
  • INIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1 has no active recall link in this catalog record, so the verdict is driven by capacity, route, airline, label, and rule evidence.

Allowed in carry-on. Final decision rests with airline and security staff.

Rules applied
  • kr.molit.2025-03.no-overhead-bin
  • oz.policy.2025.no-overhead-bin
  • oz.policy.2026.max-2-banks
  • iata.passenger-guidance.power-bank-threshold.2026

About the INIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1

Capacity
20000 mAh
Watt-hours
74.0 Wh
Voltage
3.7 V
Certifications

What to prepare before security

  • Keep the power bank in cabin baggage only, never checked baggage.
  • Make sure the Wh or mAh label is readable, or keep the manufacturer specification page available.
  • Use the linked citations below if staff ask why the device was flagged.

About Asiana Airlines

Asiana Airlines (OZ) is a South Korea-based carrier. Their dangerous-goods policy is published at flyasiana.com/C/US/EN/customer/notice/detail?id=CM This carrier adopts the 2026 two-power-bank operating limit.

Verify your specific power bank

The verdict above is for the standard INIU INIU B42 18W 20000mAh Power Bank - ProgressBar1. 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.

All public source records used by CertiWatt are listed in the source registry. Sources.

Common questions for this exact trip

Is this a guarantee at the airport?

No. This is an informational verdict based on published sources. Airline and security staff retain final authority.

Why can the same power bank get different answers by country or airline?

Power-bank rules combine global battery limits with country overlays, airline policies, storage rules, and recall notices.

When should I re-check this route?

Re-check close to departure, especially when the trip involves China, Thailand, Korea, a recalled model, or a battery near a capacity limit.

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