Rideable luggage can transform your airport experience, but using it for the first time can feel uncertain. Where can you actually ride? How does TSA security work? What do you do with the battery?
This guide walks through every stage of your airport journey with rideable luggage, so you know exactly what to expect. And once you are comfortable with the airport, the same approach applies everywhere the trip takes you: hotel corridors, cruise decks, port towns, and city streets.
Before You Leave Home
Charge Your Battery
Fully charge your rideable luggage the night before travel. Most models take 3-4 hours for a full charge. A fully charged Elala battery provides about 6 miles of range, more than enough for even the largest airports. Starting with a full charge ensures you will not run out of power mid-terminal.
Know Your Battery Specs
Memorize your battery's watt-hour rating. TSA agents and gate staff may ask. All Elala models use 96.2 Wh batteries, which is under the 100 Wh limit that requires no special approval. If your battery is between 100-160 Wh, you need airline pre-approval.
Practice Removing the Battery
You will need to remove the battery at security and possibly at the gate. Practice this at home until it takes less than 30 seconds. Know exactly where the release mechanism is and how the battery slides out. Fumbling with an unfamiliar bag while holding up the security line creates unnecessary stress.
Check Your Airline's Policy
Most major airlines allow rideable luggage with removable batteries under 100 Wh. However, United Airlines and Air Canada have complete bans. Verify your specific airline's policy before heading to the airport.
Arriving at the Airport
Curbside and Parking
If someone drops you off at the terminal, you can start riding immediately after unloading your bag. If you parked in the garage, ride from your parking spot to the terminal entrance. This is often the longest walk of your trip and where rideable luggage provides the most value.
Terminal Entry
Most airport terminals allow riding inside, but be courteous. Slow down in crowded areas. Watch for children, elderly travelers, and people who may not hear you approaching. Keep your speed moderate near ticket counters and seating areas.
Check-In
For carry-on travel, simply roll up to the kiosk or counter like normal luggage. Your rideable suitcase functions as a regular carry-on when you are not riding it.
If checking your bag: you must remove the battery before handing it over. The battery goes in your personal item or a small bag that stays with you in the cabin. The suitcase itself checks like normal luggage. Never leave the battery inside a checked bag.
TSA Security Screening
Security is where most first-time users feel uncertain. Here is exactly what to expect:
Step 1: Remove the Battery
Before reaching the conveyor belt, remove your battery from the suitcase. Do this proactively, not when a TSA agent asks. It shows you understand the rules and speeds up the process.
Step 2: Place Battery in a Bin
Put the battery in a bin alongside your laptop, tablet, and other electronics. The battery will go through the X-ray machine separately from your bag. Some TSA agents may want to inspect it visually, which is normal.
Step 3: Send the Suitcase Through
Your rideable suitcase goes through the X-ray machine like any other carry-on. It may get flagged for additional screening because the motor and electronics look unusual on X-ray. This is not a problem. The agent will either swab it for explosives residue or ask to open it.
Step 4: Be Ready to Explain
Not all TSA agents have seen rideable luggage before. They may ask what it is. A simple explanation works: "It's rideable luggage with a removable battery. The battery is under 100 watt-hours, which is allowed in the cabin." Having your battery's spec sticker visible helps.
Step 5: Reassemble After Security
Once through the checkpoint, reinsert your battery. You can now ride to your gate.
Getting to Your Gate
This is where rideable luggage shines. Major hub airports have long distances between security and gates.
Where You Can Ride
- Main terminal corridors
- Connector tunnels between terminals
- Along moving walkways (ride beside them, not on them)
- Near food courts and shopping areas (at reduced speed)
Where to Avoid Riding
- Crowded gate areas
- Inside restaurants and shops
- On moving walkways or escalators
- Near boarding queues
Speed Considerations
Elala models reach up to 11-16 mph depending on the model. This is faster than walking but slow enough to stop quickly. In open corridors, full speed is fine. In populated areas, reduce to walking pace or dismount entirely. Use common sense and courtesy.
International Airport Notes
Some international airports have stricter rules. Tokyo Narita and Singapore Changi have reportedly asked travelers not to ride motorized luggage inside terminals. If staff asks you to stop riding, comply politely. The suitcase still functions as normal rolling luggage.
At the Gate
Waiting for Your Flight
Park your suitcase like any carry-on. Most rideable luggage stands upright on its own. You do not need to remove the battery while waiting unless you want to charge your phone from it.
If Your Carry-On Gets Gate-Checked
This is important. If the flight is full and gate agents need to check carry-on bags, you must remove the battery before handing over your suitcase. The battery cannot go in the cargo hold under any circumstances. Keep it with you in the cabin, either in your personal item or held in your lap if needed.
Boarding
Roll your suitcase onto the plane normally. It goes in the overhead bin like any carry-on. There is no need to remove the battery once on board, though some airlines may ask you to do so. Having the battery accessible makes this easy to accommodate.
Upon Arrival
Deplaning
Retrieve your bag from the overhead bin. Once in the jetway or terminal, you can ride immediately.
Checked Bag Retrieval
If you checked your rideable suitcase, retrieve it from baggage claim and reinstall your battery. The motor and electronics travel fine in the cargo hold. Only the battery needs to stay with you.
Ground Transportation
Ride to rental car shuttles, rideshare pickup zones, or taxi stands. Airport ground transportation areas often involve long outdoor walks, making this another high-value opportunity for your rideable luggage.
The Airport Is Just the Start
Once you land, your rideable luggage keeps working. Most travelers think of it as an airport tool. The ones who get the most out of it use it everywhere the trip takes them.
Hotels and Resorts
Hotel and resort corridors can stretch as long as airport terminals. Ride from the lobby to your room, from your room to the pool, from one end of the resort to the other. The energy you save walking hotel hallways is energy you keep for the experience itself.
Cruise Ships
Cruise ships are enormous. The same instinct you developed at the airport applies on board: ride the long stretches, walk the crowded areas. At port stops, ride through the dock area and into the market or town. You will cover more ground than anyone who walked off the gangway.
City Streets
The Elala Pro handles urban terrain including cobblestones and brick paths thanks to its dual suspension. Use the same approach as the terminal: open stretches at full speed, slow for crowds, walk through tight spaces. The city opens up when distance stops being a reason to turn back.
One Battery, Every Destination
The same battery that gets you through the airport recharges fully in 60 minutes. Plug it in at the hotel while you shower. It is ready before you are. At every destination, the same approach applies: charge the night before, ride what you can, recharge when you stop.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
TSA Agent Unfamiliar with Rideable Luggage
Stay calm and informative. Explain that it is a motorized carry-on with a removable lithium battery under 100 Wh, which is permitted by FAA regulations. Offer to show the battery specs. If needed, ask for a supervisor.
Gate Agent Questions Your Bag
Same approach. Show the removable battery, confirm its watt-hour rating, and reference your airline's smart luggage policy. Having a screenshot of the policy on your phone can help.
Battery Runs Out Mid-Trip
Your rideable suitcase still works as normal rolling luggage. Retract the footrests if applicable and roll it manually. This is why full charging before travel matters.
Asked to Stop Riding
Comply immediately and politely. Airport and hotel staff have authority over their spaces. Step off and roll your bag normally.
Pro Tips from Experienced Users
Arrive Early for Your First Trip
Until you are comfortable with the TSA process, give yourself extra time. After a few trips, the routine becomes second nature.
Keep Documentation Accessible
Store a photo of your battery's spec label on your phone. Bookmark your airline's smart luggage policy page. Having these ready prevents delays if questions arise.
Use a Battery Case
When the battery is out of your suitcase, keep it in a small padded case or sleeve. This protects the terminals from accidental contact with metal objects in your bag, which is both a safety best practice and an FAA recommendation.
Charge at the Gate
Most rideable luggage has a built-in USB-C port on the battery. If you have a long layover, plug your phone directly into the battery rather than hunting for an outlet.
Be an Ambassador
You will get questions from other travelers. Be friendly and informative. Every positive interaction helps normalize rideable luggage and makes future trips easier for everyone.
Summary Checklist
Before travel: Charge fully, practice battery removal, verify airline policy.
At security: Remove battery before the conveyor, place in bin with electronics, be ready to explain.
In terminal: Ride in open corridors, slow down in crowds, dismount for shops and restaurants.
At gate: Remove battery if gate-checked, keep battery in cabin always.
On arrival: Reinstall battery, ride to ground transportation.
At the destination: Same rules apply. Ride the long stretches. Slow for crowds. Charge overnight. Repeat.
With a little practice, traveling with rideable luggage becomes completely routine. The time savings and reduced fatigue make the initial learning curve worthwhile, at the airport and everywhere after it.
New to rideable luggage? Read our buyer's guide to find the right model for your travel style.