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easyJet quietly drops ‘Hands Free’ and its ‘you can’t use the overhead lockers’ cabin bag policy

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There are many contenders for the title of ‘most stupid airline policy ever’, but easyJet’s new baggage policy – which launched this February – was in strong contention for a medal.

The airline banned passengers on standard tickets from bringing on larger bags which would have to go in the overhead locker. This was potentially acceptable if the benefit was sold as an extra, but it wasn’t.

Anyone who turned up at the gate with a large piece of hand baggage had to pay £55 to put it in the hold.

easyJet has also dropped its ‘Hands Free’ service which let you check in your hand baggage and which tended to be cheaper than paying for a seat which allowed a free cabin bag.

Change 1: easyJet will now allow large carry-on bags, if you pay

Under the current easyJet policy, which launched in February 2021, the only passengers allowed to bring larger bags onto the aircraft were those who paid for ‘Up Front’ (ie to sit in the first few rows) or extra legroom seats.

There were also exceptions for easyJet Plus (see our review of easyJet Plus here) and FLEXI fare holders.

This led to the ludicrous situation where the overhead lockers in the front of the aircraft were overflowing with hand baggage because anyone who refused to check in their bag had no choice but to pay for ‘Up Front’.

The overhead lockers in the rear of the aircraft were empty.

What happened if you turned up at the gate with hand baggage?

It was impossible to pay to bring a piece of hand baggage on board if it wouldn’t fit under your seat (45cm x 36cm x 20cm).

If you turned up at the gate with a bag which could not fit under the seat in front, you were charged £55 to place it in the hold.

Don’t believe me? Here is what easyJet published at the time:

easyJet quietly abandons its ludicrous 'hands free' cabin bag policy

Passengers who would have willingly (well, perhaps not willingly) paid an extra few £ for the ‘privilege’ of putting a bag in the overhead locker could not do so. They had to buy the full ‘Up Front’ package.

You weren’t necessarily able to buy ‘Up Front’ if you wanted to

‘Up Front’ seats were capped at between 42 and 63 per flight.

This meant that, even if you were willing to book an ‘Up Front’ seat in order to bring hand baggage into the cabin, you may not have been able to do so.

Once the ‘Up Front’ and extra legroom allocation was gone, that was it. No additional passengers would be allowed to bring larger pieces of hand baggage onto the aircraft, even if willing to pay.

You can now pay to take larger pieces of hand baggage on board

With, unsurprisingly, zero publicity, easyJet has scrapped this idea.

The new easyJet hand baggage policy is outlined here.

You can still buy ‘Up Front’ and extra leg room seats, which will include the ability to bring a larger bag on board for free.

For everyone else, you can now add a large piece of cabin baggage by paying for it during booking or later via the easyJet app. You cannot add a cabin bag via the website yet.

Prices allegedly start at £5.99 each way. That said, comments below suggest that the actual cost is £15+ each way, albeit that £15+ is still cheaper than the typical £30+ cost of ‘Up Front’.

Change 2: easyJet has dropped ‘Hands Free’

I never saw the point of ‘Hands Free’, but some readers did find it useful. easyJet would let you check in your hand baggage for £7 and give you free priority boarding on top. You could book a ‘family bundle’ which reduced the cost to as little as £2.67 per bag. ‘Pay monthly’ customers on the ‘3’ mobile network got the service for nothing at one point as part of a tie-up with the airline.

‘Hands Free’ was initially available on a walk-up basis at the airport, but was later changed to require pre-booking.

British Airways Globe-Trotter BOAC suitcase

It was sold to passengers on the basis that they could experience the freedom of walking around the airport without a bag in their hands, or on their shoulders. The real benefit was that it was cheaper than booking an ‘Up Front’ or emergency exit row seat (a requirement to bring a bag into the cabin) and also cheaper than paying to check in a large suitcase.

‘Hands Free’ worked best for people who had small 55cm suitcases (the largest size allowed for ‘Hands Free’) which did not contain laptops and who were happy to queue at a bag drop on departure and wait at baggage reclaim after landing. It was also useful if you were carrying liquids.

It didn’t work well if you had a soft cabin bag (the risk of damage from checking it in was too high), if you were carrying IT equipment which was too fragile to check-in or if you were looking to minimise the time spent hanging around at the airport.

‘Hands Free’ has now gone as this page of the easyJet website confirms.

Conclusion

Banning passengers from bringing larger items of hand baggage on board, even if they were willing to pay to do so, was a strategic mistake. It opened up clear water between British Airways and easyJet.

My wife, for example, is not allowed to check in her work laptop. It must stay with her at all times. If she wanted to take an easyJet flight and there were no ‘Up Front’ or extra leg room seats available, she couldn’t book it. There was no other way of being allowed to bring the bag onto the aircraft, plus a handbag, since her employer would not pay the premium for a flexible ticket.

At the same time as easyJet was stopping you bringing larger items of hand baggage, British Airways was reintroducing free water and light snacks on short-haul flights, along with the launch of the Tom Kerridge pre-order food menu.

By removing the ability to pay to put a bag in the overhead bins, easyJet also put itself behind low cost rivals Ryanair and Wizz Air. It’s hard to understand how easyJet ever allowed this policy to come to market in the first place.

Comments (149)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • BJ says:

    I was looking at JetBlue yesterday for a flight from SFO-LAX. If I understood it their Blue Basic fare also excludes cabin bags while the other two fare classes include them. Interestingly, I thought, both their two higher fare classes allow cancellation for a voucher but to get cancellation refund to the payment card you have to pay about £26pp extra at the time of booking. Total fares for Blue and Blue Extra or whatever it was called worked out at about £146 and £176 respectively for two pax. Compares with 15,000 avios plus £8.20. So while I dislike this EasyJet policy and welcome it’s removal I guess there is a market for unbundled flying but it has to be done right. This EasyJet approach and the Finnair Business Lite fares are clear examples of it done wrong.

    • Lyn says:

      BJ, have you also looked at Alaska Airlines from SFO to LAX? I wonder how it compares.

    • Lady London says:

      JetBlue fares are excellent. I have noticed trying to get fares that weren’t a ripoff on BA for my trip to US, that on the days JetBlue fly BA’s fares are reasonable. JetBlue is the only threat on the chart. (I’m using Ita.)

      On they days where there is no JetBlue on the route I need, however, BA’s fares and AA’s are anything from £300 more upwards of their fares on the days JetBlue is doing my Transatlantic leg. The fares involving JetBlue are still a little high for November. But miraculously the fares quoted by all the members of the Transatlantic Alliance are all the same. BA and AA basically mirror each other within a range of £5 to £30. There is simply no competition.

      I have given up on my USA trip and will wait till there’s some real competition.

  • Js says:

    Will miss hands free, it used to take them many years to close loopholes, also you could only book handsfree 30 days before your flight, I have a couple of bookings which I could not buy hands free for yet!
    Any other ways?

    • TimM says:

      I note that at the very bottom of the EJ page linked to in the article that the Hands Free option has been withdrawn to “simplify the baggage options available”.

      So the actual news content of the article is that easyJet have withdrawn the £7 hands-free option in favour of a £5.99 take on-board option for larger cabin bags. Not as sexy is it?

      • Steve says:

        Just got quoted 28.88 for a larger hold bag…

      • Yorkieflyer says:

        Not £5.99 on any of my booked flights! A huge price hike from hands free for all of my future bookings £17.99 upwards

        • Teresa Ellis says:

          Not £5.99 on my booked flight either. It is £19.99 on the outward and £21.49 on the inward leg whereas hands free used to cost £7. Just brought in as additional revenue for them. Ryanair are much cheaper now for cabin bags in the aircraft.

      • Lady London says:

        Yeah, Easyjet have simplified indeed. Summary: they want you to pay for your seat over again, only this time they’re calling it luggage.

  • Travel Strong says:

    Flew easyjet last night and had a middle of the plane exit seat (row 12). Only 2 others were booked in these rows, so due to this odd policy we had dozens of the overhead bins to ourselves.

    But my return flight has no extra/upfront seats available and money could not buy the ability to take my case on board! … until today.

    A very necessary and timely change.

  • NC says:

    I for one will miss this. £7 each way for a large-ish holdall checked in was a bargain! Especially as normal checked in bag prices are well over £30 each way. This was my trick to check in a bag with EZY without paying the normal price. As a bonus you could use the EZY Plus desks and cut the queue and then board first with speedy boarding for good measure. Such a shame it’s ending.

  • Zara says:

    If we have an existing booking how can we buy cabin bags? It doesn’t seem to allow it on my booking for December abs says unless selecting £27pp seats I can only take the small cabin bag in.

    • TimM says:

      easyJet say you must use their app to add larger cabin bags – their website does not yet have the option.

  • Sammyj says:

    We used the hands-free option when it was free outbound-only with Three, to take a couple of bottles of wine to Iceland, saved a fortune on prices there! Shame it’s gone in that form, as it was handy.

  • Zara says:

    I used to love hands free. For up to 6 people we would put all of our large cabin bags into the hold for £15. It was a great way to save on hold luggage and made travelling with toddlers and babies easier. I will miss it!

  • Robin says:

    Only via the App, or changes via the call centres. Not online?
    This easyJet farce continues.
    Have pity on corporate travel agents who have to navigate this minefield. I spent hours navigating this minefield yesterday all for a poxy policy

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