You've built a supplement routine that works, and you're not leaving it behind for a flight. TSA allows most supplements in both carry-on and checked luggage, with rules based on physical form, not ingredients. Capsules and tablets pass through with no quantity limit, powders over 12 ounces need separate screening, and liquids must fit your quart-sized bag. International travel adds restrictions on certain ingredients. Here's exactly what the rules say.
Superpower tests 100+ biomarkers, including vitamin D, magnesium, and ferritin, so you can see which supplements are actually moving the needle before you decide what to pack.
What TSA Rules Actually Say About Supplements
TSA has no blanket ban on vitamins, minerals, protein powders, or other dietary supplements. You can bring supplements on a plane in both carry-on and checked bags. The agency categorizes supplements by physical form, solid, powder, or liquid, and applies different rules to each.
Solid supplements: tablets, capsules, and gummies
Tablets, capsules, softgels, and gummies are treated as solid items with no quantity limits. A bottle of magnesium glycinate capsules and a jar of collagen gummies both pass through X-ray without issue. TSA agents don't count pills or measure bottle sizes for solid supplements. This is the most hassle-free form to travel with.
Powder supplements and the 12-ounce rule
Powdered supplements fall under TSA's powder policy, implemented in 2018 after concerns about concealing prohibited materials in powder form. For domestic flights, each powder container must be 12 ounces (about 350 milliliters) or less to stay in your carry-on. Anything over that limit must go in checked luggage or be placed in a separate bin at security for additional inspection.
For international last-point-of-departure flights to the U.S., the same 12-ounce threshold applies. Larger powder containers may be prohibited from the cabin entirely if they can't be cleared at screening.
Liquid supplements and the 3-1-1 rule
Liquid supplements follow the standard 3-1-1 carry-on rule: each container must hold 3.4 ounces (100 milliliters) or less, and all containers must fit in one quart-sized clear plastic bag. Most dropper bottles of liquid vitamin D or K2-D3 liquid are one ounce or less and fit easily beside travel toiletries. Larger bottles go in checked luggage.
How to Travel With Supplements in Your Carry-On
Organization matters more than most people expect. Loose pills rattling in a toiletry bag look ambiguous on an X-ray screen and invite closer inspection. Keep supplements in original labeled containers whenever possible, labels identify contents, list ingredients, and speed up any agent questions.
If you're consolidating to save space, transfer a week's supply of capsules or tablets into a clearly marked pill organizer. Keep a photo of the original labels on your phone in case you need to identify a supplement at security or customs.
Packing powders in your carry-on
Creatine, greens powders, and fiber supplements in containers under 12 ounces can stay in your bag during regular screening. If you're bringing a large tub over 12 ounces, check it or pull it out for a separate bin and allow a few extra minutes. Fine powders, like collagen peptides, get closer scrutiny than coarser powders since they can obscure other items on X-ray.
Checked Luggage: The Simpler Option
Checked luggage eliminates all carry-on size restrictions. No powder limits, no liquid rules, you can pack a full-size tub of protein powder, multiple bottle sizes, and large liquid supplements without restriction. For longer trips or bulky supply quantities, this is the right call.
The main risk is damage or a delayed bag. Pack supplements in sealed plastic bags, place bottles toward the center of your suitcase surrounded by clothing, and wrap glass bottles in a towel. For daily essentials like magnesium, keep a few days' supply in your carry-on as backup in case your checked bag is delayed.
What to split between bags
- Carry-on: 3–5 day supply of daily essentials, sleep, digestion, energy support
- Checked: Full supply, large powder tubs, glass or oversized liquid bottles
- Both: Anything you can't easily replace at your destination
Why Supplement Form and Labeling Matter at Security
TSA agents rely on X-ray imaging to flag anything unusual. Clear, labeled bottles are easy to clear quickly. Unlabeled powder bags or loose capsules in unmarked containers look ambiguous on screen and invite secondary screening, even when the contents are completely harmless.
Capsules and tablets show up as recognizable shapes. Powders are more variable: they can obscure other items in the bag, prompting agents to open containers and verify contents visually. Fine powders draw more scrutiny than chunky or coarse ones for exactly this reason.
- Use original labeled bottles whenever possible
- Mark any pill organizers or travel containers with the supplement name
- Keep a photo of original labels on your phone
- Pack powders in factory-sealed containers when you can
- Label similar-looking capsules, zinc and vitamin C capsules are often identical in appearance
International Travel and Supplement Restrictions
TSA rules govern what leaves U.S. airports. Your destination country's customs regulations determine what you can bring in. Most countries allow personal-use quantities of common vitamins and minerals. But specific ingredients can be restricted, controlled, or banned depending on where you're going.
Supplements that may be restricted abroad
Several widely available U.S. supplements face restrictions or prescription requirements in other countries:
- DHEA: Over the counter in the U.S., a controlled substance in Canada and several European countries
- Melatonin: Tightly regulated in the UK and EU; requires a prescription in some countries
- Herbal supplements: Some countries require phytosanitary certificates for botanicals like ashwagandha and berberine
- Hormone-support supplements: Pregnenolone and similar steroid hormone precursors vary in legal status internationally
- High-dose amino acids: Certain formulations may be flagged as pharmaceutical-adjacent in some jurisdictions
Bring only what you'll use during your trip, a personal-use quantity is typically a few weeks' supply at most. If a supplement contains an ingredient that could be mistaken for a controlled substance, carry a brief letter from your healthcare provider explaining why you take it.
Which Supplements Are Actually Worth Packing
Not everything in your stack is worth hauling through security on a short trip. Start with supplements that affect how you feel within 24 to 48 hours of missing a dose, sleep support, digestive enzymes, and energy-related nutrients are the non-negotiables for most people.
Supplements with longer action windows can typically tolerate a few missed days without noticeable effect. For a weekend domestic trip, most fat-soluble vitamins and minerals won't require packing.
When consistency matters most
If you're managing a specific health goal, skipping your routine during travel may have noticeable effects on your progress. Someone using berberine for blood sugar support or ashwagandha for cortisol and stress support, a double-blind RCT in Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine (64 adults) found ashwagandha root extract significantly reduced serum cortisol vs. placebo, though direct evidence for jet-lag-specific cortisol disruption is limited, won't want to break their regimen. Specialty formulations are also hard to replace abroad, quality and dosing vary significantly by country.
Know Your Numbers Before You Travel
Travel disrupts sleep, stress hormones, and your body's baseline rhythms. Knowing your biomarker levels before you leave gives you a reference point for how well your body handles that disruption, and whether your supplements are actually doing their job.
Checking your vitamin D level before a long trip establishes a baseline; retesting after you return shows whether travel affected your levels. Monitoring cortisol alongside sleep support markers shows whether your routine is helping keep your cortisol levels stable. For metabolic support supplements like berberine, checking fasting glucose after you return shows whether your levels held steady during travel. HbA1c reflects a ~3-month blood glucose average, so it's more useful for tracking consistency across multiple trips than for gauging the impact of a single journey.
Frequent travelers can use biomarker data to identify which supplements are genuinely non-negotiable. If your ferritin stays stable even when you miss a few days of iron supplementation, that's your signal it's not critical to pack. Data replaces guesswork when you're deciding what to bring on a plane.
What TSA Rules Actually Say About Supplements
TSA has no blanket ban on vitamins, minerals, protein powders, or other dietary supplements. You can bring supplements on a plane in both carry-on and checked bags. The agency categorizes supplements by physical form, solid, powder, or liquid, and applies different rules to each.
Solid supplements: tablets, capsules, and gummies
Tablets, capsules, softgels, and gummies are treated as solid items with no quantity limits. A bottle of magnesium glycinate capsules and a jar of collagen gummies both pass through X-ray without issue. TSA agents don't count pills or measure bottle sizes for solid supplements. This is the most hassle-free form to travel with.
Powder supplements and the 12-ounce rule
Powdered supplements fall under TSA's powder policy, implemented in 2018 after concerns about concealing prohibited materials in powder form. For domestic flights, each powder container must be 12 ounces (about 350 milliliters) or less to stay in your carry-on. Anything over that limit must go in checked luggage or be placed in a separate bin at security for additional inspection.
For international last-point-of-departure flights to the U.S., the same 12-ounce threshold applies. Larger powder containers may be prohibited from the cabin entirely if they can't be cleared at screening.
Liquid supplements and the 3-1-1 rule
Liquid supplements follow the standard 3-1-1 carry-on rule: each container must hold 3.4 ounces (100 milliliters) or less, and all containers must fit in one quart-sized clear plastic bag. Most dropper bottles of liquid vitamin D or K2-D3 liquid are one ounce or less and fit easily beside travel toiletries. Larger bottles go in checked luggage.
How to Travel With Supplements in Your Carry-On
Organization matters more than most people expect. Loose pills rattling in a toiletry bag look ambiguous on an X-ray screen and invite closer inspection. Keep supplements in original labeled containers whenever possible, labels identify contents, list ingredients, and speed up any agent questions.
If you're consolidating to save space, transfer a week's supply of capsules or tablets into a clearly marked pill organizer. Keep a photo of the original labels on your phone in case you need to identify a supplement at security or customs.
Packing powders in your carry-on
Creatine, greens powders, and fiber supplements in containers under 12 ounces can stay in your bag during regular screening. If you're bringing a large tub over 12 ounces, check it or pull it out for a separate bin and allow a few extra minutes. Fine powders, like collagen peptides, get closer scrutiny than coarser powders since they can obscure other items on X-ray.
Checked Luggage: The Simpler Option
Checked luggage eliminates all carry-on size restrictions. No powder limits, no liquid rules, you can pack a full-size tub of protein powder, multiple bottle sizes, and large liquid supplements without restriction. For longer trips or bulky supply quantities, this is the right call.
The main risk is damage or a delayed bag. Pack supplements in sealed plastic bags, place bottles toward the center of your suitcase surrounded by clothing, and wrap glass bottles in a towel. For daily essentials like magnesium, keep a few days' supply in your carry-on as backup in case your checked bag is delayed.
What to split between bags
- Carry-on: 3–5 day supply of daily essentials, sleep, digestion, energy support
- Checked: Full supply, large powder tubs, glass or oversized liquid bottles
- Both: Anything you can't easily replace at your destination
Why Supplement Form and Labeling Matter at Security
TSA agents rely on X-ray imaging to flag anything unusual. Clear, labeled bottles are easy to clear quickly. Unlabeled powder bags or loose capsules in unmarked containers look ambiguous on screen and invite secondary screening, even when the contents are completely harmless.
Capsules and tablets show up as recognizable shapes. Powders are more variable: they can obscure other items in the bag, prompting agents to open containers and verify contents visually. Fine powders draw more scrutiny than chunky or coarse ones for exactly this reason.
- Use original labeled bottles whenever possible
- Mark any pill organizers or travel containers with the supplement name
- Keep a photo of original labels on your phone
- Pack powders in factory-sealed containers when you can
- Label similar-looking capsules, zinc and vitamin C capsules are often identical in appearance
International Travel and Supplement Restrictions
TSA rules govern what leaves U.S. airports. Your destination country's customs regulations determine what you can bring in. Most countries allow personal-use quantities of common vitamins and minerals. But specific ingredients can be restricted, controlled, or banned depending on where you're going.
Supplements that may be restricted abroad
Several widely available U.S. supplements face restrictions or prescription requirements in other countries:
- DHEA: Over the counter in the U.S., a controlled substance in Canada and several European countries
- Melatonin: Tightly regulated in the UK and EU; requires a prescription in some countries
- Herbal supplements: Some countries require phytosanitary certificates for botanicals like ashwagandha and berberine
- Hormone-support supplements: Pregnenolone and similar steroid hormone precursors vary in legal status internationally
- High-dose amino acids: Certain formulations may be flagged as pharmaceutical-adjacent in some jurisdictions
Bring only what you'll use during your trip, a personal-use quantity is typically a few weeks' supply at most. If a supplement contains an ingredient that could be mistaken for a controlled substance, carry a brief letter from your healthcare provider explaining why you take it.
Which Supplements Are Actually Worth Packing
Not everything in your stack is worth hauling through security on a short trip. Start with supplements that affect how you feel within 24 to 48 hours of missing a dose, sleep support, digestive enzymes, and energy-related nutrients are the non-negotiables for most people.
Supplements with longer action windows can typically tolerate a few missed days without noticeable effect. For a weekend domestic trip, most fat-soluble vitamins and minerals won't require packing.
When consistency matters most
If you're managing a specific health goal, skipping your routine during travel may have noticeable effects on your progress. Someone using berberine for blood sugar support or ashwagandha for cortisol and stress support, a double-blind RCT in Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine (64 adults) found ashwagandha root extract significantly reduced serum cortisol vs. placebo, though direct evidence for jet-lag-specific cortisol disruption is limited, won't want to break their regimen. Specialty formulations are also hard to replace abroad, quality and dosing vary significantly by country.
Know Your Numbers Before You Travel
Travel disrupts sleep, stress hormones, and your body's baseline rhythms. Knowing your biomarker levels before you leave gives you a reference point for how well your body handles that disruption, and whether your supplements are actually doing their job.
Checking your vitamin D level before a long trip establishes a baseline; retesting after you return shows whether travel affected your levels. Monitoring cortisol alongside sleep support markers shows whether your routine is helping keep your cortisol levels stable. For metabolic support supplements like berberine, checking fasting glucose after you return shows whether your levels held steady during travel. HbA1c reflects a ~3-month blood glucose average, so it's more useful for tracking consistency across multiple trips than for gauging the impact of a single journey.
Frequent travelers can use biomarker data to identify which supplements are genuinely non-negotiable. If your ferritin stays stable even when you miss a few days of iron supplementation, that's your signal it's not critical to pack. Data replaces guesswork when you're deciding what to bring on a plane.


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