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Does airport security check cigarettes?

The TSA isn't looking for cigarettes, they're looking for weapons and explosives. They don't know or care how old you are or whether you smoke, and traveling with a few packs of cigarettes is not illegal.



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Yes. The scanners can detect cigarettes. Since most scanners have modern X-ray imaging technology, they can easily identify cigarettes in your luggage. But you needn't have to hide cigarettes inside your luggage as TSA permits you to bring cigarettes in the luggage.

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The airport security agent on duty will be called for assistance. Also a police officer will be involved quickly if needed (From the police station at the airport). They will physically stop you from smoking. And you will be arrested, the rest is history.

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As such, it can be transported on all American-based airlines without risk of confiscation or punishment, according to the TSA. In fact, you can bring standard cigarettes and loose tobacco in your pockets, carry-on, or even your checked luggage.

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In the US, TSA doesn't care about cigarettes as they are no hazard to aircraft operation. So there is no need to hide them. You can carry one book of safety matches or 1 lighter on your person, or in your carry on bags. Matches and lighters are prohibited in checked luggage in general.

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Before the ban, lighting and smoking a cigarette on a plane was akin to ordering a drink and all part of the air travel experience. When the smoking ban became law, it was seen as a critical step in helping to improve public health by limiting people's exposure to secondhand smoke.

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According to the CAA, you can only bring one small cigarette lighter on a plane. The condition is that your lighter needs to use absorbable liquid fuel. Some common examples would be propane, butane, or natural gas. One exception that is permitted would be liquefied gas.

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Returning resident travelers may import tobacco products only in quantities not exceeding the amounts specified in the personal exemptions for which the traveler qualifies (not more than 200 cigarettes and 100 cigars if arriving from other than a beneficiary country and insular possession).

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If you bring more than that, you'll have to pay duty on them, even if you haven't gone over your total exemption. (You may also have to pay state or local taxes on tobacco products) [source: U.S. Customs and Border Protection].

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Flip the pack upside down so the tobacco will pack down towards the filter. Hold it in your dominant hand so you will be able to hit it against something with force. This will also allow you to use your non-dominant hand as a flat surface to pack the pack against if you want to.

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A standard X-ray machine sees through clothes and skin, but not metal. As a result, airport scanners cannot see through gold, platinum, tungsten, and other metals. Scanners also cannot see objects in body cavities or ones wrapped in aluminum foil. Other items that evade detection by scanners include lead and crystals.

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According to the FAA, 696 people have been cited for smoking on board planes over the last five years. It falls to flight attendants to report it, people like Gailen David who's been with American Airlines for over 20 years.

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Nicotine inhalers are one of the best nicotine replacement for a long flight. They have the added benefit of being handheld and inhaled, like a cigarette, which is an action many smokers miss when trying to quit smoking.

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