If the airline can't find the owner of the unclaimed baggage, it will usually stay at the lost property department for about five days. After that, it's sent to a warehouse, where it's kept for another 60 days in case the owner shows up.
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Luggage storage at the airportMost airports offer temporary luggage storage, so if you have a longer layover and you'd like to explore the city, you can take advantage of this service. This way, you won't have to lug around all your things while you're out and about.
Airlines are required to compensate passengers for reasonable, verifiable, and actual incidental expenses that they may incur while their bags are delayed - subject to the maximum liability limits.
Now the most complained-about airlines for luggage problems have been revealed in research from financial comparison firm Forbes Advisor. Ryanair passengers have made the most complaints about luggage being lost, stolen or damaged, research shows - with British Airways and EasyJet in second and third place.
The leading cause of lost luggage is the mishandling of the bags between flights or from the sorting office to your airplane. Depending on the airport you fly out of, the actual sorting of luggage is done by a robot or workers.
In general, most luggage will end up being found, so they get classified as “delayed” and not “lost.” But in that immediate time when you're without your belongings, there should be some level of compensation, depending on the exact nature of your situation.
According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, you are entitled to compensation for reasonable incidental expenses you incur because of your delayed baggage, up to the maximum liability limits, set by statute. For U.S. domestic flights, this is $3,800 per passenger.
TSA makes every effort to reunite passengers with items left behind at the airport checkpoint. Lost and found items retained by TSA for a minimum of thirty (30) days, and if not claimed, are either destroyed, turned over to a state agency for surplus property, or sold by TSA as excess property.