Family. Chaos. Adventure. ✨

Family travel guide

Flying with kids. Less panic. More snacks.

Flying with children can feel like launching a tiny circus into the sky. With a bit of planning, the right carry-on setup and realistic expectations, it can be calmer, smoother and occasionally even brilliant.

Before booking

Pick the flight carefully. Future-you will thank you.

The cheapest flight is not always the best flight with kids. Sometimes a slightly better departure time, shorter connection, friendlier airport or sensible arrival time is worth more than saving a few quid and arriving broken.

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Think about timing

Try to match flights with your child’s natural rhythm where possible, but do not build the whole plan around a fantasy nap that may never happen. Early flights can be calmer. Overnight flights can work well for some families and become airborne chaos soup for others.

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Direct is not always perfect

Direct flights reduce airport faff, which is great. But for very long routes, a planned stop can help children reset, move around and eat properly. The best choice depends on your child, flight length, arrival time and how brave you feel before coffee.

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Choose airports wisely

If a layover is unavoidable, check whether the airport has family lanes, play areas, quiet rooms, baby-changing facilities, nursing rooms or decent food options. A good airport can save a bad travel day.

Before travel day

Prepare early. But leave room for madness.

Kids like knowing what is coming. Parents like not discovering missing passports at 5am. A little preparation makes the whole thing less feral.

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Sort the documents

Check passports, visas, insurance, booking references, assistance requests and entry requirements well before departure. Save digital copies offline and keep printed essentials where you can reach them.

  • Passports and visas.
  • Travel insurance details.
  • Medical letters or prescriptions if needed.
  • Accommodation and transfer details.
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Explain the journey

Talk children through the day in simple steps: taxi, check-in, security, waiting, boarding, take-off, snacks, landing, bags, then the next bit. Visual schedules or countdowns can help children who struggle with uncertainty.

  • Use pictures for younger children.
  • Explain noisy or boring parts.
  • Build in reassurance: “We will wait, then move, then wait again.”

The carry-on

Pack the cabin bag like a survival kit. Because it is one.

Your checked luggage can contain clothes and optimism. Your carry-on needs the real stuff: medication, snacks, comfort items, spare clothes, entertainment and anything that would cause full family collapse if lost.

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Comfort items

Bring the familiar things: favourite toy, small blanket, headphones, dummy, sensory item, tablet, books or anything your child genuinely uses to settle. Do not pack the sacred teddy in checked luggage unless you enjoy living dangerously.

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Spare clothes

Pack a spare outfit for each child, and ideally a spare top for the adults too. Spills, accidents, turbulence drinks and mystery airport yoghurt incidents do not respect your dignity.

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Medication and first aid

Keep essential medication in hand luggage, preferably in original packaging with prescriptions or supporting documents where needed. Add simple first-aid basics, but check airline and destination rules for liquids, gels and medicines before you fly.

Food and drink

Snacks are diplomacy. Use them wisely.

Snacks can rescue waiting times, delays, missed meals and the dangerous emotional zone between “I’m fine” and “why is everyone crying near Gate 42?”

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Choose low-mess snacks

Pack familiar, easy-to-handle food such as crackers, fruit pouches, cereal bars, rice cakes, sandwiches or chopped fruit. Avoid anything too sticky, too crumbly, too smelly or likely to create a seat-pocket crime scene.

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Be careful with nuts

Nuts can be restricted or discouraged on some flights because of allergies, and they are not suitable for very young children due to choking risk. Safer familiar alternatives are usually easier.

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Hydration helps

Bring empty refillable bottles through security and fill them before boarding where allowed. Cabin air can feel dry, and hydrated children are generally less gremlin-like. Usually.

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Ear pressure snacks

During take-off and landing, swallowing can help with ear pressure. Depending on age, try a drink, dummy, bottle, breastfeed, pouch, straw cup or chewy snack. Avoid hard sweets or gum for young children because of choking risk.

On the plane

Settle, rotate, survive. Then call it a win.

The best in-flight strategy is rotation. Food, activity, screen, toilet, walk, rest, repeat. Do not reveal all entertainment at once. That is rookie behaviour. Drip-feed it like a snack-based magician.

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Download everything

Download films, shows, games, audiobooks and playlists before leaving home. Do not trust plane Wi-Fi, airport Wi-Fi or the promise that “we’ll stream it later”. That way lies sadness and buffering.

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Mix screen and non-screen options

Colouring, stickers, small puzzles, card games, magnetic boards, fidget toys and books can stretch the flight. Keep activities small, quiet and easy to retrieve from under a seat.

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Speak to the crew kindly

Cabin crew can sometimes help with water, timing, seating questions or practical advice. They are not babysitters and cannot solve everything, but being polite early usually helps if things get bumpy later.

Boarding and seating

Family boarding is useful. But use your brain.

Early boarding gives you time to organise seats, bags and car seats if needed. But it also means children spend longer trapped in the plane before take-off. For some families that is perfect. For others, it is like loading the chaos cannon early.

The calm boarding checklist

A little plan before boarding can stop the aisle shuffle of doom. Decide who carries what, who handles documents, who takes the kids, and where the emergency snacks live.

  • Use family boarding if it helps your child settle or if you need time to install a child seat.
  • Consider sending one adult on early with bags while the other waits with the kids.
  • Keep passports, wipes, water, snacks and headphones accessible, not buried overhead.
  • Put each child’s essentials in a small bag they can recognise.
  • Check child restraint and car seat rules with the airline before travelling.
  • Accept that at least one thing will fall under the seat. This is aviation law now.

Comfort

Dress for airports, cabins and surprise weather. Layers are king.

Airports can be hot, planes can be cold, arrivals can be sweaty, and children can somehow complain about all three within the same twenty minutes.

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Use comfortable layers

Choose soft clothes, easy shoes and layers you can add or remove quickly. Avoid outfits with complicated buttons, scratchy labels or anything that makes toilet trips feel like escape rooms.

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Help sleep happen

Pyjamas, headphones, eye masks, a familiar blanket or a bedtime story can signal sleep, especially on longer flights. It may work beautifully. It may not. Either way, you tried, champion.

When it goes sideways

Stay flexible. Not everything is a disaster.

Delays happen. Tears happen. Snacks run out. Someone refuses to sleep and instead becomes a tiny motivational speaker at 2am. The calmer you stay, the better chance the whole family has of recovering.

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Lower the standard

This is not the day for perfect parenting. This is the day for safe, kind, practical parenting. More screen time than usual? Fine. Weird snack dinner? Fine. Everyone alive and through arrivals? Heroic.

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Use movement breaks

When allowed, short walks to the toilet area can help children reset. Keep it respectful, follow crew instructions, and do not unleash a corridor marathon halfway through drinks service.

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Watch for overwhelm

Noise, queues, lights, hunger and tiredness can all stack up. If your child struggles with sensory overload, build in quieter moments, headphones, familiar activities and fewer last-minute surprises.

Quick accuracy note: airline policies vary for family boarding, bassinets, child seats, pushchairs, liquids, medicines, baby food, batteries and assistance. Always check your airline and airport guidance before flying. This guide is practical family travel advice, not medical or airline-specific advice.

Quick questions

Flying with kids FAQ. The panic-reducing version.

Is it better to board early with children?

Sometimes. Early boarding gives you time to settle, but it also means children sit still for longer. A good trick is for one adult to board early with bags while the other lets the kids move around until later boarding.

What helps children’s ears during take-off and landing?

Swallowing can help. Try drinks, breastfeeding, bottle feeding, dummies, pouches, straw cups or age-appropriate chewy snacks. Avoid gum or hard sweets for younger children because of choking risk.

What should always go in hand luggage?

Passports, medication, medical documents, valuables, chargers, comfort items, spare clothes, nappies if needed, wipes, snacks and anything your child would struggle without if checked bags were delayed.

Are direct flights always best with children?

Not always. Direct flights reduce airport disruption, but on very long journeys a planned layover can help children move, eat and reset. It depends on your child, flight length, arrival time and the quality of the connecting airport.

Family. Chaos. Take-off.

Flying with kids does not need to be perfect to be a success. Pack the right things, leave extra time, expect a wobble or two, and remember: the flight is not the holiday. It is just the bridge to the good bit.

Built from real family travel, airport lessons, snack negotiations and the eternal mystery of where one shoe went.

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