The European Union's 13-year-old fight over carry-on baggage fees reaches a decision point this week. On Monday April 20, 2026, a Conciliation Committee begins meeting to resolve a split between the European Parliament and the European Council on whether to ban airlines from charging for standard carry-on bags. The outcome will determine whether millions of European passengers start traveling without paying extra for a carry-on, and whether US carriers operating into Europe have to change their fee structures.
This is where the regulation actually stands, what the two sides have been negotiating, and what happens if it passes.
The split between Parliament and Council
The European Parliament adopted its position on January 21, 2026. Under Parliament's version, every passenger on a flight would be entitled to two free items: a personal item that fits under the seat, and a standard carry-on up to 100 centimeters total dimensions and 7 kilograms in weight. Airlines could still charge for larger or additional cabin bags, but the basic carry-on would be free across the board, including on ultra-low-cost carriers that currently sell it as a paid add-on.
The European Council's position, adopted in political agreement on June 5, 2025, is narrower. The Council would guarantee only a personal item up to 40 by 30 by 15 centimeters, or essentially something that fits under the seat. Airlines would still be free to charge for anything larger, and airlines would retain the right to gate-check bags when overhead space runs out.
The difference matters commercially. Parliament's version would force ultra-low-cost carriers like Ryanair, Wizz Air, and easyJet to include a real carry-on in their base fare, which fundamentally changes their pricing model. The Council's version would preserve most of the current system, just formalizing the personal item guarantee that most airlines already offer.
Parliament and Council could not agree on which version should prevail. On March 24, 2026, the Council failed to approve Parliament's amendments, with every member state delegation except Portugal voting against them. This triggered the Conciliation Committee process, which starts meeting Monday. If the Conciliation Committee cannot reach a compromise, the proposal falls entirely and the status quo continues.
The legal background
The European carry-on debate is not new. It has been active since 2013, when the European Court of Justice issued the Vueling decision. In that case, the Court held that hand baggage is, in principle, a necessary aspect of airline passenger transportation and cannot be surcharged if it meets reasonable size, weight, and security requirements.
The Vueling decision has been the legal foundation for consumer advocates arguing that ultra-low-cost carriers are already violating EU law by charging for standard carry-on bags. The regulation under debate would codify the Court's finding into formal EU rules, with member states responsible for setting penalties that are "effective, proportionate and dissuasive." National enforcement bodies would handle actual adjudication.
Ultra-low-cost carriers have operated for years in a legal gray zone: arguably in violation of the Vueling precedent, but without a clear regulatory framework that would enforce compliance across the bloc. The regulation under debate would close that gap, at least under the Parliament version.
What this would mean for ultra-low-cost carriers
The commercial model of European ultra-low-cost carriers is built around bag fees, seat selection fees, and other ancillary charges. Ryanair, the largest ULCC in Europe, generated around 40 percent of its total revenue from ancillaries in its most recent financial year. Carry-on bag fees are a substantial component of that total.
If Parliament's version passes, Ryanair, Wizz Air, and easyJet would be forced to include a standard carry-on in the base fare. The airlines would almost certainly respond by raising base fares, since the current fares are priced below operating cost on the assumption that ancillary revenue covers the difference. But the price of a "carry-on included" ticket would still probably be lower than the current "fare plus bag fee" total, because the airlines would be forced to pass through the regulatory change with less margin than they capture on the discretionary fee.
The more interesting question is what happens to the pricing strategy long-term. Ryanair has built its empire on the perception that its base fares are dramatically lower than competitors. If base fares have to rise to include the carry-on, the gap between Ryanair and traditional carriers narrows. The value proposition becomes harder to communicate, and the discount versus legacy carriers compresses.
What this would mean for US carriers
The regulation, under either version, applies to all flights on European airlines regardless of destination, and to all flights departing the EU regardless of airline. Parliament's version extends further to all flights arriving in the EU, even on non-European carriers.
For US carriers, this could mean that flights from the United States to Europe operated by American, Delta, and United would have to comply with European baggage rules. Those carriers already include standard carry-on allowances in their fare structures for full economy and premium fares, but basic economy products on transatlantic flights sometimes do not include a full carry-on. If Parliament's version passes, US carriers would be required to include a carry-on in every transatlantic fare, regardless of the domestic pricing structure on the same aircraft.
The practical effect on US carriers would be smaller than on ULCCs, because their pricing model is less dependent on bag fees. The bigger concern for US carriers is the precedent: if the EU can mandate specific fee structures on non-EU carriers flying into European airports, it sets a pattern that other jurisdictions might follow. Consumer regulators in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom have all watched European aviation policy closely and occasionally adopted similar frameworks.
The timing
If the Conciliation Committee reaches agreement this week, the final text would still need to pass final-vote approval in both the Parliament and the Council, which would typically take another two to three months. After final adoption, the regulation would apply two years after entry into force, on the current Council timetable. That means the earliest effective date would be somewhere in 2028, with passengers probably not seeing changes until summer 2028 or later.
If the Conciliation Committee fails, the proposal falls entirely. EU regulators could restart the process, but the political momentum from 13 years of debate would be substantially diminished, and the ultra-low-cost carriers would win a significant victory by keeping their fee structure intact.
Either outcome is possible. The split between Parliament and Council was not a minor disagreement. It was 26 member states versus 1, on a regulation that Parliament considers a basic consumer right and that Council considers an overreach. Reaching conciliation compromise typically requires one side to give up substantial ground, and neither side has obvious incentive to do so.
The longer pattern
Whatever happens this week, the European debate over carry-on fees is part of a broader pattern of aviation consumer regulation that has intensified over the last decade. The EU261 compensation regime, which mandates cash payments to passengers for long delays and cancellations, has pushed European airlines toward operational practices that US carriers do not face. The Denied Boarding Compensation rules have similarly exceeded US equivalents. The pattern is that European regulators have steadily expanded passenger rights at a faster pace than any other major aviation jurisdiction.
The carry-on debate is the next frontier. If it passes, it signals that ancillary fees themselves, not just compensation obligations, are going to be subject to increasing regulatory scrutiny in Europe. If it fails, it signals that there are limits to how far the regulators can push before the airline industry successfully pushes back.
Either way, Monday's Conciliation Committee meeting is worth watching. What happens there will shape the economics of European short-haul travel for a generation.