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Turns out, the best option is to just bring your booze home with you in your luggage.
Turns out, the best option is to just bring your booze home with you in your luggage. (Photo: Ed Norton/Getty)

How to Bring Beer and Wine Home from Abroad

Traveling with beer or wine is easy if you follow these steps

Published: 
Turns out, the best option is to just bring your booze home with you in your luggage.
(Photo: Ed Norton/Getty)

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This summer, my wife and I decided to take a trip to Belgium to celebrate our fifth anniversary. As a beer nerd, I’d been dreaming of this trip for years. The country is renowned for its vast variety of styles and a brewing tradition dating back to , and many beer lovers consider a trip there to be a pilgrimage. It was just that—we sampled the wares at such famous breweries as in Bruges and in Brussels.

But beer is better when shared, and I wasn’t going to miss the opportunity to bring home some rare bottles that are impossible to find in the United States to pour for friends. I looked into shipping all of it back home, but that proved to be expensive, and the regulations are complicated and vary depending on .

Turns out the best option is to just bring your booze home in your checked baggage. There are some rules you’ll need to follow, but the hardest part is figuring out how to make sure you don’t end up with a soaked suitcase and a bunch of broken glass. Here’s how to do it.

The Paperwork

While there’s no limit on the amount of alcohol you can bring back for personal consumption, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection suggests keeping it to . If you bring back more than one liter per person, you’ll need to declare it on your customs declaration card. You could also be when going through customs. I didn’t run into any issues and was able to bring home nine bottles of beer.

The Suitcases

(Courtesy Eagle Creek)

Eagle Creek Load Hauler Expandable ($129)

The key to all of this is having the ability to shift around what you packed. The fact that this bag expands was a huge plus. We moved the majority of our clothes and toiletries into for the flight back to make room for the beer in our other suitcase.


(Courtesy Osprey)

Osprey Sojourn 45L ($300)

This was insanely useful. It fits in an overhead bin and has a backpack harness that tucks away, but it also made for the perfect beer hauler. We avoided a checked bag fee by carrying it on for our flight to Europe, and then we filled it full of beer and checked it for the flight home. The hard sides provided extra protection, and the interior load straps helped secure everything so the bottles were packed tightly and wouldn’t shift.


(Courtesy Wine Check)

Wine Check Bag ($72)

While it’s overkill for most people, if you plan on flying often with beer or wine, purpose-built luggage may be worth buying. The is basically a padded rolling suitcase made to fit a standard . (You can pick up a box at many wineries and breweries or .) You’d be hard-pressed to lose a bottle of beer or wine using it.

The Protection

(Courtesy WineSkin)

WineSkin bottle protectors ($9, set of two) 

protect your suds from breaking inside your luggage. They come lined with bubble wrap and have a two-part adhesive seal that should keep your liquids contained in case of a spill. Designed for wine bottles, they’re also the perfect size for the larger-format beer bottles we brought back and can even fit two regular-sized beers.


(Courtesy JetBag)

JetBags ($13, set of three) 

If you’re really concerned about spillage, you should use . These reusable sleeves are lined with a material that protects your booze from impacts and can absorb a whole wine bottle’s worth of liquid and keep it contained.

Lead Photo: Ed Norton/Getty

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