How to pack and ship a bike safely for travel
A practical, step-by-step guide to boxing or casing your bicycle for flights or carrier shipping—plus materials checklists, protection tips for disc brakes and derailleurs, and what to know about batteries, CO₂, and size
- Quick comparison: flying with your bike vs shipping it ahead
- Choose your container (cardboard bike box, hard case, or soft bag)
- Step 3: Gather tools and packing materials
- Step 4: Prep the bike (clean it, document it, measure it)
- Step 5: How to pack a bike safely in a box or case
- Get high-risk bike parts ready (and protect them)
- Flying with a bike: what to double check before you head to the airport
- What NOT to take for inflating roadside fixes on flights: CO₂ cartridges
- Shipping a bike with a carrier (FedEx/UPS-style shipping): how to reduce damage and avoid claim headaches
- How to stress-test make sure you packed “well enough”
- E-bikes, batteries, and other travel gotchas
- Arriving and reassembling: a fast low-mistake checklist
- Common mistakes that cause bike damage in travel
- Two quick checklists: one for flights, one for shipping
- FAQ
Packing a bike is mostly about three things: preventing bending forces on the frame/fork/dropouts, preventing “point impacts” (rotor, derailleur, axles), and abrasion, and immobilizing everything so the bike can’t act like a battering ram inside the box. We walk you through a repeatable method appropriate whether you’re flying with your bike or shipping it ahead.
TL;DR – Decide on your transport method first (fly with bike, ship to hotel/shop, or use a bike-travel service). That determines your box / case and your timeline.
- Pedals out. Remove wheels, seatpost, and usually handlebars. Protect disc brakes with pad spacers and consider removing rotors.
- Immobilize everything on the bike so nothing slips about; add dropout / axle protection and derailleur protection.
- Get lots of photos before you seal and tape it up, and put a spare label / contact sheet inside so it is useful for claims and if misrouted. (bikeflights.com)
- For flights: most airlines require you have a “durable bike container,” and enforce a 115 linear inch max acceptance on some carriers. (delta.com)
- Don’t fly with CO₂ cartridges for bike inflation, TSA prohibits them unless clearly empty, and internal pressure can confuse the issue. Pick the safest (and least stressful) way to transport your bike
There’s no single “best” option—your best choice depends on trip length, how many connections you have, whether you’ll need tools on arrival, and how risk-tolerant you are about baggage handling.
| Option | Good for | Tradeoffs | My safety tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Check the bike on your flight (box or case) | Direct flights; you want the bike immediately on arrival | Airport handling, oversize check-in lines, missed-connection risk | Use a hard case if you can; if boxing, add internal bracing and immobilize everything |
| Ship to a hotel, friend, bike shop, or event | Trips with many connections; you want less airport hassle | You must plan ahead (transit time + delays), need a receiving plan | Ship to a bike shop when possible so they can receive/inspect and store the box |
| Ship case/box as luggage (door-to-door luggage shipping) | You don’t want to carry a big box through airports | Cost can be higher; still needs great packing | Choose signature/hold-for-pickup options to avoid porch theft |
Choose your container (cardboard bike box, hard case, or soft bag)
Your container choice affects both damage risk and how much disassembly you’ll need. Some airlines require that bikes be packed in a durable protective container intended for bicycles, and may distinguish between hard-sided protection and other forms of packing. (delta.com)
| Container | Pros | Cons | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardboard bike box (shop box or specialty box) | Cheap, easy to replace, often lighter than a hard case | Less crush resistance; can get soggy/torn; needs smart internal bracing | One-off trips, shipping to an event, budget travel |
| Hard-sided bike case | Best impact/crush protection; reusable; often rolls | Costly; can be heavy; storage at destination can be annoying | Frequent flyers, high-value bikes, trips with multiple connections |
| Soft bike bag | Lightweight; easier storage; sometimes fits smaller cars/hotel rooms | Less impact protection; may require liability waivers depending on airline | Minimal-connection trips, experienced packers, lighter bikes |
Step 3: Gather tools and packing materials (don’t improvise at the last minute)
The following is a handy list of things to have on hand, so you aren’t scrambling to find them at the last minute:
- Bike tools: hex keys/Allen keys, Torx keys (common for rotors), pedal wrench (if needed)
- Protection: foam tubing/pipe insulation, bubble wrap, microfiber rags, cardboard sheets
- Immobilization: zip ties/Velcro straps, axle spacers/dropout protectors (or DIY from thick cardboard), disc brake pad spacers
- Small-parts organization: labeled zip-top bags, a small parts box/pouch, painter’s tape + marker
- Sealing: strong packing tape (2″ wide is a common recommendation), scissors/knife
- Optional but smart: a mini torque key for reassembly, spare derailleur hanger, spare brake pads
If you want a proven packing checklist, BikeFlights’ packing guide is a good model because it explicitly calls out disc brake spacers, axle/end caps, and the “shake test” before sealing. (bikeflights.com)
Step 4: Prep the bike (clean it, document it, measure it)
- Clean the bike enough that cracks/damage are visible. (A quick wipe-down is fine; you’re not detailing.)
- Photograph the bike from all angles, including any existing scratches. Also photograph serial number and any high-value components.
- Record key setup numbers: saddle height, bar angle, stem spacers order, and tire pressure you like to run.
- Measure your packed box/case and weigh it. Airlines often refuse items over certain size/ weight thresholds, and carriers price based on dimensions/weight.
Step 5 (core): How to pack a bike safely in a box or case (step-by-step)
This workflow is intentionally conservative. You may be able to remove fewer parts given your case—but these steps are the most repeatable way to prevent common damage.
- Remove accessories: bottles, lights, computer mounts, frame bags, mini pump, tools. Pack these separately so they can’t gouge the frame.
- Remove pedals: put them in a labeled bag. (Remember: the left pedal is reverse-threaded.) (bikeflights.com)
- Remove wheels: insert disc brake pad spacers if you have disc brakes. (bikeflights.com)
- Disc brake best practice: consider removing rotors and packing them flat in cardboard. This reduces the chance of a bent rotor. (bikeflights.com)
- Protect the rear derailleur: Remove the derailleur from the hanger (leave the chain in place), wrap it, and zip-tie it inside the rear triangle. If you don’t remove it, at least pad and build a ‘crush zone’ around it.
- Handlebars: Mark your current position, then remove the bars from the stem and pad/strap them so that the levers face inward toward the frame (as a general rule this reduces impact on the levers). (bikeflights.com)
- Seatpost: Mark saddle height with tape, then remove the seatpost itself, pad it, and be sure to protect the seatpost clamp (bikeflights.com). Also, make sure you plan for scale; seatposts can get surprisingly long when hanging down.
- Dropout/axle protection: Install axle spacers if you can or own dummy axles, and use plastic end caps if you can. You are trying to keep the fork/rear triangle from being squeezed inward.
- Wrap the frame completely: Use foam tubing/pipe insulation on all the tubes, but particularly the most exposed, and add extra padding at the head tube, chainstays, or anywhere the frame will touch the box or wheels.
- Pack wheels: Use wheel bags if you have them; protect only the cassette/freehub side so that it can’t chew into the frame or box.
- Load the box/case: Position the wrapped frame in first with wheels on top. I like to put the wheels in with a piece of cardboard pulled against the frame to create distance between the frame and wheels, thus helping to avoid abrasion points. (fedex.com). Going in wooden crates? I suggest adding that cardboard here as well for the same reason.
- Secure everything: Zip-tie or strap any of the looser parts inside so that nothing can shift. I like to put all of the smaller parts or parts that aren’t getting back on the bike into a container (also bagged-up) and insulate/secure that container inside of the bike’s rear triangle. It’s a common and pretty safe/quiet location. (fedex.com).
- Do the shake test!: Gently shake the sealed (but not taped shut) box or case and listen for things rattling around, etc. If they do, open up and immobilize them. (bikeflights.com) Seal it up: tape all seams; consider using ‘H taping’ style for shipping cartons (tape across center seam and both edge seams). (fedex.com)
- Label smartly: take off any old labels; put a second label/contact sheet inside box in case outside label gets messed up. (bikeflights.com)
- Take photos: one of packed interior before it’s closed, and several of sealed exterior (with labels). (bikeflights.com)
Get high-risk bike parts ready (and protect them)
- Rear derailleur + hanger: the #1 potential damage point. Remove if possible or heavily pad and don’t let it end up being the outermost part of the packed shape.
- Disc brake rotors: Bend easily. Remove and/or protect with rigid material (cardboard?) on both sides; don’t let them touch the frame.
- Fork/rear dropouts: They’re easily crushed (if the whole box is squeezed). Use spacers (or dummy axles); don’t leave the fork as an ‘open ended U shape’ without bracing.
- Chainring teeth: Cardboard can be sliced, then hit. (Add cardboard ‘armor’ around big chainrings.)
- Brake/shift levers: Move/rotate the other handlebars so the levers are inward-facing and padded; NOT away towards the box-side wall.
Flying with a bike: what to double check before you head to the airport
At the risk of redundancy, here’s a checklist for the kinds of bike boxes or cases you might be considering for flying—but check four things on your airline’s site for your exact itinerary before you commit to one:
- maximum linear inches accepted
- maximum weight
- whether a bike is considered a regular checked bag (vs special item)
- whether specific partners, aircraft, etc, have additional restrictions.
Examples (always double-check for your route): Delta, no items over 115 linear inches accepted, bicycles over 50 lb may incur excess weight fees. (delta.com)
American Airlines’ sports equipment page has a 115 in / 292 cm maximum size for special items and various packing-for-flight requirements (must use a case/bag/box built for bikes, handlebars must be fixed sideways and pedals must be removed or protected). (aa.com)
- Check in even earlier than you normally would. Attending to oversize drop-off may be a different line or counter altogether.
- Consider bringing a roll of tape and a few extra zip ties in your carry-on—they’re often lifesavers if your box has been inspected and poorly reclosed.
- If using a soft bag, be prepared that the airline may choose to treat it as a fragile item, and establish limitations on responsibility accordingly (up to the person at check-in). None of the four major airlines mention requirements for soft bags at the risk of severe penalties.
What NOT to take for inflating roadside fixes on flights: CO₂ cartridges
Ditto! (The above!) If you happen to ride with CO₂ normally. Even in your checked bag. T.S.A. “What can I bring?” guidance indicates “not allowed” for both CO₂ cartridges and small compressed gas cartridges (with limited exceptions like medical oxygen, and only allowing empties if cilindes’ emptiness may be visually verifiable). (tsa.gov)
Shipping a bike with a carrier (FedEx/UPS-style shipping): how to reduce damage and avoid claim headaches
Carrier shipping is often safer than air baggage handling, provided that (a) your bike is well-immobilized, and (b) your box is sized correctly and reinforced. FedEx’s bike shipping guidance touches on many of the best practices: disassemble as needed to fit, wrap the frame frame, insulate (barrier) your wheel from the frame, shake-test and listen for movement, and tape your seams. fedex.com
- Choose your destination well: a staffed front desk or (better) a bike shop for pickup is best. Don’t leave a bike box on someone’s porch.
- Choose a service level with tracking that updates frequently. If your bike has considerable value, signature required or hold-at-location service may be worth considering.
- Insure: declare a value and be sure you can document it with receipts/photos. (Read your carrier’s limits/exclusions too so you’re not surprised later.)
- Add in redundancy: add an additional label/contact sheet inside the box (name, phone, email, destination address) bikeflights.com.
- Keep paperwork: get and save a drop-off receipt showing the tracking number and date/time.
How to stress-test make sure you packed “well enough”
- Lift-and-set stress test. Lift one side of the sealed box a few inches and set it back down. Listen for internal movement and note your results. No movement is the goal!
- Corner pressure test. Gently push on any box corner and the side walls. If the box has caved in to the point it can touch the bike itself, consider internal cardboard bracing.
- Rear-derailleur zone check: confirm the rear derailleur (or space where it normally is) is not lightly touching the wall of the box or fragile (e.g. derailleur hanger down tube) of the bike frame design.
E-bikes, batteries, and other travel gotchas (read this before you book)
Conventional wisdom for passenger flights is that lithium batteries and packs/spare power banks must be in carry-on (not checked) and over a fairly low threshold (around 100Wh) may require airline approval, or not be approved entirely depending on size. Both TSA (US) and international freight guidelines rather emphasize (and limit) handling of items with watt-hour ratings above a certain level (widely: up to about 100-160Wh is tossed in, and a blip above 160Wh is probably not going to be allowed on a passenger aircraft, though rules vary with freight), and tsa.gov is a reputable source with links to its own more freely worded material. If you are shipping an e-bike battery separately, remember to treat it as a hazardous materials compliance question and not a “packing” question vis a vis your carrier—these may want you to revert to their documentation, labeling, and overall service regulations with regard to even “provisional” battery shipping, which isn’t necessarily (NYC in this regard) rider-friendly (see for example fedex.com).
Arriving and reassembling: a fast low-mistake checklist.
- Inspect the box/case before you open it. Photograph any punctures, crushed corners, and/or re-taping.
- Unpack small parts then check that nothing’s missing. Axles? Adapters for your thru-axle? Rotor bolts? Your pedals themselves?
- Re-install your seatpost to your tape mark and lightly snug it for now. Final torque later.
- Re-attach handlebars/stem faceplate, align, then properly torque.
- Install wheels: remove pad spacers, verify pads are seated properly then spin wheels to see if there is any rotor rub.
- Re-attach derailleur (if removed). Check hanger alignment if things aren’t shifting properly.
- Check torque on critical bolts/stuff (stem, bar clamp, seatpost clamp, crank/pedals).
- Try to get a quick 5 minute ride in local to your lodgings before going into actual traffic.
Common mistakes that cause: most of the bike damage in travel.
- Not securing your rear derailleur and having it rub against the sidewall of the box (one side impact during transit can bend the hanger).
- No drop out spacers (and thus your fork and/or rear triangle gets squeezed inwards during stacking during transit).
- Unprotected disc rotors (they’ll remain bent and try to rub the whole time, making riding and stopping miserable).
- Small parts not bagged and loose in the bottom of the box (they push through the bottom of your box, or scratch your beautiful, perfect, pristine, not-a-thing-wrong-ever carbon).
- Overstuffing your box where it bulges out (essentially ruining one of its strongest parts and most probably increasing ‘dimensional’ cost of freight with its couriers).
- Failing to remove old stickers/barcodes from previous shipments (which will result in erroneous routing of your product some of the time). (bikeflights.com)
Two quick checklists: one for flights, one for shipping
| If flying (airport checklist) | If shipping (carrier checklist) |
|---|---|
| Verify airline bike rules for your route (size/weight/container/fees) | Choose destination that can receive packages securely (bike shop/front desk) |
| No CO₂ cartridges; use a mini pump | Measure packed box and price options using final dimensions |
| Arrive early for oversize baggage drop | Add internal contact sheet + spare label inside the box |
| Carry tape + zip ties (if your box is opened for inspection) | Choose signature required or hold-at-location for high-value bikes |
| Photograph the packed interior and sealed exterior | Save drop-off receipt and all tracking/insurance details |
FAQ
Do I need to remove the handlebars to ship a bike?
Usually, yes—at least loosen/remove and rotate them so the levers aren’t sticking outward. Many packing guides and carrier instructions include removing handlebars and accessories that increase box size or create protruding points. (fedex.com)
Should I deflate my tires for flying or shipping?
Not necessarily. Some carrier guidance explicitly says not to deflate because tires can provide cushioning for rims. If you’re worried about pressure changes, reduce slightly—but avoid fully deflating your case unless required. (fedex.com)
Can I bring bike CO₂ cartridges on a plane?
Generally, no. TSA lists CO₂ cartridges / small compressed gas cartridges as prohibited in carry-on and checked bags, except for a narrow range of exceptions (and even more exclusions for non-travel). Plan to use a mini pump or purchase some once you reach your destination. (tsa.gov)
What’s the safest way to protect disc brakes during travel?
Insert brake pad spacers and consider removing rotors and packing them flat between rigid cardboard as a common way to prevent both of the two most common risks of flight: prying pads together and bending them. (bikeflights.com)
What should I do if my bike arrives damaged?
Photograph the box before opening, photograph the damage as soon as it is found, keep all packing materials, and file a claim with airline/carrier right away. Your pre-shipment photos (both bike condition + packing) will make a huge difference in proving the airline you’re right (or, at least, they are partly at fault) when you’ve attempted to get through to claim employees. (bikeflights.com)