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Stroller on Alaska Airlines: The Complete 2026 Guide

Alaska is the only US carrier with a precise written stroller-wagon spec — 90 linear inches and 35 pounds. One stroller per child flies free, gate or counter, on every fare class.

Allowed
Verified May 1, 2026

Yes — per Alaska Airlines' published policy, one stroller per child flies free as checked baggage, gate or counter, regardless of fare class; stroller-wagons must be collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds to qualify for the free exemption.

Source: DOT 14 CFR 254.4 (domestic baggage liability $4,700) — no FAA in-flight regulation for strollers

Gate check: $0
Wagon cap: <90 in / <35 lbs
All fare classes: free
Verified live
Gate Check Fee
$0 per child
Counter Check Fee
$0 per child
Stroller-Wagon Cap
<90 linear inches, <35 lbs
Family Pre-Board
Yes — under 2
Jet-Bridge Return
Mainline 737/A321: yes · Horizon E175: baggage claim
Damage Liability
Defaults to Contract of Carriage ($4,700 domestic / 1,519 SDR intl)
Verified Quote

The Exact Alaska Policy

Word-for-word from the official source — no paraphrasing.

We will transport your child's car seat and stroller free of charge as checked baggage. You can check these items with your other baggage, or wait until you reach the gate area. This also applies to stroller-wagons that are designed to carry children and are collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds. Standard bag fees/rules apply to larger wagons, those not designed to carry children, or those carried in addition to a stroller.
Retrieved May 1, 2026
Read on alaskaair.com
The Process

How It Works on Alaska

Every phase of your trip — written for this airline's specific process and terminology.

Before You Leave

Packing & prep — 24h ahead

1

Measure your stroller or stroller-wagon at home

24h ahead

Per Alaska's published policy, the 90-linear-inch and 35-pound cap applies only to stroller-wagons. Standard strollers have no published size limit, but measuring the collapsed footprint prevents Mileage Plan counter-check surprises.

2

Print Alaska's stroller-wagon clause to your phone

24h ahead

Save the alaskaair.com special-assist-infants URL offline. Alaska gate agents in SEA Concourse C/N rarely challenge this, but PDX and ANC ramp crews occasionally do.

3

Pack a padded gate-check bag

24h ahead

Alaska publishes no baby-gear damage disclaimer, so liability defaults to the Contract of Carriage and the 14 CFR 254.4 $4,700 domestic cap — but strollers are categorically excluded from that cap on every US carrier.

At Security

TSA checkpoint — stroller on the belt

4

Place stroller on the X-ray belt

At SEA/PDX/ANC checkpoint

Per TSA's Traveling with Children guidance: 'Strollers, umbrella-strollers, baby carriers, car and booster seats and backpacks must be screened by X-ray.' Larger strollers undergo physical inspection.

5

Carry the child through the walk-through metal detector

At checkpoint

TSA: 'Remove infants and children from strollers and car seats and carry them in arms through the walk-through metal detector.' Advanced Imaging Technology is not used when carrying a child.

At Alaska Gate

Gate area — request tag and pre-board

6

Request family pre-boarding

At gate

Per Alaska's published statement: 'Alaska Airlines offers pre-boarding for anyone with disabilities who may need help or more time to board, families with children under the age of two.' Alaska boards families before First Class and MVP elite tiers.

We're traveling with a child under two and would like family pre-boarding to gate-check our stroller.

7

Request a gate-check tag

At gate

Ask the agent for the claim-at-gate tag if you plan to use the stroller through the jet bridge. On Horizon Air E175 regional flights, expect the stroller at baggage claim, not the jet bridge.

Onboard

In the cabin — stow or fold

8

Stow the stroller (if collapsible cabin allowed)

Boarding

Alaska's policy is silent on cabin stroller use. In practice, fully collapsible umbrella strollers under standard carry-on dimensions fit in overhead bins on 737-800/900ER/MAX 9 and A321neo. Larger frames must be gate-checked.

At Destination

Deplaning — jet bridge or baggage claim

9

Collect at the jet bridge (mainline) or baggage claim (Horizon E175)

Deplaning

Jet-bridge stroller return on Alaska mainline 737/A321; Horizon-operated E175 routes return at the baggage carousel. SEA Concourse C/N, PDX, and ANC mainline gates are jet-bridge consistent.

10

File a damaged-baggage claim with Alaska Baggage Service if needed

Within 4 hours of arrival

There is no central 800 baggage number — call your destination airport's baggage office directly via alaskaair.com/content/travel-info/baggage/baggage-claim/airport-baggage-offices. Liability defaults to $4,700 domestic / 1,519 SDR international.

Trip Planner

Pick Your Trip Type

Gate-check vs. counter-check vs. umbrella stroller — what works for your sector.

Under 2 hours
Domestic short-hop

Gate-check on the 737-800. Bring the stroller to the gate; expect jet-bridge return at PDX.

  • Mainline jet-bridge return verified on Alaska SEA/PDX rotations
  • Family pre-board reliably called before First Class and MVP
  • Embraer E175 (Horizon) routes return strollers at baggage claim, not jet bridge
5–6 hours
Transcon / long domestic

Gate-check the main stroller; consider a lightweight umbrella stroller as cabin carry-on if it fits under-seat or in the overhead bin.

  • Likely aircraft: 737-900ER or 737 MAX 9 — 110V + USB at every seat
  • Alaska best onboard power claim: power at every seat on ~75% of fleet
  • If connecting through DFW or ORD on a oneworld partner (American), confirm stroller-return location at the connecting gate
9+ hours
International long-haul

Counter-check the stroller for predictable widebody handling. Bring an FAA-approved car seat for in-cabin use if you have a paid infant seat; Alaska has no bassinet program.

  • Alaska Air Group's Hawaiian-acquired 787-9 fleet is deployed on SEA-LHR and SEA-NRT post-merger
  • No bassinet on Alaska mainline or post-merger Alaska-operated widebodies — confirm with Accessible Services 800-503-0101
  • International Montreal Convention cap of 1,519 SDR applies
What's Different

Federal Rules vs Alaska's Rules

Where the airline aligns with TSA/FAA — and where it goes further.

Free gate-check
No federal requirement; airline discretion
Per Alaska's policy: stroller and car seat free; stroller-wagons free if <90 linear inches and <35 lbs
Lenient
Stroller-wagon spec
No federal spec
Per Alaska's policy: collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds
Stricter
Family pre-boarding
No federal requirement
Per Alaska's published statement: pre-boarding for families with children under 2; called before First Class and MVP
Lenient
Damage liability
14 CFR 254.4: $4,700 domestic baggage minimum (since 22-Jan-2025)
Defaults to Contract of Carriage; no baby-gear-specific disclaimer; per DOT, carriers may exclude liability for fragile/bulky items
Match
X-ray screening
TSA: strollers must be X-rayed; child carried through WTMD
No additional Alaska screening rules
Match
Insider Tips

What Alaska Won't Put in Writing

Measure the wagon before SEA check-in

Alaska's 90-linear-inch / 35-lb stroller-wagon cap is the most specific threshold of any US carrier. Measure the collapsed L+W+H and put it on the bathroom scale before leaving home — getting it wrong at the SEA Concourse C/N ticket counter triggers standard checked-bag fees (~$35) on top of any 'larger wagon' surcharge.

Know your aircraft for jet-bridge return

Alaska mainline (737-800/900ER/MAX 9 and the ex-Virgin A321neo) returns strollers at the jet bridge; Horizon Air E175 regional flights return at the baggage carousel. Check the operating carrier in the Mileage Plan reservation — a SEA-PSC or PDX-RDM flight is almost certainly Horizon.

Use 800-503-0101 for gear questions, not the reservations line

Alaska's Accessible Services line is 24/7 and routes to agents trained on infant-travel and gear policy. The reservations line (800-252-7522) will redirect you. There is no central 800 baggage number — call your destination airport's baggage office directly for damage claims.

Pack a hardshell gate-check bag

Alaska publishes no baby-gear damage disclaimer, but per DOT, every major US carrier excludes liability for fragile items via Contract of Carriage. A padded or hardshell bag is the single most actionable protection — the airline itself is signaling it will not pay.

Real Stories

What Parents Experienced on Alaska

Recent, route-specific, verified.

UNK

A frequent-flying family (a child with 100+ flights by 18 months) reported Alaska checks car seats and strollers free at the gate or as hold luggage, and lets parents bring both to the gate — contrasting it favorably with American, which gate-checks only one. The same family noted Alaska counts the diaper bag against the carry-on allowance and offers no bassinets.

PDX

During the January 2024 Alaska Flight 1282 Boeing 737 MAX door-plug blowout out of Portland, one mother holding her baby reportedly feared her son had been blown out of the fuselage; he was unharmed. Three infants were aboard. The NTSB subsequently renewed recommendations that children two and under have their own seats and restraints instead of riding as lap infants.

If You're Refused

What To Do at the Gate If They Say No

Alaska itself rarely refuses a stroller at the gate — the policy is unambiguous and the wagon spec is published. Friction lives at two seams: a Mileage Plan counter agent challenging a stroller-wagon at the 90/35 threshold, or a Horizon Air E175 flight returning the stroller to the carousel without notice.

Denial Protocol
3-Step Escalation
  1. 1

    Cite Alaska's published stroller-wagon clause

    Reference 'stroller-wagons designed to carry children and collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds' fly free per alaskaair.com/content/travel-info/accessible-services/special-assist-infants.

    Per Alaska's published policy at alaskaair.com, stroller-wagons designed to carry children and collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds fly free of charge.

  2. 2

    Request the Mileage Plan supervisor or gate supervisor

    Ask for the Customer Care representative on duty; if at the gate, ask for the gate agent's supervisor before boarding.

  3. 3

    File a DOT Aviation Consumer Protection complaint

    If the airline-stated policy is contradicted at the airport — DOT publishes carrier-by-carrier complaint statistics quarterly. Document agent name, time, location, and badge number.

Context

Stroller on oneworld Airlines

See Alaska compared to alliance peers at a glance.

American Airlines
yes
Per AA policy: stroller and car seat free, but non-collapsible strollers and stroller-wagons without built-in child safety straps must be checked at the ticket counter — not the gate.
British Airways
yes
Per BA policy: one pushchair and one car seat or travel cot free per infant; folded pushchair must be 117 x 38 x 38 cm for door return.
Japan Airlines
yes
Per JAL policy: one stroller and one car seat per child free as gate or counter check; JAL and Narita rent loaner strollers free.
Cathay Pacific
yes
Per Cathay Pacific policy: stroller and car seat carried free in addition to the standard baggage allowance; bassinet available on widebody long-haul.
Common Questions

Alaska + Stroller: FAQ

No. Per Alaska's published policy on alaskaair.com: 'We will transport your child's car seat and stroller free of charge as checked baggage. You can check these items with your other baggage, or wait until you reach the gate area.' The free check applies to all fare classes, including basic economy (Saver). The only cost surface is for stroller-wagons exceeding 90 linear inches or 35 pounds.

Alaska does not publish a double-stroller-specific clause. The standard 'one stroller per child' wording applies, and double strollers are accepted as one of the per-child free items. Stroller-wagons (whether single or double in seating) must be 'collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds' per Alaska's published policy; double-seat wagons that exceed those dimensions pay standard checked-bag fees. Confirm by calling Accessible Services at 800-503-0101.

Not for standard strollers — Alaska publishes no weight or dimension limit on regular strollers. The only published threshold is the stroller-wagon cap: 'collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds.' Larger or non-conforming wagons, wagons not designed to carry children, or wagons carried in addition to a stroller pay standard bag fees, per the verbatim policy on alaskaair.com.

On mainline Alaska flights (737-800/900ER/MAX 9, A321neo), strollers gate-checked at the jet bridge are returned at the jet bridge at the destination. On Horizon Air-operated E175 regional flights (typical for SEA-PSC, PDX-RDM, etc.), strollers are returned at the baggage carousel. Check the operating carrier on your Mileage Plan reservation before deciding whether to gate-check.

Alaska publishes no baby-gear-specific damage disclaimer, which means liability defaults to the Contract of Carriage and the 14 CFR 254.4 domestic baggage minimum of $4,700 (effective 22-Jan-2025). However, per DOT guidance, carriers 'often exclude liability for certain categories of items (for example: fragile items)' — and strollers are categorically excluded on every major US carrier. Pack a padded gate-check bag, file with Alaska Baggage Service at your destination airport's office.

Yes — if it is 'designed to carry children and is collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds,' per Alaska's verbatim policy quote. This is the most specific stroller-wagon threshold published by any US carrier. Larger wagons, those not designed to carry children, or those carried in addition to a stroller pay standard bag fees. Measure your collapsed wagon at home before the SEA/PDX/ANC counter.

No. Per Alaska's published policy, the stroller is in addition to your regular checked-baggage allowance: 'We will transport your child's car seat and stroller free of charge as checked baggage.' Two free items (one stroller + one car seat) per child are explicitly free of the standard baggage count, regardless of Mileage Plan or fare class.

Yes — Alaska is one of the few US carriers that does. The policy explicitly states: 'stroller-wagons that are designed to carry children and are collapsible to under 90 linear inches and 35 pounds' fly free, while 'standard bag fees/rules apply to larger wagons, those not designed to carry children, or those carried in addition to a stroller.' No other US airline publishes this level of wagon specificity.

Sources

  1. 1Alaska Airlines — Traveling with infants and toddlers (2026) — Verbatim stroller and stroller-wagon policy. Source
  2. 2Alaska Airlines — Strollers and car seats free-baggage clause (2026) — Per-child free check policy. Source
  3. 3TSA — Traveling with Children (2026) — Stroller X-ray screening rules. Source
  4. 4DOT — Lost, delayed, or damaged baggage (2026) — Domestic $4,700 / international 1,519 SDR liability framework. Source
  5. 5eCFR — 14 CFR 254.4 (2025) — Domestic baggage liability minimum (effective 22-Jan-2025). Source
  6. 6Alaska Airlines newsroom — pre-boarding (2026) — Family pre-boarding for children under 2. Source

Audit Trail

Every verification is logged. If the airline changes their policy, this page changes with it.

May 1, 2026Policy quote re-verified against alaskaair.com special-assist-infants pageUnchanged
Apr 15, 2026Quarterly review — confirmed 90-linear-inch / 35-lb stroller-wagon threshold and family pre-boarding clauseUnchanged
Jan 12, 2026Initial verification cross-referenced with flightscounsel.com (Alaska reproduction) and parenthoodadventures.com parent reportRe-verified
Reviewed by
Sophia Marchetti
Sophia Marchetti
Founder & CPST, Velivolo
CPST Certified Passenger Safety Technician · 12 years family travel research
Read full author bio
CPST Certified Reviewed quarterly
Alaska Support
+1-800-252-7522

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