If you're going on holiday soon, make sure you know the new security rules of the airport you're travelling from.
The liquid limit was introduced in 2006 after a failed plot to blow up flights travelling from to America, with terrorists planning to use bottles of liquid to assemble a bomb on board.
Liquids over 100ml were banned from flights, alongside all weapons and soft foods. This was initially intended as a "temporary measure" while technology caught up.
In 2019, vowed to ease restrictions on 100ml liquids and electronics, allowing people to carry more and keep them in their carry-ons during security.
But in 2024, the Department for Transport ordered airports to go back to the old 100ml limit, even if they had installed the new scanning equipment, due to not all airports having them yet.
Despite this, there are a number of airports where passengers can keep their sub-100ml liquids and electronics in their hand luggage during security checks.
Staff use CT machines (like in a hospital) to scan luggage, analyse the molecular structure of its contents, create an X-ray image, and detect potential threats.
The aim of this is to improve security, reduce waiting times, and free up staff from secondary searches so they can focus on assessing passenger behaviour.
The airports where you can leave liquids inside your carry-on are:
Aberdeen
Belfast International
Birmingham
Bristol
Edinburgh
Gatwick
Leeds Bradford
London City
Luton
Newcastle
Southend
Teesside
The airports where you can't leave liquids inside your carry-on
East Midlands
Glasgow
Heathrow
Manchester
Southampton
Stansted
You may also like
Active companies in India up by over 1.62 lakh in FY25
My incurable bowel cancer isn't enough to stop NHS making stupid mistakes
Is Ronnie O'Sullivan playing at the World Snooker Championship? Everything we know
Labour sunk to new level of snakery - and it was our bravest who bore insult
"For past 25 years, DDA failed to bring any master plan for Delhi": AAP's Sushil Gupta on Mustafabad building collapse incident