The Honest Truth About Flying with Toddlers
You will not have a relaxing flight. Accept this and the trip improves immediately. The goal isn’t your enjoyment of the flight — it’s getting from point A to point B without traumatizing your child, the passengers around you, or yourself.
That said, the difference between a manageable flight and a disastrous one comes down to about 8 specific decisions you make before takeoff.
Decision 1: Flight Timing
The single most important decision is the flight time. Choose flights that align with your child’s sleep schedule:
- Late-night flights (22:00–01:00): Best for long-haul. Toddler falls asleep during boarding, wakes up close to landing.
- Mid-morning flights (09:00–11:00): Second best. Use morning energy for boarding chaos, then a long nap mid-flight.
- Avoid afternoon flights (13:00–18:00). Clashes with nap time but doesn’t allow for full sleep.
Decision 2: Seat Strategy
For toddlers under 2 traveling as a lap infant: book the bulkhead row. The airline can install a bassinet (free) which works for sleep up to about 11 months. For older toddlers in their own seat: window seat for them, you in the middle.
Decision 3: The Bag Strategy
Two bags only:
The Backpack (under seat). Diapers (5-6 for an 8-hour flight), 2 changes of clothes, wipes, a small foldable changing pad, hand sanitizer, a ziploc with snacks, tablet + charged earphones, 1 small comfort object.
The Stroller/Car-Seat Bag (gate-checked). Lightweight foldable stroller. Most airlines let you bring it to the gate for free.
Decision 4: The Snack Loadout
Airplane food arrives when it arrives, which is rarely when your toddler is hungry. Pack:
- Dry cereal in a ziploc (Cheerios, Rice Krispies)
- Pre-cut fruit in a small container
- Cheese sticks or babybel rounds
- Pouches (yogurt or fruit pouches)
- One “treat” item saved for emergencies
The treat is your nuclear option for the inevitable meltdown around hour 4.
Decision 5: Ear Pain Management
The biggest source of toddler distress is ear pressure during descent.
For babies (under 18 months): Bottle, breastfeed, or pacifier during descent. The swallowing equalizes pressure.
For toddlers (18 months+): Snack pouches work great because the sucking action helps. Save 2 pouches specifically for descent (last 30 minutes).
For congested kids: Saline nasal spray 20 minutes before descent. If your child is sick, ask your pediatrician about decongestants.