Skip to content
Bestie Paws Hospital
Bestie Paws Hospital

  • 🏠 Home
  • 📚 Blog
  • 🌐 Contact Us
Bestie Paws Hospital

Alaska Airlines Pet Policy — Every Rule That Matters Before You Book

Bestie Paws, July 18, 2026July 18, 2026
✈️🐾
Alaska Airlines Pet Policy · Cabin · Cargo · Rabbits · Fees · Carrier Size · Hawaii · Brachycephalic

Real fees, exact carrier dimensions, the rabbit reversal, which breeds are grounded from cargo, what Hawaii actually requires, and every situation where travelers get caught off guard at the gate.

📰
Trending — Rabbits Reinstated, Birds Phased Out, Cargo Fees Up $50

Alaska Airlines reversed its mid-2025 rabbit ban and reinstated in-cabin rabbit travel effective January 14, 2026, following sustained customer feedback and advocacy from rabbit owner groups. At the same time, household birds lost their in-cabin eligibility for any ticket purchased after June 5, 2025. Separately, checked baggage pet fees rose from $150 to $200 each way for most routes as of January 2, 2026 — a $50 increase that caught many travelers who booked in advance off guard.

✈️ Alaska Airlines and Pets — The One-Paragraph Summary

Alaska Airlines is widely considered the most pet-friendly major U.S. carrier — it accepts a broader range of species than most airlines, operates the Pet Connect cargo program for large animals traveling without a passenger, and enforces no strict combined weight limit for cabin travel (your pet just needs to fit comfortably in an approved carrier under the seat). The in-cabin fee is $100 each way. Checked baggage is $200 each way as of January 2, 2026 on most routes ($100 within Alaska or for active military, $60 within Hawaii). Only dogs and cats are accepted on Hawaii and international routes. The carrier limit per flight is three in First Class and eight in Main Cabin — spots are limited and run out, so book the pet reservation immediately after booking your ticket.

📋 Key Questions — Straight Answers

These are the searches and questions that come up most before flying a pet on Alaska — answered directly, without burying the answer in three paragraphs of preamble.

  • 1
    How much does it cost to bring a pet on Alaska Airlines? In-cabin: $100 each way · Checked baggage: $200 each way (was $150 before Jan 2, 2026) · Within Alaska state: $100 checked · Within Hawaii: $35 in-cabin, $60 checked · Active US military: $100 checked
    Fees are charged per carrier, per flight segment — not per pet, and not per round trip. A nonstop round trip with one pet in the cabin costs $200 total. If your itinerary involves a connection, each leg is a separate fee. The January 2026 fee increase for checked pets from $150 to $200 caught travelers who had booked early by surprise — the higher fee applies based on the departure date, not the booking date. If you’ve already booked a trip with a pet as checked baggage and weren’t told about the increase, call Alaska Airlines reservations to confirm what you’ll owe.
  • 2
    What are the carrier size limits for Alaska Airlines cabin pets? Soft-sided: 17″ L × 11″ W × 9.5″ H · Hard-sided: 17″ L × 11″ W × 7.5″ H · Must fit under the seat in front of you · Smaller than most major airlines — measure carefully before buying a carrier
    Alaska’s carrier dimensions are notably stricter than Delta, United, and American, which allow 18″ × 11″ × 11″ soft-sided carriers. The 9.5″ height limit means many popular “airline approved” carriers sold as universal fits don’t actually work on Alaska flights. If you’re buying a new carrier specifically for an Alaska flight, don’t rely on the “airline approved” label — measure the actual bag and verify it meets Alaska’s specific limits. Soft-sided is strongly preferred over hard-sided not only because of the extra 2″ of height allowance but because soft sides compress slightly in the seat pocket, giving a little extra room if needed. Alaska does not enforce a strict combined weight limit for cabin pets — the real test is whether the animal fits comfortably inside the carrier with the door closed.
  • 3
    Can I buy a seat for my dog on Alaska Airlines? Yes — in a limited way. You can purchase an adjacent seat to bring two pets in two carriers · The second carrier counts as the carry-on for that seat · The two carriers still need to fit under the respective seats · Not a “dog sits in a seat” situation — the pet stays in the carrier under the seat
    Alaska is one of the few major U.S. carriers that allows a second pet carrier when a second adjacent seat is purchased — a rule that benefits owners of two small pets or a single owner who wants two pets side by side. The animal still stays in the carrier under the seat; Alaska does not allow pets to sit uncontained on a purchased seat the way some private carriers do. If you want to bring two pets and have only one ticket, your second option is to have a travel companion book a separate reservation and each take one animal. Spots are strictly limited per flight, so if you’re buying two adjacent seats for two pets, book both immediately after booking your main ticket.
  • 4
    Are rabbits allowed on Alaska Airlines in-cabin? Yes — reinstated January 14, 2026, after a short-lived ban · Allowed in the cabin on domestic routes within the continental U.S. and Alaska · Not permitted to Hawaii or international destinations · Standard carrier size rules and $100 fee apply · Must be booked in advance
    The rabbit reinstatement is one of the more notable policy reversals in recent airline history. Alaska removed rabbits from in-cabin eligibility in mid-2025, drawing immediate pushback from rabbit owners — particularly those who rely on cabin travel rather than cargo for animals that are highly sensitive to temperature and stress. After months of public pressure and direct customer outreach, Alaska reversed course in January 2026. Rabbits can now fly in the cabin on domestic routes using the same carrier requirements as dogs and cats. They are still not permitted on Hawaii or international routes, which restrict in-cabin animals to dogs and cats only. Book your rabbit’s space by calling Alaska Airlines at (800) 252-7522 or through online chat — rabbit travel cannot currently be added through the standard online booking flow at all airports.
  • 5
    My dog has a flat face (Pug, Bulldog, French Bulldog) — can they fly Alaska? In cabin: yes, if the carrier fits under the seat · Checked baggage / cargo: NO — brachycephalic breeds are fully banned from the baggage compartment · Exception: brachycephalic breeds traveling cargo to or from Hawaii only, in a kennel one size larger than standard
    Alaska’s brachycephalic ban for baggage is firm and broadly applied. The full restricted dog breed list includes: Boston Terrier, Boxer (all breeds), Bulldog (all breeds), Bull Terrier, Brussels Griffon, Chow Chow, English Toy Spaniel, Japanese Chin, Mastiff (all breeds), Pekingese, Pit Bull (all breeds), Pug (all breeds), Shih Tzu, and Staffordshire Terrier. Restricted cat breeds are: Burmese, Exotic Shorthair, Himalayan, and Persian. The reasoning is physiological — short airways make these animals significantly more vulnerable to respiratory distress during the temperature variation, altitude stress, and reduced oxygen of a cargo hold. The in-cabin exception exists because the cabin is pressurized, temperature-regulated, and the animal is in a small controlled space rather than an open hold. If your brachycephalic dog is too large for a cabin carrier, contact Alaska’s cargo team about Pet Connect — but be aware that the breed restriction generally blocks cargo as well, except for the Hawaii-specific exception with the oversized kennel requirement.
  • 6
    What does flying a pet to Hawaii on Alaska Airlines actually require? Only dogs and cats accepted to Hawaii (no rabbits, birds, or exotic pets) · In-cabin fee is $35 · Checked pet fee is $60 · Hawaii has strict rabies-free quarantine laws — extensive documentation required · Pets arriving without correct permits face up to 120 days quarantine at owner’s expense · Start the Hawaii process 4–6 months before travel
    Hawaii’s animal import process is one of the most demanding in the U.S. — the state has been rabies-free for over a century and takes enforcement seriously. The core requirements for the 5-Day-or-Less program (which lets your pet skip most of the quarantine): your dog or cat must be microchipped, have a current FAVN rabies antibody titer test performed at least 90 days before arrival, have two documented rabies vaccinations at least 30 days apart, have a health certificate from a USDA-accredited vet issued within 14 days of arrival, and carry a Neighbor Island Inspection Permit if continuing beyond Honolulu. Cats have slightly different vaccination requirements. Missing any one of these items can result in your pet being held at the Animal Quarantine Station for up to 120 days — at several hundred dollars per day in boarding fees. Hawaii’s state Department of Agriculture website has the current checklist. Begin this process no later than four to six months before your trip.
  • 7
    What is Alaska Airlines Pet Connect and when do I need it? Pet Connect is Alaska’s cargo service for pets over 150 lbs (pet + kennel) · Also used for pets traveling without a human passenger on the same flight · Managed through Alaska Air Cargo — book separately at alaskacargo.com · Not available to Mexico or Costa Rica · No live animal transport on Airbus aircraft
    Pet Connect fills the gap between checked baggage (which requires the passenger and pet to be on the same flight) and standard cargo. If your pet needs to travel without you — say you’re relocating and shipping your dog ahead — Pet Connect is the route. The pet must have a health certificate from a licensed vet, connections must be at least two hours minimum, and pickup is required within four hours of arrival to avoid additional kenneling fees. Connections cannot exceed six hours unless advance kenneling arrangements are made. Hot and cold weather restrictions also apply to Pet Connect — no travel when departure, connection, or arrival temperatures exceed 85°F or fall below 45°F (a vet’s Certificate of Acclimation can grant cold-weather exceptions). No service to Mexico or Costa Rica through this program.
  • 8
    Do I need a health certificate to fly my pet on Alaska Airlines? In-cabin domestic: no certificate required · Checked baggage and cargo: health certificate required, issued within 10 days of the initial travel date · Valid for up to 30 days for return travel on the same reservation · Hawaii: health certificate from a USDA-accredited vet required within 14 days · Travel within or to Alaska (state): rabies certificate required
    The no-certificate rule for domestic in-cabin travel catches people off guard in the other direction — they expect to need one and are surprised when they don’t. For checked pets, the 10-day window is strict. Your vet must issue the certificate within 10 days of your outbound departure date, and Alaska accepts it for return travel up to 30 days later if booked on the same reservation (verify the return date with your vet before the appointment). A separate certificate is typically needed for the return portion of a trip if it’s on a separate booking. For travel to, from, or within the state of Alaska (not the airline, the state), a rabies vaccination certificate is required for both interstate and in-state travel — this applies even to in-cabin pets on domestic U.S. routes that pass through Alaskan airports.
📐 Carrier Dimensions — Alaska Airlines vs. Other Major Airlines

Alaska’s carrier size limits are among the strictest of any major U.S. carrier. If you already own a carrier that works on Delta, United, or American, measure it before assuming it works on Alaska.

Airline Soft-Sided Max Hard-Sided Max In-Cabin Fee
Alaska Airlines 17″ × 11″ × 9.5″ 17″ × 11″ × 7.5″ $100/way
American Airlines 18″ × 11″ × 11″ 19″ × 13″ × 9″ $150/way
Delta Air Lines 18″ × 11″ × 11″ 17″ × 12″ × 7.5″ $150/way
United Airlines 17.5″ × 12″ × 7.5″ 17.5″ × 12″ × 7.5″ $125/way
Southwest Airlines 18.5″ × 13.5″ × 9.5″ Not accepted $150/way
📏 Alaska’s hard-sided height limit (7.5″) is strictest among major carriers 🧳 Soft-sided carriers compress slightly — always the safer choice for Alaska 💰 Alaska’s $100 in-cabin fee is lowest among the Big 4 carriers ⚠️ “Airline approved” labels don’t mean Alaska approved — always verify dimensions
💰 Fees and Key Numbers — Alaska Airlines Pets
🐾 In-Cabin Fee (Most Routes)
$100 /way
Per carrier, per flight segment. $35 for flights wholly within Hawaii. No strict weight limit — pet must fit comfortably in the carrier. Carrier counts as your carry-on item.
🧳 Checked Baggage (Most Routes)
$200 /way
Increased from $150 as of January 2, 2026. $100 for travel wholly within Alaska state or for active U.S. military. $60 within Hawaii. Combined pet + kennel must not exceed 150 lbs.
✈️ Pet Connect Cargo
Quote-based
For pets over 150 lbs (pet + kennel) or traveling without a human passenger. Booked through Alaska Air Cargo separately from airline tickets. Not available to Mexico or Costa Rica.
🐾 Cabin Limit Per Flight
3 (First) / 8 (Main)
Maximum carriers allowed per flight: 3 in First Class cabin, 8 in Main Cabin. These fill on a first-come, first-served basis. Book your pet reservation immediately after booking your own ticket.
🌡️ Temperature Limits
45°F – 85°F
Checked pets and cargo cannot travel if temps at any point on the route are outside this range. Cold-weather exceptions require a vet’s Certificate of Acclimation.
📋 Health Certificate
Within 10 days
Required for checked baggage and cargo pets. Must be issued by a licensed vet within 10 days of travel. Not required for in-cabin domestic pets. USDA accreditation required for Hawaii.
🚫 Banned from Cargo
Snub-nosed breeds
All brachycephalic dog and cat breeds banned from checked baggage. May still fly in-cabin if the carrier fits under the seat. Special exception for Hawaii cargo with oversized kennel only.
🧩 Real Situations — Honest Answers
I got to the gate and was told the flight is full for pets — what happens?
GATE DENIAL
This is the most preventable bad outcome when flying a pet on Alaska Airlines, and it happens because passengers don’t realize in-cabin pet space is a hard limit — not a preference. Eight carriers in the main cabin is not a soft cap. When those eight spots are filled, the ninth person at the ticket counter is refused, regardless of how long they’ve been planning the trip. The protection is straightforward: call (800) 252-7522 or use online chat to add your pet reservation the same day you book your ticket. Not the day before. Not after you’ve bought the carrier. The same day. Once added, you’ll receive a confirmation that your pet’s space is secured. If for some reason your pet wasn’t pre-added and the flight is full, Alaska may offer a rebooking to the next available flight with open pet capacity — but there is no guarantee of same-day alternatives on busy routes.
⚠️ 3 spots First Class / 8 spots Main Cabin — fills fast on popular routes 📞 Book pet space: (800) 252-7522 or online chat ✅ Book same day as your ticket — not the day before departure
My carrier is 18″ × 11″ × 11″ — will it fit on Alaska?
CARRIER SIZE
Almost certainly not. An 18 × 11 × 11 soft-sided carrier exceeds Alaska’s 17 × 11 × 9.5 soft-sided limit in both length (by 1 inch) and height (by 1.5 inches). This is the most common equipment mismatch for travelers who switch airlines — a carrier that fits on Delta or American won’t necessarily work on Alaska. Staff at the ticket counter can and do measure carriers. If yours doesn’t fit, you’ll need to check your pet into the baggage compartment ($200) or rebook. The solution is to measure your actual carrier before you travel. If you’re buying new, look specifically for a carrier marketed to Alaska Airlines dimensions — 17 × 11 × 9.5 for soft-sided is the target. Measure with the carrier fully unzipped and flat, then again with a stuffed animal or similar stand-in inside to account for the way a real carrier behaves when occupied.
⚠️ 18 × 11 × 11 does NOT fit — Alaska’s limit is 17 × 11 × 9.5 📏 Measure your actual carrier before every Alaska flight 💡 Soft-sided carriers with some give are safer than rigid at the limit
I’m flying with my dog to Costa Rica or Mexico through Alaska — can I bring them?
INTERNATIONAL
For in-cabin travel to international destinations: only dogs and cats are accepted, and you’re responsible for meeting the destination country’s own import requirements — health certificates, vaccinations, microchipping, and sometimes import permits. Mexico and Costa Rica both have specific veterinary documentation requirements that must be in order before departure. One critical note specific to Alaska Airlines: Pet Connect cargo service is not available to or from Mexico or Costa Rica. This means if your dog is too large for cabin travel, you cannot use Alaska Airlines to ship them to either of those countries. You’d need to investigate other cargo carriers or a pet relocation specialist. For in-cabin pets, the carrier must still meet the standard Alaska size limits, the $100 in-cabin fee applies, and you must document health requirements for both the airline and the destination country.
✅ In-cabin dogs and cats: accepted on international routes 🚫 Pet Connect cargo: not available to Mexico or Costa Rica 📋 Destination country docs required separately from airline
I’m traveling in July through Phoenix or Las Vegas with my checked pet — will it be rejected?
HEAT EMBARGO
Very possibly. Alaska’s temperature policy for checked pets and cargo restricts travel when ground temperatures at the departure, connection, or arrival city exceed 85°F. Phoenix and Las Vegas routinely reach 100–115°F in July and August. If any point on your route hits the limit, pet travel in the baggage compartment is suspended — regardless of your booking confirmation. This isn’t a staffing call made at check-in; it’s a weather-based protocol triggered automatically. In-cabin pets are not affected by heat embargoes — the passenger cabin is always temperature-controlled. If you must travel in summer with a larger dog that can’t go in the cabin, consult with Alaska’s cargo team about routing options that avoid high-heat airports, or consider whether the trip timing can shift to cooler months. A vet’s Certificate of Acclimation only helps with the cold threshold (below 45°F), not the heat limit.
⚠️ Checked pet travel suspended if any route point exceeds 85°F ✅ Cabin pets not affected by heat embargoes 💡 Summer travel with large dogs: avoid Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Tucson routing
My dog is a trained service animal — what do I need to fly Alaska free?
SERVICE ANIMALS
Trained service dogs fly free on Alaska Airlines with no carrier requirement — they travel in the cabin floor space at the handler’s feet. Alaska follows DOT rules, which define a service animal as a dog individually trained to do work or perform tasks for a person with a disability. Emotional support animals are explicitly not recognized as service animals under the current rules and must travel under the standard pet policy with the $100 fee and carrier requirements. Before your flight, you’ll need to submit the DOT Service Animal Form, which Alaska requires to be completed in advance — not at the gate. Alaska allows up to two service dogs per passenger if needed. If your dog exhibits aggressive behavior, excessive barking, or is not under control, staff may request the animal be contained or removed from service animal status for that flight. Psychiatric service dogs that are individually trained to perform a specific task qualify as service animals; a comfort animal or ESA with documentation does not.
✅ Trained service dogs: fly free, no carrier required 🚫 ESAs: regular pet rules apply — $100 fee, carrier required 📋 Submit DOT Service Animal Form before travel — not at the gate
📍 Find Resources Near You

Use the buttons below to locate veterinarians for health certificates, pet supply stores for approved carriers, and Alaska Airlines airport locations near you.

Searching near you…
✅ Before You Go — 5 Things to Confirm
  • Add your pet reservation the same day you book your ticket. Call (800) 252-7522 or use Alaska’s online chat. Cabin space is limited to 8 carriers in Main Cabin — do not wait. Your ticket doesn’t automatically include pet space.
  • Measure your carrier before every Alaska flight. Soft-sided maximum is 17″ × 11″ × 9.5″. Hard-sided is 17″ × 11″ × 7.5″. A carrier that fits on Delta or American may not meet Alaska’s limits. Measure flat and again with your pet inside.
  • If your pet is traveling as checked baggage, get the health certificate within 10 days of your outbound departure date. Not 11 days, not two weeks before — within 10 days. Bring a copy in a waterproof sleeve attached to the kennel.
  • Traveling to Hawaii? Start the paperwork 4–6 months out. The 5-Day-or-Less quarantine exemption requires a FAVN rabies titer test at least 90 days before arrival. Missing any document can result in your pet being quarantined at your expense for up to 120 days.
  • Check the weather forecast for your entire route, not just your destination. If any airport on your route hits above 85°F, checked pet travel is suspended. Plan summer trips with large pets on routes that avoid high-heat hubs, or consider flying in the early morning before temperatures peak.
📞 Key Contacts: ✈️ Alaska Pet Reservations: (800) 252-7522 📦 Pet Connect Cargo: alaskacargo.com/petconnect 🏝️ Hawaii Pet Import: hdoa.hawaii.gov 🌡️ Pet travel policy: alaskaair.com/pets 🐾 Brachycephalic restrictions: alaskacargo.com/petconnect/restrictions

This guide is for informational purposes only and has no affiliation with or sponsorship from Alaska Airlines, Alaska Air Cargo, or any related entity. Pet policies, fees, breed restrictions, accepted species, and route eligibility change frequently — always verify the current rules directly at alaskaair.com and alaskacargo.com before booking or traveling. Hawaii animal import requirements are set by the Hawaii Department of Agriculture and are subject to change independently of airline policy. Health certificate timing, international documentation, and carrier size requirements should be confirmed with Alaska Airlines reservations at the time of booking. Fees listed reflect information available at time of writing and may not reflect current rates.

Recommended Reads

  1. Flying with a Pet on American Airlines
  2. Airline-Approved Pet Carriers for Cats ✈️🐱
  3. 🐕 How to Air Travel With Your Dog
  4. 🐶 How to Fly with a Large Dog
Dog

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Bestie Paws

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Is ASPCA Pet Insurance Worth It?
  • ASPCA Pet Insurance Cost Per Month
  • Five Acres Animal Shelter
  • All American Pet Resorts
  • Alaska Airlines Pet Policy — Every Rule That Matters Before You Book

Recent Comments

  1. STEPHANIE M on 12 Vets That Offer Cat Declawing Near Me 🐱✂️

    We’ve always had our cats declawed. They still think they have claws and can still climb anything & everything. 😂…

  2. Bestie Paws on How to Get a Service Dog for Free Near Me

    What you're describing — wheelchair use, a tracheostomy, and a diagnosed mental disability — actually qualifies you for two distinct…

  3. Jonathan Russell on How to Get a Service Dog for Free Near Me

    I’m in a wheelchair and have a hole in my throat, I’m disabled and would love to get a service…

  4. Christine Clark on 12 Vets That Offer Cat Declawing Near Me 🐱✂️

    In the 1970's I worked for a practice of 6 vets in Pasadena, Md. & declawed cats often. We did…

  5. Bestie Paws on 12 Non-Prescription Low Phosphorus Wet Cat Foods

    💬 Expert Reply You've identified one of the genuinely difficult corners of CKD cat nutrition — and you're not alone.…

Help for Seniors Near Me
https://www.budgetseniors.com/

The content, tools, and chat features on Bestie Paws are for informational and educational purposes only. They are not a substitute for professional veterinary or medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

  • ⚠️ Privacy Policy
  • ⚖️ Terms of Service
©2026 Bestie Paws Hospital | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes