Airports feel like controlled, secure environments. Cameras everywhere, staff everywhere, crowds everywhere. It seems like the last place a thief would take a chance. But the luggage carousel is one of the easiest places for someone to walk off with your belongings — and it happens far more often than people realize.
The problem is simple: once your bag leaves the aircraft and slides onto that conveyor belt, it’s in a public space. Anyone can grab it. And unless someone physically sees the theft happen, it’s almost impossible to prove who took what.
Here’s how it happens — and how you can protect yourself.
1. The “Oops, Wrong Bag” Trick
This is the most common tactic. A thief simply picks up a suitcase that looks expensive or easy to resell and walks away with it, pretending it’s theirs. If anyone questions them, they shrug and say, “Oh, sorry, I thought it was mine.”
By the time you realize your bag isn’t coming, they’re already in a taxi.
Why it works:
Most luggage looks similar. Black roller bags dominate every carousel. Thieves rely on confusion and the fact that no one wants to accuse a stranger of stealing.
2. The “Grab and Go Before You Arrive” Move
Some thieves don’t even wait for passengers. They position themselves at the carousel before the flight’s passengers reach the area. Bags start coming out, and they simply take one and leave. That rarely happens at the airports I visit! I'm always waiting at the carousel for my luggage.
Why it works:
Airports rarely check baggage claim areas for boarding passes. Anyone can walk in.
3. The “Distract and Lift” Team
This is less common in Canada but more common in busy international hubs. One person creates a distraction — asking a question, bumping into someone, dropping something — while their partner quietly lifts a bag and disappears.
Why it works:
People focus on the distraction, not the carousel.
4. The “Unzip and Dip” Theft
Sometimes the thief doesn’t take the whole suitcase. They unzip it on the carousel or just after grabbing it, remove valuables, and toss the bag somewhere else in the terminal.
Why it works:
Most people don’t notice a missing item until they reach their hotel.
5. The “Swap and Steal”
A thief takes your bag and leaves behind a similar one — often empty or filled with junk. You think your bag is delayed or missing, but the thief is already gone with the real one.
Why it works:
People assume the airline lost their luggage, not that someone swapped it.
How to Protect Yourself
These are simple, practical steps that dramatically reduce your risk.
1. Get to the carousel quickly
Don’t stop for the washroom or coffee until after you have your bag. The longer your luggage spins unattended, the more vulnerable it is.
2. Make your bag unmistakably yours
Add:
• A bright luggage strap
• A colourful tag
• A patterned handle wrap - we use fluorescent wool
• Stickers or decals
Thieves avoid bags that stand out.
3. Use a luggage tracker
Air Tags, Tile, and Samsung SmartTags can show you exactly where your bag is — even if someone walks off with it. When I'm at home, I put one air tag my air tag in my car and the other one on my key chain!
4. Lock your zippers
A simple TSA‑approved lock prevents “unzip and dip” theft.
5. Stand close to the chute
Thieves prefer bags that have already made a few loops. Standing near the point where bags first appear reduces opportunity.
6. Don’t get distracted
Keep your eyes on the carousel, not your phone.
7. Check your bag immediately
Before leaving the airport, make sure:
• The zippers are intact
• Nothing feels unusually light
• Your name tag is still attached
If something is wrong, report it before exiting the secure area.
Luggage theft isn’t just about losing clothes. It’s about losing medications, passports, electronics, sentimental items, and sometimes the only things you packed for a long‑awaited trip. And because baggage claim is a public area, airlines often won’t compensate for theft — only for lost bags.
Understanding how thieves operate gives you the power to stop them.