Qanot Sharq
Maximum weight: 5 kg
The context in a few words
Qanot Sharq mostly operates within Ouzbékistan and its immediate neighbours. It's the typical regional carrier profile: a tight fleet, focused routes, and a baggage policy that mirrors the regional norm.
Numbers to remember: and 5 kg. At this level of rigour, the gap between theory and gate practice gets expensive — a lot of travellers get caught and end up paying for hold luggage.
In concrete terms: a typical "cabin format" suitcase weighs 2–3 kg empty for 55×40×20 cm. Weight is the recurring concern: at 2–3 kg empty, payload melts fast. Frequent travellers tune the bag to exact spec to avoid gate-side reclassification fees.
On the ground, agent discretion is wider than on majors. A bag that's slightly over may pass; a clearly oversized one ends up in the hold, sometimes free of charge, but with extra wait at arrival.
Don't overlook the allowed personal item — it's often the trick that saves a light trip. Handbag, laptop sleeve or small backpack, as long as it slides under the seat in front. On Qanot Sharq, that's where books, headphones, water and flight essentials live without eating into the main carry-on.
Which bag for Qanot Sharq?
Across Qanot Sharq's network, what matters is consistency between the case and the published rules. The cases below are sized to clear without dispute.