Airports are where gluten-free travel plans go to die — or at least that’s the reputation. The reality in 2026 is better than the myth, but only if you work the system instead of hoping it works for you. Here is the plan we use ourselves, gate to gate.
Before you fly: win the trip at home
Pack two sealed, labelled gluten-free snacks in your carry-on. Security in the US, Canada, Mexico and the EU allows sealed solid food through screening — it’s liquids they care about. Those two bars are not a backup plan; they are the plan. Delays, gate changes and sold-out shelves are when hungry people make risky calls.
If your airline serves meals, request the gluten-free meal (the booking code is GFML) when you book, or at latest 48 hours before departure. Then confirm it again at check-in — meal loading errors are rare but real, and the crew cannot conjure a GFML at 35,000 feet. One caveat from the editorial desk: an airline GFML is prepared to airline standards, not dedicated-kitchen standards. Coeliac travellers tell us experiences vary by carrier; eat your own backup if anything seems off.
At the airport: sealed beats served
The hierarchy that keeps you safe at any hub in the world: packaged and labelled first, dedicated outlets second, everything else last. Most major airports now stock labelled gluten-free items in grab-and-go chains and convenience stores — the trick is checking the terminal map before you’re hungry, not after. Food courts are the highest-risk zone: shared fryers, shared counters, staff under time pressure. If you do order hot food, ask the same two questions you’d ask anywhere: is there a dedicated prep space, and is the fryer separate? Hesitation is also an answer.
On the plane
Wipe down your tray table (crumbs are the classic plane hazard for coeliacs), keep your snacks within reach, and if the GFML doesn’t arrive — it happens — you’re covered, because you packed for exactly this.
The rule that never fails
A label beats a promise. Verbal assurances vary by airport, airline and shift. A sealed product with a printed label is the same in every country. When in doubt, your backup snack wins — and your trip carries on.
Travelling to the World Cup this summer? Our city guides cover gluten-free options for all 16 host cities, including airport notes — see the guide hub. As always: kitchens and ranges change without notice, so re-verify any listing on the day.

