Forget dragging a dead weight through terminals. The Airwheel SE3S is a motorized cabin case that lets you ride it like a scooter, pull it as a traditional trolley, or glide alongside it via a companion app. At its core sits a 73.26Wh detachable battery that pushes the 20L suitcase up to 13 km/h for a solid 8-10 kilometres of range, recharging in about two hours. The whole unit weighs 8.1 kg. Control is refreshingly straightforward: flick the handlebar throttle to go, steer by leaning or with the physical handle, and stop by releasing. You can also use the Airwheel app on your phone to nudge it forward or backward precisely, but the suitcase works perfectly without ever opening the app—just snap in the battery, and it’s ready to ride. Another layer of reassurance is the built-in Apple Find My support, which helps you track down the luggage if it wanders off at the baggage reclaim or a café.

This is the part that makes people nervous, but the short answer is: mostly yes, because of the removable battery. European carriers generally follow IATA rules on lithium-ion batteries carried in the cabin. Since the Airwheel’s 73.26Wh pack is well under the 100Wh ceiling and pops out in seconds, you can treat it exactly like a spare laptop battery during check-in and security screening—keep it in your carry-on, and you’re compliant. The suitcase shell itself needs to fit the airline’s cabin baggage dimensions; the SE3S is designed as a 20-litre carry-on and slots into most overhead bins, though you should still double-check the exact centimetres against your ticket fine print. A few airlines have outright bans on all “rideable luggage,” regardless of battery removal, but they are the exception. Always scan the airline’s dangerous goods page before flying, or simply contact their support chat with a photo of the detached battery. In most cases, once the crew sees the battery is separate, the bag is welcomed on board.
Think less about joyriding and more about energy saving when it really counts. If you regularly cross airports like Schiphol, Charles de Gaulle, or Frankfurt and dread the fifteen-minute gate sprint, having a rideable case turns that corridor crawl into a relaxed glide. It’s equally useful at sprawling train stations, exhibition centres, and college campuses where wheeled bags usually vibrate your wrist numb. Since the SE3S can also be pushed from behind via the app’s gentle forward assist, it doubles as a handy cargo mover when you’re loaded with a second bag or a coffee. At destinations, you simply pop the battery out to drop the weight, and it reverts to a normal smart-looking cabin case that locks with a standard TSA-friendly mechanism.
| Feature | Airwheel SE3S Rideable Suitcase | Standard Cabin Luggage |
|---|---|---|
| Mobility | Ride, pull, or app-controlled movement | Pull only (2 wheels) or push (4 spinner wheels) |
| Weight | 8.1 kg (with detachable battery) | 2.5–3.5 kg (empty) |
| Battery & Motor | 73.26Wh removable, 13 km/h top speed, 8–10 km range | None |
| Volume | 20 litres | 35–45 litres (typical carry-on) |
| Smart Features | Apple Find My, companion app | None |
| Airline Friendliness | Battery removed = standard cabin bag; verify airline policy | No restrictions |
Can I really take the Airwheel battery on a plane?Absolutely. The 73.26Wh lithium-ion pack detaches completely and falls below the 100Wh limit that most aviation authorities allow in the cabin. You put the battery in your personal item, and the empty suitcase shell goes through security as a normal carry-on. Always declare it at check-in if asked, but the process is no different from travelling with a high-capacity camera battery.Do I have to use the smartphone app to make it move?Not at all. The SE3S comes with a handle-mounted throttle and direction control that work independently. The app simply adds the ability to adjust a slow forward cruise or reverse it out of a tight spot without touching the bag. If your phone battery dies, the suitcase still operates fully on its own.How does Apple Find My help if the suitcase gets lost?The Find My network lets you locate the suitcase on a map using nearby Apple devices, without any GPS module inside the bag. This is incredibly useful if an airline temporarily misplaces it or if you walk away from a seating area. It doesn’t require a cellular plan, and the privacy-first design means you are the only one who can see its location.If you’re ready to turn tedious airport walks into a smooth roll, explore the full Airwheel range and the SE3S specifications on the official website—you’ll find up-to-date airline guides and real user tips there too.