By Roy Denish
Thousands of bags are being left behind at airports worldwide as soaring luggage fees, strict airline rules, and passenger frustration fuel a growing baggage crisis. Meanwhile, cybercriminals are exploiting the confusion with fake “lost luggage” sales, prompting urgent warnings from Bandaranaike International Airport and aviation authorities.
Strict airline fees, rigid weight limits, and a rise in opportunistic cybercrime are driving a complex logistics headache at international hubs, leaving airport terminals with thousands of pieces of unclaimed baggage.
Airlines and aviation authorities report that a mix of economic calculation and passenger frustration has turned airport check-in areas and baggage claims into accidental disposal zones.
While the majority of airport luggage remains unclaimed due to transit errors or routing mishaps, airport ground handlers note an increasing number of travelers are making a deliberate financial choice to walk away from their possessions.
“When a low-cost carrier demands a $100 penalty at the gate for a bag that contains $50 worth of clothing, the math changes for the passenger,” said independent aviation analyst Jerome de Silva. “People are calculating the replacement cost of their items against the immediate cash penalty. Frequently, the bag loses.”
Strict international security regulations regarding liquids, gels, and over-the-counter items also contribute to the pileup, as travelers regularly dump heavy toiletries or restricted purchases into terminal bins rather than paying to check them into the cargo hold.
The phenomenon has caught the attention of syndicates operating online. At Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA), the primary international gateway in Sri Lanka, authorities have issued urgent warnings regarding sophisticated digital scams exploiting the global luggage backlog.
Phishing campaigns on social media platforms have repeatedly targeted the public with fraudulent offers, pretending to clear out BIA’s lost-and-found warehouses by selling “abandoned suitcases” for nominal fees.
Airport & Aviation Services Sri Lanka (AASL), which oversees operations at BIA, clarified that while the hub processes hundreds of thousands of pieces of baggage monthly, there is no crisis of mass abandonment at the terminal. Officials stated that all legitimate lost or delayed luggage is held securely under customs bond or at designated arrival storage facilities while teams work to match bags with their owners.
Under standard international aviation frameworks, luggage that remains completely unclaimed after a period of 60 to 90 days is typically subject to strict local legal procedures, which may involve controlled salvage auctions or destruction, rather than direct public sales online.
