Can you take cheese from France to the UK?
Hard cheese is fine in your cabin bag. Soft cheeses like brie or fresh cheese count as a gel at security, so cabin containers must be 100ml or less — otherwise pack in checked luggage.
Triple-check
Security · Airline · BorderSoft or spreadable forms count as gels — keep cabin containers to 100ml. Hard, solid forms are usually fine through screening.
At the checkpoint leaving the origin airport.
Checked luggage solves the security size problem, but it does not solve the import problem.
Many countries ban or restrict dairy and meat products on arrival regardless of how they're packed.
Cabin vs checked baggage rules.
Dairy, meat and other animal products are frequently restricted on import to the UK. Check the destination's biosecurity rules before you pack.
Customs and import rules in the UK.
Best packing plan
Cabin
Hard cheese is fine in your cabin bag. Soft/spreadable cheese counts as a gel, so containers must be 100ml or less in cabin.
Checked
All cheese travels fine in checked luggage — wrap well and pack with a cool pack for longer journeys.
Border
Dairy and animal-product import rules apply when you arrive in the UK. Check GOV.UK guidance on bringing food into Great Britain.
Strictest play: Safest packing plan: keep individual containers at 100ml or less, or put the full-size item in checked luggage.
Source: EU passenger security guidance applies as a regional fallback. We don't have an airport-specific source for this departure, so the answer assumes the EU 100ml baseline.
This answer covers France → the UK. The rules can change depending on where you're flying from and to — check this item for your exact route.
Liquid Limits focuses on airport security and liquid-like travel items. Separate customs, import, airline, or destination laws may apply. CBD, alcohol, medicine, food liquids, and dangerous goods may need official destination guidance beyond airport security. What this site covers and doesn't cover.
Related guides
Packing checklist for this trip
A short checklist for this trip — pack what you need to stay within the rules above.
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Frequently asked questions
Can I take cheese from France to the UK?
Hard cheese is fine in your cabin bag. Soft cheeses like brie or fresh cheese count as a gel at security, so cabin containers must be 100ml or less — otherwise pack in checked luggage.
Can I pack cheese in cabin baggage?
Hard cheese is fine in your cabin bag. Soft/spreadable cheese counts as a gel, so containers must be 100ml or less in cabin.
Can I put cheese in checked luggage?
All cheese travels fine in checked luggage — wrap well and pack with a cool pack for longer journeys.
Do I need to declare cheese at customs in the UK?
Dairy and animal-product import rules apply when you arrive in the UK. Check GOV.UK guidance on bringing food into Great Britain.
LiquidLimits.com is a travel planning tool, not an official airport or government source. Rules can change between trips and between terminals. Always check the official airport or aviation security guidance before you travel, and when in doubt pack to the stricter 100ml cabin-bag rule.