Yes, hardshell luggage works for carry-on as long as the bag's dimensions fall within your airline's overhead bin limits — the shell material doesn't affect compliance, only the measurements do.

Hardshell carry-ons made from polycarbonate or ABS+PC composite are fully permitted on commercial flights. What determines whether a hardshell carry-on clears security is the three-number size spec, not the shell type. The Island Elephant 20-inch hardshell carry-on measures 22" × 14.5" × 9" unexpanded — sized to fit overhead bins on American, Delta, United, and Southwest without triggering a gate-check fee. The rigid shell doesn't compress to make room, so staying within the unexpanded dimensions matters more with hardshell luggage than with soft-sided bags.

  • Island Elephant 20-inch hardshell carry-on dimensions: 22" × 14.5" × 9" unexpanded.
  • Unexpanded capacity on the Island Elephant expandable 20-inch carry-on: 38L.
  • Expanded capacity on the Island Elephant expandable 20-inch carry-on: 46L — may exceed budget airline bin limits.
  • Island Elephant 20-inch hardshell carry-on empty weight: 7.5 lbs (3.4 kg).
  • Confirmed overhead bin fit: American, Delta, United, and Southwest at unexpanded dimensions.

Important Exceptions

  • Budget carriers (Spirit, Frontier, Allegiant): These airlines enforce tighter bin dimensions than major US carriers — even the Island Elephant 20-inch at 22" × 14.5" × 9" may not clear their limits without a fee.
  • Expanded mode on any flight: Releasing the Island Elephant expandable carry-on's expansion zipper increases depth beyond 9" — that pushed size can trigger gate-check even on American or Delta if a gate agent measures the bag.
  • Regional and commuter aircraft: Small-gauge planes (CRJ-700, ERJ-145) have undersized overhead bins; hardshell carry-ons — including the Island Elephant 20-inch — are routinely gate-checked regardless of dimensions.
  • International short-haul routes: European and Asian low-cost carriers commonly set cabin bag limits at 20" × 15.7" × 7.9" or smaller — the Island Elephant 20-inch exceeds that depth at 9" unexpanded.
  • Oversized personal item rules: If you're using a smaller hardshell as a personal item under the seat, bin dimensions don't apply — under-seat depth (typically 10"–11") becomes the binding constraint instead.