The Millions in Lost Pocket Change on Planes

Date:

Share post:

The Fortune Lost Yearly as Pocket Change Falls Through the Cracks

You reach for your phone and keys as you grab your bag and jacket to dash off a flight. In the shuffle, a few errant coins slip out from your pocket, rolling under the seat as you rush away. Multiply those forgotten pennies and quarters and other pocket change by millions of airline passengers each year, and you have a financial phenomenon – the millions of dollars in loose change left annually on commercial flights.

A Fortune Between the Cushions

According to estimates, around $58 million in spare change and crumpled bills are abandoned on airplanes in the U.S. every year. With hundreds of millions of domestic flights annually, it’s easy to see how coins quickly add up as they work their way into seat cushions and crevices.

While discovering a few dollars in loose change might seem like a welcome surprise, don’t get too excited at the thought of striking it rich. Even if you flew daily, the likelihood of finding more than a few nickels and dimes left wedged in your seat is low.

Still, small change can make a big difference in the aggregate. And often that money goes not to other lucky passengers but directly into the coffers of the airline industry.

The TSA’s Unintentional Revenue

In addition to pocket change left behind on planes, a sizable sum gets abandoned at TSA security checkpoints each year. In 2022, it’s estimated that travelers will have forgotten over $1 million in bins and scanners.

Unlike the airlines, the TSA gets to keep and utilize any money collected at checkpoints, which contributed over $960,000 to the federal agency’s budget in 2018 alone.

So why are travelers leaving more cash at TSA gates? The increased prevalence of cashless payments means many people rarely carry bills and coins anymore. Scrambling to empty pockets at security, it’s easy to forget a few errant dollars and cents among small luggage items. Or passengers may simply choose not to hold up the line to dig that quarter out from the bottom of the bin.

Either way, the TSA surely doesn’t mind this unintentional revenue stream from American travelers each year as payment for their services keeping the skies safe.

Think Twice Before Tossing Your Change

The millions in abandoned pocket change each year sheds light on a peculiar byproduct of mass air travel and security – the tendency to misplace and forget about our pocket change.

So next time you’re flying, take a moment while boarding or going through security to double check for any loose coins or cash. Unless you want your forgotten nickels and dimes contributing to the millions in lost airline revenue or TSA funding, it pays to be mindful of keeping those cents in your pocket.


Additional Fun Facts


747 Million

US airline passengers in 2022

5.2%

of America’s total GDP was from the U.S. Aviation industry as of 2022

$206 Billion

US Airline industry revenue in 2022; a drop from $248 Billion in 2019.

1 in 11 Million

probability of dying in a plane crash. Chances of dying in a car crash are 2,200 times higher (1 in 5,000)!


spot_img

Related articles

How the Eiffel Tower Was Built: The Marvel of 1889

In the winter of 1887, Parisian journalists gathered at a curious construction site on the Champ de Mars. There, amid wooden scaffolding and the rhythmic clang of hammers, they witnessed what one reporter would describe as men "reaping lightning bolts in the clouds."

Alan Smithee: The Worst Director in Hollywood

For over 30 years, one name appeared again and again as the director of some of the worst movies ever made - Alan Smithee. But Alan Smithee wasn't a real person. He was a pseudonym used by Hollywood directors who wanted to disavow their finished films.

Emmanuel Nwude: The Man Behind the $242 Million Nigerian Airport Scam

In the late 1990s, a brazen fraudster named Emmanuel Nwude pulled off one of history's most outrageous cons - selling a fictional airport to a gullible Brazilian bank director for a whopping $242 million.

The Oldest Customer Complaint: A 4,000-Year-Old Complaint to Ea-Nasir

The next time you find yourself composing an angry email to customer service, take comfort in knowing you're participating in a tradition nearly four millennia old. Long before Yelp reviews and Twitter rants, an irate customer named Nanni etched his frustrations into clay, creating what would become the world's oldest documented customer complaint. His target? A copper merchant named Ea-Nasir...
0