BY: article@nationalcorporate.com.au; FROM: articletrader.com
Why should you identify carry-on luggage? After all, you're carrying it with you...
Well, the first reason is because you have to. Airlines require that all luggage have proper identification. This is for carry-on bags as well as checked luggage. An easily identifiable tag of your own is the best for this.
Even though you're going to be carrying it on, it's always best to have a way to identify carry-on luggage to tell it apart from the luggage of other travelers.... so a name tag in a bright color or one laminated with a big picture of your pet or something like that will make it legal and identifiable at a glance to you.
If you don't have a tag, you can always use one of those paper tags that they have at airline counters. Put one of those on anyway... it will add to the "uniqueness" of your bag.
You don't always have that carry-on bag with you. Once you get to your destination, it may ride in the back of a shared minibus or in the storage compartment under an airporter bus. Chances are that it won't go missing, but if you have identification for your carry-on luggage, you will at least have a chance of getting it back if someone else grabs it by mistake.
This is also helpful if you have to leave bags with the hotel because of check out or check in times. It's important to identify carry-on luggage if you're on a tour. It will get stored with the carry-on luggage of all the rest of your tour companions. Think what might happen if that bag gets "misplaced" while someone else is transporting it for you....
We once were on a trekking vacation in India. On the bus ride to our trekking destination, our bag was left on the side of the road.... don't ask how that happened! Several hours after we arrived at our hotel, the Indian army returned our bag to us because it had proper identification on it, and our itinerary inside.
You may find that size and weight restrictions are much stricter abroad than they are at home. We've had to check suitcases in China and Europe that we routinely carry on at home. There is no use arguing that you always carry them on. Those airline personnel have the final say... and if they say to check it.... you check it. At least you have the proper identification on it.
Security experts do recommend that your address be covered so unscrupulous people won't know you are away from home. They even sometimes recommend that you put a business address on the identification tag.
That's fine, but you want an honest person to be able to contact you, so have a phone number or address or your itinerary where they can find you if necessary.