
I follow the news all day long and today, I kept seeing the same claim pop up that TSA was rolling out a new “clear bag rule,” and travelers would need transparent bags to get through airport security. I even saw that Amazon sells clear TSA bags.
It sounded big enough to matter and vague enough to be confusing, which usually means one thing: the internet is blending a real rule with a rumor. Although I have no plans to travel or deal with TSA again in the near future, I know many of my friends are traveling for spring break and since TSA is already a talking point, I needed answers.
So I asked ChatGPT to explain it.
The short version is that it could not find any TSA announcement or public rule change requiring passengers to use clear carry-on bags at airport checkpoints. Recent fact checks say that the viral claim is false and a simple April Fool's joke that went awry.
What TSA does still require is the long-standing 3-1-1 liquids rule. According to TSA, passengers can bring liquids, aerosols, gels, creams and pastes in travel-size containers of 3.4 ounces or less, packed in one quart-size, clear, plastic, zip-top bag, with one bag per passenger.
Using AI to fact-check

When I tell people I often use AI to fact-check, I usually get a laugh. But, I'm not joking. When done the right way, AI can help break down the news and find sources. You just need to know the right questions to ask and use a straightforward prompt. In this case, I simply asked a direct question:
“Is TSA requiring clear bags for airport security now? If so, what changed and when?”
Within seconds, ChatGPT gave me a clear answer: it could not find any official TSA announcement or rule change requiring clear carry-on bags.
That alone saved me time — but I didn’t stop there. I asked it for sources not just answers. Because ChatGPT is known to be wrong 1 in 4 times, you cannot be too careful. In this case, I also leaned on Gemini and Perplexity for sources and they all said the same thing.
Next, I refined the prompt:
“Show me the official TSA guidance or sources confirming this.”
This is the step most people skip — and it’s the difference that actually verifies something.
ChatGPT pointed back to official TSA guidance and recent fact checks, which all said the same thing. The "clear bag rule" is not real and is an April Fool's joke that spread.
Then, I asked what is real. Instead of stopping at “it’s false,” I asked:
“What actual TSA rules could people be confusing this with?”
This is where ChatGPT becomes incredibly useful. It explained that the confusion likely comes from the long-standing 3-1-1 liquids rule: Liquids must be in containers of 3.4 ounces or less , all liquids go in one quart-size clear zip-top bag and one bag per passenger.
What AI is good at (and what it’s not)

AI is excellent at summarizing complex rules quickly and spotting patterns in misinformation. AI tools like Gemini in Nano Banana 2 can also often decipher if an image has been AI generated. This is often helpful for videos or images that appear to be real on social media or in a news feed.
And while AI is good at translating confusing things, it also is known to hallucinate and be a people-pleaser. It's not perfect and can sound confident when it's wrong, pull outdated or incomplete information and miss nuance if the question is vague.
That’s why the goal isn’t blind trust — it’s faster clarity. When I did a quick Google search about TSA clear bags, it didn't immediately come up with the fact that it was an April Fool's joke. Instead, I got several e-commerce links to buy clear TSA bags.
Why this works so well right now

We’re in a moment where real information spreads at the same speed as rumors. Sometimes faster. AI helps because it can collapse multiple sources into one explanation, highlight what’s consistent versus questionable and give you a starting point in seconds.
Instead of guessing what’s true or looking to a typical search engine, you can get information in seconds.
Finally, I asked one more question:
“Has anything changed recently with TSA screening that might cause confusion?”
This surfaced something important — and real. TSA is rolling out newer CT scanning technology at some airports, which can give officers a more detailed look inside bags and allow travelers in some lanes to leave liquids and electronics inside
But, this isn’t consistent everywhere. Rules can still vary by airport and even by checkpoint lane.
The takeaway
What surprised me wasn’t just that AI got the answer right. But how quickly I went from confusion to clarity and context.
Instead of clicking through multiple articles or guessing which sources were reliable, ChatGPT gave me a structured explaination in seconds so I didn't have to connect the dots myself.
If you want to fact-check something fast, this is the framework I frequently use:
“Is [claim] true? Show me official sources. If it’s false or misleading, explain what people might be confusing it with.”
So the real takeaway here is that there is no new TSA rule requiring clear carry-on bags. But there is a better way to fact-check confusing claims when they start spreading.