U.S. Airports are Hotbeds for Laptop Loss

Travel Blog  •  Elyse Franko  •  07.07.08 | 3:29 PM ET

Flustered flyers leave behind an astounding 12,000 laptops in U.S. airports each week, according to a recent study (pdf) sponsored by Dell. But here’s the really scary part: The Economist’s Gulliver blog reports that less than 35 percent of those lost laptops are returned to their owners.

On a related note, this video from the British show “The Real Hustle” provides a step-by-step demonstration of laptop theft at an airport security checkpoint. According to these guys, about 3,500 laptops are stolen at U.K. airports each year. Hopefully these numbers will be enough to shock travelers into keeping their hands—and eyes—on their laptops at all times.

Update, Sept. 17: The stat isn’t accurate. Sean O’Neill at This Just In helped sniff out the problems with the number soon after the press release went out about the Dell-sponsored study, and earlier this week the Wall Street Journal also picked over the faulty reasoning.

“[T]he 12,000 figure includes laptops that were briefly lost and then found before they were ever moved,” writes the WSJ’s Carl Bialik. “A follow-up estimate by the institute found that roughly 70% to 85% of laptops left at security checkpoints are reclaimed in the original location, never reaching lost-and-found.”


Elyse Franko is a Long Island native, a graduate of the American University School of Communication in Washington, D.C., and a former World Hum intern. During her time at university, she wrote and edited for several campus publications and fostered her love for traveling by spending time abroad in Istanbul, Turkey, and Berlin, Germany. She currently works as a teaching assistant in Vienna, Austria.


2 Comments for U.S. Airports are Hotbeds for Laptop Loss

Sophie 07.07.08 | 5:52 PM ET

Hm. I usually won’t let my stuff start moving through the x-ray until they’re ready for me to walk through the thingamabob—but I’ve actually had a woman try to jump in front of me because I was “just standing there.” I wanted to smack her silly (but I can be tense that way).

Louise 08.01.08 | 12:38 PM ET

OK - But now that virtually all airports are demanding that laptops are taken out of their cases or carriers and placed in a plastic tray to be passed through Xray machines - doesn’t that make it a little tougher? You can’t just pick up a bag anymore - you have to put the laptop back in it, which can’t be done half as quickly or unobtrusively.

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