Samurai swords, WWII flight jacket, meteorite among items left behind by travelers: Unclaimed Baggage report

Travelers left millions of items behind in 2025, including things as eccentric as a samurai sword, as expensive as diamond earrings and as historic as a World W

Travelers left millions of items behind in 2025, including things as eccentric as a samurai sword, as expensive as diamond earrings and as historic as a World War II flight jacket, according to the new Unclaimed Baggage report.

Unclaimed Baggage, which calls itself the nationโ€™s only retailer of lost luggage, released its annual Found Report on Thursday, listing its most interesting finds from luggage that airports couldnโ€™t get back to passengers.

“Each year, I am amazed at the treasures discovered in luggage and what it reveals about our society,” Bryan Owens, the company’s CEO, said in a statement. “After more than 55 years of reclaiming the lost and rejected for good, we often believe we’ve seen it all. But then we uncover something like a matching set of Samurai swords, a fully assembled robot, a Dolce & Gabbana jeweled jacket or gold-plated golf clubs, and we are reminded of why the annual ‘Found Report’ exists.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to Unclaimed Baggage for comment.

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The report said that while 99.9% of checked bags eventually get back to their owners, “a rare few take a detour โ€” one that ends in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains in Scottsboro, Alabama,” the location of the Unclaimed Baggage store.

The top 10 finds for the companyโ€™s third annual report include a robot, a bionic knee, 10K gold teeth grills, a meteorite, a pair of fire poi used for fire dancing, an Australian one-ounce pure gold bar, a matching set of samurai swords, a beekeeping suit, gold-plated golf clubs and a teak didgeridoo.

The top five most expensive finds include white diamond earrings worth an estimated more than $43,000, a stainless steel Rolex watch with 18k yellow gold and diamond dial worth around $35,000, a Tosca bass clarinet worth $17,500, a Balenciaga leather jacket worth $12,500 and a T530 thermal camera valued at more than $12,000.

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What the report described as “weird” finds include a taxidermy deer form, frog purse, pre-World War I U.S. Army bayonet, a giant stuffed goose, a long bone specimen, an armadillo purse, a 12-pack case of sardines, a fake skeleton, a suitcase filled with rat poison, and a feather bow tie.

The top sports find was signed boxing gloves from undefeated boxing champion Terence Crawford, the top fashion find was Miss North Dakota USA 2025โ€™s state costume designed by Ryan Castillo, and the top find from around the world was a Tibetan singing bowl.

A 1960s Ken doll complete with carrying case was the top pop culture find, vintage cassette tapes of Elvis and Bobby Helmsโ€™ Jingle Bell Rock made the top musical find, and an 1893 commemorative coin made the top currency find.

The top historical find was a U.S. Army Air Force A-2 leather flight jacket and the top tech find was a 1900s Kellogg candlestick telephone.

The company noticed trends in the baggage of travelers packing “more pop collectibles,” like Labubus, than ever. There was a “shift toward attainable luxury โ€ฆ without the premium price tag,” many packed books, especially “The Housemaid” author Freida McFadden, and more gold traveled than theyโ€™d seen “in years.”ย 

“From 24K dice to gold-plated golf clubs, this precious metal showed up in suitcases as both a statement and a store of value,” the report said.ย 

Last year, Owens told Fox News that the company recycles about one-third of the items, and gives another third to charity.

At the time, Owens said one of the strangest things heโ€™d seen was a “well-traveled, almost wornout Gucci suitcase that was packed full of Egyptian artifacts that went back to 1500 BC.”

Owens added that the airlines “put a lot of effort” into reuniting bags with their owners because “itโ€™s much more to their advantage economically to reunite you with your bag than to sell us your unclaimed bags.”

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