Best Travel Backpacks

By Tim Leffel, Travel Expert

Walk into a gear store or visit a product website to browse for backpacks and you may feel like an overwhelmed tea-totaler trying to pick out a bottle in a wine for a gift. Once upon a time there were a few dependable brands of backpacks with a handful of models a year. Now there are literally hundreds of them vying for your attention.

Fortunately, you can dismiss a big subsection of them by eliminating the ones for campers and hikers. These are generally lightweight, stuffed-from-the-top affairs that enable you to traverse the Appalachian Trail with a sleeping bag, tent, and cooking gear along for the ride. What you need for travel is a different kind of backpack. Here are the best ones out there for a short group adventure tour or a yearlong trip around the world.

High Sierra ATQ Carry-on Wheeled Backpack
Wheeled backpacks work best when they’re not so heavy you’re forced to use the wheels all the time. This 50-liter (3068 cubic inches) High Sierra model is small enough to work as a carry-on, but still has a detachable daypack and plenty of bells and whistles.

The daypack can be zipped onto the main bag or slipped over the telescoping handle. It has a zippered accessory pocket, two mesh water bottle holders, a headphone port, and room for all your books and camera gear.

With a telescoping handle for the wheels plus side and top handles for other times, this is a versatile bag that works well for a trip of a week or two. Be advised though that bags of this design are suitcase first, backpack second: you will have a handle hitting your back instead of an adjustable internal frame and there are no additional support straps for your waist or chest.
Shop for this productClick here
Get cashback for you, favorite charity, or school

BUZZ

Post a comment...
Becka

The North Face Backtrack 70 is lightweight, and I like the long narrow shape for trekking