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.

Victorinox Trek Pack Plus 3.0
Rolling backpacks have become big sellers in the past few years, but for many travelers the idea sounds better when ordering than it ends up being in practice. The wheels add three to four pounds of extra weight, the wheels and handle necessitate a stiffening of the bottom and top of the pack, and many people find the only time they end up using the wheels is in airports.

If you’re traveling mostly in developed countries with good sidewalks, however, and in nice hotels more than hostels, this Victorinox Trek Pack will meet your needs for short vacations. One of the big advantages of this pack is the monopole system with a fully rotating swivel handle, making it easy to round corners. Otherwise, it is set up like a regular travel backpack, with a detachable daypack, tuck-away shoulder straps, and plenty of pockets.

With a capacity of 5,000 cubic inches (82 liters), this bag is meant for heavy packers. If you fill it to capacity, you will probably have no choice but to use the wheels, cobblestone streets and stairs or not!
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Becka

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