The Best Travel Totes for Digital Nomads Who Never Log Off
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Summer is right around the corner. We’re headed out on adventures and bringing our stuff with us. Here are all the tech and tips that WIRED Reviews recommends for your travels.
Your search ends here: the best travel tote for planes, trains, and any journey in between is Away's Everywhere Tote ($158). It doesn't collapse under pressure, doesn't mind getting dirty, and, most importantly, carries your baggage (emotional or otherwise).
Finding the best totes for travel shouldn't be harder than finding your gate, and somehow it is. Frankly, it seems like totes don't want to work these days. They're floppy, allergic to moisture, and too cool to carry actual stuff. They went vegan, then minimalist, then micro. But you need something spacious, wipable, and tough enough to survive TSA.
If the Everywhere Tote isn't your vibe, we've schlepped some close seconds through airports, overstuffed them with travel essentials, and wedged them under seats. We have guides to the Best Tote Bags and Best Messenger and Crossbody Bags for more commuter picks, but if you're shopping for travel gear, check out our guides to the Best Carry-On Luggage, Best Toiletry Bags, and Best Travel Pillows.
Updated May 2026: I have refined picks to the top 5 and added the Béis Sport Tote and the Yardsale Day Bag. I have also added more honorable mentions and updated prices and links.
Compare Top 6 Travel Totes
| Product | Best for | Materials | Capacity | Colors | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Away The Everywhere Tote | Air travel | Nylon, leather | 21 liters | Jet Black, Navy Blue, Coast Blue, Sea Green, Cloud Gray, Salt White, and Clay Pink | $158 |
| Yardsale The Day Bag | Day trips and skiing | Recycled nylon with a PFAS-free, DWR coating | 20 and 30 liters | Double Black, Hot Cocoa, Marshmallow, Cherry Blossom, Butter | $184 |
| Béis The Sport Tote | Outdoor activities and sports | Nylon body and polyester lining | 21.1 liters | Black, Atlas pink, Limone | $88 |
| L.L. Bean Zip Hunter's Tote Bag With Strap | Outdoor activities | 1,200-denier polyester shell, nylon, and thermoplastic interior coating | 15 liters (medium), 29 liters (large), 53 liters (extra-large) | Black, Maple Brown, Olive Drab | $65 |
| Lo & Sons The O.G. 2 | Weekend trips and air travel | Nylon and Napa leather | 25.1 liters (medium), 26 liters (large) | Black | $378 |
| Topo Designs Mountain Gear Bag | Road trips | 1000D recycled nylon, 200D lightweight recycled nylon, 10 oz vinyl tarp liner | 48 liters | Pond Blue/Spice, Black/Neutral, Desert Palm/Sahara, Black | $159 |
More Travel Totes I Recommend
Longchamp Large Le Pliage Tote for $180: This bestseller is the equivalent of a classic white tee: timeless, versatile, and built to be passed down for generations. Inspired by origami, Le Pliage folds down small when you need to pack it, but it's also roomy enough to double as your personal item. I can fit all the essentials in here—laptop, Kindle, my airport toiletries, snacks, and then some. With its minimalist design and zipper closure for valuables, it's also the ideal work bag for business trips. My one gripe with this travel tote bag is the lack of internal compartments (besides two impractical flat pockets), but if you're someone who has little pouches and tech organizers for your gear, you might not miss it.
Cincha the Vegan Leather Go-Tote for $130: This vegan leather bag is deceptively huge. The base is 7.5 inches deep, so while it doesn’t look that big in pictures, it holds an astonishing amount of stuff. I’ve packed enough clothes in it for a full weekend trip. I usually have concerns about vegan leather cracking and breaking with use, but Cincha’s soft pebbled fabric does not look or feel obviously plastic. This is the tote bag I took on a multi-week trip to the Philippines, and the leather stood up to rain and being kicked around airport lounges, ferries, and train depots. However, it is more than 2 pounds heavier than a Longchamp Le Pliage, so this is strictly for when you can sling it on top of your carry-on. —Adrienne So
Mission Workshop Drift Laptop Tote for $345: The Drift is my favorite travel tote. It's burly but with styling that's refined and classy, and the rolled handles and removable strap make it comfortable to carry by hand or over the shoulder. But the best thing about it is the smartly organized storage pockets inside and out. It feels designed especially for people like me who always carry an army of gadgets. The Drift is kind of a beast, though. It's too huge to slide under the seat in front of you on an airplane, but it fits into the overhead baggage compartment. —Michael Calore
Vera Bradley Original Duffel for $105: If there were ever a product I would refer to as “ol’ reliable,” it’s undoubtedly the Vera Bradley bag. The bright pattern, durable materials, and washable cotton structure have held up remarkably well for over a decade’s worth of travels. Even when I’ve completely overpacked and lugged it with me on planes, trains, and car travels, I don’t detect strain on the handle stitching. There are no internal pockets, but you do have four exterior ones located around the sides of the bag for easy access (or last-minute additions to your planned outfits). —Julia Forbes
BaubleBar Large Custom Icon Tote for $98: What sets BaubleBar apart is its playful personalization. Your chosen icons (up to six, depending on the size) are embroidered directly onto the canvas tote. The process is super user-friendly, with predesignated spots to help you visualize your picks. Choose from zodiac signs, cutesy foods, initials, and more. Just note that it's a final sale, so be sure of your design before ordering. The large size fits everything you need for a beach day trip, and the medium and small options are better for light shopping or city exploring. It closes with just a snap button, which isn't the most secure for crowded areas.
Aer Simple Tote for $139: Have you ever hefted a nylon or leather tote in your hand and realized that slinging it over your shoulder would give you immediate scoliosis? Then you want Aer’s ultra-lightweight, simple sailcloth tote, which weighs less than a pound. Its 15 liters felt surprisingly capacious. I fit two jackets inside on a walk with my kids, and the 3-inch-wide bag tucked neatly under my arm. The two exterior drop pockets fit my Nalgene and Kinto mug, and my phone fits neatly in the exterior zipper pocket. This is a great upgrade if you are getting tired of carrying everything in your canvas tote from Umami Mart and want a bag that’s not going to get soaked in something questionable if you put it down in the wrong place on the subway. It is a little more expensive, though. —Adrienne So
Cuyana System Tote 16-Inch for $378: The Cuyana System Tote is a modular gear-hauler that shape-shifts with your itinerary. Designed to outlast the churn of fast fashion, this travel tote starts minimal, but the genius lies in its add-ons. A laptop sleeve or insert organizer creates a structure on the go, with dedicated slots for your computer, water bottle, and other work essentials. A System Flap Bag insert doubles as a clutch or in-bag organizer, and a detachable, adjustable crossbody strap (also available in a wide model) converts the tote, perfect for hands-free airport sprints if you're unintentionally trying out airport theory. Instead of stitched-on straps prone to failure, the System Tote's handles are cut directly from its leather body, minimizing points of wear. The main compartment snaps shut rather than zips, something to know if you're the spill-averse type.
Avoid This Tote
Calpak Diaper Tote Bag with Laptop Sleeve for $195: This bag was really puffy, but felt bulky, and space was lost to give the puffiness to the bag’s layers. It was somehow too big for everyday use, but not big enough when I needed a lot of stuff brought along for a day trip or long outings. It also didn’t really feel that diaper bag-centric; the only thing “diaper” about it was the baby wipe compartment on the outside, but I would have preferred an exterior pocket to store actual diapers along with it. You could stuff a couple of diapers in the flat front pocket, but it’s not as ideal as other designs I’ve tried. The insulated bottle pockets are handy if you travel with bottles, but feel useless after your baby graduates from bottles (which they graduate much earlier than diapers!) It’s not a bad bag, but I'd recommend a different design for parents and travelers alike. —Nena Farrell
How I Test Travel Totes
To determine the best travel tote, I put each bag through real-world travel scenarios to see how it performs. That means packing it with laptops, chargers, clothes, and toiletries, testing comfort when worn over the shoulder or carried by hand. I'll overstuff the totes to check durability, organization, and accessibility. I'll evaluate how it fits under airplane seats, protects tech gear, and resists wear and weather. If it's supposedly water-resistant, I'll take it out in the rain to determine whether it survives without soaking its contents.
I scrutinize every pocket, compartment, and zipper for usability. When it comes to design, I pay attention to the details: interior fabric choices that make contents easy to see, convenient pocket placement, and hardware choices like zippers and zipper pulls. I also like to take note of the key design elements, such as the handle length and overall structure.
I prioritize quality and sustainability, and I include eco-friendly brands for environmentally conscious consumers. I also made sure to include an array of fabrics for stylistic variability. Lastly, I consider how each bag stacked up against its price point, ensuring that the quality justified the cost.
What Am I Testing Next?
I'll be testing the MZ Wallace Large Metro Tote Deluxe for $295, the Baggu Small Cloud Carry-On for $78, and the Calpak Luka Expandable Laptop Tote for $138. I'm also reevaluating the Bellroy Tokyo Totepack for $199.
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