
The Best Luggage Brands — And Their Best Products, Too
If you’re in the market for an upgrade, a new check-in bag, or perhaps your first set, then browse the best luggage brands.
If you’re in the market for an upgrade, a new check-in bag, or perhaps your first set, then browse the best luggage brands.
By Monica Mendal, Kevin Cortez, and Adam Hurly
From the rainproof and travel-ready to the casual and commuter-friendly, this list has over a dozen backpacks tested and approved by our editors.
You shouldn't be towing textbooks in a tote bag. Instead, try one of these trusty backpacks.
By Monica Mendal and Jacorey Moon
For when a regular backpack is too much.
By Jacorey Moon
Duffle bags are more casual than suitcases, but they can be just as effective at getting your stuff from point A to point B (especially if they're water-resistant).
Lugging around your gear never looked so good.
By Stephen Praetorius and Jacorey Moon
This $475 duffle bag is a reductionist's dream. Here's why.
When you can't find your favorite, branch out to one of these underrated picks.
By Hayley Helms
No matter where you’re traveling to, you’ll need a bag, and there’s nothing more functional than a cavernous, weatherproof, backpack strap-equipped duffel.
By Tanner Bowden and Hayley Helms
The pioneering German brand debuted the first-ever aluminum luggage in 1937. Now, its $1,400 carry-on suitcase sits atop the category. Here's why.
To the surprise of many, a brand best known for building bags for firefighters and soldiers worked with French fashion royalty.
Delicate shirts and suits call for a bag of their own.
These items are more than a means for getting things from point A to point B.
A dedicated laptop bag looks a little out of place in the era of excess, but sometimes less is more.
By Evan Malachosky and Will Porter
We all aspire to roll a ritzy Rimowa, but Away makes an aluminum option that's half the price.
Joshuvela originally only sold its Utility Tote in canvas. Now, an easy-to-clean nylon iteration has arrived — and it might be better.
What do you get when you combine the forces of an Olympic athlete and a respected luggage brand? 3 top-of-the-line snow bags, that's what.
By Rich Stoner
Away's line of modern luggage shook up the industry with its millennial appeal, inclusive branding and direct-to-consumer prices.
By Monica Mendal and Evan Malachosky
Pine Green, as the German luggage brand calls it, is a nice break from burnished aluminum.
When Away's For All Routes collection dropped, it immediately drew comparisons to Patagonia's Black Hole line. But which is the right bag for you?