If Summer 2017 was characterized by the fall of James Comey and the rise of Cardi B, then let the recent solstice mark the start of the Summer of the Cooler Backpack. Yes, while you’ve been face-down in your phone attempting to predict this year’s song of the season and identify the fashion trend that’ll replace oversized clothing, soft-sided coolers with adjustable backpack straps dealt pop culture a sucker punch and took the reigns into their own hands.
A trend wouldn’t be a trend without the participation of multiple parties, and this spring three of the biggest names in cold-keeping each revealed a different take on the same product. It’s no surprise that Yeti, which has maintained its acclaimed collection of soft-sided Hopper coolers for multiple years, would add backpack straps to the build. OtterBox was waiting in response with the Trooper, a soft cooler that follows up the company’s decision last year to break further into the outdoor category with an emphasis on customizable features. New to the cooler market entirely is Hydro Flask, an Oregon-based company known for making some of the best insulating water bottles available — now it too has a cooler backpack.
The question that remains is, which one of these new adventure-prepped cooler packs is the best? To find out, we put these three bags lid-to-lid, ranking them according to three traits: cold retention, ease of carrying and overall construction. Here’s what we found.
Cold keeping:
Keeping cold things cold is the primary function of any cooler, and if it can’t succeed at that, then every other feature is superfluous. We performed a low-tech test to figure out which of these backpacks does it best: each cooler was filled with the same quantity of ice and left under the same conditions until fully melted.
The ice in the Hydro Flask cooler was the first to revert to liquid water. This occurred roughly 40 hours into our test, just shy of the bag’s claimed 48-hour threshold. Both the Yeti and OtterBox coolers surpassed that mark but were mostly liquid. The OtterBox cooler performed slightly better than the Yeti, but not by much.