The Topo Designs Global Travel Bag 30L ($199) pairs the brand’s idiosyncratic aesthetic with one of the toughest builds we’ve seen in a travel pack, thanks to extra-thick materials. Its organization is also among the best in the category, and it has three carry modes to adapt to your preferences. Overall comfort is a limitation, however, especially once you start carrying heavier loads.
Comfort & Support
Organization
Durability
Water Resistance
Weight & Size
Sustainability
Capacities
30L
Fabric(s)
1,000D nylon, 1,680D nylon back and bottom
Hipbelt
Yes
Laptop Sleeve
Yes (15 in.)
Exterior Pockets
2
Weight
3 lb. 3.2 oz.
Pros
Cons
Topo Designs Global Travel Bag 30L
For this season's top models, see our guide to the Best Travel Backpacks.
I liked carrying the Topo Designs Global Travel Bag 30L on a trip to New York, but I didn’t love it once I tried to really load it up. (Which, to be honest, was a little disappointing given its appealing gorpcore aesthetic.) It felt fine and stable with 15 pounds inside for bopping around the city, but when I put closer to 25 pounds in it for a 2.5-mile hike in L.A., its limits quickly showed.
The Topo Designs Global Travel Bag has a hipbelt, a sternum strap, and load lifters, but the backpanel isn’t very sturdy—especially when compared to the version on the Osprey Farpoint or The North Face Router—and I kept having to make adjustments as I went. I felt the weight in my shoulders more than I do with those other models, which also tend to sit more naturally against my back. I do appreciate that this pack has a duffel-style over-the-shoulder strap, though, which those models don’t.
The Global’s sternum strap is a plus. It’s elastic, and I liked how it let the shoulder straps move with my body without feeling restrictive. Ventilation is more of an issue: The backpanel is basically a flat fabric surface, and my back got sweaty quickly compared to packs with mesh and airflow channels. The shoulder straps stow away, and both the hipbelt and the over-the-shoulder strap are removable, but the Global’s carry versatility is held back a bit by its actual comfort.
If you like pockets, the Global is going to make you one happy traveler. It has a clamshell opening that hinges at the bottom, and the overall layout feels well thought out without becoming an endless maze of compartments. I always found a place for everything, and more importantly, I could remember where I put it all, which isn’t always true with feature-heavy travel backpacks. (The Thule Aion, an otherwise great model, is guilty of that.)
On the side of the pack facing away from your body, there’s a side-zip pocket with a key clip and two zippered pockets inside, which works well for holding small essentials. Behind that is a second compartment that opens wide and acts like a staging area: It has two deep sleeves, plus a big zippered pocket that runs all the way to the bottom of the pack. I also ended up using this section as my quick-access zone, since the Global lacks a pocket on top (a minor misstep). It’s easy to pop open without rummaging through the main compartment.
Inside the main compartment, the underside of the lid has two mesh pockets, which help keep smaller items from drifting. The separate laptop compartment sits against the backpanel and fits up to a 15-inch computer, though the zipper opening doesn’t go all the way; if your laptop is right at that upper limit, you may need to angle it a bit to get it in and out. Water bottle storage is the clearest miss: the two sleeves are small. A standard bottle works, but wide bottles don’t. But add in the Global’s luggage pass-through strap and the three haul handles, and this is a smartly designed pack overall.
The Topo Designs Global Travel Bag is among the category’s durability stars. Overall, only the Aer Travel Pack 3, which is made with 1,680-denier Cordura nylon, has a thicker build. The Global is also kitted out with 1,680-denier material, but it’s on the pack’s dorsal and bottom sides (which, to be fair, see the most wear). The rest is made with 1,000-denier nylon, which is still one of the toughest fabrics in the category. In short, the entirety of the pack is extremely confidence-inspiring.
That applies to the hardware, too. All of the Global’s zippers, pull tabs, and webbing loops are hefty, and nothing about the bag reads as delicate. During testing, it handled scraping against the usual obstacles of travel—floors, cargo bins, occasional trailside brush—and I never needed to baby it. This is the kind of pack that looks cool enough for city use but can thrive anywhere you take it, which is a big part of its appeal.
I used the Topo Designs Global mostly in fair weather, but it doesn’t strike me as a pack that panics in a little rain. It has a durable water-repellent finish and thick materials, so light precipitation shouldn’t be a problem. That said, it doesn’t have a rain cover, and it doesn’t use a TPU coating, so I’d still treat sustained rain as something to plan around. If a nasty forecast is on the horizon, I’d rather have something like the REI Co-op Ruckpack 30, which has an included waterproof rain cover, or a TPU-coated pack like the Patagonia Black Hole or the Cotopaxi Allpa.
The Global weighs 3 pounds, 3.2 ounces, which places it around the middle of the range for the travel backpacks we’ve tested. It also carries its 30-liter volume in a fairly tidy footprint, and isn’t super bulky, which is one of the problems with overbuilt models like the Peak Design Travel Backpack (which is 45L and weighs a whopping 4 lb. 8 oz.). This bag doesn’t feel like a brick on your back the way some boxier travel packs can, and the lack of a stiff backpanel makes it easier to fit into tighter storage situations than more structured models.
I treated it like a carry-on at first, but I was also able to get it under an airplane seat as a personal item on a couple of flights—it was tight, but doable, and my feet definitely had to negotiate for space. It’s not a pack I’d choose for roomy under-seat comfort, but it’s compact enough that you can sometimes get away with it.
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Longevity
Choosing durable outdoor gear and keeping it in use for longer is one of the best ways to reduce environmental impact. Our proprietary longevity rating assesses factors like overall build quality, materials, fabric denier, component durability, and real-world performance. A green check indicates that we expect the product to be long-lasting relative to its peers, a yellow check mark indicates average longevity, and a red X indicates a product that may have a limited lifespan.
Recycled Materials
Recycled materials are prevalent in outdoor gear, with nylon, polyester, wool, and down among the most common, but the composition varies widely. A green check mark indicates the product is made with a substantial amount of recycled materials (100% recycled or the core fabric that makes up most of the product is recycled), a yellow check means it contains a moderate to small amount of recycled materials, while a red X means there are no recycled materials in the product.
Bluesign Approved
Bluesign Technologies, based in Switzerland, operates a third-party textile management system that ensures materials are manufactured to strict environmental, chemical, and worker safety standards. A green check mark indicates a product is either a Bluesign Product (contains at least 90% Bluesign-approved fabrics and 20-30% Bluesign-approved accessories) or features a significant amount of Bluesign-approved materials. A yellow check mark means it uses some Bluesign-approved materials but less than the aforementioned category, and a red X means there are no Bluesign-approved materials in the product.
PFAS-Free DWR
Durable water-repellent (DWR) finishes can contain PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances). These highly persistent “forever chemicals” are used in outdoor gear for their strong resistance to water, oil, and heat, but are linked to environmental contamination and a range of health concerns. A green check mark indicates the product uses a PFAS-free DWR, while a red X means the DWR contains PFAS.
Responsible Manufacturing
This criterion evaluates a brand’s commitment to fair wages, safe working conditions, and reducing environmental impact through certifications and programs like Fair Trade Certified, Fair Wear Foundation, Worldwide Responsible Accredited Production (WRAP), and the Fair Labor Association, while also recognizing brands that manufacture primarily in the U.S. or Europe under strict labor and environmental regulations. A green check mark indicates a brand meets our responsible manufacturing criteria, while a red X means it does not.
Recycled and/or Reduced Packaging
Packaging can add significant waste to outdoor gear purchases, so many brands work to reduce its impact by using recycled materials, incorporating Forest Stewardship Council-certified paper products, and minimizing plastic and paper use. A green check mark indicates a brand uses recycled or reduced materials across all of its packaging, a yellow check indicates moderate or limited use of recycled or reduced packaging, and a red X indicates the brand does not make either of these efforts.
Repair Services
Repair services extend the lifespan of outdoor gear and reduce overall consumption, though programs vary widely. Some brands offer comprehensive repairs for a range of issues, while others provide limited or no repair support. A green check mark indicates a robust repair program, a yellow check mark indicates limited repair services, and a red X indicates the brand does not offer repair services.
Resale and/or Recycling Services
Resale and recycling programs help keep outdoor gear in circulation longer and out of landfills, ranging from trade-in resale platforms that offer store credit to take-back initiatives that recycle products at the end of their usable life. A green check mark indicates a brand offers both resale and recycling programs, a yellow check mark indicates it offers one or the two, and a red X indicates it offers neither.
Carbon Footprint Tracking
This criterion evaluates whether a brand measures, reports, and works to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions using established frameworks such as the Higg Index, Greenhouse Gas Protocol, or The Change Climate Project. A green check mark indicates a brand publicly reports greenhouse gas emissions data, sets clearly defined reduction targets, and uses established tracking frameworks such as Higg or The Change Climate Project. A yellow check mark indicates the brand tracks emissions and outlines reduction goals but provides limited data, lacks science-based verification, or does not clearly report progress. A red X indicates the brand does not appear to track greenhouse gas emissions or provides so little information that its efforts cannot be verified.
Annual Impact Report
Annual impact reports provide transparency and accountability by outlining a brand’s sustainability efforts across areas such as material sourcing, greenhouse gas emissions, waste, water use, supply chains, and packaging. A green check mark indicates a brand publishes a detailed, brand-specific impact report that closely aligns with our sustainability criteria and leaves little room for ambiguity. A yellow check indicates a brand provides some relevant sustainability reporting but lacks detail in key areas or is covered only briefly within a parent company report. A red X indicates a brand does not regularly publish an impact report.
I tested the 30-liter version of the Global, and Topo Designs also makes a 40-liter option. On my 5-foot-10, 185-pound frame, the fit was acceptable but not memorable. Nothing felt egregiously wrong, and the sternum strap, load lifters, and hipbelt helped keep the pack in check with heavier loads, but the harness never felt as natural as on The North Face Router or as supportive as on the Thule Aion.
If you travel with lighter loads, you may not care much. If you routinely haul close to 25 pounds or more and want the pack to feel truly comfortable all day, this isn’t the model I’d start with.
Bellroy Lite Travel Pack 30L ($199): Another Style-Forward Pack
The Lite Travel Pack is another model that should appeal to style-conscious travelers. However, instead of the Global’s bold colors and busy exterior, it favors a clean, minimalist aesthetic. The Lite’s organization is equally understated, with fewer pockets overall—including no water bottle sleeve. You’ll still find a front and top pocket, a dedicated laptop sleeve, and a few additional compartments inside its clamshell opening, but it can’t hold a candle to the Global’s compartment layout. The Global can also handle rougher use, while the Lite’s thinner materials require more care. And as for comfort, it’s a toss-up. The Lite lacks a hipbelt to shift weight off your shoulders, but its mesh backpanel helps keep you cooler. Otherwise, both packs have decently effective shoulder straps that stow away when you’re not wearing them. Ultimately, we’ll let your preferences for style and storage options help you make the final call here. To learn more, check out our Lite Travel Pack 30L review.
Thule Aion 40L ($210): A Different Take on Organization
The Aion offers fewer pockets than the Global Travel Bag, but more compartmentalization. There’s no dorsal pocket, but the top pocket includes a comprehensive admin panel with slots for pens, notebooks, keys, and other small items. Instead of a basic laptop sleeve, you get two dividers and a zippered mesh pocket to organize your devices, chargers, and maybe a book. Other perks include a detachable TPU bag to separate smelly items, as well as a hidden pocket above the shoulder straps. And while the Aion lacks a hipbelt, it actually provides a better carry thanks to its padded mesh-covered backpanel and prominent airflow channel. The Global, however, has shoulder straps that tuck away and comes with a removable over-the-shoulder strap for briefcase carry. If you need a pack for long hauls, though, the Aion is the better choice. To learn more, check out our Aion Travel Pack review.
Like many of Topo Designs’ products, the Global marries a busy design with dependable build quality and smart organization. However, it doesn’t match the comfort of more ergonomically built travel packs.
Comfort & Support
Organization
Durability
Water Resistance
Weight & Size
Sustainability
Forgive us if this sounds weird, but the Bellroy is one of the sexiest travel packs that we’ve seen. Its simple yet striking silhouette is backed by smartly designed pockets and thoughtful features, although your carry comfort may vary depending on your body type.
Comfort & Support
Organization
Durability
Water Resistance
Weight & Size
Sustainability
The Aion offers a decently comfortable carry, which says a lot for a pack that forgoes a hipbelt. We’re not huge fans of its bulky, sometimes overengineered design, but its tough, stylish exterior means you won’t have to worry about your stuff (or this pack) taking much damage.
Comfort & Support
Organization
Durability
Water Resistance
Weight & Size
Sustainability
If you want a travel pack that looks sharp in the city, has genuinely useful organization, and won’t get thrashed by rough handling, we think the Topo Designs Global Travel Bag is a strong pick. Its pocket layout is one of its best traits, and the multiple carry modes make it easy to live with on travel days—as long as you’re not shouldering a ton of weight. If you care most about long-haul comfort, we’d look elsewhere, but there’s no guarantee you’ll find a pack with this feature set melded with Topo’s fun styling.
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