Last Updated: Nov. 28, 2008
More Tour and Travel Advice for: Europe, USA & Canada, Australia and New Zealand
“I would advise travellers to take a suitcase with an extendable handle and wheels for any overseas trip. Firstly, suitcases can be packed in a very organized manner so that anything is easily accessible once you hit your hotel room. Wheels and a handle allow for easy transport, whether into a hotel, a coach in the morning, or out onto a sidewalk to catch a cab to the airport. Additionally, suitcases offer better structural protection of anything remotely breakable or any souvenirs picked up in your travels.”
- Jordan Allen, Tour Manager, USA
The general consensus taken from the forums is that suitcases are easier to travel with on a Contiki Tour. It should go without saying that wheels on any suitcase are a must and that the following pros and cons do not take into account personal preference.
Suitcase Pros
Suitcase Cons
Backpack Pros
Backpack Cons
A new player has appeared on the luggage market – the backpack with wheels. By all accounts these offer the best of both worlds.
Contiki Tour Mangers and Drivers are on the road most days of the year and almost all, without exception, use hard-shelled suitcases with wheels. Strength, practicality, durability and ease of loading on and off the coach make these a must for the Contiki veteran.
If you travel Europe on a Camping Tour through Europe then you will stay in a tent for most, if not, all of your tour. You should certainly take this into consideration as it may be more practical to use a backpack as they are generally easier to fit into tents. You should also consider using a backpack with zips that can be locked with a small padlock to keep your property secure.
I did the 32 day camper! Wicked trip, thanks Mark, Pheobe and Mel for a great tour! Itravelled with a backpack while my tent buddy travelled with a suitcase. I found that it doesn’t make much difference whether you travel with one or the other. The room in the tent wouldn’t have changed if we both had a backpack or a suitcase. I must say it was easier to carry a pack thru the mud in Vienna than it was dragging a suitcast thru it.
I did a Time Out tour and the suitcase worked fine as we stayed in hotels with lifts and only carried our luggage to and from the bus. However, as I travelled independently after the tour and stayed in hostels where there are no lifts and would walk to them from train stations, I would have loved the convenience of a backpack. I’m using a backpack from now on.
I used a back pack for my tour, and I was the one laughing all the way to the 13th hotel floor when the elevator broke down, by the time all the others with suitcases got to their rooms I was relaxed with a cold beer and ready to hit the town that night!
Was really annoying having to unpack and repack every time that i needed something from the bottom of my pack, though. You can get packs where the entire front unzips – much like a suitcase. I recommend them.
i went on the 21 day london to athens tour and took a backpack and have to say it was one of the best decisions i ever made. while other people struggled to get suitcases up and down stairs and through gravel i found it easy.
i recommend one that opens on the front to pack easily and has dividers inside to make it more organised to pack.
biggest tip is make sure you get a backpack that fits you. being a girl and not very big i got a smaller bag in which i could only pack a weight i can handle, also womens design ones are great!
i have found backpacks are also a lot lighter than suitcases so takes up less of ur baggage allowance on flights :)
Nice backpack appropriate for vacation and tour
I started my European adventure with a backpack. Two weeks into my trip, I bought a duffel-style bag on wheels in London for 15GBP. The backpack gave me a sore back and was just far too fiddly for packing/unpacking. And I couldn’t fit enough stuff into it.
It was a bit inconvenient to have to carry the bag up stairs when there was no elevator, but if you can’t carry your own bag, perhaps you have too much stuff in it!
I kept the zip-off day pack off my big pack, and posted the pack home from Austria (the post office was a great adventure too!).
In 2004 I bought an Eagle Creek backpack on clearance at the REI outlet online. I paid just around 70 USD and it has definitely been one of the best travel investments I have made. I have a bad back as a result of a bad accident, so the sternum strap and the hip belt not only helped disperse the weight evenly, but it forced me to maintain proper posture as well. I originally bought it for a 30 day tour around the UK and France, but now use it in place of a suitcase every time I travel. I also bought two packing cubes which kept my clothes and souvenirs safe and organized. As far as lifting it onto my back I just pay attention to proper body mechanics and have no problems. Make sure any backpack you buy is the right size for you, I took mine to an REI store when I received it and they adjusted it to my height.
Hi. i have decided to take a backpack for two reasons.
One: I dont have a decent sized suitcase so my friend lent me her backpack. Two: In the past I have hated dragging my cases across a snowy/wet road and up the stairs of hostels. I think it may come down to personal preferance as well but I can see why a suitcase is practical in the sense that it protects breakables. Plus the backpack has a detachable smaller bag I can carry round during the day or use as a overnight bag if I want.
i am currently travelling and i have a backpack on wheels with daysack. All i can say is it is a nightmare! i have to bend down to wheel it and it flips constantly whilst wheeling it! Its too heavy to carry long distances and to get it up stairs you carry it like a suitcase anyway rather than unzip the straps. I say a suitcase is fine!
i just went on european panorama (month long tour) in june/july. i think all but one or two people had suitcases. one had a bag you carry on your back and one had a duffel. if you plan on buying souvenires i would consider a suitcase to protect the fragile ones. i cant say for the snow/sludge since i was there in summer, but i can say that typically you dont have to walk all that far from the coach to the hotel entrance (im not sure of budget/camping tours), so i dont think it would be that hard to get a suitcase around. you might consider going to the meeting place for your tour and seeing what your tourmates will be bringing.
I’m taking the European Discovery (winter) in October and I was thinking of taking a suitcase for all my luggage but perhaps a backpack to carry for the day. i.e drink bottle, jumpers and any souviners. Do this sound reasonable?
Hey.
In December, my sister and I are going on the European Vista tour and I have a hard shell suitcase which I was planing on taking, but today some one was telling me that I shouldn’t take a suitcase, but take a backpack. I think that it would be way too heavy and disorganising//unorganising..¿ to take a back pack, and after reading all those comments and the stuff contiki wrote, I think I will be sticking with my suitcase, even though that hybrid thing sounds good, I like the thought of my hard shell suitcase protecting all of my goods. A comment also mentioned the snow and sludge in Europe which I didnt think about. I hope it wont be too hard pulling my suitcase through that aswell.
What sort of day bag would people recomend? Like a small or medium sized back pack?
After reading all these comments, I will definately be taking a suitcase. (And we don’t have the High Sierra range in South Africa.)
You’ll be fine….you wouldn’t want to get any bigger than this though. Size restrictions exist because if 50 people brought huge pieces of luggage with them, the luggage simple would not fit in the luggage hold of the coach.
We have just received our “contiki pack” for the European Highlights tour and it says you bag has to be no bigger then 73cm x 50cms x 25cm. Our hard cases are 76cms x 60cms x 30cms. including the handle. Can anyone tell me if this size rule is strictly adhered to or if our cases will be ok as they are only slightly over?
I also bought the same high sierra duffel bag which has wheels. i used this with the wheels the majority of the time and the few times that we were in hotels with stairs and no lifts i used the straps that are hidden behind the zip down panel on the back. I found this bag useful for keeping the different kid of clothes separate so they were easier to find
Hi,
I’ve just bought a High Sierra backpack with wheels and a handle so if it gets a bit too heavy I can just pull it along. The measurments are 91cm(W) x 41cm(H) x 36cm(D.
I hope this is OK. The size smaller than this was tiny.
My first time I went to Europe with just my friend, we did the backpacking thing. Never again. For my male friend it was okay but I had a difficult time carrying around the weight even up the stairs. Second time I went the suitcase route and never regretted it. I just dragged it up the stairs. That was much preferable to the backpack :D
I went on the wild west tour last year, i had a small backpack with wheels but i wish i’d used a my medium suitcase. Its good to travel light as you always packing and unpacking put a medium suitcase would have been fine,
I brought a suitcase and my travel buddy brought a backpack. For the most part, the suitcase was much easier. It really depends on your preference on getting up stairs. You are in a different hotel every other day and you will usually end up taking the stairs to your room unless you, a) get lucky and have a first floor room, or b) want to take turns using the elevator with the other 35 folks on your bus.
The suitcase is much better for getting to and from the bus/hotel. The backpack is easier for getting up the stairs, unless you have especially strong biceps. And if you don’t, no worries, you will by the end of the trip.
If I was able to go again, I would take a suitcase again.
Hi emma-lol
im an 18 year old guy from australia going on the greek island hopping tour in june. how is it? got ne tips? also would it b better to take a backpack or suitcase?
thanks
I would go a suitcase with wheels any day of the week!As a small petite female there is no way I could lug a large backpack around a country for a month!Trust me when you get to the airport after spending 13 hours + on a flight wheels are you’re best friend!
hi everyone, i went on the greek island hopping last year it changed everything for me. my tour manager was amazing (nick). im off to australia in september to meet some of the girls i met in greece, cant wait. love emma g
Well… I got a backpack on my Europe tour. It was great to carry around, althought it is hard to organize all your stuff in it and it can really hurt your back depending of how long is going to be your walk. I would get a suitcase next time.
If you do use a backpack, make sure you have a good inconspicuous lock and keep it locked always. My brother had a lock but 2 weeks into the trip he got annoyed with it and stoped locking it, walking down a street in Rome a kid unziped it and had it almost empty before my brother felt anything at all. Also keep it infront of you on crowded trains cause I was told theives can cut your straps and dissapeared with all your stuff before you can even turn around!
I’ve got a Rick Steves backpack that can be carried (like a suitcase) or on your back. It was perfect for my Contiki tour!
Personally I’d recommend taking a suitcase over a backpack. I purchased a new, standard-size, expandable suitcase two years ago. It fits all flight requirements (which was an issue for flying inside Egypt), is easy to wheel around, pack and unpack. I pack it lightly at the beginning of trips and have the ability to expand as I go…although I still end up buying a second bag at the end of my trips…what’s with that? I chose the brightest, most obnoxious exterior I could find so I could easily identify it. I’ve taken that luggage to 14 countries since I bought it and it’s never been late or lost…which is more than I can say for myself. What can I say…they were great Contiki trips!
im going to australia doing the aussie explorer tour, does anyone know if a back pack or suitcase is best?
I have to agree with getting a High Sierra backpack/suitcase. I was fortunate to get one for free but I haven’t put it to good use yet. It has tons of pockets for easy storage of miscellaneous things.
Hard shelled suitcase? Absolutely no problem, they’re fav luggage but it’s personal choice/opinion….the only reason no metal frames are not allowed is that the metal frame may damage other peoples luggage when it’s in the luggage hold of the bus…I think metal framed backpacks went out circa 1987 though…
Was wondering if hard shelled suitcases are allowed on concept tours, as I noticed backpacks with rigid external frames are not?? Also, what exactly are the regulations on a backpack, can it be partially rigid??
i brought a high sierra backpack,but i should have bought a hard shelled suitcase with wheels.its a lot easier,trust me.i just got back from the winter wanderer tour,and a big backpack sucked carrying around.get the suitcase.
I took a backpack on a European winter hotel tour. It was really useful to walk up the stairs to my room with it rather than wait 30min in the lobby for the tiny hotel lifts to ferry suitcases up and down all the time. It was also good to carry my luggage from bus to hotel – suitcase owners had to wheel theirs through snow and slush crossing the roads. My backpack was also fabulous for the cabins on the Scandi/Russia tour. Cabins are often up hills or along paths of stone/dirt/mud, making life difficult for suitcase owners to drag their stuff to their cabins …
I bought a high sierra duffel bag, it cost me $120 and has wheels, it also has a zip down pannel on the back and you can pull out the back pack straps, so i cant complain. the straps are super compfy! I also have a high sierra laptop back pack, its awesome has like a 10 pockets both big and small, also has a small compartment for an ipod/or walkman and a hole for the cords to come out, i got it brand new off ebay for $27… also very comfortable and loads of room!