%3Amax_bytes(150000)%3Astrip_icc()%2Ftl-amazon-roundup-space-saving-travel-bags-tout-1e3dbe79f1384fcda043e2beaecacc8e.jpg&w=3840&q=100)
Amazon's Top-rated Collapsible Travel Bags Fit '3 Weeks' Worth of Clothes'—and Help You Save Luggage Space
If saving space is what you're after, we found the 12 most convenient space-saving, foldable travel bags at Amazon, including spinners, weekenders, and even coolers and pet carriers. Prices start at only $17, but some of these deals are worth their square footage in gold.
The Foldie is 'the original foldable travel bag' that collapses down into an 11-by-7-inch flat pouch so you can store it easily at home or pack it in your carry-on to use when you reach your destination. It unfurls into an 18-by-12-inch duffel that can hold about 30 liters and slide under most plane seats. Use the bottom expansion feature to add a couple of inches and boost its capacity by a whopping 25 percent. The Foldie Weekender Bag has about 2,000 five-star ratings on Amazon, where reviewers say they can fit up to a full week's worth inside it, shoes included.
If you're someone who travels with your whole bathroom countertop in tow, this Bagsmart hanging toiletry bag will keep all your potions contained and organized. The carrier unzips and splays out into hanging storage for your beauty items. It has four compartments that also feature multiple pockets, plus slots on the outside of the bag. This top-selling toiletry bag at Amazon—and one of Travel + Leisure's favorite hanging organizers—has racked up more than 50,000 five-star ratings, including rave reviews from flight attendants.
Storing large wheeled luggage is such a struggle, especially if you have a mismatched set that doesn't nest together. To help, this Hanke collapsible spinner takes up nearly no closet space at all. When expanded, it takes the place of a 100-liter, 27-inch checked bag. You can also use it at half size as a compact cabin bag. Packed all the way down, when you're ready to store it at home, it's just 19 by 13 by 5 inches (which is hardly bigger than a large pizza box). 'This luggage is amazing. I was extremely skeptical before I purchased it and wanted to be sure wheels were [made of a] sturdy, strong material,' one reviewer said. 'It's all of the above, and I truly recommend. Fits three weeks of getaway clothing and some more extras.'
Have you ever considered taking a cooler on a flight? This insulated option packs down to fit inside your suitcase—or to hide in the corner of a closet all winter, waiting for warm weather. The brand, CleverMade, is known for its collapsible totes. Its coolers are underrated on Amazon, but if you head over to the CleverMade website, shoppers say they're wonderful for travel, able to keep items cold for up to 24 hours. They're designed with a special strap that keeps them flat when not in use, so even travelers in small apartments can easily store them.
Perfect for when you need to fit a daypack inside a larger bag, this 30-liter collapsible backpack packs down into itself, at just 10 by 8 by 3 inches, and weighs an ultralight half pound. Like normal hiking backpacks, it has adjustable shoulder straps, a chest strap, side straps to keep the bag compressed and compact, and mesh bottle pouches on both sides.
For an item you can use in your closet and in your suitcase, this hanging organizer doubles as a portable shelving unit and packing cubes. It has four large compartments, two of which have mesh windows to easily see what's inside. Four more mesh pockets run along the side of the organizer, giving you even more places to put toiletries, socks, and so forth. You can put the whole thing, fully stuffed, into your suitcase.
Reviewers in the comment section of this Amazon listing have it all figured out. They pack this Eddie Bauer duffel into their carry-on, fill it with souvenirs, then either check the duffel or take it back home as an extra carry-on. 'Thanks to this bag, I was able to trek two weeks in Japan with just a roller carry-on, a backpack, and also bring back plenty of souvenirs without feeling limited by huge luggage the whole time I was there,' one person wrote. The Eddie Bauer Stowaway packs down into an attached pocket that measures just under 10 inches long and wide. It's normally $55, but you can snag it for $39 right now.
BYOBB—bringing your own beach bag—because nobody wants to pack their swim accessories into a backpack or the tote they used as a personal item on the plane. This $17 mesh shoulder bag is chic and beachy for coastal vacations or hotel pool sessions. It packs up into a small matching pouch that comes with it, which you can use to carry your phone, cards, and other small essentials inside the bag when it's unfolded. Genius!
Biaggi's Zipsak is a Shark Tank star. The brand is one of the best at making luggage foldable, and its 'boosted' version of the Zipsak bag offers three sizes and ways of carrying. The smallest is a simple 15-by-9-inch packing cube-like pouch with a handle. Expand it to the 16-inch-tall underseater with spinning wheels or turn it into the largest version, a full-sized 21-inch carry-on. The two bigger sizes can be rolled or carried by the shoulder strap or handles. Reviewers say it can hold at least four days' worth of clothing.
Traveling with a pet? This medium-sized carrier for cats and small dogs up to 20 pounds collapses into itself, reducing its 18-inch length to just under 3 inches. The side walls and the top flap zip open, and the mesh walls have tiny curtains that roll up or Velcro closed to give your pet some peace and quiet. It comes with a safety leash, a wool mat for cool temperatures, and a cool mat for summer. It has a small pocket with a hole to keep waste bags in, too.
This weekender is both collapsible and expandable, so its versatility will be a huge help for any type of traveler. It compresses down into a small 7-by-11-inch pouch for easy storage, and then unfolds into a 16.5-by-11-inch weekender bag. The bottom also expands an additional 4 inches, giving you plenty of room for extra items you pick up on your trip. One reviewer said it's 'perfect to tuck into your suitcase or carry-on' and use it to carry souvenirs on the way back. Another wrote that the full-size weekender can fit a week of outfits and two pairs of sneakers.
If you don't use a car trunk organizer for road trips, you might be missing out on amazing organization. This foldable box takes up two feet of trunk space and can help you keep track of things that often get lost, such as snacks, chargers, kids' items, and emergency essentials. It folds down to a flat 18 by 12 inches when not in use, secured by buckle straps.
Love a great deal? Sign up for our T+L Recommends newsletter and we'll send you our favorite travel products each week.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
12 minutes ago
- CNN
White House lands on Trump-Putin summit location as officials scramble to prepare for historic Alaska meeting
Donald Trump RussiaFacebookTweetLink Follow American officials scrambling this weekend to identify and lock down a venue for Friday's summit between President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart quickly discovered a major snag: summertime is peak tourist season in Alaska, and options both available and equipped to host the two world leaders were severely limited. When word reached certain prominent Alaskans that Trump and Putin were coming, a few began reaching out to the president's allies with a proposition: could their home be an option? It's unclear if those offers ever reached White House officials, who were calling sites in Juneau, the state capital, along with Anchorage and Fairbanks. Organizers of the summit soon came to believe the only city in the massive state with viable options for the summit would be Anchorage. And only Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, on the northern edge of the city, would meet the requirements for the historic meeting, though the White House had hoped to avoid the optics of hosting the Russian leader and his entourage on a US military installation. That is where the two men will meet Friday, two White House officials said. The struggle underscored the rush now underway to nail down the details of Friday's meeting, the first time the top US and Russian leaders have met in more than four years. The summit is still largely a work in progress as US and Russian officials make haste to prepare for the high-profile encounter. The two countries' top diplomats — Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov — spoke Tuesday to discuss 'certain aspects of preparation,' according to Russia's foreign ministry. Usually, a high-stakes summit with a US adversary would be preceded by extensive negotiations over the agenda and outcomes. But Trump himself has said he is approaching the meeting as a 'feel-out' session, with few advance expectations for how it will proceed. The White House on Tuesday termed it a 'listening session.' 'The president feels like, 'look, I've got to look at this guy across the table. I need to see him face to face. I need to hear him one-on-one. I need to make an assessment by looking at him,'' Rubio said in a morning radio interview Tuesday with Sid Rosenberg, offering one explanation for why Trump's five known phone calls with Putin this year wouldn't suffice in determining the Russian leader's intentions. Trump's administration and the Kremlin landed on Alaska as the site for the summit after a lengthy behind-the-scenes back-and-forth, according to people familiar with the matter. There were few places that would work for the sit-down, the people said, particularly given a war crimes warrant issued for Putin's arrest by the International Criminal Court in 2023. With that fact looming, Russia balked at a European destination — even in a city like Vienna or Geneva, where US and Russian leaders have met dating back to the Cold War. While Putin himself raised the United Arab Emirates as an 'entirely suitable' location, many inside the White House hoped to avoid another lengthy trek to the Middle East after Trump's visit in May. In the end, sources said, it came down to Hungary — whose Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is close to both Trump and Putin — and the United States as possible hosts, according to two US officials. American officials were pleased and somewhat surprised when the Russian president agreed to a meeting on US soil — on land that once was part of the Russian empire, no less. 'I thought it was very respectful that the president of Russia is coming to our country as opposed to us going to his country or even a third-party place,' Trump said this week, as his team was rushing to finalize details of the summit. Others were not so taken. 'The only better place for Putin than Alaska would be if the summit were being held in Moscow,' said Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, who fell out with Trump during his first term. 'So, the initial setup, I think, is a great victory for Putin.' The last time an American president met with Putin — President Joe Biden's 2021 summit in Geneva — the date and venue were announced three weeks ahead of time. But the planning between Russian and American officials started months before that. Biden, on a week-long swing through Europe, spent the days leading up to the sit-down in intensive preparation with top advisers, blocking out time in the mornings to parse potential directions the conversation could take and anticipate some of Putin's moves. He consulted other leaders, including the German chancellor, for pointers on how to approach the notoriously wily Russian leader. By the time the summit arrived, aides had planned the day down to the most minute detail, including what order the leaders would arrive, how long each session would last and what type of flower would sit on the table (it was white roses). American officials even ensured there were bottles of orange Gatorade — labeled 'POTUS' — inside a refrigerator at the 18th-century villa where the meeting took place. During Trump's first term, he and Putin sat one-on-one in Helsinki, Finland, during a summit in 2018 that ended with a remarkable moment when Trump sided with Putin over US intelligence agencies on the question of Russian election interference. Trump also met Putin alone in 2017, during their first encounter at the G20 summit in Hamburg. While American and Russian officials have been in extensive conversations to prepare for the sit-down since it was agreed to last week, the encounter that prompted the event remains something of a mystery. Trump's foreign envoy Steve Witkoff visited Moscow last Wednesday for a meeting with Putin that resulted in the decision to meet, though what exactly Putin said in the meeting is still largely unknown. European officials spent much of the last week trying to ascertain the parameters of a peace deal that Putin offered up, but some said they were frustrated by the lack of clarity offered by Witkoff, a real estate developer and longtime friend of Trump's. Trump plans to hear from European leaders in a virtual meeting on Wednesday, arranged by the Germans so the president can get their perspective ahead of the Friday meeting. And he has promised to get on the phone with them, along with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, immediately after the summit concludes. But Zelensky isn't expected to be in Alaska for the summit, so any potential trilateral meeting is off the table for now. Instead, Trump will spend at least part of the summit meeting with Putin one-on-one, the White House said Tuesday, allowing time for the two men to carry out a discussion unheard by anyone else aside from their translators. 'That's part of the plan,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said when asked whether the two presidents would meet as a pair. 'As for the other mechanics and logistics, I will let our team speak to that when they're ironed out.' It's not atypical for leaders to meet alone with their counterparts, but Trump and Putin's relationship has been the subject of intense scrutiny. And during Trump's first term, even senior officials said they sometimes were left in the dark about what was discussed when aides were left out. In Trump's previous two meetings with Putin, both encounters included translators, but not high-ranking aides. After the Germany meeting, Trump reportedly asked his translator for his notes. For his part, Putin has spent the days ahead of Friday's meeting placing phone calls to his remaining global allies — including some who have staged their own high-profile summits with Trump. That included North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, the Kremlin said Tuesday, who met three times with Trump during his first term, but still hasn't abandoned his nuclear weapons.


CNN
12 minutes ago
- CNN
White House lands on Trump-Putin summit location as officials scramble to prepare for historic Alaska meeting
Donald Trump RussiaFacebookTweetLink Follow American officials scrambling this weekend to identify and lock down a venue for Friday's summit between President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart quickly discovered a major snag: summertime is peak tourist season in Alaska, and options both available and equipped to host the two world leaders were severely limited. When word reached certain prominent Alaskans that Trump and Putin were coming, a few began reaching out to the president's allies with a proposition: could their home be an option? It's unclear if those offers ever reached White House officials, who were calling sites in Juneau, the state capital, along with Anchorage and Fairbanks. Organizers of the summit soon came to believe the only city in the massive state with viable options for the summit would be Anchorage. And only Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, on the northern edge of the city, would meet the requirements for the historic meeting, though the White House had hoped to avoid the optics of hosting the Russian leader and his entourage on a US military installation. That is where the two men will meet Friday, two White House officials said. The struggle underscored the rush now underway to nail down the details of Friday's meeting, the first time the top US and Russian leaders have met in more than four years. The summit is still largely a work in progress as US and Russian officials make haste to prepare for the high-profile encounter. The two countries' top diplomats — Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov — spoke Tuesday to discuss 'certain aspects of preparation,' according to Russia's foreign ministry. Usually, a high-stakes summit with a US adversary would be preceded by extensive negotiations over the agenda and outcomes. But Trump himself has said he is approaching the meeting as a 'feel-out' session, with few advance expectations for how it will proceed. The White House on Tuesday termed it a 'listening session.' 'The president feels like, 'look, I've got to look at this guy across the table. I need to see him face to face. I need to hear him one-on-one. I need to make an assessment by looking at him,'' Rubio said in a morning radio interview Tuesday with Sid Rosenberg, offering one explanation for why Trump's five known phone calls with Putin this year wouldn't suffice in determining the Russian leader's intentions. Trump's administration and the Kremlin landed on Alaska as the site for the summit after a lengthy behind-the-scenes back-and-forth, according to people familiar with the matter. There were few places that would work for the sit-down, the people said, particularly given a war crimes warrant issued for Putin's arrest by the International Criminal Court in 2023. With that fact looming, Russia balked at a European destination — even in a city like Vienna or Geneva, where US and Russian leaders have met dating back to the Cold War. While Putin himself raised the United Arab Emirates as an 'entirely suitable' location, many inside the White House hoped to avoid another lengthy trek to the Middle East after Trump's visit in May. In the end, sources said, it came down to Hungary — whose Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is close to both Trump and Putin — and the United States as possible hosts, according to two US officials. American officials were pleased and somewhat surprised when the Russian president agreed to a meeting on US soil — on land that once was part of the Russian empire, no less. 'I thought it was very respectful that the president of Russia is coming to our country as opposed to us going to his country or even a third-party place,' Trump said this week, as his team was rushing to finalize details of the summit. Others were not so taken. 'The only better place for Putin than Alaska would be if the summit were being held in Moscow,' said Trump's former national security adviser John Bolton, who fell out with Trump during his first term. 'So, the initial setup, I think, is a great victory for Putin.' The last time an American president met with Putin — President Joe Biden's 2021 summit in Geneva — the date and venue were announced three weeks ahead of time. But the planning between Russian and American officials started months before that. Biden, on a week-long swing through Europe, spent the days leading up to the sit-down in intensive preparation with top advisers, blocking out time in the mornings to parse potential directions the conversation could take and anticipate some of Putin's moves. He consulted other leaders, including the German chancellor, for pointers on how to approach the notoriously wily Russian leader. By the time the summit arrived, aides had planned the day down to the most minute detail, including what order the leaders would arrive, how long each session would last and what type of flower would sit on the table (it was white roses). American officials even ensured there were bottles of orange Gatorade — labeled 'POTUS' — inside a refrigerator at the 18th-century villa where the meeting took place. During Trump's first term, he and Putin sat one-on-one in Helsinki, Finland, during a summit in 2018 that ended with a remarkable moment when Trump sided with Putin over US intelligence agencies on the question of Russian election interference. Trump also met Putin alone in 2017, during their first encounter at the G20 summit in Hamburg. While American and Russian officials have been in extensive conversations to prepare for the sit-down since it was agreed to last week, the encounter that prompted the event remains something of a mystery. Trump's foreign envoy Steve Witkoff visited Moscow last Wednesday for a meeting with Putin that resulted in the decision to meet, though what exactly Putin said in the meeting is still largely unknown. European officials spent much of the last week trying to ascertain the parameters of a peace deal that Putin offered up, but some said they were frustrated by the lack of clarity offered by Witkoff, a real estate developer and longtime friend of Trump's. Trump plans to hear from European leaders in a virtual meeting on Wednesday, arranged by the Germans so the president can get their perspective ahead of the Friday meeting. And he has promised to get on the phone with them, along with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, immediately after the summit concludes. But Zelensky isn't expected to be in Alaska for the summit, so any potential trilateral meeting is off the table for now. Instead, Trump will spend at least part of the summit meeting with Putin one-on-one, the White House said Tuesday, allowing time for the two men to carry out a discussion unheard by anyone else aside from their translators. 'That's part of the plan,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said when asked whether the two presidents would meet as a pair. 'As for the other mechanics and logistics, I will let our team speak to that when they're ironed out.' It's not atypical for leaders to meet alone with their counterparts, but Trump and Putin's relationship has been the subject of intense scrutiny. And during Trump's first term, even senior officials said they sometimes were left in the dark about what was discussed when aides were left out. In Trump's previous two meetings with Putin, both encounters included translators, but not high-ranking aides. After the Germany meeting, Trump reportedly asked his translator for his notes. For his part, Putin has spent the days ahead of Friday's meeting placing phone calls to his remaining global allies — including some who have staged their own high-profile summits with Trump. That included North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, the Kremlin said Tuesday, who met three times with Trump during his first term, but still hasn't abandoned his nuclear weapons.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The Little League World Series has had its share of drama before even getting to Williamsport
SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — The road to Williamsport was filled with more drama than usual for a couple Little League World Series participants this year, including a Venezuelan team that needed visa exemptions to make the trip and an American club that narrowly knocked off a defending champ. Baseball's preeminent youth baseball tournament resumes Wednesday in central Pennsylvania. The festivities begin with a look at what makes the 20-team event special. ESPN is airing a documentary called 'Big Dreams: Little League World Series 2024" on Tuesday night. The filmmakers had great raw material. Lake Mary, Florida, defeated Taiwan 2-1 in eight tense innings last August to win the title. But director Rudy Valdez wanted to go deeper than wins and losses. 'These are kids, you know, I want you to remember that,' Valdez said. 'We're showing them how to navigate life, and we're showing them how to take wins and take losses and be good sports and how to get back up when you fall. 'We have to give them the space to learn and I wanted that to be the feeling of this, that you were really navigating this year of the Little League World Series through the eyes and experiences of them.' The film was set to premiere Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. ET on ESPN and is available for streaming through ESPN+. Venezuela travels to Williamsport on exemption from travel ban Cardenales Little League from Barquimesto, Venezuela, will represent Latin America for the second straight year, but this time the team required a special exemption from President Donald Trump's travel ban. The team only learned of the exemption less than a week before its opening game Wednesday at 1 p.m. against Puerto Rico. The team declined to comment. Cardenales' exemption came after a different Venezuelan team was denied entry into the United States for the Senior Baseball World Series last month. This year's Cardenales team has a different roster and coaching staff than the 2024 group. Last year's team survived two rounds in the elimination bracket to advance to the international final. It lost 4-1 to Taiwan but beat Texas for third place. Venezuela only has two Little League World Series titles, the last 25 years ago. The path to Williamsport include a notable US upset Defending champion Lake Mary was one out away from making its return to central Pennsylvania, but there will be a different team representing the Southeast Region this year: South Carolina's Irmo Little League. In the regional final, Irmo trailed 4-0 in the bottom of the sixth — the last inning in Little League ball — with the bottom of their lineup headed to the plate and the goal of getting Joe Giulietti, the team's best hitter, to bat. Irmo succeeded but Joe never swung at a pitch. Lake Mary intentionally walked him with the bases loaded to make the score 4-2. Brady Westbrooks was up next and, down to his last strike, he found the fastball he was looking for, hammering a three-run double. Players were running around the stadium, carrying the Southeast Region champions banner, while their manager, Dave Bogan, was brought to tears. 'While we had confidence, we were the underdog,' Bogan said. 'When this team was forming, there was a lot of local excitement about our potential and our possibilities. But with that excitement comes pressure and it was a sense of relief that we did it.' Lake Mary previously defeated Irmo 14-0, and before the regional final, Bogan told his players they needed to believe they were 'going to shock the Little League baseball world.' Irmo is only the fourth South Carolina team, and second since 1950, to play in South Williamsport. It'll play Braintree American Little League, the Massachusetts team representing the New England region, on Thursday. 'Our motto is nothing is given, everything is earned and they really work hard to earn everything through this process,' Bogan said. 'They absolutely love to grind.' Taiwan tries to return to LLWS glory Taiwan's 17 Little League World Series championships are the most by any country other than the United States, which always gets a team in the championship because of the way the LLWS brackets are set up. But it has been nearly 30 years since Taiwan won its most recent title in 1996. Ten years ago, current manager Min-Nan Lai's club went 2-2 in the tournament, losing its second game in the double-elimination tournament to Mexico. Now, Lai is back with the Tung-Yuan Little League team after defeating South Korea in the Asia-Pacific regional final. The 2025 LLWS marks Taiwan's fourth consecutive and 33rd appearance in tournament history, and its first game will be against Mexico on Thursday. The Little League World Series first-round bracket matchups were announced not long before the Asia-Pacific regional tournament, something Lai and his team noted. They wanted to get another chance at the team that ended Taiwan's chances 10 years ago. 'A famous Taiwanese saying is you always want to do hard work for 10 years for one minute to shine,' Lai said through an interpreter. Tung-Yuan brings strong pitching to South Williamsport and Lai believes this is one of the best teams to represent Taiwan in recent history. Unlike last year's Taiwan club, his team doesn't seem to have any issues hitting. In the regional tournament, Taiwan outscored opponents 60-1 in the six games the team won. Taiwan also boasts five pitchers capable of reaching over 70 mph and Chin-Tse Lin throws at 80 mph, which looks much faster to the hitter because of how close the mound is to home plate. There are pitch count rules in Little League, requiring a certain amount of days rest depending on how many pitches a player throws. The Kuei-Shan Little League team from Taoyuan reached the final of the international bracket the past two years but wasn't able to win it all. Lai hopes for a different result for Tung-Yuan — he wants to bring Taiwan that 18th championship. 'That's the number one expectation,' Lai said. ___ Amanda Vogt is a student in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State. ___ AP sports: