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Travel Essentials Checklist: Under $50 Must-Haves

The small stuff that separates a smooth trip from a frustrating one. Nothing on this list costs more than $50.

Travel Essentials Checklist: Under $50 Must-Haves
Austin at a Glance
36
Properties Reviewed
90.1
Avg. Quality Score
86%
Walkable to Dining
8%
Beach Access
What Travelers Look For
Have a Pool: 69% Breakfast Included: 19% On-site Spa: 42% Pet Friendly: 61% Have a Gym: 64% Kitchen Available: 61% Parking Available: 94%

The Packing Paradox

You’ll spend hours researching hotels and flights. You’ll curate a perfect itinerary. Then you’ll throw your bag together the night before and forget the $12 luggage scale that would have saved you $75 in overweight bag fees at the airport.

The big stuff takes care of itself – you won’t forget your passport or your phone. It’s the small stuff that gets you. The ear plugs you wish you had on the red-eye. The packing cubes that would have let everything fit in a carry-on. The portable charger that would have saved you from a dead phone in a foreign city.

Everything on this list costs less than $50. Most of it costs less than $25. And every item has earned its place by solving a problem that anyone who travels regularly has run into at least once.

Sleep and Comfort

Airplane cabin at night -- where good sleep gear pays for itself

Loop Quiet 2 Ear Plugs

Hotel hallways at 6 AM. The ice machine. Your neighbor’s alarm through the wall. A crying baby three rows ahead on the red-eye. The Loop Quiet 2 ear plugs reduce noise by 24dB – enough to turn a loud environment into background hum without making you feel sealed off from the world. They’re reusable, comfortable for side sleepers, and small enough to live permanently in your travel bag. At this price, buy two pairs and keep one in your carry-on and one in your toiletry bag.

Check Loop Quiet 2 price on Amazon

Silk Contoured Eye Mask

A good eye mask isn’t the flimsy freebie from the airline amenity kit. The ZOESMIEN 3D contoured silk mask blocks light completely without pressing on your eyelids – you can blink normally, which sounds trivial until you’ve tried sleeping with a flat mask mashed against your face. Mulberry silk is gentle on skin and won’t crease your face. The contoured design means it works whether you’re on a plane, in a hotel room with terrible blackout curtains, or trying to nap poolside.

Check silk eye mask price on Amazon

Cabeau Evolution S3 Neck Pillow

Most travel neck pillows are glorified pool noodles. The Cabeau S3 is memory foam that actually supports your head in multiple positions – leaning left, leaning right, or chin-forward. The seat strap clips to your headrest so the pillow doesn’t slide down while you sleep. It compresses into its own carrying case to about a quarter of its inflated size, which matters when carry-on space is tight.

Check Cabeau S3 price on Amazon

Packing and Organization

Traveler with luggage ready to go -- organized packing makes it all fit

Compression Packing Cubes

This is the single most useful item on this list for anyone who travels with a carry-on. A six-piece set of compression packing cubes turns a chaotic suitcase into organized compartments: shirts in one, pants in another, underwear and socks in a third. The compression zipper squeezes out excess air and typically saves 30-40% of the space. The BAGSMART set includes a shoe bag, which keeps dirty soles away from clean clothes.

Check BAGSMART packing cubes price on Amazon

Hanging Toiletry Bag

A toiletry bag that hangs from a towel bar or door hook is dramatically more useful than one that sits on a counter – especially in hotel bathrooms where counter space is an afterthought. Everything is visible and accessible instead of jumbled at the bottom of a pouch. The Buruis bag is water-resistant, has dedicated compartments for bottles, brushes, and small items, and folds flat for packing.

Check hanging toiletry bag price on Amazon

Leak-Proof Travel Bottles

Hotel shampoo has gotten better. Hotel conditioner hasn’t. A set of TSA-approved silicone squeeze bottles lets you bring your own products without worrying about leaks in your bag. The DEPOZA set includes 16 bottles in various sizes for shampoo, conditioner, lotion, and whatever else you refuse to leave to hotel mini-bottles. Silicone is easier to squeeze than hard plastic and doesn’t crack in cold cargo holds.

Check travel bottles price on Amazon

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Hydration

YETI Rambler 26oz Bottle

A vacuum-insulated water bottle isn’t just for hikers. It keeps ice water cold through an entire flight, saves you from buying $6 airport water bottles (fill it after security), and survives being thrown into bags, dropped on airport floors, and generally treated like luggage. The YETI Rambler is the gold standard – double-wall vacuum insulation, stainless steel that won’t dent easily, and a chug cap that doesn’t leak in your bag. It’s the kind of thing you buy once and use for a decade.

Check YETI Rambler price on Amazon

Hotel Room Cooking

Portable Electric Travel Kettle

Not every hotel room has a coffee maker, and even the ones that do usually offer a pod machine with stale pods. A travel kettle gives you hot water for coffee, tea, instant oatmeal, ramen, soup, or hot chocolate – basically anything that just needs boiling water. This one is 9 inches tall, weighs 1.1 pounds, and has a leak-proof seal so it can ride in your suitcase without worry. The LCD touch screen lets you pick from four temperature presets (113/131/176/212F) – dial in the right heat for green tea versus pour-over coffee. Double-walled stainless steel keeps the outside cool while the water stays hot. It’s ranked in the top 25 electric kettles on Amazon for a reason.

Check travel kettle price on Amazon

Precision Induction Cooktop

For extended stays, Airbnbs without a proper kitchen, or anyone who doesn’t want to eat out for every meal on a long trip, a portable induction cooktop lets you heat soup, cook eggs, warm up leftovers, or make a proper meal without leaving the room. Induction heats faster and more efficiently than a traditional coil burner, and the flat surface wipes clean in seconds. Precise temperature control gives you everything from a gentle simmer to a hard boil. It’s not a carry-on item – this is for the checked bag on longer trips – but it earns its place for any stay longer than a weekend.

Check induction cooktop price on Amazon

Tech and Charging

Multiple devices charging -- the reality of modern travel

Anker Nano Power Bank

This isn’t the heavy-duty laptop charger from our remote work gear guide. This is the compact, phone-sized power bank that lives in your day bag. 10,000mAh is enough to charge a phone two to three times, and the built-in USB-C cable means one less cord to pack. 30W output charges fast enough that a 20-minute top-up during lunch gives you meaningful battery life for the afternoon.

Check Anker Nano Power Bank price on Amazon

Travel Power Strip

Hotel rooms have two outlets. You have a phone, a laptop, a camera charger, a partner’s phone, and maybe a tablet. The math doesn’t work. A travel power strip with USB ports solves this immediately. The NTONPOWER has three AC outlets plus four USB ports (two USB-C), and the 4-foot flat extension cord wraps neatly around the body. It’s also cruise-approved if that’s your style of travel.

Check travel power strip price on Amazon

Universal Travel Adapter

If you’re leaving the country, you need one of these. A universal adapter covers every plug type on the planet – US, EU, UK, Australia, and everywhere in between. Modern phones, laptops, and cameras all have dual-voltage chargers, so you don’t need a voltage converter – just the plug adapter. At $14, it’s the cheapest insurance against arriving in London and realizing you can’t charge anything.

Check travel adapter price on Amazon

Security and Safety

Apple AirTag (4-Pack)

Drop one in each checked bag. If your luggage doesn’t make your connection – and it happens more often than airlines admit – you’ll know exactly where it is in real time. The Find My network is massive, and Precision Finding on newer iPhones guides you to within inches. At under $16 per tag in the 4-pack, it’s absurdly cheap insurance for bags containing hundreds of dollars of gear and clothes.

Check Apple AirTag 4-pack price on Amazon

TSA-Approved Luggage Locks

Not all locks are TSA-approved, and a non-approved lock will get cut off if TSA needs to inspect your bag. The Forge dual-opening locks let you use either a key or a combination, so you have a backup if you forget your code mid-trip. Stainless steel shackle, four-pack, and a red indicator that tells you if TSA opened your bag.

Check Forge luggage locks price on Amazon

Portable Door Lock

This one is especially popular with solo travelers. A portable door lock adds a physical barrier that works from the inside – even if someone has a key, a master key, or the door lock malfunctions. It takes two seconds to install, weighs almost nothing, and works on any standard inward-opening hotel or Airbnb door. Peace of mind for under $15.

Check portable door lock price on Amazon

RFID-Blocking Passport Holder

A leather passport wallet that blocks RFID skimming keeps your passport, boarding passes, and cards organized in one place. The WANDERINGS wallet is genuine leather, fits comfortably in a jacket pocket or the front pocket of a sling bag, and prevents digital pickpocketing in crowded airports and transit systems. It also just looks better than pulling a bare passport out of your back pocket.

Check RFID passport holder price on Amazon

The Weigh-In

Digital Luggage Scale

This $12 item has saved more people from $75 overweight bag fees than anything else on this list. Hook it to your bag handle, lift, and you know exactly how much your bag weighs before you get to the airport. No more guessing, no more repacking at the check-in counter while the line behind you grows. The AWS scale has a die-cast metal body that won’t break in your bag and a built-in tape measure for checking bag dimensions.

Check luggage scale price on Amazon

Traveling with Your Dog

Dog ready for adventure -- because they need a packing list too

Sherpa Original Deluxe Pet Carrier

If your dog flies with you in the cabin, this is the carrier most airlines recognize and accept. The Sherpa Original Deluxe has been the standard for airline pet travel for years. The patented spring wire frame compresses so it fits under airplane seats, mesh panels keep airflow moving, and the machine-washable faux lambskin liner keeps things comfortable on long flights. The medium size fits pets up to 16 pounds. The Guaranteed On Board program means participating airlines have pre-approved this specific carrier – one less thing to worry about at the gate.

Check Sherpa carrier price on Amazon

Collapsible Silicone Dog Bowl

A two-pack of collapsible silicone bowls weighs almost nothing and folds completely flat. Pop one open for water at the airport, at the hotel, at the park, on a hike. The lids prevent spills in your bag. At this price, keep a set in every bag you own so you never have to think about it.

Check collapsible dog bowl price on Amazon

The Bottom Line

None of these items will change your life. All of them will prevent a specific, predictable travel frustration that you’ve either already experienced or will eventually. The entire checklist – every item on this page – costs less than one night at a decent hotel. And unlike the hotel, you’ll reuse all of it for years.

Pair these essentials with the right hotel and you’re set. Browse stays in the cities we cover: Austin, Nashville, Miami, Denver, New Orleans, San Diego, or Clearwater Beach.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about staying in Austin, answered with data from our research.

What are the most forgotten travel items?

The items people forget most often are the ones they don’t use daily at home: a universal power adapter, ear plugs, a portable door lock, a luggage scale, and a toiletry bag with leak-proof bottles. You also forget things you assume the hotel provides but often doesn’t – like a decent pillow for the flight there. The best defense is a packing checklist you reuse every trip.

Are compression packing cubes worth it?

Yes. Compression packing cubes typically save 30-40% of the space your clothes would otherwise take up in a suitcase. They also keep your bag organized so you’re not digging through everything to find a pair of socks. If you’re trying to fit a week’s worth of clothes into a carry-on, packing cubes are the difference between making it work and checking a bag.

Can I bring a portable door lock on a plane?

Yes. Portable door locks are allowed in both carry-on and checked luggage. They’re small, lightweight, and add an extra layer of security to any hotel room, Airbnb, or rental. Solo travelers and frequent hotel guests find them particularly reassuring.

What is the best way to track luggage?

Apple AirTags are the most reliable option. Drop one in each checked bag and you can track its location in real time through the Find My app. If your bag doesn’t make your connection, you’ll know exactly where it is – and so will the airline when you show them your phone. At under $25 per tag, it’s cheap insurance for bags that contain hundreds of dollars worth of gear and clothes.

Can I bring my dog in the airplane cabin?

Most major airlines allow small dogs in the cabin if they fit in an airline-approved carrier that slides under the seat in front of you. The Sherpa Original Deluxe is the most widely accepted carrier and comes with a Guaranteed On Board program for certain airlines. Your dog must stay in the carrier for the entire flight. Check your airline’s specific pet policy, size limits, and fees before booking – most charge $95-$150 each way for in-cabin pets.

Do I need a travel adapter or a voltage converter?

For most modern electronics – phones, laptops, tablets, cameras, chargers – you only need a travel adapter (plug shape), not a voltage converter. These devices have dual-voltage power supplies (look for 100-240V on the charger label) and work anywhere in the world with just a plug adapter. You only need a voltage converter for older single-voltage devices like hair dryers or curling irons, and honestly it’s easier to just buy a cheap one at your destination or borrow from the hotel front desk.

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