Holiday Packing List: What to Pack for Every Type of Trip
You've booked the flights, sorted the accommodation, and spent a suspicious amount of time on Google Maps plotting the best restaurants. Then, the night before departure, you stand in front of an open suitcase and go completely blank. Having déjà vu? Don't worry, we've all been there.
Whether you're heading for a sun-soaked beach, a city break, a ski slope or a winter sun escape, what you pack genuinely makes a difference to how well the holiday goes. This guide covers every major holiday type with practical, no-faff packing lists drawn from real search data on what travellers forget.
Last updated: April 2026.
The Essentials Every Holiday Packing List Needs

Before you get into the specifics, these are the items that should go on every packing list regardless of where you're headed.
Travel Documents and Money
Passport (check the expiry date a few months earlier, not at the airport), travel insurance details, flight or rail tickets, hotel confirmations, and a mix of card and a small amount of local cash. Keep digital copies on your phone too, just in case.
Tech & Charging Essentials
Phone charger, universal travel adaptor, portable power bank and headphones. If you're travelling to Europe or the US, check your adaptor covers the right plug type. A surprising number of people still get caught out and have to spend a tenner (or more!) at the arrival gates.
Toiletries and Health Basics
Any prescription medication with enough supply for the whole trip plus a few extra days. Paracetamol, antihistamines and plasters take up almost no space and can avoid a disaster every single time. Travel-size toiletries if you're flying carry-on only.
Worth knowing for 2026: several UK airports including Heathrow, Gatwick, Birmingham and Edinburgh now have CT scanners that allow liquids over 100ml through security. However not all airports have upgraded yet. Check your departure airport before assuming the 100ml rule does not apply.
Why Packing Cubes Are Worth It
This item is worth mentioning here because searches for them have hit an all-time high. They genuinely transform a chaotic suitcase into something you can find things in. Roll clothes into them by outfit or category and you'll wonder how you ever managed without.
Portable Luggage Scale
There are few airport experiences more stressful than rearranging socks between bags at check-in while a queue forms behind you. The Lugg Digital Portable Luggage Scale solves this at home, before it becomes a problem. It's compact, precise to 0.01kg and earns its keep again on the way back when the souvenirs have quietly added a few kilos.
Got the essentials sorted? Make sure you are also avoiding the common airport packing mistakes that catch most travellers out before they even board.
Beach Holiday Packing List

A beach holiday has one of the most forgiving packing briefs of any trip. The key? Resisting the urge to overdo it. You can get away with a cabin suitcase for most of these!
Clothing
Pack lighter than you think you need. Lightweight dresses, linen trousers, shorts and a couple of evening tops cover most situations. A sarong or oversized scarf does double duty as a beach cover-up and a modesty layer if you visit any religious sites. One smart outfit for a nicer dinner is usually plenty.
Beach Kit
- Swimwear (two so one can dry whilst you're enjoying the sea)
- Flip flops
- Lightweight microfibre towel
- Wide-brim sun hat
- Goggles (if that's your thing)
Sun Protection
SPF 30 minimum, SPF 50+ for children. Sunscreen is significantly cheaper to buy at home than in resort, so bring enough for the whole group. Aftersun or aloe vera gel is worth packing too in case you've missed a spot.
If you're snorkelling or diving, look for a reef-safe formula; many popular destinations including Bali, Hawaii and parts of the Caribbean restrict or discourage chemical sunscreens near coral.
One thing people miss: sunscreen degrades in heat. Check the PAO symbol on any bottles you're reusing from last year.
Useful Extras
- Reusable water bottle (empty it before the airport's security gate)
- Small waterproof phone pouch for the beach
- Good book or e-reader
- A lightweight packable laundry bag - keeps dirty clothes separate and makes unpacking at home significantly less grim
The practical takeaway: once the sun cream, swimwear and documents are in your beach bag, you're most of the way there. Everything else is just comfort.
City Break Packing List

City breaks have a different logic to beach holidays. You're on your feet all day, the weather is often unpredictable, and you want to look reasonably put-together for evenings out without dragging a full-size case around. A cabin suitcase is usually all you need for a city break.
Clothing
Build around a neutral colour palette so everything works together. Two or three pairs of trousers or jeans, a mix of tops, and one smarter outfit. Layers are your friend. A lightweight down jacket that folds into itself is one of the most useful travel purchases you can make if you don't already own one.
Footwear
Comfortable shoes that can handle a full day of walking and still look decent for dinner. This is worth taking seriously. Blisters on day one of a city break make for a miserable holiday. Bring a second pair if space allows, ideally with a slightly smarter finish, so you can impress the locals.
Autumn & Winter City Break Additions
- A couple of jumpers
- Thermal underlayers
- Hat, gloves and scarf
- Compact packable rain jacket
- Small travel umbrella that fits in your bag
Merino wool is brilliant for travel because it packs small, keeps you warm and doesn't smell after repeated wear.
Useful Extras
A slim travel wallet to keep all your documents together, a day bag or tote that fits a water bottle and your phone, and a compact travel hairdryer if your hair needs it. Hotel dryers are famously useless!
The practical takeaway: for a city break, the shoes and rain jacket are the decisions that matter most. Get those right and everything else falls into place.
Ski Holiday Packing List
Ski holidays require the most preparation of any trip on this list. The good news is that once you've nailed the kit, you're sorted.
On-Slope Clothing & Layers
- Ski jacket and ski trousers (or a one-piece suit)
- Thermal base layers (two or three, merino or synthetic)
- Mid-layer fleece
- Ski socks, one pair per day on the slopes
- Gloves or mittens
- Warm hat or helmet liner
Equipment: Hire or Bring?
If it's your first ski trip, hire your skis, boots and helmet at the resort. Ski boots are agony to travel with and hiring is easy. If you already own your kit, pack your ski bag carefully and consider ski bag insurance. Goggles are worth buying in advance as resort shops charge significantly more.
Not sure how much luggage space you will need? Read our guide on what size suitcase you need before you start packing.
Sun Protection at Altitude
This catches people out every year. UV rays are much stronger at altitude and reflect off the snow, so SPF 50 on your face is genuinely essential. An SPF lip balm too - pack both in your jacket pocket for easy top-ups on the mountain.
Apres-Ski and Resort Wear
- Snow or sturdy boots with grip for walking around the resort
- Casual change of clothes for evenings
- Swimwear if your accommodation has a pool or spa
- Small rucksack for water, snacks and sun cream on the mountain
The practical takeaway: layers are the whole game on a ski holiday. Too many is far better than too few, and you can always tie a fleece around your waist if the afternoon warms up.
Winter Sun Holiday Packing List
A winter sun holiday sits somewhere between a beach trip and a city break. You're after warmth but you're often also sightseeing, which means you need more versatility than a purely beach-focused packing list.
Clothing
Lightweight trousers, breathable tops and a couple of casual dresses or shorts. Pack at least one layer for air conditioning. Planes, restaurants and taxis can be aggressively cold regardless of the outside temperature. A light cardigan or thin linen shirt covers this well.
Footwear
Sandals for the beach and casual days, plus a more comfortable walking shoe or trainer for sightseeing. This combination handles most situations without overloading your luggage.
The practical takeaway: the light cardigan or cover-up for air conditioning is the most underrated item on any winter sun list. Pack it in your carry-on so it's immediately accessible.
Long-Haul Holiday Packing List

Long-haul trips need a bit more planning because you're usually away for longer, potentially in multiple climates.
What to Pack in Your Carry-On
- Neck pillow and eye mask
- Compression socks
- Small carry-on bag with moisturiser, lip balm, ear plugs and toothbrush
- Refillable water bottle (empty through security)
- One change of clothes in case hold luggage is delayed
Hold Luggage Tips
Pack versatile clothing that layers and mixes easily rather than lots of specific outfits. Roll rather than fold to save space and reduce creases. Think about different dress codes. One modest cover-up is respectful and expected in some countries.
The practical takeaway: on long-haul, what you pack in your carry-on matters as much as what goes in the hold. Put everything you'd genuinely miss if your luggage were delayed in your cabin bag.
Still deciding on luggage? Our guide covers what size suitcase you need for longer trips.