Packing a suitcase: 7 expert tips for making the most of your space in 2026
Fitting two weeks’ worth of travel into a cabin suitcase isn’t luck — it’s a method. Frequent travellers and industry professionals rely on precise, proven techniques, flight after flight, that dramatically increase the real capacity of a suitcase without ever forcing the zip. Here are the key techniques, along with the right accessories to put them into practice.
Sort before you pack: the foundation of any effective method
The most common mistake is opening the suitcase and piling clothes in as you go. The result is always the same: unnecessary duplicates, creased garments and poorly used space.
Before packing, a rigorous sort is essential. The 5‑4‑3‑2‑1 rule is a reference in the world of light travel: 5 tops, 4 bottoms, 3 pairs of shoes, 2 layers, 1 set of accessories. For even more minimal travel, the 3‑3‑3 method (3 tops, 3 bottoms, 3 pairs of shoes) creates at least nine outfits through simple combinations.
Choosing a colour palette is a strategic step that’s often overlooked. A neutral palette that mixes easily — a black pair of trousers, two jeans and several interchangeable tops — doubles the number of possible outfits without increasing volume.
Rolling or folding: the technique depends on the fabric, not habit
There is no single winner between rolling and folding — both complement each other depending on the garment.
- Rolling works perfectly for T‑shirts, jeans, leggings, underwear and cotton or synthetic fabrics. Rolled garments take up less surface area, fill leftover gaps and reduce creasing.
- Folding is better for dress shirts, blazers, structured dresses and delicate fabrics that crease easily.
A third method, bundle packing, involves wrapping clothes around a central core (often a toiletry bag). Each layer protects the next, significantly reducing creases — ideal for business travel.
Packing cubes: the accessory that truly changes everything
Packing cubes transform the way you travel — and their efficiency depends on choosing the right type.
- Classic packing cubes (like Lipault’s S/M/L Travel Accessories) group clothes by category and make the contents instantly visible.
- Compression cubes go further by physically reducing the volume of bulky items such as jumpers or sportswear. Lipault’s 3‑piece compression set covers everything from small garments to the largest items.
- Compression laundry bag (31 × 41 cm): unlike a basic laundry bag, it includes a valve to expel air when rolled — ideal for worn clothes.
- Shoe bag (18 × 29 × 12 cm, 84 g, 7 L): isolates shoes to protect clean clothes.
- A toiletry bag with a waterproof compartment prevents leaks and should be placed in an easily accessible outer pocket for airport security checks.
The Tetris technique: use every cubic centimetre
A well‑packed suitcase is built in structured layers.
- Bottom layer (wheel side): heavy, firm items — shoes, books, toiletry bag — to stabilise the suitcase.
- Middle layer: rolled clothes standing upright in cubes, or folded bulky items arranged vertically like files.
- Top layer: delicate items, first‑day outfits and last‑minute accessories.
No space should be wasted: socks, belts and cables go inside shoes; gaps between cubes hold scarves or small items; hoodie hoods become improvised pockets. Integrated straps in Lipaul cabin suitcases keep everything in place.
Protecting fragile items and liquids
Each liquid container is a potential leak. Double zip‑bags, store bottles upside down, and respect the 100 ml cabin limit required by European aviation rules.
Jewellery should go in a dedicated case or pill box. Electronics travel best in padded pouches or wrapped in soft clothing.
Managing formalwear without creasing
Suits and evening dresses should not be rolled. Use a garment cover when possible. Otherwise, the reverse fold method — folding the garment inside‑out and tucking in the shoulders — creates a crease that disappears easily on arrival.
For shirts, placing a thin plastic sheet between layers helps the fabric glide instead of creasing.
Choosing the right suitcase or travel bag
Even the best packing techniques have limits if the luggage itself isn’t suitable.
Soft nylon bags, like Lipault’s City Plume collection, stretch slightly to accommodate an extra jumper — unlike rigid shells. The lighter the suitcase, the more weight allowance remains for your belongings.
Well‑designed luggage also includes an accessible outer pocket for documents and essentials, avoiding the need to reopen the entire suitcase in the aircraft aisle.
Express checklist before closing your suitcase
Before zipping up:
- Check all compression zones are closed.
- Keep liquids in a separate, accessible pouch.
- Isolate shoes in their own bags.
- Place travel documents in an instantly accessible pocket.
- Weigh the suitcase to ensure it meets airline limits.
- Ensure no fragile item rests directly against the suitcase’s hard edges.
A final expert tip: photograph all your belongings laid out before packing. If you forget something at the hotel, you’ll spot it immediately.
Packing methodically ultimately saves time at arrival, on the return journey and during security checks — and travelling with peace of mind is the foundation of a successful trip.
FAQ: suitcase packing
What is the best method to pack a cabin suitcase?
A rigorous pre‑sort (5‑4‑3‑2‑1 or 3‑3‑3), packing cubes by category, and a layered structure: heavy items at the bottom, clothes in the middle, delicate items on top.
Should you roll or fold clothes?
Both. Roll T‑shirts, jeans and cotton/synthetic items; fold shirts, blazers and structured garments.
Are packing cubes really useful?
Yes — they organise clothes, save time and, in compression versions, reduce the volume of bulky items.
What is the liquid rule in cabin luggage?
Each container must be 100 ml max, stored in a transparent pouch accessible at security.
How to avoid creasing clothes?
Reverse folding, bundle packing, or placing thin plastic sheets between layers.
How to isolate shoes without dirtying clothes?
Use a dedicated shoe bag to separate one or more pairs from the rest of the suitcase.