5 Travel Hacks Advertorial v2
5 Travel Hacks I Swear By
The flight tricks, planning secrets, and one outfit that changed how I pack for good.
I'm standing at the luggage carousel in Lisbon, watching the same 200 people from my flight crowd around the belt with that glazed, anxious look. You know the one. Bags start coming out. Somebody's massive hard-shell gets stuck sideways. A woman is already on the phone because hers didn't make the connection.
I walked straight past all of it. Carry-on rolling behind me, out the door, into a cab, checked into my hotel before most of them even had their bags.
That trip changed how I think about packing, planning, and honestly how I travel in general. And this post is everything I figured out the hard way over probably a dozen trips, condensed into the five things that actually moved the needle. Real stuff. Not "roll your clothes" advice you've already heard a hundred times.
Here's the thing no one tells you about being a bad traveler: it's not one big mistake. It's a dozen small ones that stack up until you're dragging a 50-pound suitcase over cobblestones in Rome at 2pm in July, sweating through the shirt you picked specifically because it "goes with everything," dreading the uphill walk to your Airbnb. You packed seven outfits and you hate all of them by day three.
I used to be that person. Overpaying for flights because I booked on impulse. Showing up in peak season because I didn't know better. Laying everything out on the bed the night before and telling myself I needed options. The linen pants that wrinkle if you look at them wrong. The "nice dinner" dress that takes up half the suitcase. Three pairs of shoes, because what if. Then I'd get there and wear the same two things on rotation anyway.
The worst part was the 6am budget airline gate, watching the attendant pull out the scale. My bag was always two kilos over. Always. I spent years doing this wrong before I figured out a system that actually works. Here are the five hacks that fixed it, in order.
Hack 1: Use the Google Flights date grid to find the cheapest days to fly.
Most people open Google Flights, type their dates, and take whatever price comes up. That's leaving money on the table. Pick your departure city and destination, then click "date grid" instead of entering specific dates. It shows the cheapest fare for every combination of dates across a two-month window. You can see at a glance that flying out Wednesday and coming back Thursday saves $380 versus the weekend flights you were about to book. I've saved over $400 on a single booking doing this. Be flexible by even two or three days. That's where the real savings live.
Hack 2: Travel in shoulder season, not peak season.
September in Italy. October in Greece. May in Portugal. Early June almost anywhere in Europe. Lower prices, thinner crowds, and honestly better weather than August in most Mediterranean cities. I went to Lisbon in late September and the city felt like it was mine. Open tables. Short museum lines. Flights $300 cheaper than they would have been six weeks earlier. Shoulder season is the single biggest quality-of-life upgrade you can make to a trip, and it costs you nothing.
Hack 3: Book one "home base" and take day trips instead of hopping cities.
This one took me years to figure out. I used to plan four cities in ten days, which meant four check-ins, four check-outs, and half my trip spent on trains instead of actually being somewhere. Now I pick one city, book an apartment for the full stay, and take day trips from there. Lisbon as a base, day trip to Sintra. Florence as a base, day trip to Siena. You unpack once. You learn your neighborhood. You stop repacking your suitcase every 48 hours, which alone makes the whole trip feel calmer.
Hack 4: Carry-on only. No exceptions.
This is the rule that forces all the other good decisions. Once you commit to a single carry-on, you stop packing "just in case." You bring what you'll actually wear. You move faster through airports, skip baggage claim, avoid lost luggage, and never pay a checked bag fee again. The trick isn't better packing cubes or a fancier rolling technique. The trick is owning fewer, harder-working pieces of clothing that do more jobs. Which brings me to hack number five.
Hack 5: The one outfit that replaced half my suitcase.
A friend wore a three-piece set on a girls' trip to Barcelona and I didn't realize it was one outfit until she told me on day four. She kept showing up looking polished, put-together, clearly comfortable, and I assumed she was mixing and matching from a well-packed capsule wardrobe. Nope. One set. Three pieces. She sent me the link. It was the Essential Set from SexyModest. I ordered it the next week, and it's the reason hack number four is possible for me now.
The set is three pieces. A square-neck tank that sits flat against your collarbone and doesn't gape or shift when you move. Wide-leg pull-on pants with an elastic waist that somehow looks structured, not like pajamas. And a long open duster cardigan that hits just below the knee and moves behind you when you walk in a way that makes the whole outfit look intentional. The square neckline on the tank is the detail that makes it. It reads polished. You can wear just the tank and pants in the heat and it still looks like you thought about it.
The fabric is buttery, breathable, and wrinkle-free. Not clingy. Not see-through. It doesn't grab your body in weird places when you sit down, which matters when you're in a cramped economy seat for nine hours. The pants don't crease. I sat through an entire transatlantic flight, stood up, and they looked the same as when I boarded. I kept waiting for the catch.
Here's the packing test I ran before my Portugal trip. I folded all three pieces, stacked them, and they took up roughly the same space as two rolled t-shirts. That's it. Three pieces that replace five or six outfits, flattened into almost nothing. They unpack wrinkle-free. I pulled them out of my carry-on after 10 days and they looked like I'd just taken them off a hanger.
Sizes XS–XL. The exact set from this article.
80,000 of these have sold. Over 10,000 Google reviews. Those numbers are real, and they're the reason I didn't hesitate when my friend sent me the link. That many women don't quietly buy the same outfit unless it's doing something right.
"I wore this on a 14-hour flight to Rome and walked off the plane looking like I hadn't just slept in it. That's never happened to me before. I'm ordering a second color for my next trip." Verified Review
The repeat buying is the part that surprised me. Women aren't just buying one. They're collecting colors. I started with black because I'm predictable. I now own three. My friend who sent me the original link owns five and says she's not done.
"Bought black first. I have four now. I keep telling myself I'm done and then a new color drops." Verified Review
5:45am, airport. TSA line. I'm in the Essential Set with sneakers and a crossbody bag. Carry-on fits overhead, personal item under the seat. No checked luggage, no stress, no last-minute gate-check panic. I look like a person who has it together. I do not mention that I woke up 40 minutes ago.
2pm, Alfama district, Lisbon. It's warm. The duster is off, folded into my tote. I'm walking uphill on tile sidewalks in just the tank and wide-legs, and I'm comfortable. Not overheated, not underdressed. A woman on the street gives me one of those quick approving looks. I'll take it.
8pm, dinner at a tiny seafood place near the river. Duster back on. Simple gold earrings I brought, the only accessory I packed. The waiter pulls out my chair. Same outfit I wore through security 14 hours ago. Nobody knows. I barely remember.
Things people ask
Does it really not wrinkle?
I tested it on a 9-hour flight. Pulled the pants out of my carry-on in Lisbon and they looked the same as when I packed them. The fabric does the work, not the folding.
How does the fit run?
True to size. The pants have an elastic waist so there's some give, the tank is fitted but not tight, and the duster is meant to fall open. I'm normally a medium and the medium fit how I'd expect.
Can you wear it for a "nice" dinner?
With the duster on and a pair of earrings, yes. The square neckline does a lot of the work. That's the whole point of the set. One outfit, three contexts.
The same three pieces from 5:45am to dinner.
