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Wenger Security Waist Belt with RFID Protection Grey
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The difference between a traveller and a tourist is usually whatever's in the small pocket of their bag. Boarding pass holders, RFID wallets, packing cubes, the universal adaptor that actually fits Australian outlets — none of it sounds exciting until the moment you need it and don't have it.
This is the catch-all collection: the practical bits and pieces that make travel less annoying. Not brand-specific, not flashy, just useful gear that earns its place in your bag.
RFID Wallets & Cardholders
Contactless cards are convenient. They're also readable from a few centimetres away by anyone with the right reader. RFID-blocking wallets and cardholders shut that down without you having to think about it. Slim profiles, leather and synthetic options, designs that fit in a front pocket without bulging.
Packing Organisers
Packing cubes are the single biggest upgrade most travellers make. They turn a chaotic suitcase into a row of small, labelled bags — shirts here, underwear there, charger cables in their own zip pouch. Easier to find things, easier to repack at the next hotel, easier to pull out a single cube at airport security. Toiletry bags with hanging hooks, shoe bags, and laundry pouches finish the system.
Travel Essentials
The small stuff: luggage tags that survive baggage handlers, TSA-approved locks, lightweight umbrellas that fold into a carry-on, neck wallets and money belts for when you don't trust the hotel safe. Compression bags for puffer jackets. Foldable daypacks for the day trip you didn't plan.
What A Smart Traveller Always Packs
- One RFID-blocking wallet or cardholder for daily use
- A passport sleeve or travel wallet for documents
- 2–4 packing cubes (small for socks/underwear, medium for shirts, large for trousers)
- A toiletry bag with a hanging hook
- A foldable daypack that lives in the suitcase
- A compact umbrella, especially anywhere in Asia or coastal Australia
- Spare zip-lock bags — for wet swimmers, leaking sunscreen, dirty shoes
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best travel accessories for long-haul flights?
The non-negotiables: a decent neck pillow, an eye mask, noise-isolating earphones, a refillable water bottle (empty through security, fill at the gate), and a small toiletry bag with toothbrush, moisturiser, and a fresh pair of socks. Compression socks if you're tall or prone to swelling. A power bank for your phone. Everything else is a bonus.
Do I need an RFID wallet in Australia?
RFID skimming in Australia is rare but not impossible — and the cost of a contactless fraud is more than the cost of an RFID wallet. The bigger argument for one is overseas travel, where skimming is more common in some markets. Either way, a slim RFID-blocking cardholder costs little and removes the worry entirely.
What should I always pack in my carry-on?
Anything you cannot afford to lose: passport, wallet, phone, charger and cable, medication, a spare pair of underwear and a t-shirt (in case the checked bag goes missing), and any tech with a lithium battery (laptops, power banks, e-readers — these aren't allowed in the hold). Keep it under the cabin weight limit and you'll never be the person at the gate repacking on the floor.