How to Build a Packing List You Actually Trust (and Never Repack in a Panic)
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Printables
Most forgotten items are not exotic - they are the boring essentials: a charger, a toothbrush, the one prescription you actually need. The reason they get left behind is that packing usually happens from memory, late at night, with a half-open suitcase. A packing list maker fixes the root problem by giving you an external, categorized list so your brain does not have to hold everything at once. The trick to getting value from it is not just generating a list, but turning that list into a repeatable system you trust trip after trip.
Start by being specific about the trip, because the right list depends entirely on context. A long weekend in a city needs different things from a week of camping or a business conference. Choosing the correct trip type loads a base list that already reflects those differences - swimwear and reef-safe sunscreen for the beach, a dress shirt and chargers for business, a headlamp and first-aid kit for camping. From there, prune ruthlessly. Every item you remove because you genuinely will not use it is one less thing to carry and one less distraction when you are ticking boxes at the door.
Next, layer in the things only you know. The generated list cannot guess your medications, your children's comfort items, the specific cables your gear uses, or whether your destination needs a visa or a power adapter. Add a 'documents' block early - passport or ID, boarding passes, travel insurance details, a copy of your passport stored separately, and any vaccination or entry paperwork. These are the items that are hardest to replace mid-trip, so they deserve a dedicated, double-checked section rather than being lumped in with socks.
Then split the list by where each item travels: carry-on, personal item, or checked bag. Anything you cannot afford to lose or wait for - medication, a laptop, chargers, a change of clothes, travel documents - belongs in the cabin with you. Toiletries are where the rules bite: for carry-on, liquids, gels and aerosols must be in containers of 3.4 oz (100 ml) or less and fit in a single quart-size bag, so larger bottles go in the checked bag or get bought at your destination. Tagging items by bag while you build the list means you are not making these decisions while standing at the security line.
Finally, make the list reusable and verify against reality. Print it or save it, then pack against it physically: tick an item only when it is actually in the bag, and do not pull it back out 'just to check'. Before you finalize, look up the forecast for your exact dates and skim your airline's baggage and any destination entry rules - the list is a starting framework, not a substitute for those checks. Keep the finished version; next time you travel somewhere similar, you reopen it, adjust a few items, and you are packed in a fraction of the time.
Quick tips
- Pick the trip type first - beach, business, or camping base lists differ enough that choosing right saves you from heavy editing later.
- Give travel documents their own section and tick passport, ID, insurance, and a backup passport copy before anything else, since these are hardest to replace abroad.
- Tag each item with its bag (carry-on, personal, checked) so essentials and TSA-limited liquids end up in the right place before you reach security.
- Save or reprint the list after the trip and reuse it - a refined personal list beats a generic one and cuts future packing to minutes.
The Packing List Maker is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.