Best portable coffee makers for travel junkies

Travel means different things to different people, and to me, travel generally means going places with good coffee. Sampling the local varieties and getting a morning energy boost before adventuring around town for the day is one of life’s simple pleasures, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

But for others, travel often means a boring business trip in the middle of nowhere with nothing but atrociously bitter drip coffee as far as the eye can see that crushes the spirit and saps more energy than it creates.

Luckily for them, brew-it-yourself portable coffee makers are better than they have any right to be. They’re as far from second-rate as you can imagine, with one in particular that weighs practically nothing, and is frequently cited as the world’s best. And not just the best travel-appropriate portable coffee maker, but the best, period. Just to give you an idea of how good your coffee can be, even in the middle of nowhere.

Rejoice, coffee enthusiasts, rejoice! No longer must one deal with the brackish swill of local dive establishments whose putrid excuses for caffeinated beverages border on the gasoline-esque! No longer I say! No longer must one subject oneself to anything but the finest of hand-crafted hipster pretentiousness, no matter one’s place in the world! Rejoice, damn you, rejoice!

Ahem, moving on!

Portable Coffee Makers!

1) Aeropress

Aeropress Portable Coffee Maker Travel Kit
This travel kit version includes a handy carrying case.

Despite being designed by the same guy who invented the Aerobie (yes, the Frisbee-alternative children’s toy), the Aeropress is no mere plaything. Having converted over millions of obsessive coffee fans (including this one), the Aeropress is frequently described as the best coffee maker on the planet, despite costing a mere $30 and consisting of little more than a series of tubes. Like the internet!

The reason it works so well is that it reduces the amount of time the ground coffee remains in contact with hot water (down to about a minute, instead of the usual three or four), thereby eliminating the acidity and bitterness associated with over-brewed coffee, while compensating for this short brew time with piston-activated air pressure to extract more flavor. It brews a strong, smooth, concentrated shot or two of flavorful coffee, which can be enjoyed on its own, or used as the base for a latte or an Americano.

Once I got this, I could never go back to Starbucks ever again. I’ve used it maybe twice per day for the last three years, and with good beans and proper technique (and a stainless steel mesh filter instead of the included paper filters, to allow more flavor to come through), the coffee it produces is so good that I’ve occasionally stopped in my tracks at the first sip, and I can’t bring myself to consider many alternatives.

The parts aren’t the smallest, but they’re all lightweight plastic, and the scoop and stir stick can be stored in the hollow upper tube during transport, so it’s not so voluminous.

  • Price: $30
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, paper filters (or you can upgrade to a reusable stainless steel filter, which I highly recommend) and a mug

Get it here.

2) Impress Coffee Brewer

Impress Portable Coffee Brewer
Those dots are part of the design, by the way. Not a reflection.

The Impress is even more portable than the Aeropress, consisting of only three parts, while also doubling as its own travel mug, thus making it even more portable.

The Impress functions quite a bit like a French press, but has a much finer mesh, thus giving you more flavor by allowing you to grind to a finer consistency, while also blocking tiny particles from escaping into the drinkable section, which is often the downside of standard French presses. The outer chamber is also double-walled, insulating the coffee to keep it warm.

The lid is more of a heat-retaining cover, rather than a leakproof screw-on, so it’s best to think of this as more of a desktop travel coffee maker, rather than one that can be thrown in a bag alongside a fancy laptop.

  • Price: $40
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, and maybe a stirring spoon

Get it here.

3) Espro Travel Coffee Press

Espro Travel Press
The Espro (pictured with the tea filter)

So I was originally going to include this one as just a quick mention, as it’s kind of similar to the Impress featured above (and the French press down below), but it offers a number of advantages to set it apart.

First of all, it uses a super-fine double-filtered press to keep the coffee grounds from getting into the drink; secondly, it operates entirely inside of its own vacuum-sealed travel mug; thirdly, it has a secondary cap on top, so it all stays warm, and won’t leak. Oh, and it does tea as well. There’s a separate filter for that, either available separately, or as part of an all-in-one pack. It really does everything you’d want, from the portability, to the versatility, to the insulation, to the no-leak lid.

I will say the cap is a little tricky to operate, as it doesn’t have any rubber coating or grooves to get a good grip on it, making it quite slippery. But aside from that, it’s top-notch. Just don’t press down too hard when you’re filtering, or it’ll compress the grounds, and they’ll be harder to clean out.

  • Price: $35 (+$15 if you also want the tea filter)
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, and maybe a stirring spoon

Get it here.

4) French Press Travel Mug

Bodum Travel French Press
Mmm, shiny.

Tried and true, and plain and simple. French press brewing usually won’t produce something as strong or clean as some other methods, but it has plenty of fans, and it’s also perfect for a portable design that can function as its own insulated travel mug. Options are also numerous enough that you can find some with minor features you might prefer, like handles or weird sizes.

Pictured is the Bodum stainless steel insulated French press travel coffee mug, a popular model with a sippy spout for drinking coffee on a bumpy bus ride.

This won’t give you the seal of other travel mugs, since the plunger extends directly out the top of the mug, so this is more like a car or desk sort of thing than something you could throw into a bag and forget about.

  • Price: $30
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, and maybe a stirring spoon

Get the pictured stainless steel Bodum here.

5) Collapsible Coffee Dripper

GSI Collapsible Java Drip
Also makes a decent frisbee. Kinda.

Easily the most compact and transportable option available here (unless you consider the counter-argument that the travel mugs take up zero extra space if you were planning on taking them anyway), a collapsible coffee dripper is about as tiny as it gets.

You’ll need your own mug and coffee filters too, but aside from that, it’ll barely take up any space at all. It therefore pairs well with an insulated travel mug, given its minimalism.

Paper filters also allow for easier cleanup than the other options too. French presses, for example, can take a while to clean, making this even lower-maintenance than those alternatives.

The one pictured here is from GSI, and I picked this one because it has a lid, so you won’t have to worry too much about keeping it clean all the time. It also doubles as a frisbee if necessary.

  • Price: $13
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, paper filters (or a reusable stainless one) and a mug

Get it here.

6) Cafflano Kompact

Cafflano Kompact Portable Coffee Press
asdf

Cafflano has a few products, including a drip brewer that includes a coffee grinder, as well as a device that looks quite a bit like the Aeropress up above, but I’m featuring this one here because it accordion-shrinks down to the handy little size of a hockey puck.

The accordion bellows squish down to press the coffee through the filter, giving you a high-pressure extraction for lots of flavor, and a quick brew, and you can store it by squishing them down, then closing it with the cap.

This is about as small as it gets; not much bigger than a collapsible drip filter, but with a high-pressure system that’ll give you a stronger cup. That’s the secret of the Aeropress, too; a short brew time under high pressure, providing stronger flavor, and less of the overdone bitterness and acidity of longer brew methods. But at a much smaller size, it’s more compact than the Aeropress, and therefore more portable.

  • Price: $65
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee, and a mug

The company doesn’t have an online store at the moment; a number of local coffee shop chains carry their products, but the easiest online store I can find that carries it is Bed, Bath, and Beyond.

Portable Espresso Makers!

7) Handpresso

Handpresso portable espresso maker
Brings classy new meaning to the phrase “pump and dump.”

Handpresso has been around for a while, and has two major products; a pump-operated version (shown in the photo) and an electric version that plugs into a car’s cigarette lighter (seriously, why don’t cars just have regular outlets at this point?).

I’m highlighting the manual version here, because the car version is rather pricey, and requires an additional adapter to plug it into a regular outlet, so I think the manual version is likely to be more versatile for most people, especially if you’re traveling internationally, and don’t want to deal with an outlet mismatch. Just a few pumps, coffee, and hot water, and you’ve got espresso, with no additional electricity needed. It’ll even work when camping as well, which is another reason I prefer this manual method.

Despite being a more complex system than the regular coffee makers shown above, it’s still quite small, and easily portable. They even make a travel case for extra protection.

  • Price: Approximately $100 (original prices are in euros, so currency fluctuations can change this)
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee or ESE coffee pods, and a mug

Get it here (and peruse the other pages for the car version as well).

8) Minipresso

Minipresso portable espresso maker
Mini me.

This one might actually win the espresso competition. It’s lighter than the Handpresso, and has what I would say is a simpler pump mechanism, plus an included cup, making it quite a convenient little contraption. Oh, and it’s about half the price, too.

The only potential disadvantage is that it produces coffee under 8 bars of pressure, compared to the Handpresso’s 16; I doubt this will be a deal breaker for anyone out there, but it’s perhaps worth mentioning, especially since “official” espresso typically requires 9 bars. If you really need espresso, it’s not quite there, but it’s darn close.

Minipresso currently comes in two versions; one for ground coffee, and one for pods. The ground coffee version would be more versatile, while the pod version would be more convenient, but those pods produce so much waste that I think ground coffee is a good way to go, if you can manage that little extra nuisance.

  • Price: $50
  • What else you need: Hot water, ground coffee (or pods for the pod version)

Get it here (and check out their even smaller Nanopresso while you’re at it).

Accessories you might like

Seeing as how quite a few of the options above require hot water and ground coffee, you might be thinking about how to manage those requirements during a late-night productivity session after the coffee shops have closed for the day. With that in mind, you’ll want to take a look at these:

  • A manual coffee grinder will allow you to grind on demand, wherever you are, and once you give freshly ground beans a try, it’s all but impossible to go back. Manual grinders take quite some time to operate (particularly for a finer grind), but it’ll give you a minor workout, too. You could also bring a small, electric blade grinder, as it’s not going to be that much bigger, and might be justifiable if you’re brewing for several people, or going for a long trip where you’ll make frequent use of it.
  • An immersion boiler is a portable water heater that plugs into a standard outlet (car adapter versions also exist), and gives you hot water wherever you have electricity. Some hotels have hot water dispensers, but some don’t, so this is nice to have if you’re staying in a low-budget hotel without many amenities, while also being more efficient than heating up a whole kettle for just one cup.
  • A good travel mug is great for keeping coffee or tea hot on a cold day, while also providing the under-appreciated advantage of keeping water cold on a hot day. I don’t necessarily have a favorite, but the Contigo is pretty incredible.

Well, that should do it. With just a few simple ingredients, you can brew your own coffee, wherever you are. For those venturing through Italy and enjoying the amazing espresso on every street corner, this might not seem like a big deal; but for those attending some business conference in a small town for whom the term “coffee” consists of little more than black tap water, a portable coffee maker can make a wonderful difference.

A few quick Kickstarter/Indiegogo mentions would be the Leverpresso (like the Aeropress, but with wine-opener-style folding handlebars for ease of use); the Pascal Press (like the Espro); and the Mojoe, Nowpresso, and Portapresso, which are all-in-one units with battery-operated water heaters. They’re all pretty neat, but I didn’t want to list them before they became available, but they’re worth checking out too.

About SnarkyNomad

Eytan is a pretentious English major whose rant-laden sarcastic tirades occasionally include budget travel tips and other international nonsense. You can follow his every narcissistic word on Facebook or Twitter.

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36 Comments on “Best portable coffee makers for travel junkies”

  1. These look so cool and I would totally get one – if only I drank coffee!! I’m a tea-person, and my bugbear with drinking tea anywhere else, like at seminars/group events/in most accommodation places including hotels, is that the cup (if plastic), or thermos, or jug, often has had coffee in it. For some reason the smell and taste of coffee sticks to surfaces like fluids from the Bog of Eternal Stench, and it totally ruins the taste of tea. I’m interested in the water-heating thingy though – I’m with you on the superior taste of a hot drink made with proper boiling water. As you can see, tea drinkers can be just as fussy as coffee addicts about their brew…

    1. There’s a brief list of travel tea mugs you might enjoy perusing. It doesn’t include the one from Thermos (mentioned at the very end of this post in the accessory section), because it hadn’t been released back then, but I might add it.

  2. I use the Bialetti: Moka Elettrika – Electric Moka…makes great espresso! Your post motivated me to weigh & then compare to the 5 mentioned. Upon weighing, 20.3 ounces, I just now discovered I left the U.S. adapter at our hotel just 2 weeks ago! (BTW the adapter comes with the original purchase). After losing the adapter & finding a youtube post that claims the key components of the Aeropress weigh only 8.2 ounces I’m actively in the market. Eytan, any information on the weight of these portables reviewed would be appreciated. Thank you for all your great reviews!

    1. Hmm…I’ll see what I can do about that…some of them have weight listings, but in the case of the Aeropress, you might only bring a few of the components, as some of them are convenient, rather than necessary, so I’ll mention things like that too.

      I like Moka pots as well, and some of them are miniature versions; they have no top chamber, but instead just have a little spout where the coffee comes out, and you put a mug there. I might add some of the camping ones…sometimes they require a flame, but there are some neat designs out there.

  3. You can even get a manual grinder that fits into the aeropress for stowage – Ritual sells the whole shebang as a kit — http://www.ritualroasters.com/store/traveling-brewers-kit/ .

    Although I am a big fan of the aeropress, it’s much too large for my packing style. For trips of <1 week I pre-grind my coffee at home, bring a collapsible filter holder, pack an appropriate number of #2 filters, and do manual drip/pourover (which is what most fancy coffee houses do – simple is good!).

    I fall into the "often travel for work to places without great coffee" category (and no, the Starbucks attached to the hotel/around the corner does *NOT* count), and having great coffee everywhere has improved my mornings immeasurably.

    The immersion heater you link to is great – I also travel with that, but find that nearly all hotels I wind up at have either an electric kettle or a coffee maker that I can use to heat up the water.

    The filter holder I use is:
    http://www.amazon.com/Kuissential-SlickDrip-Collapsible-Silicone-Dripper/dp/B0051HEFAS/ref=sr_1_22?s=home-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1429281595&sr=1-22&keywords=coffee+filter+holder

    1. I was thinking of adding a collapsible dripper, or at least a small dripper, to the list. Most of these options are too big for me too, but there are people out there who might take a single flight to stay a whole month in one spot, so I think that’s the type of trip where these would work out just fine. Except maybe the Impress, because it’s quite compact.

      1. I use a collapsible pour over gizmo It does take disposable filters but they are light and available almost anywhere. Fairly light and not at all bulky.

  4. Thanks for the post! I live/travel in Asia, and finding a good coffee shop open early in the morning is pretty hard to do consistently. For my travel needs, I tried the Handpresso, but it required pretty constant application of a food-grade oil (olive, vegetable, etc) on some of the moving parts to maintain a seal, which got to be a pain. I then discovered the Portaspresso, and I haven’t looked back. Yes, it is pricey, and yes, it is relatively heavy–if you are traveling light, this is probably not what you are looking for. However, it will probably last me my entire life, and it produces the best espresso I have ever had. I can control the grind settings, and the pressure throughout the flow, which allows me to “dial in” on whichever beans I am using. I use it at home, and on the road with equal results. Again, not for everyone, but I thought it deserved a mention. Cheers!

  5. I LOVE the Aeropress! I didn’t bring it with me because I ran out of space (in my backpack). But it was on my plan!! I was considering the Minipresso as well…. but I decided not to bother with coffee gadgets because I wanted to have local Spanish coffee instead. NEXT TIME :) next time, it will be The Travelling Aerorpress.

    1. Yeah, these aren’t really for backpackers who are wandering through cities; I think they make a lot more sense for people who are taking just one or two flights and staying in one place for a few weeks, and working while traveling; that way they can have homemade coffee while they get things done while away from home. “Travel” is different for everyone, so for some people it’s that kind of a trip.

      1. you’re right, and I would +1 to the Aeropress as well as the Bodum French Press. I would have loved any on your list for my previous business trips. Thanks for writing!

  6. Coffee singles work for me in a pinch. They are like tea bags but with coffee. I don’t know why they are not more popular except it may be related to the fact that I have only seen Folgers and Maxwell House make them.

    1. Yeah, it seems like they should be more popular. Some people prefer fresh coffee, but there are enough people out there drinking instant coffee that this seems fine.

    1. FYI for anyone interested, I messaged Oomph about their product and they let me know the whole thing weighs 600g fully assembled (too heavy for me).

      Wondering how annoying it will be to make enough coffee with the Minipresso if it’s just 1 shot at a time (I want at least 2 in the morning and if it’s me and my husband that’s a lot of rinsing and reloading).

      I’m looking at the Pascal Press (don’t know if you’ve heard about it?) for fewer parts, ease of use and light weight, but it’s on Indiegogo right now and with all their delays in production and shipping I’m worried about getting it in time for our trip in August (trying to avoid obscene coffee spending in Switzerland). I can’t do instant as my only coffee!

      1. That actually looks great. From the look of it, it seems like it’s an Aeropress that’s also a travel mug. If you can’t get that in time, I think maybe a French press travel mug might work well enough, while also doubling as a water bottle while not being used for coffee.

  7. The Hario grinder is affordable and decent, but if you want a more durable build, more ergonomic design, and better grind, check out the Porlex.

  8. Have a friend who recommended the Aeropress so took the chance and got it. Watched a few Youtube videos and then tried it and I have to say it makes a great cup of coffee. I keep it at work and not only does it make a great cup quick, it’s easy to clean, compact and easily stored in it’s on bag.

    1. Completely agree, at home I’ve got a Krups Drip coffee maker but when backpacking I’ve used a trusty Moka for many years (perfect over a campfire). I was bought an Aeropress as a present and reluctantly took it on a camping trip (I was going camping with the present giver to felt obliged), that was several camping trips ago and my Moka is now gathering dust in the cupboard. I’d highly recommend the Aeropress for anyone who want’s a portable coffee maker.

  9. I love using my MiniPresso instead of drinking the gross coffee that is typically available while travelling. I am travelling and it’s very convenient to have with me. Received this as a gift and what I like about it most is It’s unexpectedly small – about the size of a 500mL water bottle.

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