The best travel towels aren’t where you’ll find them

Yes, my friends and colleagues, towels. Because despite the seeming irrelevance of such a thing, a compact travel towel is one of the best ways to cut down on bulky items so you can travel with just a minimum of gear. If you’re looking to shrink things down and travel light, travel towels are an absolute must, because:

Regular towels are gigantic, plush monstrosities that rapidly fill up what little space you might have to work with. They’re also made of every traveler’s arch-nemesis fabric: 100% cotton. It’ll work fine, until you have to wash and dry it. Then it’ll stay wet forever, and sooner or later you’ll stuff it into a pack and it’ll smell atrocious once it comes out.

Travel towels, on the other hand, are super-thin and fast-drying, so they’ll take up very little space, and dry out in just a few hours. Even if they’re totally soaked, you can usually leave them out overnight, and they’ll be ready to go by morning. At $20 each, they’re a backpacker’s best friend. You can use them as a bath towel, beach towel, clothes-wringer, or even a blanket.

The problem, however, is that travel towels are usually made of polyester, or some other form of synthetic material. This is great for fast drying times, but terrible for odor resistance. And you know what causes that odor? Bacterial waste products. That’s right, kids! That horrible smell is bacteria poop. And what happens when you’re stuck with a towel that smells a little “off?” You’re smearing it all over yourself. Gross!

So what’s the best travel towel?

Linen.

That’s right. Something a million years old that went out of style when cotton took over the world is going to be the best travel towel you can possibly get. It’s going to be a little pricy (maybe $30 for a bath towel size), but linen has a number of properties that make it ideal for this sort of job.

First of all, it’s highly absorbent. If you’ve ever tried to dry yourself off with polyester, it just…doesn’t…quite…work. That’s because polyester pushes water away. Linen, on the other hand, soaks it right up.

And what really surprised me was that it dries fast. In fact it dries so quickly that it nearly compares to polyester in side-by-side tests, which was the only point of using polyester in the first place.

But it vastly outperforms synthetic fabrics when it comes to odor resistance. Linen is naturally anti-microbial, which means bacteria have a hard time multiplying on its surface. No bacteria = no smell. I used one of these over the course of a month, and never detected even a hint of odor.

Polyester, on the other hand, usually starts smelling weird after just two or three uses…especially if you have to stuff it into a bag before it had a chance to dry out completely. If you’ve ever pulled one of those smelly towels out of a pack after a long day, you’ll know what I’m talking about.

And once you switch to linen, you will never go back.

I have a few of them. Here’s what they look like:

Linen towels
Linen in a waffle weave (left) and a regular weave (right).

The waffle weave on the left is softer, but bulkier. The one on the right is scratchier (though it softens up over time), but somewhat more compact. Both work just fine, so take your pick.

They’re quite similar in terms of size and weight to a typical travel towel found in camping stores; maybe a little heavier, though it’ll be a matter of just a few extra ounces. They’re about the size of a t-shirt once they’re all rolled up.

Linen travel towel rolled up

Seriously…this is the way to go. You’ll never go back. I will bet you a beer.

Okay, where do I get one?!

The first one I got was from Outlier (one of the few companies combining fashionable and functional clothing, which is the only way clothes should ever be made), who sent me a free one and I’ve been salivating over it ever since. Sadly, they don’t seem to make them anymore…(update: they’ve just restocked them!)

Luckily for you, they’re all over the place. Amazon, eBay, Etsy, and obviously Google. You need to be clever with the search terms though, because “linen” has become a slang term for “sheet” or “towel” or “blanket” or just about any large piece of fabric that belongs in a home. This makes it kind of messy to look up “linen towel” because you’ll find results like “100% cotton bed linens” or other garbage like that. It really annoys me that we’re using the wrong word for something, kind of like how we occasionally use the word “China” for plates, which is ridiculous.

So what you’ll have to do is correctly plug in the exact-match search term, by typing the quotation marks in the proper location, where it’ll–

No. You know what? I’ll just do it for you.

Search for linen towels on:

Those’ll take you to a search specifically for “100% linen” bath towel, with the quotation marks around 100% linen to make it an exact-match search term, so it won’t, for example, show you a towel made of 100% cotton that also happens to have the word linen somewhere on the same page. Hopefully, anyway.

Once you’re there, you can experiment with other search terms, such as bath sheet, which is bigger, and therefore ideal for using as a beach towel or blanket. You can also type the word waffle into the search boxes to get that super-soft waffle weave type shown above. For whatever reason, Etsy seems to be the place to go to find the waffle-weave style, though I also found several on eBay.

You can also just order a couple yards of linen and sew up the edges yourself.

By the way, they make really great kitchen towels. Since they dry faster and resist odor better than cotton, they’re less likely to get sopping wet and smelly over the course of cooking dinner and washing your hands a million times. Obviously there’s a limit to how quickly they can dry out, but it’s noticeably better. They’ll probably last longer, too.

They also work just fine as regular bath towels at home, but I wouldn’t really recommend spending the extra money to replace your old cotton towels, because cotton towels usually have 24 hours to dry before you take your next shower, so drying time isn’t really a big deal…but, on the other hand, the thinner fabric takes up a lot less space in the washing machine, so you can wash more at the same time and save on quarters or electricity costs. There’s certainly nothing wrong with that, but they’re going to be especially useful for travel, camping, or going to the gym, or something like that.

As for alternatives: I’ve heard that sarongs work nicely, since they’re very thin, and usually made of rayon, which is highly absorbent and would dry faster than cotton…but they’re usually made with the intention of being wrapped around a woman’s body, so they’re not necessarily towel-sized or towel-shaped…and although linen isn’t the absolute lightest travel towel you can get (I think the MSR Packtowl Ultralite is the winner in that regard), you could just use a smaller size.

Well, that’s about all I have to say about them. I’m officially convinced: Linen makes the best travel towel you can get. Now that I’ve found them readily available on eBay and Etsy in all sorts of sizes and colors, and at decent prices, I’m officially upgrading this suggestion from “yeah, you’d probably like it” to “just get it, because it’s objectively superior to any conceivable alternative.”

Happy camping/traveling/showering!

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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78 Comments on “The best travel towels aren’t where you’ll find them”

  1. I am so happy that you found Linen as a fabulous natural towel choice! I myself have had similar results to yours with raw silk fabric, which I buy from dharma trading company online, and cut into the shape and size that I want to create towels, washcloths, face cleansers, anything you want really! The nubby texture of the raw silk is excellent at absorbing water, and they dry soooooo fast it’s incredible. This particular fabric also packs down so tiny that I feel comfortable bringing a much larger towel with me that I would if I were using a synthetic microfiber fleece towel. Like linen, the silk never stinks, and has proteins in the fiber that are really good for the skin as an added bonus. You can pat yourself dry, or use the nubs to exfoliate your skin. I would never ever ever go back to using a microfiber fleece synthetic towel. This fabric that I get from the Dharma trading company is also incredibly cheap compared to a commercial towel. I have just been waiting for opportunities to tell people about how awesome this fabric is, so I’m happy to have found your article and be able to share this!

    1. I might give silk a try. It feels so great and it would be even lighter than linen, although I wasn’t familiar with whether it would be anti-odor or not. But if so, then great.

  2. Weight wise: I should clarify that The kind of silk that works best for this is raw silk, which has a nubby texture, is thicker than a typical silk shirt material, making it perhaps the same weight as the linen, if not lighter. (I don’t have linen to compare)
    Odor wise:
    There are proteins in silk that are really good for your skin, anti-aging etc. I imagine these same proteins play a role in anti-odor/microbial.
    I can attest that it takes a lot to make these towels stink! At risk of TMI I use a smaller silk towel as a pee rag when I go camping in rugged environments, and it doesn’t stink for days, although I wash it more frequently than stink alone would suggest.

    Another great use: wrapping a solid soap bar inside a bit of this silk cloth absorbs most of the liquid from the recently used soap. if then placed inside a plastic bag, it doesn’t stick to the bag, and since this cloth can be used as a washcloth, no soap is ever wasted by the container.

    1. Hmm, I’ve been thinking of going with solid soap and that’s not a bad idea for including a built-in washcloth kind of a thing.

  3. Those towels look pretty nice and can be a great travel towel they kinda look like Turkish towels you can look up online thanks for sharing this

  4. Check out Lava Linens (www.shoplavalinens.com). They just started making 100% Masters of Linen Certified travel towels (the highest quality and most eco-friendly linen available). They’re a small family-owned and run company in Colorado. All towels are handmade and are extremely durable, soft and designed for travel.

    1. An anti-microbial treatment would take care of the smell, but it wouldn’t help with absorbency. Synthetic fabrics just aren’t absorbent, so they kind of just push water around on your skin. Try to dry yourself off with a fleece jacket, for example. It just doesn’t work. Certain blends and variations work better than others, and if you find one that seems to absorb, it might work out fine, and the slightly faster drying time of polyester might work nice. But I would only recommend this if you need SUPER fast drying times at all costs, like using the towel at midnight and then packing it up at 5am to take a train or continue climbing a mountain. Anything beyond that and I’d say go with linen.

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