The Best Packing Cubes, Measured by the Space They Actually Hold
A packing cube's stated volume and its interior volume are two different numbers, and only one of them goes in the suitcase. These three tell the truth about the smaller one.
A packing cube advertises one number and holds another, and the gap between them is where every ruined suitcase begins. The stated dimension is the outside of the cube — measured, I would guess, from the far edge of one seam to the far edge of the other, which is generous — while the interior, once the fabric doubles back on itself and the zipper takes its channel, is a centimeter or so smaller on every face, and it is that smaller, quieter number that actually goes into your bag. I have measured the three sets below from both the outside and the inside, and where the two disagree I have trusted the inside, because the inside is the one you pack.
Compression complicates this honestly. A compression cube does not conjure new room; it takes the depth a cube had and lays it flat, so three inches of folded shirts become one inch of very firm shirts, and the missing two inches have not disappeared — they have gone sideways, into the rest of the suitcase, which is exactly what you wanted them to do. This is the whole trick, and it is a real one, and anyone who tells you compression makes clothes smaller is standing too far away to see the seams.
The Eagle Creek Pack-It Reveal set is my overall pick because it is honest about its interior and shows it to you: a mesh top you read from directly above, three sizes that nest into a carry-on, recycled fabric that holds its shape when full. The Isolate compression set is for the traveler fighting depth — its second zipper flattens a packed cube to roughly a third, and it weighs almost nothing, so the space you save is space and not fabric. The Bagail six-piece set is the value play, giving you six compartments and a shoe bag for less than two premium cubes, with the standing caveat that six cubes is six invitations to overpack.
So: the Reveal, if you want to see what you packed without unpacking it. The Isolate, if your enemy is depth and you pack from above onto a flat surface. The Bagail, if you want the most compartments per dollar and can be trusted with them. But before any of that, stand over your open suitcase and look straight down, because a cube tells the truth from directly above and begins to lie the moment you view it from the side — and the suitcase, like everything I review, only makes sense from one particular place to stand. Find that place. Pack from there. I will be adjusting.
A pair of readers is a small correction to where your arms end and where the page insists on being. These three close that gap from three different distances.
The undersigned party has reviewed three hardside sets for the admission, transport, and eventual return of a household's belongings. Findings below, per procedure.