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Best Motorcycle Luggage for Touring Riders

  • Writer: jamesjordan
    jamesjordan
  • May 30
  • 4 min read

Luggage choice affects your bike's handling, your packing flexibility, and how miserable you are when it rains at mile 400. Get it wrong and you're bungee-cording a damp duffel at a gas station in Montana. Get it right and touring becomes significantly more enjoyable.

Hard Luggage vs. Soft Luggage: The Real Trade-Off

The hard vs. soft debate is mostly a question of what you're optimizing for.

Hard luggage — aluminum panniers, Pelican-style cases, manufacturer cases like Givi or BMW's own system — offers genuine waterproofing, theft deterrence, and the ability to walk away from a locked bike without worrying about someone unzipping your bag. Hard cases mount rigidly, which gives consistent handling once you adjust to the added width.

The downsides: weight (aluminum panniers add 8-12 lbs empty before you pack anything), cost, and the fact that a tip-over at low speed now means a bent pannier rail and cracked lid instead of a scuffed bag.

Soft luggage has a waterproofing problem that nobody fully solves. Even quality soft bags from Kriega or Giant Loop need dry bag liners or internal waterproofing strategy. Treat the bag as water-resistant and the liner as waterproof.

The advantages of soft are real: lighter, flexible to overpack, easier to carry off the bike, and far cheaper than a full hard case system. For adventure riders who crash occasionally, soft bags walk away from tip-overs intact.

Tankbags: More Useful Than Most Riders Expect

A tankbag is often the last piece added to a touring setup and the first thing you'd miss if you removed it.

The advantage is access — items you need every hour (phone, sunglasses, snacks, map, lip balm) live at your chest level without stopping. A decent 15-20L tankbag effectively adds a day bag to your setup without touching your saddlebag capacity.

The disadvantages: magnetic mounts work on steel tanks (not aluminum), strap mounts chafe some tanks over time, and a filled tankbag shifts weight forward in a way that affects steering feel on sport bikes more than on big tourers.

Kriega's tankbag system and SW-Motech's Quick-Lock series are worth the money for secure mounting. Cheap tankbags with weak magnetic mounts bounce at highway speed and eventually scratch your tank.

Tail Packs vs. Full Racks

For weekend trips — two nights, three days — a quality tail pack strapped or bolted to your pillion seat handles most riders' needs. Kriega's US-30 dry pack and the Giant Loop Coyote are proven options that can carry 30-40 liters without needing a rack.

For 10-day or two-week trips, you want a rack system or structured mounting. Tail packs that aren't rack-mounted shift and compress over long distances.

Quick-Release Systems: Worth the Investment

If you stop frequently — city touring, multiple destinations per day — quick-release panniers pay for themselves in convenience. Unlocking and lifting off a pannier in 10 seconds instead of unbolting hardware is a real quality-of-life improvement.

SW-Motech's EVO and Trax systems, Givi's Monokey and Monolock, and Touratech's aluminum cases with quick-release rails are the standard options. None of them are cheap. All of them are worth it if you tour more than once a year.

Luggage Weight and Handling

Heavy luggage packed poorly is a handling problem. The basic principle: heavy items low and centered. Top-heavy loading raises the center of gravity and makes the bike feel unstable, particularly at low speeds and in parking lots.

A loaded touring bike handles differently than an unloaded one. If you've never ridden with full luggage before a trip, load up your bike for a 30-minute local ride first.

Capacity Planning by Trip Length

Weekend (2-3 days): 30-40L total. A 15L tankbag and a 20-25L tail pack covers most riders without saddlebags.

5-7 day trip: 50-70L. Add saddlebags. At this point a system approach — matched bags from one brand — simplifies mounting significantly.

2-week or longer: 70-90L depending on climate and route. This is where hard panniers, a top case, and a tankbag all earn their place.

Brand Notes

SW-Motech is the benchmark for mounting hardware quality. Their bags are solid; their rack and mounting systems are excellent.

Kriega makes the best soft luggage available. Expensive, but their roll-top dry packs are genuinely waterproof and last years of hard use.

Givi has the widest range of bike-specific fits. Quality varies across their tiers — Trekker Dolomiti aluminum cases are excellent, entry-level plastic cases are adequate.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best motorcycle luggage for a first touring bike?

Start with a quality tail pack like the Kriega US-30 and a mid-size tankbag. This covers most weekend to 5-day trips without committing to a full hard case system.

Are soft motorcycle bags truly waterproof?

Most soft bags are water-resistant, not waterproof. Plan for rain by using dry bag liners inside soft luggage. Kriega's roll-top systems come closest to genuinely waterproof in sustained rain.

How much does luggage affect motorcycle handling?

Noticeably, especially at low speeds. Pack heavy items low and near center, don't overload, and take a loaded test ride before a long trip to adjust to the feel.

Is hard luggage worth the cost for occasional touring?

If you tour once or twice a year, a soft system is usually more practical. Hard luggage makes more sense for riders who tour frequently, need weather security without managing liners, or want the theft-deterrence of lockable hard cases.

 
 
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