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If you’ve ever found yourself stretched out on a seaside dune in the blistering August sun, pining for the cool rejuvenation of a fresh mint tea, you’ve understood the allure of a cooler. Whether your taste is sparkling waters or brewskies, sweltering deserts or music festivals, any prolonged occasion in the out-of-doors benefits from the power of a cold beverage, and with the best coolers, you’ll be sure to keep things ice-cold no matter where the adventure may take you. Available in different sizes and shapes, coolers are ready for extended camping trips, multiple-day fishing trips, and anywhere else you need easy portability. Hard-bodied coolers—like our best overall pick, the YETI Tundra 35—are usually made out of roto- or injection-molded plastics and feature thick, rigid sides containing layered insulation. Often latching and sometimes on wheels, some can retain ice for over a week. Soft-bodied coolers are designed to be lighter, usually using various polymer-constructed fabrics and often strapping to a user’s back or slinging over a shoulder. With these and other factors in mind, we’ve put together our suggestions for the best coolers for any and every occasion.
How we chose the best coolers
For this article I examined a wide range of coolers, looking for the best coolers from multiple manufacturers. I stacked the specs against one another and accumulated as much info on each model as possible. I also used my experience from multiple cross-country US road trips and camping trips when I lived out of a cooler for weeks. A few factors emerged as the most important in this search.
Ice retention varies dramatically from cooler to cooler. Some coolers will retain ice for an afternoon, and some boast ice retention of over a week. Great ice retention requires expensive components and heavier builds, so ice retention isn’t a be-all and end-all. However, if you’re looking for a cooler that can keep supplies cold in the back of your truck for a week, then it might be. Good ice retention was one of the most important factors I looked at.
Portability is an all-important metric for a good cooler (at least for most people). Even if you’re buying a cooler that will live in the back of your truck, it still needs to be mobile enough and have enough purchases to load it in and out. The most portable coolers are usually soft-bodied ones that will likely sacrifice some ice retention for a lightweight build. This list features a few highly portable coolers and a few that focus elsewhere.
Ruggedness can be an important factor. Loaded coolers can be very heavy. That’s why I looked for models that are rugged enough to survive a drop or two or repeat scraping against the sharp edges of a boat. For hard-bodied coolers, this often means roto-molded plastics rather than injection molds.
Price is always a factor with outdoor gear. Where coolers are concerned, long ice-retention times generally increase your cost dramatically. Thus, this list highlights a few coolers that make a low price the prerogative while simultaneously prioritizing expensive and impressive insulation in others.
The best coolers: Reviews & Choice
The best coolers can keep drinks and food cold for hours while you and your pals/loved ones romp around having a blast outdoors, and these are the best ones we found.
Best overall: YETI Tundra 35
Specs
- Weight: 20 pounds
- Outer Dimensions: 21.38 x 16.13 x 15.75 inches
- Inner Dimensions: 13.88 x 10.63 x 9.38 inches
- Materials: Roto-molded polyurethane
Pros
- Keeps ice for long stretches
- Gasket seals lid
- Rugged construction that’s even bear-resistant
- Comes in multiple sizes
Cons
YETI is such a well-known name in coolers that I specifically looked for a cooler that could outrank it for the “best overall” category in this article, but with its long ice retention and rugged build, the YETI Tundra 35 is simply the clear choice. YETI hard-body coolers are designed with a roto-molded frame that provides greater structural integrity, drop resistance, and insulation than lesser injection-molded coolers. The lid seals with an industrial gasket, so it’s guaranteed to keep contents at the desired temperature, and opens with easy-to-use rubber latches.
At 20 pounds, the YETI is heavy. However, this is addressed in its design. Rope handles are attached to both sides, making carrying easy. The cooler is also designed to be tied down and is easily secured to your boat or truck with ropes. A removable metal dry basket also ships with the product. Further, the Tundra meets the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee (IGBC) standards for grizzly bear (or black bear) resistance when locked with standard long-stem master locks (YETI sells these on their site). These are just some of the reasons we love YETI coolers for camping.
When it comes to coolers, YETI is one of the undisputed industry leaders, and the Tundra is no isolated golden child. YETI makes a great cooler called the Tundra Haul, which is equipped with wheels for greater portability. If you’re looking for a soft-body cooler or a hard-bodied water cooler, their offerings are also worth a look. If you like Yeti’s insulated water bottles, you’ll be just as satisfied with the Tundra 35 cooler, which is why a YETI is always our suggestion for the best splurge.
Best portable: RTIC Road Trip
Specs
- Weight: 4.1 pounds
- Outer Dimensions: 11.75 x 8 x 11 inches
- Inner Dimensions: Top: 10 × 5 × 7.75
- Materials: Rotationally molded plastic
Pros
- Excellent coolness retention
- Flip-up handle
- Price
Cons
- Using a small cooler means settling for less capacity
RTIC’s Road Trip Personal Cooler takes all of the company’s cooling technology and packs it into a comfortable, grab-and-go design. Our hands-on testing proved that the Road Trip is the ultimate choice in its size class.
The Road Trip has an official capacity of 12 cans, but we fit eight 12-ounce cans along with two-and-a-half pounds of ice inside, with a little room to spare. RTIC recommends using a 2:1 ice-to-beverage ratio to get the best experience. Pre-chilling your drinks will also help retain ice. We didn’t follow these guidelines but still ended up with beverages that felt colder than they would have out of the fridge even after the cooler was out in nearly 90-degree heat for an extended period of time.
This level of performance is possible because the Road Trip Personal Cooler has insulation that’s two inches thick. For reference, its full-sized coolers only use roughly three inches of insulation, so RTIC didn’t skimp out on its smallest model. Using this much insulation means once your beverages have cooled down, they’re not going to get warmer for a long time. The downside is that it does increase the cooler’s weight, but that’s a fair tradeoff.
One feature we didn’t expect to like as much as we have is the Road Trip’s Lid Lock Handle. When flipped down, the handle keeps the cooler locked so drinks won’t end up on the floor of your car when you hit a bump. When flipped up, the handle made the Road Trip comfortable to carry around—even when it was full.
If you don’t need a full-sized cooler for your day trip but want to keep enough beverages for two or three people chilled from before noon through deep into the night, RTIC’s Road Trip Personal Cooler is an excellent choice.
Best ice retention: Grizzly 75-Quart Cooler
Specs
- Weight: 33 pounds
- Outer Dimensions: 33.13 x 17.75 x 18 inches
- Inner Dimensions: 27.5 x 12.63 x 13.75 inches
- Materials: Roto-molded linear low-density polyethylene plastic with Ecomate polyurethane foam insulation
Pros
- Extreme ice retention can last five days to over a week
- Sealing gasket
- IGBC-certified bear-resistant and includes placements for locks
Cons
For those among us who are looking for a cooler that can go and go, the Grizzly 75 Quart Cooler is about as rugged as its namesake. Manufacturing rugged coolers in Iowa, Grizzly is an American company specializing in reliability. The Grizzly is a powerhouse with ice retention that can last for well over a week in moderate conditions and most of a week, even in scorching desert settings. If you’re looking for an ice chest that will work for days angling on the Everglades, weeklong hunts in the mountains of Colorado, or months on the road in your van-life rig, this is the one.
Built of roto-molded plastic injected with a special non-VOC environmentally friendly polyurethane called Ecomate, the Grizzly is more sustainably minded and insulated than most of the competition. IGBC-certified grizzly resistant, the cooler is also remarkably rugged and closes with three latches; it also has padlock holes on each side (for real bear thwarting). A rubber gasket in the lid seals the deal.
Grizzly builds a cooler that really delivers longevity. It comes at an expensive price point, but it’s the best out there for those looking for a truly fortified cooling system that’s ready for weeks in the field.
Best value: Ninja FrostVault Cooler
Specs
- Weight: 29.01 pounds
- Outer Dimensions: 32.2 x 17.07 x 18.78 inches
- Capacity: 80 cans without ice
Pros
- Separate “Dry Zone” drawer that keeps items cool without getting them wet
- Solid performance
- Price
Cons
- Difficult to move when full
Note: Use code COOL10 and PopSci readers get 10% off.
There may be less expensive coolers than Ninja’s FrostVault, but none of them come close to offering the same level of performance or build quality. The company has succeeded in bringing features we’d expect from coolers twice the FrostVault’s price without cutting corners or sacrificing quality.
This 50Qt cooler has two chambers: a main one for drinks and a separate “Dry Zone” drawer for food or other items you don’t want to get wet. Coldness from the main chamber gets transferred to the Dry Zone, keeping it under 40 degrees Fahrenheit. In our experience, this dual-chamber design works really well and reminds us of the benefits of using on- and off-heat zones for grilling. We kept some sandwiches in the Dry Zone during a trip to the beach, and they weren’t soggy out by the time we got there. Meanwhile, our drinks—a couple dozen cans, two larger bottles—and ice were very cold.
The FrostVault kept our drinks cold for a couple of days when set on a porch during roughly 70-degree weather, which means it’s sufficient for use during multi-day parties. What impressed us most about the FrostVault cooler was its overall build quality. This cooler is solid and as well-built as other brands that quantify their gear as “bearproof.” That this is Ninja’s first large outdoor cooler makes the feat even more impressive.
If you’ve been mulling over getting a full-sized hard cooler but are afraid you can’t find a good one in your price range, Ninja’s FrostVault will prove you wrong. Just be mindful that it doesn’t have wheels (we have plenty of suggestions that do), which means it gets pretty heavy when full. The cooler’s handles make it easy to carry, but you’ll still need some elbow grease to get it into and out of a car.
Best for short adventures: IceMule Classic
Specs
- Weight: 1.93 pounds
- Outer Dimensions: 16.5 x 6 x 7 inches
- Inner Dimensions: 15 liters
- Materials: Fiberglass
Pros
- This cooler floats and can even be towed behind a boat
- Slings over the back easily
- Easy to stuff with whatever you need
- Can keep food cold for over 24 hours
Cons
- Not the best ice retention out there
- Material isn’t the most rugged and may tear on sharp or rough surfaces like unfinished metal boat parts
At the most portable end of the spectrum, the IceMule Classic is a soft-body roll-closed cooler that looks like a dry bag and slings over your shoulder. It also floats. If water sports and agile adventuring are your prerogatives, the IceMule is ready.
While it doesn’t have the best ice retention of any cooler out there, the IceMule will still retain ice all day and keep your food and drinks cold for over 24 hours. Because of its roll-over design, a poor, not watertight seal is possible, so be mindful when closing it to avoid liquids getting out if the cooler is held upside down. This also means that water can get in if you take it floating in the water. It’s not a common enough issue to get in the way of most users, but it’s something to be aware of.
Another issue with the IceMule is that the fabric isn’t as rugged as it could be. With all-week use, your IceMule may crack or scratch, especially when used around rough or jagged materials, such as sharp metal edges on a boat.
Where the IceMule shines is on adventurous outdoor day trips in and out of water. The fact that it floats means you won’t have to worry about your lunch sinking if you take it out paddleboarding, and the shoulder strap makes it easy to pack fresh food or drinks on one- or two-night backpacking trips.
Best compact cooler with wheels: RovR Roll R 45 Wheeled Cooler
Specs
- Dimensions: 22.5 x 218.9 x 19.3 inches
- Weight: 39 pounds with land bin, 34 pounds without
- Capacity: 60 cans or 10 pounds of ice
- Materials: Rotomolded High-Density Foam Insulation
Pros
- Sporty, space-saving design
- 8-day ice retention
- All-terrain wheels
- DeepFreeze dry bin
- Bearproof design
- Plenty of color choices
Cons
- Handle is slightly flimsy when fully extended
The sporty-looking RovR Roll R 45 Wheeled Cooler resembles a miniature version of my mid-engine MR2 Spyder—which, admittedly, looks like a miniature version of a full-size vehicle. It also happens to make our list of the best coolers. The 45-quart cooler is the perfect size for my two-seater car and is also ideal when space is either limited or you don’t need a giant cooler. (Note: Rover does make 60-quart and 80-quart wheeled coolers, and in addition to glacier and chili pepper, other color choices include desert, magic hour, midnight, powder, moss, and Gobi.)
The deep freeze-dry bin is deep enough to hold wine bottles upright or can also be used to store clean ice for beverages. The wheeled cooler also offers compartments to store various types of items (meat, veggies, etc.) separately—but also below food-safe temperatures recommended by the FDA. The latches are tight enough that it takes a minute to open them, and the drain plug makes it easy to channel the water out. Also, the custom rubber gasket seals the cold air inside, which allows the cooler to provide up to eight days of ice retention.
In addition, the telescopic handle lets me find the right height for comfortably wheeling the cooler around. When the handle is fully extended, it feels rather flimsy, but at lower heights, it’s fine. The 9-inch all-terrain wheels are puncture-resistant, making the cooler easy to navigate even over rough terrain, including deep sand.
There are also a lot of cool RovR Roll R 45 accessories that you can purchase separately and attach to the anchor points, like a prep board, double cup holder, umbrella/rod holder, collapsible bin, and bike trailer kit.
More coolers we love …
Best soft: Polar Bear Coolers 24 Pack
Sturdiness is one of the greatest issues with soft coolers—but this is not even close to an issue with the Polar Bear Cooler. It features one of the toughest, puncture-resistant liners made of TPU double-coated nylon, which is consumer-safe for perishable storage. Plus, it has beautiful stitching with double-hemmed seams, a weatherproofed zipper, and a side zipper compartment that can be totally customized with your name or logo! Looking for something more heavy-duty? Check out our selection of the best soft coolers.
Best backpack: TOURIT Cooler Backpack
This cooler bag comes in six colors, has a stylish design, and promises comfort on your back and shoulders with its padded and adjustable straps. This backpack keeps food and drinks chilled for up to 16 hours (freeze packs are needed, though). It is durable and leak-resistant, and its ventilated exterior ensures that your clothes won’t get wet by condensation during your adventure. It has multiple compartments perfect for organization: one main storage compartment for all your provisions, two front zipper pockets, two bottle holders, a mesh pocket on the strap, and even a bottle opener.
Best budget: Coleman Xtreme 5 Cooler
This Coleman cooler features Xtreme technology, including an insulated lid and extra wall insulation, and holds up to 100 cans. The closed lid features four slots to rest your drinks without spilling and is perfect to squat down on—it holds up to 250 pounds! Its EZ-clean lid and comfortable handles make this a perfect choice for a no-frills ice chest that will get the job done without breaking the bank.
Things to consider before buying the best coolers
When you’re shopping for a new cooler, the following factors are important to keep in mind:
Sustainability
Most coolers are made from plastics, but more environmentally friendly options are out there. Igloo makes a 100 percent biodegradable cooler called the Recool 16-Quart Cooler out of recycled paper and alkyl ketene dimer (a hydrophobic sizing agent). It’s an excellent budget alternative to the Styrofoam coolers of yesterday because it’s biodegradable. Igloo’s post-consumer recycled resin coolers are also worth a look, especially the Parks Project Playmate line, which donates a portion of proceeds to the National Parks Conservation Association.
When buying any product, it’s important to consider its effects. When shopping for coolers, remember that there are more sustainable options out there that might biodegrade or use plastics that won’t leach harmful chemicals.
Portability
Strategizing how you’ll use your cooler before you buy is important. If you need an ultraportable cooler to take in and out of the water, you’ll most likely want a soft-body cooler that can strap to your back. If you fish and like to head out for multiple-day excursions, you may want a cooler that will keep ice frozen (and fish fresh) for up to a week. Usually, the best ice retention requires more weight to achieve. So, ultimate portability and ultimate ice retention are mutually exclusive factors.
Performance
Unless you’re heading into the field for multiple-day camping trips or driving across the country in a modified van, you may not really need multiple days of ice retention. If you’re looking for a solid cooler that will keep your drinks cold all afternoon at the beach, many cheaper options could do the job fairly well.
FAQs
For most people, the YETI Tundra 35 delivers the best balance between ice retention and ruggedness for the price. It’s an excellent cooler that’s ready for most anything you throw at it. On the other hand, the expensive Grizzly 75-Quart Cooler is the most rugged cooler out there with the best ice retention.
The best coolers generally use hard or soft plastic exteriors with dense insulators that block heat transfer. Sometimes, including a gasket that further insulates the seal on a lid, coolers are (usually) waterproof boxes that prevent heat transfer. And you can help the process by packing your cooler efficiently.
Most coolers with updated insulation technology can keep ice for up to a few days. Depending on the temperature and if the ice chest is located in direct sunlight or not, the maximum days will vary. That said, however, the Grizzly 75-Quart Cooler can hold ice for 5-7 days.
The Grizzly 75-Quart Cooler surpasses the YETI in terms of ice retention and ruggedness. It also offers bear protection, roto-molded plastic, and rugged latches.
Final thoughts on the best coolers
Every family, group of friends, or individual can benefit from a trusty ice cooler to pull out for that next party or outdoor adventure. Especially as the summer months approach, it’s smart to ensure you’re ready for any situation by checking the best cooler off your to-buy list. There are so many options, but you certainly won’t go wrong with any of the best coolers we recommend.
Why trust us
Popular Science started writing about technology more than 150 years ago. There was no such thing as “gadget writing” when we published our first issue in 1872, but if there was, our mission to demystify the world of innovation for everyday readers means we would have been all over it. Here in the present, PopSci is fully committed to helping readers navigate the increasingly intimidating array of devices on the market right now.
Our writers and editors have combined decades of experience covering and reviewing consumer electronics. We each have our own obsessive specialties—from high-end audio to video games to cameras and beyond—but when we’re reviewing devices outside of our immediate wheelhouses, we do our best to seek out trustworthy voices and opinions to help guide people to the very best recommendations. We know we don’t know everything, but we’re excited to live through the analysis paralysis that internet shopping can spur so readers don’t have to.