The Best Travel Mugs
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If there’s one thing we at WIRED love almost as much as tech gear, it’s caffeine. Over the years, we’ve naturally tracked down the best travel mugs through a series of unfortunate events: spilled lattes, lukewarm brews, and dented thermoses that saw better days. But those mishaps led us to our top picks, from spill-proof mugs that can survive the chaos of a NYC commute to self-heating tumblers for all-day sippers.
I’ve rounded up the best travel mugs that have earned their place in our cupboards. If you’re as obsessed with your morning brew as we are, be sure to check out our guides to the Best Coffee Subscriptions, Best Coffee Grinders, Best Espresso Machines, Best French Presses, Best Portable Coffee Makers, Best AeroPress Coffee Makers, and How to Make Better Coffee at Home.
Updated February 2025: I've added the Owala SmoothSip Slider and the Fellow Carter Move Mug. I've flagged picks that confirm lead use and added information on how we test. I also updated links and prices.
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I'll be testing the Snow Peak Milk Bottle for 350ml for $80 and the Kinto Travel Tumbler for $37. |
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A Note on Lead Soldering
Since we began testing reusable water bottles and travel mugs, we've discovered that some brands use lead soldering to seal their insulated bottles. While exposure is unlikely, we still believe it's an unnecessary risk, especially since many of our top choices use safer sealing methods. We've flagged any brands that confirmed lead use and will keep this list updated as we hear from others.
- Stanley Cup
- Contigo Luxe Autoseal
- Yeti Rambler
- OtterBox Elevation
How We Tested
I’ve been running on caffeine since I was 12 (sorry, Mom and Dad) because I took middle school way too seriously. Fourteen years later, caffeine is my personality at this point. So it's safe to say I’ve been unofficially testing travel mugs for over a decade.
For this guide, I personally tested every mug on this list. I drank both coffee and tea at piping-hot and ice-cold extremes, rating heat retention and the taste, ensuring none had that metallic aftertaste. Shape and design matter, too: how comfortable it is to hold, whether it fits into a car cup holder, and if it offers additional features worth considering. I psychotically shook the mugs that promised to be leakproof and dropped those that claimed to be durable from about four feet onto both wood and concrete surfaces to evaluate how well they held up. Finally, travel mugs can be a pain to scrub, so I factored in how easy they were to clean.
Simply put, I’m a lazy, highly caffeinated creature of convenience, and I need a travel mug that pulls its weight. If it didn't keep my coffee warm, my bag dry, and my life a little easier, it didn’t make the list.
Honorable Mentions
We've run through many travel mugs, and not all of them are winners. These are a few we like, just not as much as the ones above.
KeepCup 12oz Coffee Cup for $28: This double-walled, insulated mug is meant to replicate (and replace) paper coffee shop cups. This is a solid option if you're looking for a glass cup (the rubber grip is plastic, though). That said, it’s not the best for preserving your coffee's temperature, and the lid is a tad wobbly.
Oxo Good Grips Thermal Mug for $33: We reviewed this bottle in 2022 and appreciated its sturdy build and dishwasher-friendliness, but since it's older it now fluctuates in and out of stock.
REI Co-op Camp Mug for $16: REI's stainless steel cup is a decent mug that doesn't particularly stand out. Giordano says the exterior coating was tough enough to show no scratches, even after knocking it over a few times outside.
Zojirushi Stainless Steel Mug for $22: The lid locks to avoid accidental spillage, and editor Adrienne So once left tea in it for 18 hours (unintentionally) and discovered it was still hot when she opened it. The downside is that the cover has three separate parts—a mouthpiece, a gasket, and a lid—that are deeply ridged and annoying to clean.
Avoid These Travel Mugs
They can't all be winners. As mentioned above, we excluded brands that use lead. These are two additional cups that just fell short in comparison to our favorites.
Greens Steel Beast 20-Ounce Insulated Tumbler for $21: The Beast Tumbler has over 78,000 positive reviews on Amazon, but we found the rubber seal around the lid easily comes out of place. That meant it leaked like a sieve.
Toaks Titanium Double Wall 450ML Cup for $40: More often than not, we champion Toaks gear as an affordable source of titanium camp cookware. But this mug is $12 more than the Hydro Flask mug we recommend above, and its finishing is rougher.