Hard-wearing rollers that actually suit winter travel
Ski travel is rarely kind on luggage. Between baggage belts, coach holds, slushy pavements outside arrivals and the daily shuffle in and out of ski rooms, your bag gets punished long before you get a turn in. The North Face’s Base Camp-inspired rollers feel made for that reality, not for looking smart on a showroom floor, with tough fabrics, structured chassis designs and wheel systems that stay composed when the route gets rough.
We have travelled with three models that cover most ski-trip scenarios: a cabin-friendly roller for short breaks, plus two Rolling Thunder sizes for week-long trips and heavier packing. Here is how they fit into real ski holidays.
Best cabin bag: Base Camp Voyager Roller 21″
Best all-round ski-week roller: Base Camp Rolling Thunder 28″
Best for big trips, families, or over-packers: Base Camp Rolling Thunder 36″
Tested models and key specs
1) Base Camp Voyager Roller 21″
Best for: cabin-friendly ski breaks and short trips with skis checked in
Price: £220 (The North Face UK, price at time of writing)
Volume: 40L
Weight: 3100g
Dimensions: 35.6cm x 23.8cm x 54.6cm
What it is like on a ski trip
If you are doing a long weekend and your skis are in the hold, this is the carry-on you want beside you. The Base Camp-style tarpaulin fabric has the familiar tough feel, but the overall build stays manageable for cabin use. It rolls smoothly through terminals, feels stable when you step outside onto rougher ground, and the internal divider and compression straps make sense when you are packing bulky layers.
Highlights
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Cabin-friendly sizing on many airlines (always check your carrier)
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Rock-solid chassis and durable fabrics, but not overly fussy inside
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Handy for keeping essentials close if ski bags go missing for a day
Watch-outs
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At 3100g, it is not an ultra-light cabin case, so weight limits still matter.
Where to buy: thenorthface.com, cotswoldoutdoor.com
2) Base Camp Rolling Thunder 28″
Best for: most standard ski holidays, especially 7 nights to 2 weeks
Price guide: from about £237 via price comparison; £325 listed as retail price at GO Outdoors (prices vary)
Volume: 95L
Weight: 5000g
Dimensions: 77cm x 47cm x 34cm
What it is like on a ski trip
For many skiers this is the sweet spot. It has proper ski-week capacity without tipping into “moving house” territory, and it is easier to lift into transfer vehicles and hotel storage areas than the 36″. The hard-shell chassis and custom-moulded wheels are confidence-inspiring when the route includes grit, slush or compacted snow.
The pocketing is useful, too, especially for separating travel essentials and keeping damp or dirty items away from clean layers.
Highlights
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95L is plenty for winter layers without going huge
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Tough Base Camp fabric and chassis built for repeat travel
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Compression straps help stop heavy clothing shifting in transit
Watch-outs
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5000g empty means you will hit airline weight limits quicker if you pack ski boots inside.
Where to buy: cotswoldoutdoor.com, snowandrock.com, thenorthface.com
3) Base Camp Rolling Thunder 36″
Best for: longer trips, family packing, big gear loads
Price guide: £370 at Cotswold Outdoor; from about £298 via price comparison (prices vary)
Volume: 160L
Weight: 5300g
Dimensions: 92cm x 50cm x 40cm
What it is like on a ski trip
This is the workhorse. If you like packing everything into one hold bag, or you are travelling as a family and want fewer pieces to manage, 160L is liberating. The wheel and chassis set-up is designed for the sort of surfaces ski holidays deliver, and it stays composed even when fully loaded.
It is the bag that makes “just in case” packing possible, but it is also the one most likely to tempt you into airline excess baggage if you are not disciplined.
Highlights
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Massive capacity for long stays or shared packing
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Durable materials and a chassis built for repeated long-haul travel
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Real-world practicality: quick-access pockets, compression, lockable zip options depending on retailer listing
Watch-outs
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5300g empty and 160L capacity is a combination that can quietly destroy your hold-weight allowance.
Where to buy: cotswoldoutdoor.com, alpinetrek.co.uk, thenorthface.com
What we liked across the range
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Durability that suits ski travel. The Base Camp fabric and chassis approach feels built for being dragged, stacked, knocked and rolled in winter conditions.
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Wheel confidence. Both Rolling Thunder sizes use custom-moulded wheels that cope better than most on rougher surfaces.
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Usable organisation. Compression, dividers and mesh pockets are there to make packing easier, not to over-engineer it.
What we would change
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Weight. These are robust bags and they are not the lightest in class, especially the Rolling Thunder models. If you regularly fly with strict hold limits, that matters.
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Price volatility. Retail pricing swings depending on colourways, promotions and stock. It is worth checking a couple of reputable retailers before buying.
Buying advice for ski holidays
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If you travel with a separate ski bag and just want a solid cabin companion, pick the Voyager Roller 21″.
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If you want one main hold bag for most ski trips, start with the Rolling Thunder 28″.
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If you pack for the family, stay longer, or like having options in resort, the Rolling Thunder 36″ is the stress-free choice, as long as your airline weight limit agrees.
InTheSnow verdict
The North Face has taken what it knows about hard use in the mountains and applied it properly to travel luggage. These are rollers you can trust when the journey includes wet pavements, tight transfers and the usual airport battering. Choose your size carefully, keep an eye on weight limits, and you have a set of bags that should see you through many winters.
Overall rating: 8/10
Best pick for most skiers: Base Camp Rolling Thunder 28″
We regularly showcase the latest gear on our YouTube channel. Dive into our Gear Playlist for in-depth reviews. For the latest snow forecasts, updates on top skiing destinations, and comprehensive gear evaluations, tune in to our podcast, “The Whiteout.” You can find it on Apple, Spotify, Podcasts, or by searching “The Whiteout” in your favourite podcast directory.


