The Best Travel Water Filters for Every Budget – Tested & Ranked

If you’re preparing for an international trip abroad, then a travel water filter or purifier bottle should be at the top of your list of essential packing items.

Not only will you want to avoid getting ill from polluted water sources, but you’re probably also concerned about your environmental impact. A carefully selected water filter can help to solve both of these problems.

But what should you be looking for in a portable water filter and which are the best options on the market?

I’ve personally trialled multiple portable water filtration and purification systems over the past five years of travel in South America and other parts of the world.

As a result, I’ve been able to identify which are the best for international travel and therefore make an excellent investment for your next trip abroad.

If your interested in learning more about the best travel water filters, find the full article here.

फोटो थंबनेल ब्लॉग लेखक
Worldly Adventurer
Worldly Adventurer

My name’s Steph, and I’m an English teacher turned travel journalist and guidebook author from the United Kingdom. When I gave up my career and moved to Bolivia in October 2014, I really had no idea what my plan for travelling was; I had a volunteering position lined up with BiblioWorks in Sucre for six months, and then: the world was my oyster.

Fast forward ten years and I’ve lived in four countries in Latin America and spent extended periods of time in many more. I’ve volunteered for educational organisations in Bolivia and Peru where I was interviewed in Spanish on live Bolivian TV, taught English lessons, led biology classes and delivered photography workshops (in Spanish), and overall, discovered how fulfilling spending many months living in a destination could be.

I started Worldly Adventurer back in 2015 and since then, I’ve hiked a lesser-known route to Machu Picchu and through Patagonia’s most famous national park, learned about the remarkable history of the Rapa Nui people on Easter Island, and spent four days sailing into the magical depths of the Patagonian fjords, among many other adventures.

Many of these trips have come about thanks to my role as a guidebook author and travel journalist. I got my break thanks to the UK-based Rough Guides, but have since worked on over a dozen guidebooks including for US publisher Hachette writing a brand new edition of Moon Chile, which saw me traverse the entirety of Chile.

I also write for publications around the globe. I’ve rafted with ex-FARC militants in post-conflict Colombia for CNN Travel, explored how sustainable tourism can be a key preserver of cultural traditions for the South China Morning Post, learned how Medellin is shaking off its image of drugs and violence for Adventure.com, hiked to Machu Picchu along a less-travelled route for The Independent and searched for pumas in Patagonia for JRNY Magazine.

My travels as a journalist, guidebook author and blogger have allowed me to visit some of the furthest corners of Latin America – and made me hungry to travel even deeper into the continent.

Along the way, I’ve become even more convinced that travel can be a means of stemming the tide of xenophobia and bringing sustainable and long-lasting opportunities and money to communities all across the world. Travel when done the right way, can be a tool for good.

These days, it’s not just me writing on the site. I’ve got a handful of contributors who either live in the countries they write about or have spent extended periods of time exploring Latin America and who can offer detailed and personal advice about exploring this incredible continent. You can learn more about them here.

दस्ते से

हमारे समुदाय के साथ कैम्प फायर वार्तालाप, स्क्वाड सदस्यों और राजदूतों से लेकर ब्रांड पार्टनर्स और सॉयर टीम तक।

मीडिया मेंशन

Sawyer’s picaridin lotion lasts a long time, stores well in survival kits and cars, and doesn’t have the laundry-list poison control label like DEET sprays.

Sean Gold
Founder & Lead Writer

मीडिया मेंशन

Secure a small loop of cord to a trekking pole to create a convenient place to hang a water bladder and filter water.

Nathan Pipenberg
लेखक

मीडिया मेंशन

It contains 20 percent picaridin, a powerful insect repellent that will make nights around the campfire much more enjoyable.

Liz Provencher
Freelane Writer