Branded Luggage
- Eco-friendly
- Made in Europe
- Price, low to high
- Price, high to low
Treat your clients and employees!
FAQ - Personalised suitcases
Trusted by 1,000+ companies
Cabin or check-in: the size class that frames an order of custom suitcases
A regional sales team flying short-haul twice a week needs a 55x40x20cm cabin case that clears Ryanair priority and easyJet overhead racks. A check-in shell would cost them a hold fee on every trip and defeat the gift.
Cabin cases run around 35 to 40 litres at roughly 2.5 to 3kg empty. Medium check-in shells sit near 65 to 75 litres, and large cases reach approx. 90 to 100 litres for longer trips and relocation gifts.
Match the size to how the recipient actually travels, not to the biggest case in the catalogue. A consultant living out of overhead lockers will use a smart cabin case daily, while a large shell sits unused in a hallway. A Personalised backpacks often rides alongside as the cabin-side carry for a laptop the hold should not hold.
Weight matters as much as volume on a suitcase, because every kilo of empty case is a kilo less packing allowance. A sub-3kg cabin shell leaves the traveller more headroom under a 10kg airline limit than a heavy rigid build.
Branded Hard shell suitcases: polycarbonate against ABS and the dent test
Branded Hard shell suitcases split on one material call. Polycarbonate flexes under a drop and springs back, so a case thrown onto a belt absorbs the hit and recovers its shape. ABS costs less and stays rigid, but a sharp impact can crack rather than rebound.
A polycarbonate-blend shell is the safer choice for an executive gift that has to look intact after a year of holds. The trade-off is unit cost, so a high-volume incentive run sometimes lands better on an ABS or PC-ABS blend.
Shell finish changes how the case ages on camera. A matte or brushed texture hides the scuffs and trolley rub that a high-gloss face shows after three trips. For a logo case that recipients photograph, the texture choice protects the brand look.
A free sample lets you flex the shell, drop the lid and check the hinge before you commit a full order. We send the actual case, not a swatch, so a buyer feels the real grade ahead of a sign-off.
Soft-side custom suitcases and when fabric beats a rigid shell
Not every brief wants a hard shell. A field team loading kit into car boots values a soft-side trolley case with external pockets for a laptop, a charger and a folder reached without opening the main lid, which is exactly the use case custom suitcases in fabric answer best.
Soft cases built from 600D or 900D polyester give more pack flex, squeezing into a tight overhead gap that a rigid shell will not. The fabric face also takes an embroidered or printed logo more readily than a curved polycarbonate panel.
The honest trade-off is protection. A fabric case guards clothing well but shrugs off less crushing force than a closed shell, so fragile contents travel safer in a hard suitcase. Pin the recipient's cargo down first, then the construction follows.
Wheels, handles and the mechanics that decide the lifespan of branded Cabin suitcases
Two-wheel rollers against four-wheel spinners on branded Cabin suitcases
Picture a delegate sprinting a terminal with a case that pulls to one side on two trailing wheels. Four-wheel spinners glide upright beside the traveller and turn on the spot, which is why they read as the premium option on a gift case.
Wheel mounting is where a cheap suitcase fails first. Recessed spinner housings protect the wheel from a kerb strike, where exposed corner wheels snap off under a hard pavement drop. The spec sheet names the wheel type case by case.
Telescopic and carry handles on custom suitcases that take the strain
The telescopic handle is the second wear point. A three-stage aluminium handle with a metal-reinforced housing survives years of yanking, while a thin two-stage pole develops play and rattle within months of daily use.
Carry handles finish the picture. A soft-grip top handle and a recessed side handle let a traveller lift a loaded check-in case onto a belt without straining a single moulded grab point. These details separate a kept gift from a discarded one.
TSA locks, zips and the security branded cabin suitcases need
A check-in suitcase crossing a US border needs a TSA-approved combination lock, so security can open and reseal the case without cutting it. A non-TSA padlock gets clipped off, and the recipient blames the gift.
Zip security splits two ways on a suitcase. A dual-zip puller takes a TSA padlock through both tabs, while a frame-lock or zipperless case clamps the two shells with latches that resist a pen-knife split. The closure type sits in the product spec.
Branded Cabin suitcases carry less risk on a lock, since they rarely leave the traveller's side, but a recessed combination lock still deters an opportunist on a crowded train rack. We confirm the lock standard per model rather than assume it.
Branding methods on branded Hard shell suitcases that survive an airport
Engraved plates against full-wrap panels on branded Hard shell suitcases
A logo on a polycarbonate suitcase cannot be screen-printed like a flat tote, because the curved, textured shell rejects a clean ink lay. The marking method has to suit a hard, contoured face that scrapes belts and trolley rails daily.
A laser-engraved or embossed metal plate riveted to the shell is the durable executive route. It survives every hold without fading, where a surface print on a high-wear case eventually rubs at the corners. Personalised luggage tags in a matching finish extend the same engraved branding onto the grab handle.
For a bolder, full-colour brand, a sublimated or full-wrap panel covers a large face of the shell with artwork that a metal plate cannot carry. This suits a launch-edition case or a sponsor livery where the suitcase itself is the campaign surface.
A woven branded tag stitched into a soft-side case, or a custom shell colour matched to your brand Pantone, gives a subtler cue than a printed logo. The colour route turns the whole case into a brand object without a single visible mark.
Initials, custom colour and the personal touch on printed suitcases
An executive gift lands harder when the case carries the recipient's initials, not just the company logo. A small engraved monogram beside the corporate plate turns a batch order into something that reads as personal to each name on the list.
Custom shell colour is the quiet power move on a branded suitcase. Matching the polycarbonate to your brand colour, rather than stamping a logo onto black, produces a case that signals the brand the moment it appears on a carousel.
Per-name personalisation does lengthen production on custom suitcases, because each case needs its own engraving pass or print file. Flag a named list early so the artwork stage budgets for it, and a fixed event date stays achievable.
Expandable custom suitcases and packing volume for longer trips
Expandable custom suitcases earn their place when a recipient packs light out and heavy back, the classic conference or trade-fair return loaded with brochures and samples. A zip-release gusset adds roughly 5 to 8 litres without a second case.
The catch is airline limits. An expanded cabin case can breach the 55x40x20cm gauge and trigger a gate charge, so expansion suits check-in shells more safely than overhead cases. The product spec states the expanded depth case by case.
Internal organisation finishes the pack. A compression panel, a zipped divider and a wet pocket keep a business wardrobe smart across a multi-day trip. A single open cavity, by contrast, lets a packed suit shift and crease.
A flat extra slips into the gusset for the heavy return leg. A Personalised Tote Bags folds into a side pocket and opens out for the duty-free or conference-floor overflow on the way home.
Executive incentive and sales-conference scenarios for custom suitcases
Picture a top-performer incentive trip where each winner collects a branded cabin case at the airport, monogrammed with their name. The suitcase outlasts every other reward in the programme and travels for years as a quiet thank-you.
For a sales kick-off, a matched set of branded cabin cases issued to a new cohort builds an instant team identity through the terminal. The shared shell colour does more for belonging than a lanyard ever could. A Branded sunglasses case slipped into the front pocket rounds the travel kit for a summer offsite.
Channel-partner rewards lean on the perceived value of a real suitcase. A quality shell signals a serious thank-you in a way a desk trinket cannot, which is why distributors reserve cases for their highest-tier partners.
Relocation and onboarding gifts suit a larger check-in shell, handed to a new hire moving city for the role. The case carries their life to the new desk and the brand rides along on day one.
Minimum orders, lead time and the honesty a printed suitcases order needs
Suitcases carry higher minimums than a printed pen, because each case is a manufactured product with its own tooling and pack. A logo-plate or printed run often starts around 50 to 100 units, with custom shell colours needing more.
Lead time on a branded suitcase runs longer than stock giveaways, since engraving, custom colour or full-wrap printing each add a production stage. Standard branded orders land near three to four weeks, and bespoke shell colours need longer.
Per-name monogramming, a custom Pantone shell and a full-wrap print each push the calendar further than a single logo plate. Flag any fixed conference or incentive-trip date at quote, so the build schedule protects it from the outset.
Freight is a real line on a suitcase order, because cases ship as bulky rigid units rather than flat-pack. Nesting smaller cabin shells inside larger check-in cases trims the pallet count and the carriage bill on a big run.
Recycled-shell custom suitcases and the claims a tender accepts
Procurement briefs increasingly ask what a branded suitcase is made of. Selected custom suitcases use recycled polycarbonate or recycled-content polyester, and the named standard sits in the product spec rather than behind a vague green label.
The durability of a quality suitcase is itself the sustainability story. A case a recipient carries for years displaces the throwaway gifts a giveaway budget otherwise burns, which reads well against an ESG-led buying policy.
We avoid unverified eco wording on a suitcase, so any recycled or organic claim reflects the actual product data. A tender that asks for proof gets the standard and the content figure the model genuinely carries, not an assumption.
Travel programmes where branded Cabin suitcases land as the headline reward
A suitcase carries a weight a desk gift never reaches, so it suits the briefs where the reward has to feel earned. A top-tier sales incentive hands winners a monogrammed cabin case at the gate of the trip itself, which makes the case part of the prize rather than a follow-up. A graduate or new-hire onboarding scheme issues a matched check-in shell that carries a relocating starter's life to the new city. A channel-partner programme reserves the case for its highest distributors, where perceived value does the talking.
The size class and the branding route shift with each programme, not the catalogue default. An incentive trip leans on a smart cabin shell that the winner uses twice a month afterwards. A relocation gift leans on a large check-in case that earns its volume once. A custom-colour fleet across a sales cohort builds team identity through a terminal, so the shell colour does more than any printed logo could. We map the class and the mark to the programme before the moulding or engraving stage locks.
| Programme | Size class that suits | Branding route |
|---|---|---|
| Sales incentive trip | Smart cabin shell | Engraved monogram plate |
| Graduate onboarding | Large check-in shell | Logo plate plus initials |
| Channel-partner reward | Medium check-in shell | Custom shell colour |
| Sales kick-off cohort | Matched cabin fleet | Brand-Pantone shell colour |
Care, repair and the long life of branded Hard shell suitcases
A branded suitcase only earns its cost per year if it survives the holds, so a few care points protect the gift. A wipe-down of a polycarbonate shell lifts the belt grease that dulls a glossy face after a handful of trips.
Wheels and handles are the serviceable parts on a quality case. A spinner wheel mounted on a screwed housing can be swapped after a kerb strike, where a riveted budget wheel writes off the whole suitcase. The spec notes which models take replacement wheels.
We hold your approved engraving file and shell-colour reference, so a top-up order a year later matches the first batch rather than drifting a shade. A Personalised travel mugs reorder from the same brand kit stays consistent against the original run too.
On a rolling travel-incentive programme the repeat intake is where colour and finish drift, so we keep a build record per suitcase order. We log the shell mould, the Pantone reference and the engraving-plate file. A second batch months later then matches the first cases rather than arriving a shade or a finish out.
For a December reward push, a branded case anchors a seasonal gift far better than a token. Sit it among Personalised Christmas gifts and the suitcase reads as the headline item the recipient keeps long after the season.
- Cabin hard shell at 55x40x20cm for short-haul sales travel
- Expandable check-in shell for conference returns loaded with samples
- Soft-side trolley case for field teams loading car boots
- Custom-colour polycarbonate shell matched to a brand Pantone
- Engraved metal-plate branding for executive incentive winners
- Monogrammed cabin case as a top-performer reward gift
| Class | Typical volume | Empty weight | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cabin | Approx. 35 to 40 L | Approx. 2.5 to 3 kg | Short-haul, overhead |
| Medium check-in | Approx. 65 to 75 L | Approx. 3.5 to 4 kg | Week-long trips |
| Large check-in | Approx. 90 to 100 L | Approx. 4.5 to 5 kg | Long trips, relocation |
| Expandable cabin | 40 L to approx. 48 L | Approx. 3 kg | Light-out, heavy-back |
| Construction | Impact behaviour | Relative weight | Relative cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polycarbonate | Flexes and rebounds | Light | Higher | Executive gifts |
| ABS | Rigid, can crack | Light | Lower | High-volume runs |
| PC-ABS blend | Balanced | Light | Medium | All-round branding |
| Soft polyester | Absorbs, less crush | Medium | Lower to medium | Field teams, pockets |
| Method | Surface | Durability | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engraved metal plate | Hard shell | Very high | Executive, monograms |
| Full-wrap print | Hard shell face | Medium | Launch livery, bold logos |
| Custom shell colour | Whole case | Permanent | Brand-colour fleets |
| Woven tag | Soft-side | High | Subtle fabric branding |
| Order type | Branding | Indicative lead time |
|---|---|---|
| Stock shell, logo plate | Engraved plate | Around 3 weeks |
| Stock shell, printed | Full-wrap or panel | 3 to 4 weeks |
| Per-name monogram | Engraving per unit | Longer, list-dependent |
| Custom shell colour | Bespoke moulding | Longest, confirmed at quote |


































