Video Overview
Pack Hacker Reviews puts the Sherpani Santiago Travel Backpack through two weeks of real-world use before reporting back. The Santiago is a 39L travel backpack built from recycled polyester with YKK zippers, Woojin hardware, a clamshell main compartment, a padded hip belt, and a luggage pass-through sleeve — positioned as an all-in-one carry-on for travelers who want organization without sacrificing capacity. Pack Hacker walks through every external feature, the harness system, fit notes across body types, secondary compartments, and the main compartment load-out in their standard two-week format.
Items and/or Gear Mentioned in the Video
- Sherpani Santiago Travel Backpack – Purchase on Amazon
The Sherpani Santiago earns a 7.3/10 (Good) from Pack Hacker. At 2.4 lbs and 39L with a 21″×12″×11″ footprint, it fits within standard carry-on dimensions for most airlines while delivering more internal organization than most bags at this volume — two mesh zippered pockets in the clamshell lid, an admin pocket with dual-side mesh organization, and an exterior quick-access front pocket with a key leash.
Editor’s Insight
The Sherpani Santiago sits in a competitive segment of the travel backpack market: 35-40L clamshell packs aimed at travelers who want organizational depth without checking a bag. The 7.3/10 score reflects a well-executed bag that earns its place in the category without breaking new ground — which is exactly the right way to interpret a “Good” rating from Pack Hacker’s methodology.
The recycled polyester construction is the Santiago’s most meaningful differentiator in its price range. Sherpani isn’t the only brand using recycled materials, but the execution here is worth noting: the shell maintains structural integrity through pack/unpack cycles without pilling or deforming at the seams. For a bag that’s going to live in overhead bins and be compressed into tight spaces repeatedly, material durability under stress matters more than the sustainability angle.
The clamshell main compartment is the organizational center of the Santiago’s case. Two mesh zippered pockets in the lid — one large, one small — give you a dedicated layer for items you need access to mid-trip: chargers, adapters, toiletry bags, items that don’t go in the admin pocket but also shouldn’t be buried under your main clothing load. The X-shaped compression straps and small hidden zippered pocket on the packing side complete a main compartment that’s genuinely better organized than most travel bags at this volume.
Pack Hacker’s primary critique — worth understanding before buying — is the laptop compartment. It’s not suspended off the bottom (no false bottom), and the padding is minimal. For travelers carrying sensitive equipment, a sleeve is effectively required. This is a standard trade-off on bags that prioritize main compartment volume over laptop protection, and the Santiago makes that trade consciously. If your laptop is your most critical item, factor in a Tomtoc or similar laptop sleeve at purchase.
The harness system earns positive marks from Pack Hacker: padded shoulder straps with mesh lining, an adjustable sternum strap on a slider rail with micro-adjustment, and an included padded hip belt. At 39L and 2.4 lbs unladen, the Santiago will clock 15-25 lbs loaded — which is right at the threshold where a hip belt transitions from convenience to necessity. Sherpani’s inclusion of a non-removable padded hip belt signals that the brand designed the Santiago for genuine load transfer, not just aesthetic completeness.
The exterior feature set is practical without overbuilding: a single tight mesh water bottle pocket on one side (Pack Hacker notes it’s tight, which keeps bottles secure but limits options to slim bottles), a compression/stabilizer strap above it that doubles as a tripod or umbrella holder, three grab handles for different orientations, a luggage pass-through sleeve for airline travel, and a security clip/wire loop on the back panel for locking to fixtures. None of these are flashy; all of them reflect real travel scenarios.
The admin pocket deserves specific attention. It opens to reveal zippered mesh pockets on both interior faces — a design choice that doubles the flat-item storage compared to a single-face admin panel. Socks, underwear, documents, slim electronics: the dual-face layout accommodates them all without the confusion of too many rigid pockets. Pack Hacker notes it’s one of the better-executed admin areas they’ve reviewed at this price point.
At 39L, the Santiago positions itself as an aggressive carry-on — at or near the maximum dimensions most carriers accept. Travelers who push the limit of overhead bin compliance regularly should check their primary airline’s policy, but for major carriers, the Santiago’s 21″×12″×11″ spec keeps it within standard allowances with room for the bag to compress slightly if needed.
Closing Remarks
The Sherpani Santiago earns its 7.3/10 through organizational depth, a genuine harness system, and sustainable construction in a format that covers carry-on travel without checking a bag. Watch the full Pack Hacker two-week review for hands-on harness fit notes and the main compartment load-out. What do you carry in your travel backpack? Drop it in the comments. Affiliate links above support the site at no extra cost to you.





