The car organisation system

The most important packing decision for a family road trip isn't what to bring — it's where to put it. A car that isn't organised forces stops every time someone needs something from the boot, generates constant requests from the back seat, and makes the journey feel like an endurance test.

The system that works: designate five zones in the car.

Entertainment: the honest assessment

Screens work. This is not a debate worth having on a long road trip with children under 10. A tablet loaded with offline content is the single most effective tool for a peaceful journey. The question is what else to have as backup when batteries die, when children want variety, or when you want something that doesn't require headphones.

Snack strategy

Pack twice as many snacks as you think you need, and hide half of them for the second half of the journey. Snacks run out faster on road trips than any other form of travel. A cool box with fruit, cheese, and water is more sustainable than stopping for fast food — both for energy levels and for budget.

Stopping strategy

Research rest stops in advance. In Europe, most motorway service areas have play areas or at minimum outdoor space — but they're not evenly distributed. On long drives through France or Germany, the Aire de service system is excellent; in some other countries, services can be 60–90 minutes apart with limited facilities.

Plan stops at the 90-minute to 2-hour mark for children under 7 regardless of whether anyone has asked for one. A 15-minute run-around prevents the 45-minute meltdown that comes from sitting too long.

Road trip with kids — car bag essentials
  • Wipes (always more than you think)
  • Change of clothes per child in accessible bag
  • Snacks — twice what you think you need
  • Reusable water bottles per person (filled before each stop)
  • Tablets with offline content downloaded
  • Children's headphones (volume-limited)
  • Activity bags — one per child, revealed strategically
  • Sick bags (motion sickness) — even if your child has never been carsick
  • Back-of-seat organisers
  • First aid kit including children's pain relief
  • Cool box with fruit, cheese, drinks
  • Bin bags for car rubbish

Build your road trip packing list

Our road trip checklist covers car documents, safety kit, navigation, food, and the family essentials — personalised to your trip.

🚗 See road trip checklist