Yeti’s Surprising New Drop Redefines Its Iconic Cooler Lineup

Available in an array of sizes, the brand’s new lineup of insulated boxes open up a new genre of thermal retention.

Black YETI soft cooler bag with zipper held by a person wearing a red plaid shirt and jeans near tall grass.Yeti

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Yeti built a vast outdoor empire with ultratough hard coolers. The iconic Tundra is famously rugged, keeps ice for days and makes for a pretty good seat on a boat or truck bed.

But even in its smallest form, Yeti’s renown cooler is heavy, hard to carry and pretty pricey, all things considered.

In other words, it’s overkill for everyday situations that call for a day’s worth of thermal retention but don’t involve any bear sightings.

Enter the rapidly expanding Daytrip collection, which now boasts Yeti’s most practical, and affordable, coolers to date.

Person placing a black Daytrip 3L bag into an open olive green backpack in a boat.
New Insulated Boxes, available in three sizes, join last year’s tote bags in the expanding Daytrip lineup.
Yeti

Practicality over performance

For what it’s worth, the brand calls the new Daytrip inductees “insulated boxes,” not coolers. But reducing them to mere lunch vessels risks limiting their potential.

The largest size, which boasts a nine-liter capacity, can carry a 12-pack of beer, besting Yeti’s longstanding Hopper Flip 8 soft cooler.

Person placing clear plastic container with pineapple chunks into a navy YETI cooler bag on rocky ground.
The largest box has a nine-liter capacity, meaning it can fit up to 12 standard cans.
Yeti
Child in a green jacket and blue boots climbing a mossy hill with a black bucket, followed by a person in a red beanie and dark jacket carrying a black bag.
The Daytrip collection is both kid- and adult-friendly.
Yeti

Comparatively, the Daytrip boxes aren’t fully leakproof, at least when it comes to the closure. And the thermal retention is best measured in hours, not days.

But what they forfeit in overall performance is easily made up for in practicality. Anyone who has ever used a Hopper Flip knows just how cumbersome its zippers can be to keep melted ice from spilling out.

Person holding a lime green YETI cooler bag with black handle, wearing orange pants, white Nike socks, and orange sneakers.
The three-liter size (pictured) is an in-between size for in-between meals.
Yeti

Better suited to Yeti’s array of ice packs, which nestle neatly at the bottom, the easy-to-open Daytrip boxes accessible to children and a breeze to open with a single hand in the car.

Navy blue YETI soft cooler being held by a person in a pink sweatshirt sitting on a dark quilted blanket.
The Daytrip collection forfeits the leakproof zippers found in the Hopper series, making it more suitable to children.
Yeti
Blue YETI cooler bag with a matching blue ice pack held above it on a dark fabric surface.
The sizes are built around Yeti’s collection of ice packs and storage containers.
Yeti

Availability and pricing

The new Daytrip Insulated Boxes come in three sizes at launch, with capacities ranging from two to nine liters. The largest comes with an adjustable shoulder strap.

Prices start at $50, making the collection considerably more affordable than the Hopper, Roadie and Tundra series of coolers.

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