For all its advantages and delights, travel inevitably leads to a surprisingly consistent problem across airports, dive bars, restaurants, and cafés worldwide: There’s rarely a clean, secure, or convenient place to put your bag. Floors are often wet, crowded, or unhygienic. Chairs are often too small or narrow, placing a tote underneath a table feels too crowded, and leaving a bag out of sight is never a great idea. That’s why purse hooks have become one of the most underrated and genuinely useful accessories for frequent fliers, city travelers, and all in-the-know folks in between.
Over the past few months, I’ve tested out a slew of purse hooks in cities across the globe and in all different settings—from the marble counters of five-star hotel lobbies to the cramped ledges of buzzy transit hubs—to evaluate which ones actually work well when you’re on the move. I found that a well-designed purse hook creates a stable sanctuary for your bag in seconds, reducing both physical clutter and the stress of keeping your valuables safe. Whether you’re navigating an airport gate, sitting in a business lounge, grabbing a drink at a hotel bar, or eating at a buzzy restaurant, a compact purse hook lends a simple (and chic) solution: It keeps your bag off the floor and within reach.
Read on for five purse hooks I recommend adding to your travel accessory arsenal—each has held up to full handbags and work totes, even with a heavy laptop inside.
What I looked for when testing out purse hooks:
- Strong grip strength that holds securely on a range of surfaces, including thin café tables, thick lounge counters, and uneven bar tops
- Stable weight handling, especially for heavier bags like structured totes, work bags, or small carry-ons
- Nonslip contact points that resist sliding on polished materials such as marble, glass, or lacquered wood
- Compact portability, folding or storing easily inside a handbag or personal item without adding noticeable bulk
- Multi-environment versatility, working equally well in airport seating, restaurants, hotel lounges, and transit spaces












