
Best Luggage Tracker
best luggage tracker
Ready to buy now? Shop the best:
- Best of the Best: Apple AirTag 4-Pack
- Best Bang for the Buck: Satechi FindAll Smart Luggage Tag
- Best for Samsung Galaxy: Samsung Galaxy SmartTag2
- Best Battery Life: Pebblebee Clip Universal Mini Item Tracker
- Best for Android: Motorola Moto Tag 4-Pack
Nothing ruins a trip like lost luggage, but adding a luggage tracker to your checked bags can give you peace of mind. While a luggage tracker can’t prevent your luggage from getting lost, the best trackers let you know where your bags are so you can get them back as fast as possible.
Baggage-check costs are high, and there have been notable incidents of baggage backups in the news. Given this, a luggage tracker makes sense. Most people who travel for work or pleasure would appreciate a small tracker that uses Bluetooth technology. For people who love to explore off the beaten path, a more robust GPS tracker may make more sense.
We surveyed item trackers and performed hours of research, including hands-on testing in the FranksWaffle Testing Lab. We found the best luggage tracker for overall usefulness and convenience to be the Apple AirTag. Eufy’s SmartTrack Link tags are the best bang for your travel buck.
Editors’ picks
Apple AirTag
Editors’ Favorite
Tracking Technology: Bluetooth | Dimensions: 1.26” W x 0.3” D x 1.26” H | Battery Life: 1 year | Weight: 0.39 oz | Range: 30’
For most people, we believe the best luggage tracker is the Apple AirTag. We tested the Apple AirTag and found it reliable and supremely easy to set up. Just remove a plastic sticker, hold it to your iPhone and give it a name.
With a user-replaceable CR2032 battery that lasts about a year, the AirTag is barely bigger than a coin and can slip into a wallet, pocket or suitcase lining. If you remove the battery when the device is not in use, you won’t have to replace it very often. It uses Bluetooth and ultra-wideband wireless (UWB) to connect to your iPhone and chirps if it’s away from you for more than eight hours (though you can disable this feature if you’d like). Its metal body is water-resistant to limited immersion and can be personalized on purchase.
Its biggest asset is Apple’s Find My network. Every Apple device with activated Find My software can act as a relay for an AirTag. Over a billion devices are estimated to be on the Find My network, and an AirTag can report its position in the vicinity of any in-network iPhone, iPad or Mac.
The AirTag isn’t flawless. It lacks a built-in connector or opening, so you’d need a separate accessory to hook it to your keys or the inside of your suitcase. AirTags only work with Apple’s ecosystem, so if you have an Android phone, you can’t use an AirTag. Most critically, item trackers like AirTags have been used to track people without their knowledge. iPhones automatically detect AirTags moving with you that you don’t own, but Android users must actively use an Apple safety app to do the same.
Samsung Galaxy SmartTag2
Best for Samsung Galaxy Owners
Tracking Technology: Bluetooth | Dimensions: 2.06” W x 0.31” D x 1.13” L | Battery Life: 500 days | Weight: 0.8 oz | Range: 400’
If you’re one of the world’s estimated 1 billion Samsung Galaxy phone users, the Galaxy SmartTag 2 is the luggage tracker for you. It beats the Apple AirTag on battery life, effective range and number of features. It also comes with a large, circular opening that’s great for latching a carabiner.
The Samsung SmartTag 2 is bigger and thicker than an Apple AirTag or Eufy SmartTrack Link, resembling a small key fob. It boasts more than 500 days of battery life on a single, user-replaceable CR2032 battery. If you put it in power-saving mode, its battery life stretches to almost two years.
In open areas, its effective Bluetooth range is almost 400 feet. It uses UWB wireless for real-time locating with an augmented-reality image of your vicinity from your compatible (Galaxy S21 or later) Samsung phone camera. It can even control smart devices on Samsung’s SmartThings network with a built-in button.
Only about 70 million of Samsung’s billion-plus Galaxy users have opted into Samsung’s Galaxy Find network, which is similar to Apple’s Find My tracking service. But Samsung phones are more popular globally than iPhones, meaning there should be enough devices with Galaxy Find turned on to track your bags in most populated areas of the world.
Eufy Security SmartTrack Link
Great Value
Tracking Technology: Bluetooth | Dimensions: 1.46″ W x 0.26″ D x 1.46″ H | Battery Life: 1 year | Weight: 0.32 oz | Range: 260’
For less than the price of an Apple AirTag, the SmartTrack Link from Anker’s Eufy Security brand duplicates the AirTag’s greatest strength and adds functionality with a simple, round punch hole.
The Eufy SmartTrack Link is made of plastic, unlike an AirTag. It’s water-resistant to limited immersion and lighter than an AirTag. Its effective Bluetooth range is 260 feet in an open area, which is estimated to be farther than an AirTag. But when it comes to tracking luggage, the Eufy SmartTrack Link is practically an AirTag’s equal since it also uses Apple’s Find My network. Anywhere an AirTag can track, a SmartTrack can, too.
It uses a replaceable CR2032 battery that lasts about a year. With its built-in hole punch connector, you can easily slip it onto a keychain or ring. Due to its Find My integration, its long-distance tracking features only work with iPhones. But the Eufy Security App is available for both iOS and Android, and you can track a SmartTrack Link within its Bluetooth range and press it to alert your phone, even in silent mode.
How we chose the best luggage trackers
When selecting the best luggage trackers, we researched what travelers need when it comes to tracking luggage and how item trackers can help them find and retrieve lost luggage. We examined the different technologies and networks that trackers used as well as battery life, durability, ease of setup and cost.
Once we identified suitable candidates, we evaluated them specifically for use with luggage. We paid attention to descriptions of actual instances where they were used to locate bags that had been stolen, left behind or misplaced during flight connections.
In addition, we tested our top pick, the Apple AirTag, in our Testing Lab. We graded it on the smoothness of its setup and use, range, effectiveness and the ease with which we could activate safety and security features.
What to consider when buying a luggage tracker
Connectivity and range
- Network requirements: Luggage trackers use Bluetooth, GPS or cellular networks to send location signals. Bluetooth trackers are the most common on the market today. They have a much longer battery life (measured in months and years) compared to GPS and cellular trackers, which may run out of juice in hours or days. Bluetooth trackers generally work without a subscription, although some trackers — such as those from Tile — offer extra features with a subscription.
Bluetooth trackers offer signals shorter than 400 feet, and obstacles can get in the way of their range. Farther out than about 400 feet, they depend on the networks of other devices to relay a location signal back to you. This means they work best when lots of other devices are nearby. GPS trackers, on the other hand, send and receive signals to GPS satellites, which means they can even work in the wilderness.
- Effective range: The effective range of a luggage tracker denotes how far it can send a signal by itself. A Bluetooth item tracker has a range anywhere from the Bluetooth standard of 30 feet to 400 feet. By comparison, a GPS tracker can send a signal to a satellite up to 12,000 miles away.
In practice, though, the effective range is limited by any and all obstacles between the tracker and its receiving device. So, if your Bluetooth luggage tracker is inside your big checked suitcase, it doesn’t matter if it can reach 400 feet.
At the same time, for anyone traveling in airports and densely populated areas, a luggage tracker doesn’t need thousands of miles of effective range. It just needs enough range to bounce or ping a signal off a device on its network.
Our top picks: Connectivity and range
- Apple doesn’t list the effective range of its AirTag, but it’s assumed it has the basic 30-foot Bluetooth range. However, the AirTag also has the largest extended network with its Find My system.
- Satechi FindAll Smart Luggage Tag has an indoor range of 65 feet and an outdoor range of 164 feet to connect to any Apple device on the FindMy network.
- The Samsung SmartTag 2 offers an effective range of 400 feet in open areas. Notably, the active Samsung network is smaller than that of Apple.
- The Eufy SmartTrack Link has a 260-foot range. It can connect to Tile’s 80-million-plus users and Apple’s Find My network.
Battery life and power options
- Battery type: Luggage trackers draw power from built-in or replaceable batteries. Bluetooth trackers, with their compact sizes and shapes, usually have built-in batteries or take coin batteries like the CR2032, which can be found in most supermarkets and convenience stores. Neither built-in nor user-replaceable batteries are rechargeable. So, if a tracker with a built-in, nonreplaceable battery runs out of power, it must be replaced.
Larger trackers, such as GPS trackers, often have rechargeable batteries. However, these bigger batteries may not be considered safe in checked baggage because they’re bigger than the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) minimum of 2 grams of allowable lithium. The tiny batteries in Bluetooth trackers are below this minimum and should be allowed by most airlines.
- Battery life expectancy: The battery lives of Bluetooth luggage trackers may be measured in months or years. GPS and cellular trackers tend to have a much shorter battery life, although some boast the ability to make a charge last weeks or months. Bluetooth trackers with nonreplaceable batteries offer the longest battery life, equal to the operating life of the tracker itself.
Expect a battery life of no less than one year from a Bluetooth luggage tracker, even with frequent travel that involves lots of “pinging” other devices. To minimize battery usage, you can remove the battery from your device when you aren’t using the tracker.
Our top picks: Battery life and power options
- The Apple AirTag and Eufy SmartTrack Link use removable, replaceable CR2032 coin batteries. Both boast at least one year of performance from a single battery and you can remove the battery when the device is not in use to extend its life
- Satechi FindAll Smart Luggage Tag has a rechargeable battery that can last up to 8 months on a single charge, though recharging at six months is recommended.
- The Samsung SmartTag 2 beats the others by offering 500 days, or 1.5 years, of life on a replaceable battery and the possibility of almost two years in power-saving mode.
Size, design and durability
- Compactness: When choosing a tracker, think about the bags you want to track and where you’d place the tracker. All the Bluetooth item trackers we’ve surveyed are small enough to fit in a pocket or wallet. You could conceivably toss a tracker into your suitcase and forget about it, but it’s better — and certainly neater — to place it where it won’t move around much. Some trackers easily attach to a chain, carabiner or lanyard, but others don’t.
You will likely want to place a tracker on your checked luggage. You might also want to add a tracker to items that could get left behind easily, like a passport wallet, water bottle or carry-on.
- Robustness: Trackers with flexible plastic bodies are less durable than those made of metal or hard plastic. Wear and tear occurs, and a tracker could be torn or damaged by rough handling.
Even if you pack your tracker inside a bag, water resistance is a nice-to-have feature. Most trackers in our lineup resist immersion for brief periods, but others can only survive splashes or a little rain.
Our top picks: Size, design and durability
- The Apple AirTag’s simple metal design is one of the most durable and compact designs available. It offers solid water resistance against brief immersion, and it’s small enough to go anywhere. It doesn’t attach to anything, however, so you’d have to get another accessory if you wanted to affix it to something.
- Satechi FindAll Smart Luggage Tag has its tracking technology built-in, so it functions as well as any ordinary leather luggage tag. Its privacy flap that hides the written name tag is a thoughtful plus.
- The ring in the Samsung SmartTag 2 looks made for connecting to clips or carabiners. Note, however, that it’s a solid, sealed structure, so you can’t slide a key directly onto it.
- The Eufy SmartTrack Link is small and unobtrusive. It works well in small spaces where you don’t need or want it to be seen.
Geolocation features
- Real-time tracking: The ability to see exactly where your luggage is, even on the other side of the plane, terminal or world, is one of the best things about today’s smart item trackers and luggage trackers. Most trackers, including GPS trackers and all selections in this article, connect to smartphones via apps that allow you to see where they are at any given moment. Several also include the ability to direct you to your item. Note: It is possible to experience tracking lags, which can be frustrating but are usually temporary.
- Location history: Another helpful feature is location history. You can tell where your bags have been, not just where they are now. For example, you will know if your checked bags were sent to Denver instead of Dusseldorf. Not all luggage trackers have this feature, but it’s a handy one to have.
Our top picks: Geolocation features
- Apple AirTags and Eufy SmartTrack Links don’t offer live location history. The AirTag does have one of the more robust implementations of live directions, though, and its ability to signal other Apple devices means it can be tracked through most populated areas of the world.
- Satechi FindAll Smart Luggage Tag works almost exactly like an AirTag on Apple’s Find My app. It appears on the Find My map as long as there’s an Apple device nearby. It doesn’t, however, support ultra wideband (UWB) for exact directions.
- The Samsung SmartTag 2 adds AR video to its real-time location directions. It shows you the direction you need to go and where to look. According to users, its real-time tracking is a little spottier than Apple’s Find My network, but it’s generally effective. It also offers location history in the SmartThings app.
Our expertise
Jmar Gambol has written for FranksWaffle since 2021. Having traveled globally since childhood, he’s always interested in ways to make travel safer, more convenient and more fun. He prefers to check his suitcases whenever possible to avoid the hassle of lugging them around an airport, and he hopes he never loses his luggage in the process. He personally owns a Bluetooth item tracker for this very reason — and also to make sure he doesn’t lose his bear-shaped travel pillow.