EDC flat lay: pocket knife, Victorinox Swiss Army knife, wallet, watch on dark textile
The Carry List

Everyday Carry

Pocket lists and full kits for men, women, and teens. Every item chosen for honest materials, long life, and real daily utility.

Every list here splits in two. The pockets-only tier contains what fits in standard pockets with nothing left over. The full kit tier adds what belongs in a jacket or bag for days that ask more of you. Neither list includes a phone. The phone is assumed. These lists are about everything else.

The criteria for every item: honest materials that do not degrade, a single clear function it does better than the alternatives, and a lifespan measured in decades not seasons. Nothing here requires a battery except the flashlight, and that exception earns its place.

Cross-referenced with the 100 Items for Life list. Items that appear on both lists carry links to the deeper writeup.

EDC flat lay: pocket knife, wallet, Victorinox, watch on dark textile
person Everyday Carry

Men

Ten items. Four pockets. Every situation covered. The pockets-only list fits in standard jeans with nothing left over. The full kit adds what belongs in a jacket or a bag for days that ask more of you.

Pockets Only

10 items that fit in your pockets. No bag required.

$244

total

Front right

Pocket Knife

Victorinox Cadet Alox

$40

Three inches closed. Aluminum scales with a milled grip pattern. Carbon steel blade, nail file, and scissors. Thinner than a folded dollar bill. The Alox model skips the plastic scales of the classic SAK for something that survives a lifetime of pocket carry without looking worn out.

Front left

Wallet

Horween Leather Slim Bifold

$70

Full-grain Horween leather from Chicago. The same tannery that has been supplying NFL footballs and Red Wing boots since 1905. A slim bifold holds six cards and cash without the bulk that moved wallets to back pockets. Front-pocket carry protects against pickpockets and spine alignment both.

Wallet

Cash

$40 minimum, always

Always

Not a purchase recommendation. A discipline. Cash works when the card reader is down, when there is no signal, when the power is out, when the bartender does not take cards, and when you need to tip someone who deserves it. Forty dollars buys you out of most short-term problems.

Front right

Keys

Orbitkey Leather Key Organiser

$45

Stacks your keys flat so they do not jingle, do not scratch your phone, and do not bulk up your pocket. Full-grain leather strap, solid brass hardware. Carries up to seven keys in the profile of a folded piece of cardboard. The leather develops a patina over years of daily carry.

Shirt or front

Pen

Fisher Space Pen Bullet

$25

Pressurized cartridge writes upside down, in cold, in wet, at altitude, and on greasy paper. Three and three-quarter inches capped, five and a quarter posted. The same design since 1948 and carried on every NASA mission from Apollo onward. Refills last longer than most pens and cost three dollars.

Back pocket

Notebook

Field Notes 3-Pack

$12

Forty-eight pages. Three and a half by five and a half inches. Manufactured to fit in the back pocket of Levi 501s, which is exactly where it belongs. Write phone numbers, measurements, names, observations, things you do not want to lose to a dead phone. The cover is kraft paper over a chipboard back.

Front left

Handkerchief

Irish Linen, 16 inch

$15

Linen is stronger wet than dry, which is the only relevant property of a handkerchief. It wipes a lens, covers a wound, filters water, signals for help, ties a splint, and cleans a blade. A paper tissue does one of those things. Replace it with linen once and never think about it again.

Front right

Lighter

Zippo Brushed Chrome

$25

Refills with lighter fluid indefinitely. The flint replaces in thirty seconds. The same mechanical design since 1933 and still made in Bradford, Pennsylvania. A Zippo that runs dry is not a broken Zippo. It is a Zippo that needs fuel. That distinction matters when you are far from a store.

Any

Lip Balm

Sierra Bees Beeswax Tin

$4

Beeswax and botanical oils. No petroleum, no synthetic fragrance. The tin fits anywhere and conditions chapped skin, dry cuticles, and leather equally well. One tin lasts three months of daily use. At four dollars, it is the most useful thing on this list per dollar spent.

Back pocket

Bandana

100% Cotton, 22 inch

$8

The most underestimated item in any carry. Dust mask, pre-filter, tourniquet, sling, pot holder, signal flag, grip cloth, sweat rag, face covering, water filter stage one. Natural cotton breathes where synthetic blends trap heat. Buy three, put one in every bag, and keep one in your pocket.

Full Kit

5 additions for a jacket, bag, or backpack.

$412

complete

Belt pouch or bag

Multi-Tool

Leatherman Wave+

$110

Eighteen tools including needlenose pliers, wire cutters, scissors, three knife blades, two screwdrivers, a can opener, a saw, and a ruler. All tools accessible from the outside without opening the handles. The Wave+ is the standard against which every other multi-tool is measured.

Jacket pocket

Flashlight

Streamlight Microstream

$30

Single AAA battery. Forty-five lumens. Three and a half inches long. The lightest credible flashlight made. Fits in a coin pocket or clips to a bill fold. A phone flashlight washes out, cannot be aimed, and drains your battery. The Microstream is a tool. The phone is a communication device.

Jacket pocket

Paracord

550lb Mil-Spec, 10 feet

$5

Ten feet coils into a roll the size of a golf ball. Seven inner strands that separate into fishing line, sewing thread, and snare cord. Cinches a bag, replaces a broken shoelace, ties a splint, hangs a tarp, and lashes gear. The most useful length that still fits in a jacket pocket.

Bag

First Aid Tin

Altoids tin: gauze, tape, aspirin, antiseptic

$15

Not a pharmacy. Four things: a roll of medical gauze, a strip of medical tape, eight aspirin, and four antiseptic wipes. Fits in an Altoids tin with room for a folded sheet of paper listing blood type and allergies. Covers ninety percent of daily emergencies in a package that weighs nothing.

Jacket pocket

Beeswax Block

Small tin or block

$8

Wax a thread before sewing to make it twenty times stronger. Condition a leather belt or boot. Lubricate a sticky zipper or drawer. Waterproof a seam on a canvas bag. Rub the face of a sticking wood joint. No item on this list does more different jobs for less money than a piece of beeswax.

Slim leather card wallet on waxed canvas with brass rivets
person_4 Everyday Carry

Women

The pockets-only list assumes pants with real pockets and a keychain. The full kit is what belongs in any bag you carry daily. Every item earns its weight by solving more than one problem.

Pockets Only

8 items that fit in your pockets. No bag required.

$196

total

Keychain

Knife

Victorinox Classic SD

$25

Two and a quarter inches closed. A 1.5 inch blade, a pair of scissors, a nail file, a screwdriver, a toothpick, and tweezers. Rides on a keychain where it weighs nothing and disappears. The blade handles packages, threads, and everything in between. The scissors replace a separate pair in most situations.

Front pocket

Wallet

Bellroy Note Sleeve

$70

Full-grain leather. Holds eight cards and cash flat. The sleeve design keeps the wallet to the thickness of four credit cards stacked. It front-pocket carries without a bulge. The leather is vegetable-tanned and develops a patina over years. The stitching is visible and reinforced at stress points.

Front pocket or bag

Keys

Orbitkey Leather Key Organiser

$45

Stacks up to seven keys flat between two pieces of leather, secured with a brass screw and loop. No jingle. No scratching. No bulk. Attaches to a bag D-ring or carries in a pocket. The leather strap ages well and the brass hardware never corrodes.

Bag or pocket

Pen

Fisher Space Pen Bullet

$25

The same pen on the men's list. It writes in wet conditions, cold conditions, and at any angle. The capped length of three and three-quarter inches disappears in any bag. The pressurized cartridge outlasts ten standard refills. This is the pen you stop losing because you stop wanting to replace it.

Bag or back pocket

Notebook

Field Notes 3-Pack

$12

Forty-eight pages of useful blank space. Fits in a coat pocket, a clutch, or the flat pocket of any bag. Write grocery lists, measurements, phone numbers, the name of the book someone recommended, the thing you need to remember before you open your front door. The phone is for calling people.

Any pocket

Handkerchief

Fine Linen, Hemstitched

$15

Linen is stronger wet than dry. It folds to a two-inch square and weighs nothing. It replaces every paper tissue, every paper towel from a dispenser that is empty, and every fast-food napkin. A good linen handkerchief washes and improves with every washing. Buy two.

Any

Lip Balm

Sierra Bees Beeswax Tin

$4

Beeswax and botanical oils in a flat tin. Conditions lips, cuticles, and the corners of dry skin. The tin does not leak, does not crack, and fits in any pocket or coin compartment. The same tin conditions the leather wallet and the Orbitkey strap when they begin to dry. One product, many uses.

Wallet

Cash

$40 minimum, always

Always

The exact same argument as the men's list. Cash is the backup system for every digital payment. Forty dollars is enough to get out of nearly any short-term situation. Keep it in a separate compartment from the cards so you always know it is there.

Full Kit

7 additions for a jacket, bag, or backpack.

$262

complete

Bag

Bandana

100% Cotton, 22 inch

$8

Everything in the men's description applies here. The bandana is the most undervalued carry item on any list regardless of who is carrying it. Put one in every bag you rotate through and never think about it again.

Bag

Safety Pins

Brass, Assorted Sizes in a Tin

$6

A broken shoulder strap, a fallen hem, a split seam, a bag clasp that fails mid-day. Safety pins solve all of these in thirty seconds. Brass does not rust. Keep six in a small tin and the tin in an inside pocket of every bag you own. You will use one within the first month.

Bag

Sewing Kit

Needle, Thread, and Thimble in a Tin

$12

A curved needle, a straight needle, black thread, white thread, and a small thimble in a flat tin. Handles the repair that a safety pin can stabilize but not fix. Linen thread waxed with beeswax is stronger than any polyester thread sold in a travel kit. The whole tin weighs less than a tube of lip gloss.

Bag

Small Mirror

Solid Brass Pocket Mirror

$15

Solid brass, not plastic. A plastic mirror cracks in three years. A brass mirror outlasts the bag it lives in. The practical uses go beyond grooming: signal a rescue in open country, inspect something behind or above you, or check a rear-facing situation without turning around.

Bag

First Aid Tin

Gauze, tape, aspirin, antiseptic

$15

Same four items as the men's list. The argument is identical. The tin is the same. Carry it.

Bag

Beeswax Balm

Multi-use tin

$8

A separate tin from the lip balm, in the bag. Conditions leather goods. Waterproofs the seam on a canvas bag before a rainy day. Waxes thread before hand-sewing. Heals dry knuckles and cuticles. One tin of beeswax replaces four or five single-purpose products.

Bag

Lighter

BIC Mini

$2

The BIC Mini before the Zippo for carry in a bag. It is lighter, cheaper, and if you lose it in a bag pocket you have lost two dollars. A Zippo earns a front pocket. A BIC earns a bag pocket. Either way, you have fire when you need it.

Brown leather backpack on a windowsill in warm sunlight
school Everyday Carry

Teens

Most teens already carry a backpack. The pocket list is what goes on your person every day regardless of what bag you have with you. The backpack kit is what lives in the bag permanently. Not emergency gear. Daily tools.

Pockets Only

4 items that fit in your pockets. No bag required.

$19

total

Front pocket

Pen

Pentel EnerGel 0.7mm

$3

Three dollars. Writes the first time, every time, without shaking or clicking until ink appears. The gel ink does not smear. The tip does not skip. There is no reason to carry a disposable Bic when this pen costs the same and works twice as well. Carry two.

Back pocket

Notebook

Field Notes 3-Pack

$12

Forty-eight pages in a book that fits in a back pocket. Write down what the teacher said before you type it into a phone that will autocorrect it wrong. Write down directions, phone numbers, the names of things you want to look up later. The physical act of writing encodes memory differently than typing.

Front pocket or wallet

Cash

$20 minimum, always

Always

Twenty dollars is enough to get home from anywhere, buy a meal when the card does not work, or help someone who needs it. Keep it separate from your cards. The habit of always having some cash is one of the most useful habits you can build before you turn twenty.

Any

Lip Balm

Beeswax Tin

$4

Beeswax, not petroleum. The tin is small enough to lose in a jacket pocket and cheap enough not to care if you do. It also works on dry knuckles, small cuts, and the leather on your bag strap. Four dollars. Carry it.

Full Kit

10 additions for a jacket, bag, or backpack.

$126

complete

Backpack exterior pocket

Pocket Knife

Victorinox Classic SD

$25

The smallest Victorinox: a 1.5 inch blade, scissors, nail file, screwdriver, and tweezers on a keychain. This is a tool, not a weapon, and it should be treated as one. Know your school's policy. Keep it in the bag, not in your pocket. A knife is the single most useful daily tool you can carry.

Backpack

Handkerchief

Heavy Cotton, 20 inch

$10

Heavy cotton, not fine linen. It survives a backpack. Wipes a lens, wraps a hand, covers your face in dust or smoke, keeps sweat out of your eyes during a run. Washes and dries in twenty minutes. One handkerchief replaces a semester's worth of pocket tissues.

Backpack

Bandana

100% Cotton, 22 inch

$8

Bigger than the handkerchief and more versatile outdoors. Dust mask, pot holder, tourniquet, signal flag, sling. A cotton bandana is one of the oldest multi-tools in existence. The fact that it is not electronic does not make it less useful.

Backpack

Paracord

550lb, 10 feet

$5

A broken bag strap, a tent that needs repairing, a load that needs cinching, a tree branch that needs tying. Ten feet of 550 paracord solves all of these. It also separates into seven thinner strands that work as fishing line, sewing thread, and lashing. Learn how to tie four knots and this becomes one of the most useful things in your bag.

Backpack interior pocket

First Aid Tin

Band-aids, gauze, ibuprofen, antiseptic wipes

$15

Six band-aids in two sizes, four antiseptic wipes, a strip of medical tape, and eight ibuprofen in a flat tin. Handles blisters, cuts, headaches, and the kind of minor injuries that otherwise send you to the nurse's office for a bandage from a box. Keep it in the same pocket every time so you can find it quickly.

Backpack

Lighter

BIC Full Size

$3

Start a campfire. Light a candle during a power outage. Seal a frayed rope end so it does not unravel. A lighter does not expire, does not need a signal, and does not need a charger. Learn to use fire safely before you carry one. That knowledge is more useful than the lighter.

Backpack exterior pocket

Flashlight

Streamlight Microstream

$30

A single AAA battery runs this flashlight for an hour and a half at forty-five lumens. That is enough to navigate a dark parking lot, read a circuit breaker panel, or signal for help. Your phone flashlight costs you battery life you might need later. A dedicated light costs three dollars in batteries per year.

Backpack

Safety Pins

Assorted sizes in a tin

$5

A broken bag zipper pull, a split seam, a hem that dropped in the morning. Safety pins fix all of these in thirty seconds without sewing. Ten pins in a small tin weigh almost nothing and take up no space. You will use one within the first two weeks.

Backpack

A Book

Your choice. One physical book, always.

Always

Not a phone. Not an audiobook. A physical book that you can read when there is no signal, no battery, no network, and no permission to use a screen. The habit of reading on paper builds a kind of sustained attention that screens make difficult. One book, always. Finish it and put the next one in.

Backpack

Food

Mixed nuts in a tin, or a quality bar

$6

Every day that runs long is a day where you made a decision while hungry. Mixed nuts in a small tin or two compact bars do not expire quickly, survive a backpack without crushing, and cost less than the vending machine you will otherwise use. Hunger is the easiest problem to prevent in advance.

Go Deeper

100 Items for Life

The full homestead. Cast iron, forged tools, leather goods, garden equipment. 10 kits, 100 items, $3,891 total. Everything a life requires and nothing it doesn't.

Read the Full List →
The Weekly Letter

One thing worth owning. Once a week.

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