Planning / Packing

Antarctica packing list for expedition cruises.

A practical checklist for Antarctica cruise travelers: what to bring, what your ship may provide, what to skip, and how to avoid overbuying bulky gear for one trip.

The short version

Pack for wet, windy, near-freezing summer conditions. The winning system is not the heaviest jacket you can find; it is warm layers, waterproof protection, dry storage, and gloves that still let you use your camera or phone.

Before buying anything

Check your cruise line documents. Many Antarctica operators provide expedition boots, and some provide or loan parkas. Policies vary by ship and season, so confirm before spending money or filling your suitcase.

Quick Antarctica packing checklist

Use this as the working list, then adjust for your cruise line’s provided gear, your cold tolerance, and whether you are adding kayaking, camping, photography, or longer South Georgia routes.

Clothing layers

  • Thermal base layer tops
  • Thermal base layer bottoms
  • Fleece or active mid layers
  • Light down or synthetic jacket
  • Waterproof shell or provided parka
  • Waterproof pants

Hands, feet, head

  • Warm wool or synthetic socks
  • Liner gloves for photos
  • Insulated waterproof gloves or mittens
  • Warm hat that stays on in wind
  • Neck gaiter or buff
  • Comfortable ship shoes

Protection and accessories

  • Sunglasses with strong UV protection
  • Sunscreen and lip balm
  • Dry bag or waterproof day bag
  • Waterproof phone pouch
  • Disposable hand warmers
  • Outlet adapters and charging cables

On the ship

  • Casual pants or leggings
  • Comfortable tops or sweaters
  • One nicer casual outfit
  • Sleepwear
  • Swimsuit for polar plunge or sauna
  • Reusable water bottle

Camera and electronics

  • Extra batteries
  • Extra memory cards
  • Lens cloths
  • Power bank
  • Camera rain cover or dry insert
  • GoPro or phone mount if desired

Documents and health

  • Passport and cruise documents
  • Travel insurance details
  • Prescription medication
  • Seasickness plan
  • Basic toiletries
  • Copies of key documents

The layering system that works

Most travelers are happiest with a three-part system: a moisture-wicking base layer, an insulating mid layer, and a waterproof outer layer. This lets you adjust between a warm ship interior, a windy deck, a wet Zodiac ride, and a landing where you may stand still watching wildlife.

Layer What to bring Why it matters
Base layer Thermal top and bottom, synthetic or merino. Keeps sweat off skin so you do not chill after moving around.
Mid layer Fleece, active insulation, or light down/synthetic jacket. Adds warmth without forcing you into one giant heavy coat.
Outer layer Waterproof shell, provided parka, and waterproof pants. Blocks wind, snow, splash, and wet Zodiac seats.
Avoid cotton as your main outdoor layer. Cotton gets wet, stays wet, and makes cold conditions feel worse.

Waterproof gear matters more than heavy gear

Antarctica landings happen by Zodiac, so waterproof protection is not optional. You may sit on wet tubes, step through shallow water, or get sea spray on the ride. Waterproof pants are one of the highest-value items on the whole packing list.

  • Waterproof pants: Bring pants large enough to fit over base layers. Ski pants can work if they are waterproof and not too bulky.
  • Dry bag: A small dry bag protects cameras, phones, medication, spare gloves, and extra layers.
  • Waterproof gloves: Gloves or over-mitts are especially useful for Zodiac spray and snowy landings.
  • Neck protection: A buff, gaiter, or scarf makes windy deck time much more comfortable.

Boots, ship shoes, and socks

Do not buy expedition boots until you know your operator’s policy. Many cruise lines loan landing boots, and some require specific boot types for biosecurity and wet landings.

Landing boots

Often loaned or provided, but not always. Confirm before departure and ask whether they have your size.

Ship shoes

Bring comfortable closed-toe shoes with grip for stairs, decks, dining, and lectures.

Socks

Warm wool or synthetic socks work best. Avoid socks so thick that they make boots tight and reduce circulation.

Gloves, hats, sunglasses, and hand warmers

Hands and face are often what end a landing early. Bring a glove system, not just one pair. Photographers especially need thin liner gloves for camera controls plus waterproof insulation for waiting and riding in Zodiacs.

  • Liner gloves: Helpful for phones, cameras, and moments when bulky mittens are too clumsy.
  • Waterproof gloves or mittens: Bring the warmest pair you can still use comfortably.
  • Warm hat: Choose one that covers your ears and stays secure in wind.
  • Sunglasses: Snow, water, and long daylight can be bright even when it feels cold.
  • Disposable hand warmers: Worth packing if you run cold or plan to photograph a lot.

What to wear on the ship

Most Antarctica expedition ships are casual. You will move between meals, lectures, briefings, deck wildlife watching, and landings. Comfortable clothes beat formal clothes for almost everyone.

Day to day

Casual pants, leggings, fleece, sweaters, and comfortable tops are enough for most onboard time.

Evenings

Bring one nicer casual outfit if your trip includes Christmas, New Year’s Eve, or a captain’s welcome.

Polar plunge

Pack a swimsuit if your ship offers the plunge, sauna, hot tub, or spa access.

Camera, GoPro, and electronics protection

Cold drains batteries faster, and Zodiac spray can punish loose electronics. Keep batteries warm, bring more memory than you think you need, and avoid changing lenses in wet conditions.

Item Bring it if Notes
Phone pouch You will use your phone for photos. Useful on Zodiac rides and wet landings.
Extra batteries You use a camera, GoPro, or drone-like action setup. Keep spares close to your body in cold weather.
GoPro mount You already like action-camera footage. Chest or hand grips are often easier than a head mount.
Dry camera insert You carry a mirrorless or DSLR kit. Protects gear while still fitting inside a day bag.

For more detail, see the Antarctica photography guide.

Medication, documents, and practical extras

Last-minute travelers should solve documents and medical planning before obsessing over gear. If you are booking close to departure, passport validity, insurance, flights, and seasickness preparation matter immediately.

  • Passport: Check validity and entry requirements for your route and flight path.
  • Insurance: Bring policy details and emergency contacts. Most operators have specific medical and evacuation coverage requirements.
  • Medication: Bring prescriptions in original packaging when appropriate, plus enough for delays.
  • Seasickness plan: Talk with a doctor before the trip if you are worried about the Drake Passage.
  • Adapters: Check your ship and Argentina hotel plug requirements before departure.

How many clothes should you bring?

For a typical 8- to 12-day Antarctica cruise, you can usually rotate a small set of technical layers instead of packing a new outfit for every day. Laundry may be limited or expensive, so prioritize pieces that dry quickly and can be worn more than once.

Category Suggested amount Why
Base layers 2 to 3 sets Rotate between landings and let damp items dry.
Warm socks 4 to 6 pairs Feet get cold when socks are damp or compressed.
Mid layers 2 pieces One lighter and one warmer option works well.
Ship clothes 3 to 5 comfortable outfits Casual clothes can be repeated onboard.
Outer shell 1 waterproof system You do not need multiple shells if the main one works.

Provided gear, rentals, and last-minute buying

Before ordering everything online, check whether your cruise line provides parkas, boots, dry bags, poles, or kayaking/camping gear. Operators vary, and inclusions can change by ship or itinerary.

Often provided or loaned

Landing boots, expedition parkas, kayaking dry suits, camping sleep systems, and activity-specific safety gear may be included depending on the operator.

Usually personal

Base layers, socks, gloves, hats, sunglasses, sunscreen, toiletries, camera gear, adapters, and medications are normally your responsibility.

Buy carefully

If you are leaving soon, prioritize waterproof pants, gloves, dry storage, and warm layers over expensive specialty gear you may only use once.

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What not to overpack

Antarctica packing anxiety is real, but overpacking makes flights, transfers, and cabin storage harder. Skip bulky duplicates unless you know you need them.

  • Multiple heavy coats if your operator provides a parka.
  • Formal clothing beyond one nicer casual outfit.
  • Too many shoes. Ship shoes plus operator-approved landing boots are usually enough.
  • Large camera rigs you cannot manage with gloves on a moving Zodiac.
  • New hiking poles unless you already use them or need extra stability.

Antarctica packing FAQ

Do Antarctica cruises provide parkas?

Some provide parkas to keep, some loan them, and some require you to bring your own. Check your specific cruise line before buying.

Do I need waterproof pants?

Yes. Waterproof pants are one of the most important items because Zodiac seats, sea spray, snow, and wet landings are common.

Do I need waterproof gloves?

Strongly recommended. Many travelers use liner gloves for cameras plus waterproof insulated gloves or mittens for warmth.

Are dry bags worth it?

Yes. A small dry bag or waterproof day bag protects cameras, phones, medication, spare layers, and gloves.

Can I rent gear for Antarctica?

Sometimes. Boots and parkas are often provided or rentable depending on the operator. See the gear rental guide for more.

Should I bring hiking poles?

Bring them if you already rely on them for knees, balance, or snow walking. Otherwise, they are optional and may be restricted by some landing rules.

What should I pack for New Year’s Eve?

One nicer casual outfit is enough for most expedition ships. Antarctica cruises are generally casual, even around holiday sailings.

Use the list, then check the deal fit.

If you are booking close to departure, send the sailing, route, ship, cabin type, and timing. We can help you think through whether the fare, packing needs, flights, and operator terms make sense before you move.

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