Beach Holiday Packing List with Toddlers and Babies
Find the right packing list
The first beach holiday with a toddler brings a specific kind of logistics anxiety. Every packing list you find is either too generic to help or written by someone who hasn’t actually wrestled a 14-month-old out of a wet swimming nappy in 35-degree heat. This one is built around the moments that actually catch you out.
The big three to get right: shade when you need it, a dark room for nap time, and not leaving the comforter in the apartment. Get those right and the rest is manageable.
The single most useful piece of kit
A rash vest outperforms any amount of sunscreen on a toddler. It covers the shoulders, back, and arms — the surfaces hardest to reapply cream on a squirming child — so you only need to manage face, neck, and legs. Pack two so one is always dry.
For under-2s, pair it with a mineral-based SPF 50 sunscreen. Mineral formulas sit on the skin surface rather than absorbing into it — the right choice for young skin.
Green People SPF50 Sun Lotion — Kids
From £14
Amazon
Shade you can actually rely on
A beach umbrella isn’t enough for under-3s. Toddlers don’t stay under them, the shade angle shifts as the sun moves, and you can’t supervise properly while staying in the shade yourself. A pop-up tent solves this — it’s self-contained, relocatable shade that gives you a proper base rather than a constant negotiation with the sun.
Quechua 2 Second Shelter UPF 50+
From £45
Decathlon
Nappies: what to pack and what to buy there
Pack swimming nappies from home — 15 for a week is a sensible minimum. They’re available at most European resort supermarkets if you run low, but expect to pay more than at home.
For regular nappies, if you’re staying a week or more: buy at the destination. Pampers, Huggies, and supermarket own-brands are available across Spain, Portugal, Greece, and the Canaries. You’ll save real luggage weight.
Huggies Little Swimmers
From £8
Amazon
A reusable wet bag earns its space multiple times per day — wet swimwear, used swimming nappies, the inevitable clothing casualty. Pack two.
Bambino Mio Wet Bag
From £12
Amazon
The item that saves the holiday
A portable blackout blind. Holiday rooms are bright. Toddler naps require darkness. Without one, the afternoon nap window disappears — and that is the window where you sit somewhere quiet with a cold drink. Pack it in your hand luggage so it can’t get lost in checked bags.
Tommee Tippee Portable Blackout Blind
From £35
Amazon
Travel cot: check before you pack it
Most hotels and family resorts provide a travel cot on request — confirm at booking, not on arrival. Villas and self-catering apartments rarely supply one. If you’re in self-catering, bring your own. If you travel with under-3s more than twice a year, a quality lightweight travel cot pays for itself quickly.
Lotus Travel Cot
From £195
Amazon
Packing Checklist
Clothing — Adults
- Swimwear × 2–3
- Light cover-up or linen shirt
- Sun hat or cap
- Evening outfits × 2
- Casual day clothes × 4
- Smart sandals × 1 pair
- Flip flops × 1 pair
- Light cardigan (for flights and air-conditioned restaurants)
Clothing — Toddlers
- Rash vest × 2–3 (cuts sun cream reapplication dramatically)
- UV all-in-one swimsuit × 2
- Sun hat with chin strap × 2 (regular hats get thrown off immediately)
- Light cotton rompers or babygrows × 5
- Light cardigan or layer
- Water shoes or beach shoes × 1 pair
- Pyjamas × 3
Sun Protection
- SPF 50+ mineral-based sunscreen (zinc oxide — essential for under-2s)
- After-sun lotion or aloe vera gel
- Pop-up beach tent or sun shade (non-negotiable for under-2s)
Nappies & Feeding
- Swimming nappies × 15 (buy more at destination if needed)
- Regular nappies × 2–3 days supply (buy locally after)
- Wet wipes × 4+ packs
- Reusable wet bag × 2
- Portable changing mat
- Formula × 3–4 days supply (verify brand availability first)
- Portable formula dispenser
- Baby food pouches × 5 (supplement with local shops)
- Sippy cup × 2
- Toddler snacks (puffs, rice cakes)
Sleep Gear
- Travel cot + 2 fitted sheets (confirm if accommodation provides one first)
- Portable blackout blind (suction-cup, fold-flat)
- Familiar comforter or soft toy
- Small white noise speaker (optional but helpful in unfamiliar rooms)
Beach Essentials
- Sand-free beach mat
- Arm bands or baby float ring (for pool use — check accommodation rules)
- Small cool bag for milk and snacks
- Simple sand toys (buy cheap ones at destination and leave them behind)
Health & Pharmacy
- Children's liquid paracetamol (Calpol) — in hand luggage
- Children's ibuprofen (Nurofen for Children) — in hand luggage
- DEET-free insect repellent for toddlers
- Children's antihistamine (age-appropriate formulation)
- Rehydration sachets (Dioralyte)
- Digital thermometer
- Plasters and antiseptic wipes
- GHIC card for each child (free via NHS app)
Documents & Money
- Passports for all (child passports valid 5 years not 10 — check expiry)
- Travel insurance documents — print a copy
- GHIC cards
- Booking confirmations (flights + accommodation)
- Accommodation address in local language (for taxis and emergencies)
Frequently Asked Questions
- How many swimming nappies do I need for a week's beach holiday?
- Pack 15 as a minimum — budget one to two per beach or pool session plus spares for leaks. They're available in most European resort supermarkets but cost more than at home. Buying a backup pack there is good insurance.
- Do I need to bring a travel cot to a beach holiday with a toddler?
- It depends on your accommodation. Most hotels and family resorts provide one on request — confirm at booking, not on arrival. Villas and self-catering apartments rarely supply one, so bring your own for those. If you travel with under-3s more than twice a year, a lightweight travel cot pays for itself quickly.
- What sun cream is safest for a toddler on holiday?
- SPF 50+ minimum. For under-2s, mineral-based formulas (zinc oxide or titanium dioxide) are the better choice as they sit on the skin rather than absorbing. Green People, La Roche-Posay, and Riemann P20 Kids are the most recommended UK brands. Reapply every 2 hours and after swimming, regardless of what the label claims.
- Should I pack a pop-up beach tent for a toddler?
- Yes, if you have children under 3. Young skin burns quickly in direct sun, shade on beaches is unreliable, and toddlers won't stay under a regular umbrella. A pop-up tent gives you a reliable, relocatable shaded base. Pack it in your checked luggage.
- What can I buy at the destination instead of packing?
- Regular nappies, wipes, formula (verify your brand first), sunscreen, and beach toys are all widely available in popular European beach destinations. For a week-plus stay, buying nappies locally saves significant luggage weight and usually money. Pack only enough for your first day or two.