Soft Coolers
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FAQs
No matter where you have plans to take your soft cooler, you’re going to want one that fits your destination and lifestyle—whether you find yourself kayaking, floating the river, or heading to the backcountry. For our best recommendations on which YETI soft sided cooler you should buy, browse our complete guide to compare which size is ideal for all of your outdoor adventures.
Looking for an insulated cooler bag that has a shoulder strap and is comfortable to carry? Check out our Hopper soft coolers which are offered in the following sizes: Hopper Flip 8, Hopper Flip 12, and Hopper Flip 18.
Due to a large number of variables that affect ice retention, YETI stays away from the definitive time claims that are often based on testing conditions and not real-life situations. However, the Hopper® Family of soft coolers—with cold-holding features like a welded DryHide™ Shell, thick ColdCell™ Insulation, and a waterproof HydroLok™ Zipper—provide unmatched ice-retention power.
To learn more about the best practices for keeping ice cold for longer in your YETI soft insulated cooler check out our complete list of tips and tricks for ice retention.
Our soft-sided coolers are easy to clean. To get the job done, mix mild dish soap with water. Use a gentle cloth for the inside, outside, and zipper. Be sure to fully air dry before zipping closed and storing.
The M12 can fit up to 20 standard 355 ml cans and the M20 up to 36 (cans only, no ice).
Yep, we packed both the 3L and 5L with our proprietary Coldcellâ„¢ Flex Insulation. A lightweight, closed-cell foam offers the superior temperature-holding power to keep your food and drinks fresh.
For the 6L lunch bag we recommend using a medium YETI® Ice Sheet or one to two small YETI® Ice Sheets. For the 14L insulated tote bag, one large YETI® Ice Sheet is optimal, but it can also fit small and medium YETI® Ice Sheets.
The M15 can fit up to 32 standard 355 ml cans and the M30 up to 42 (cans only, no ice).
Built for sunrise to last cast
YETI Drinkware are overbuilt vessels engineered for relentless temperature control, daily punishment, and grab‑and‑go convenience. From Rambler stainless steel to ultralight Yonder bottles, every piece plays into our ecosystem—rides in our coolers, stows in our bags, swaps caps across the family—and keeps hands dry while your drink stays exactly how you packed it.
Here’s the short version from a long time on the water and the road: Rambler drinkware keeps hot drinks hot and cold drinks cold for hours, shrugs off dents and drops, and cleans up easy in the dishwasher. Modular lids and caps tailor flow and leak resistance to your mission, while cup‑holder‑friendly shapes and handles make carry simple on rough miles.
Use them everywhere we actually go—pre‑dawn coffee in the truck, iced water on the poling platform, a cold beer in the duck blind, tea on the chairlift, electrolyte refills at the trailhead, soup at basecamp, lemonade at the tailgate, cocoa at the fire ring, and kid‑proof sips on the school run. Rambler’s insulation handles scalding to sub‑freezing, office desk to off‑grid. Yonder shines for high‑mileage hikes, travel days, and river trips where low weight and quick refills beat heat retention. Colster keeps camp cans cold between bites, and Rambler Jugs resupply crews, dogs, and dish duty back at the rig. Everything nests with our Tundra and Roadie coolers, rides in Camino and Crossroads bags, and plays nice with our Bottle Slings and gear.
Our team recommends choosing by mission first: pick Rambler when you need true insulation for hot coffee, all‑day ice, or rugged duty; pick Yonder when shaving weight matters and you’re carrying cold, non‑carbonated liquids. Match capacity to time away: commute and workouts go lighter, all‑day guides and road miles lean on 26–36 ounces, and crews or basecamps step up to Rambler 1.8 Litre and 3.7 Litre Jugs.
Select your lid or cap by drink and terrain: MagSlider for daily, splash‑resistant use; Stronghold for jostled travel; HotShot for coffee you can toss in a pack; Chug for quick gulps; Straw for max cold‑flow; Colster for cans. Note: MagSlider and Straw are not leakproof, and Straw/Chug aren’t for hot or carbonated drinks. Think fit and ecosystem: go cup‑holder‑friendly tumblers for the road, handled mugs for camp, Bottles for rough carry, and remember Rambler caps interchange across bottle sizes. Yonder is non‑insulated and excels in a side pouch on Crossroads packs or in a Bottle Sling. Colour comes last but matters: DuraCoat Colour resists cracking, peeling, and fading, and limited edition drops pair across coolers, bags, and drinkware for a dialed kit.