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13 healthy snacks for travelling

Updated: Sep 18, 2025

One of my clients recently said that she is struggling to stay on healthy eating habits when travelling, especially as there are not really good options when having to wait for the flights at the airports, food choices at airplanes etc. Many of the petrol stations you drive past where there is a cafe, shop, don't focus on providing lots of healthy food options, but rather hamburgers, hotdogs, kebabs, pies, pastries. So how can you make sure you don't run into a food emergency when travelling and can still follow your healthy eating habits? Below I will share with you some ideas to try.


Healthy snacks ideas for travelling


1. Have your own trail mix along

It's very easy to create your own trail mix of nuts, seeds, dried berries or fruits. They are packed with healthy fats, protein, fibre, vitamins, minerals and keep you satiated till your next meal. Make a mix of any of the following, you can also toast nuts and seeds slightly in the oven: walnuts, pecan nuts, almonds, Brazil nuts, hazelnuts, pine nuts, macadamia nuts, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, coconut chips, hemp seeds, goji berries, dried figs, dried apricots, dried plums, mulberries. Make sure you purchase dried berries and fruits preservative free (no sulfur dioxide). You can also add cocoa nibs to the mix.


2. Vegetables with hummus

Depending on the travel distance and mode of travel, you can also cut some vegetables like carrots, cucumbers, paprika, celery, endives, kohlrabi and make a hummus from chickpeas, lentils- so you can get a good amount of fibre, protein, healthy carbs, fat, minerals and vitamins.


3. Boiled egg or omelette

If it's not a long-haul flight or long-distance travel, where you don't have an option to keep food cold (cooler bag, car fridge), you can boil couple of eggs or make an omelette along. Eggs are a nutritious food, filled with healthy fats and protein- keeping you full for hours. You can also put some hummus into the omelette before eating.

4. Nut or seed butters with vegetables or fruits

Nut butters travel well (make sure you put them into small below 100ml jar if you travel by airplane as it's a liquid). In some countries you can purchase easy nut butter travel packs. You can eat the nut and seed butters with fruits (like apples, pears) and vegetables (carrots, celery). You can of course have some rice or buckwheat crackers along and spread the nut or seed butters on those as well. Nut butters you can purchase in the store or make yourself:


  • almond butter (I have bought in the past these easy travel packs of nut butter from Jason's

  • peanut butter (make sure you purchase ecological that contains only nuts and sea salt to avoid any unnecessary ingredients and also exposure to mould as peanuts are more susceptible to mould than other nuts or legumes

  • cashew butter

  • tahini (from sesame seeds)

  • sunflower butter (from sunflower seeds)

5. Seaweed with rice, vegetables, guacamole

Take along seaweed sheets (that you use for sushi making), some sushi rice (you can also skip the rice), vegetable sticks (cucumber, paprika, celery), guacamole (mashed avocado with some lemon or lime juice, some salt, pepper or cayenne pepper). Easy to assemble if you need a quick meal.


6. Olives

Olives are a great nutritious snack to take along. You can purchase them pitted so they are easier to eat or stuffed with for example garlic.


7. Tapenade on cracker bread

You can make your own tapenade or purchase a jar. To make your own, chop finely some olives, pistachio nuts, grate some parmesan or pecorino cheese and add olive oil- mix all together.


8. Beef strips, beef jerky

There are healthier options for packages beef strips or beef jerky. In Estonia, Liivimaa Lihaveis sells beef jerky in different flavours. Always check the ingredients list, that it doesn't have any preservatives, dextrose.


9. Protein bars, seed bars, energy bars

These are a great options for a quick snack and diminish the biggest hunger, but please do read the ingredient list before purchasing.


Many bars on the market are nothing but overpriced candy bars filled with artificial sweeteners. What you want to have in your bar is:


  • protein (pea, hemp, collagen)

  • healthy fats (nuts, seeds, MCT oil, cocoa butter, coconut oil)

  • if sweeteners then natural sweeteners like dates, honey or other fruits or berries are the best. Stevia is also ok as it has no impact on blood sugar. Erythitrol is ok, though can cause unpleasant gastrointestinal issues for some. Better options for non-nutritive sweeteners are allulose and monk fruit. You can check my post on sugar for more options for healthy and unhealthy sweeteners. What you don't want from a protein bar is artificial sweeteners, like sucralose, maltitol, aspartame, dextrose etc. A bar should ideally contain less than 5g of sugar (and fructose and agave are not healthy sugars).

  • look for a bar that contains at least 5g of fibre- whether as nuts, nut butters, chia seeds, flaxseeds, inulin.


If the manufacturer has fortified the bar with vitamins and minerals, be aware, as often they are cheap and poorly absorbed by the body (sulfate, gluconate, magnesium oxide etc). Also make sure that the bars don't contain any gluten, dairy, soy, peanuts, if you have food sensitivities.


Here are a couple of bars on the market to try:


Loodusvägi, Ampstükk, BeMore in Estonia also have bars, but they are higher in carbs, some lower in protein but definitely healthier options than other protein bars, energy bars sold in Estonian market. Nakd bars is also healthier choice but has also higher carbohydrate content due to dates and raisins in the bar. Puls (can also be bought in store in Estonia) in Finland has two bars, a chocolate bar and peanut butter bar which I have bought for my teenage son for energy or after-workout quick snack.


10. Canned salmon, sardines, mackerel, tuna with a cracker bread

If you fly, this is not a good option, but if you travel by car, this a quick and easy snack to have. Just make sure, you purchase the canned fish in water or olive oil (avoid other oils as these can be inflammatory). These fish are full of protein, healthy fats- just don't overdo with tuna as tuna contains mercury unlike the other suggested canned fish options. For cracker bread, you can purchase rice crackers, buckwheat crackers or other non-gluten options.


11. Avocado on a cracker bread

Avocado is packed with healthy fat, fibre, vitamins and minerals. It's easy to take along a ripe avocado, use a knife to cut it in half, scoop out the mixture (discard the pit) and mash it with a fork or a knife on a cracker bread.


12. Homemade muffins

Good thing with muffins when you make them at home is that you can really make them nutritious, choose what you put in there and they travel well. I have a few recipes I have shared in the past for muffins: macadamia and cashew nut muffins, pumpkin muffins and blueberry muffins.


13. No-bake protein balls

These are a great snack you can also get your kids involved creating. Blend together in the food processor gluten-free rolled oats, nut butter (almond, peanut, cashew), chopped nuts (almonds, walnuts, Brazil nuts, macadamia nuts), some dried fruit for sweetness (dates, raisins, prunes, apricots, cranberries), shredded coconut, protein powder (pea protein, hemp protein, bone broth protein etc), cocoa nibs. Roll into small bite-size balls and put in the cooler.


I hope you found some tips for easy healthy snack foods to take along on your trip alone or with kids.


If you have any other healthy snacks you have tried, please do share in the comments below.



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© 2026 by Katrin Peo

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