Herschel vs Venque — Which Canadian Backpack Brand Is Actually Worth It? (2026)

Venque backpacks

Bag Comparison · 2026

Herschel vs Venque —
Which Canadian Brand
Is Actually Worth It?

By Simon Cui · April 2026 · 10 min read

Herschel is one of the most recognized bag brands in Canada. You've seen them on every campus, in every coffee shop, and behind every traveller in every airport. They've built something genuinely impressive — brand recognition so strong that "Herschel" has become shorthand for "backpack" for a whole generation of Canadians.

But brand recognition and bag performance aren't the same thing.

We're Venque — also Canadian, also making bags — so we have obvious skin in this game. We'll be upfront about that. What we'll also be is specific. This isn't a brand takedown. It's an honest breakdown of two Canadian bag companies with very different philosophies, so you can figure out which one actually fits your life.

The quick answer

Buy Herschel if

You want a casual, affordable bag that looks clean and you don't need heavy-duty features. Student life, weekend use, light commuting.

Buy Venque if

You commute daily with a laptop, travel carry-on only, need anti-theft features, or want a bag built to last 5+ years of real use.

Two very different origin stories

Herschel Supply Co. was founded in 2009 in Vancouver by brothers Lyndon and Jamie Cormack. Their design philosophy from day one was heritage aesthetics — that classic rucksack silhouette, clean colourways, woven stripe lining — delivered at accessible price points. It worked spectacularly. By the mid-2010s Herschel was one of the fastest-growing bag brands in the world.

Venque was founded in Toronto with a different mandate: solve the real problems that daily commuters and travellers actually face. Hidden anti-theft zippers. RFID-blocking pockets. Faraday-cage protection. X-Pac and Cordura materials designed for durability over decades, not seasons. Where Herschel zigged toward lifestyle and brand identity, Venque zagged toward function-first engineering.

"Both are genuinely Canadian. Both sell globally. But they're not really competing for the same customer."

Materials — this is where the real difference shows up

Venque Transit Alpha Backpack — X-Pac front panel detail

The Transit Alpha's X-Pac VX21 front panel — originally developed for offshore sailing gear.

This comparison matters more than most people realise. The material determines how your bag ages, how it handles rain, and whether it's still usable in year three or year ten.

Herschel materials

Most Herschel bags use 600D polyester — a mid-grade synthetic fabric that's lightweight and inexpensive to produce. It looks fine new. Over time with daily use, 600D polyester tends to show wear at stress points (zipper pulls, bottom corners, strap attachment points) and can begin to fray. The woven stripe lining Herschel is known for is cotton-polyester blend — attractive but not waterproof. Some premium Herschel lines use 840D nylon, which is meaningfully more durable — worth the extra cost if you're buying Herschel.

Venque materials

Venque's flagship bags use X-Pac VX21 fabric on the front panels — originally developed for offshore sailing and expedition gear. X-Pac is cut-resistant, water-resistant at the surface, and significantly more abrasion-resistant than standard polyester. Secondary panels use Cordura® nylon — the same material used by military and law enforcement for gear that needs to survive daily punishment over years.

Features — side by side

Herschel Little America 22L ($80) vs Venque Transit Alpha 20L ($199)
Feature Herschel Venque
Primary material 600D polyester X-Pac VX21 + Cordura® Better
Anti-theft zippers None Hidden zipper pulls, back-panel only Venque
RFID protection None Dedicated RFID-blocking pocket Venque
Faraday protection None Blocks cellular, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS Venque
Laptop sleeve access Top of main compartment Dedicated rear sleeve — faster at security Venque
Water resistance Coating that fades with wash X-Pac surface + DWR coating Better
Luggage pass-through No Yes Venque
Back panel Minimal padding AirNano® foam, ventilated channels Better
Interior visibility Dark lining Matte grey — designed for item visibility Venque
Weight ~0.75 kg Lighter ~1.1 kg
Price $80 CAD Cheaper $199 CAD
Warranty Lifetime (limited) 3 years + 100-day returns Comparable

Price — is the Venque premium justified?

Herschel Little America

$40
per year of use
($80 ÷ 2 years daily use)

Venque Transit Alpha

$28
per year of use
($199 ÷ 7 years daily use)
The "expensive" bag is actually cheaper per year. A $80 Herschel used daily shows significant wear in 2–3 years. A Venque built with X-Pac and Cordura realistically lasts 7–10 years. If you're a student who wants a clean bag for 2–3 years, the Herschel is a sensible purchase. If you're a professional commuting daily, the Venque pays for itself relatively quickly.
Venque Transit Pro commuter backpack lifestyle shot
Venque: built for daily urban commuters
Venque sling bags collection
The Transit Sling — a Venque bestseller

Verdict by use case

🏙
Daily commuting
Venque wins
✈️
Carry-on travel
Venque wins
🎒
Casual everyday
Herschel wins

Daily commuting

If you're commuting daily with a laptop, navigating public transit, and want a bag that still looks good in year four — Venque wins clearly. The dedicated rear laptop sleeve means you're not digging through your main compartment at security. The anti-theft zipper placement means you're not constantly aware of your bag on crowded trains. The X-Pac front panel handles weather better than standard polyester without looking like outdoor gear.

Carry-on travel

For carry-on-only travel, Venque is the clear choice. The FLAI 40L is designed specifically for airline carry-on dimensions. Luggage pass-through. Faraday protection for your devices. Laptop sleeve positioned for quick security removal. Herschel's travel bags are perfectly usable for casual travel — they just don't have the same travel-specific engineering.

Casual everyday use

For genuine casual use — heading to campus, meeting friends, weekend errands — Herschel is a strong choice. The lower price is real. The clean aesthetic is real. If you don't need RFID protection or anti-theft zippers and you're not carrying $2,000 of tech equipment, a $75 Herschel Heritage is honest value.

The bottom line

Both brands are genuinely Canadian. Both make bags worth considering. They're solving different problems for different people.

Herschel's strength is aesthetic identity at an accessible price. Their heritage design language has genuine cultural resonance and the bags look great for casual use at the right budget.

Venque's strength is performance engineering at a mid-market price. The materials, features, and carry system are designed for people who use their bag hard, every day, and want it to still be excellent in year seven.

"If the answer is 'commute daily, travel light, protect my tech, and not replace it in two years' — the Venque is the better investment by a meaningful margin."


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