Comparison · 3 picks

Best Dog Backpack Carrier UK 2026: K9 Sport Sack & Co

By Rob Griffiths 6 min read

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UK dog owners reach for backpack carriers for one of three reasons: navigating city transport (Tube and London buses, where small dogs must be carried), longer hikes where puppies or recovering dogs cannot keep up the full distance, or travel where a separate carrier is awkward. The three backpacks in this comparison cover the range: two carriers that carry the dog (the K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2 front-carrier and the EzyDog Summit Backpack), and one premium hiking saddle-bag (the Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack, designed for the dog to carry their own kit).

Sizing matters more than feature creep. Every brand uses chest girth as the primary measurement; the dog's weight is a secondary check. A K9 Sport Sack rated to 15 kg may still be too small for a long-bodied dachshund whose chest girth exceeds the medium harness opening. We've called out the body-shape gotchas per product. A short note on welfare: ventilated mesh and stretch panels are non-negotiable for any prolonged carry. Avoid carriers that fully enclose the dog without breathable side panels, even for short city trips.

At a glance

All 3 options side by side.

K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2 4.8 / 5 Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack 4.6 / 5 EzyDog Summit Backpack 4.5 / 5
Price £99£110£49.79
Best for the leash anchors inside the carrier prevent the dog from slipping out if zipped wrong, and the upgraded shoulder padding handles long Tube commutes without bruising. Best for owners who want their working-breed dog to share the load on long walks. Best for taller owners and dogs in the 5-13 kg range, and at around 50 GBP the value pick of this comparison.
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The picks in detail

#1 Best overall

K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2

4.8 / 5
From £99

Bottom line. Best overall for small-to-medium dogs and the most refined front-carrier on the UK market. The harness clip system is the differentiator: the leash anchors inside the carrier prevent the dog from slipping out if zipped wrong, and the upgraded shoulder padding handles long Tube commutes without bruising. Worth the price if you'll use it weekly; the EzyDog Summit Backpack is the cheaper call for occasional use.

Pros

  • Premium ventilated front-carrier; upgraded harness clip system
  • Built-in safety leash anchors the harness collar inside the carrier
  • Removable Sherpa-style liner for cold-weather use; washable at 30 degrees
  • Sizes XS (1-4 kg) through XL (up to 27 kg) cover most small/medium breeds
  • Stowable side pockets for treat pouch and waste bags

Cons

  • Highest RRP in the category
  • Front-carry only - back-carry adapters sold separately
  • Not suitable for brachycephalic breeds without vet sign-off
#2

Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack

4.6 / 5
From £110

Bottom line. Best for owners who want their working-breed dog to share the load on long walks. The Approach Dog Backpack is the genre's category leader and is what serious UK hill-walking dog owners use. Don't buy this expecting to carry the dog - it's the opposite direction. Pair with a separate body-carrier (the K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2 or EzyDog Summit Backpack) if you also need an emergency carry option for the same dog.

Pros

  • True hiking saddle-bag - the dog wears the pack and carries their own gear
  • Lightweight 700g empty weight; capacity 3-7 L depending on size
  • Padded spine and chest plate distribute load on long hikes
  • Five sizes (XXS through L) fit dogs 8 kg to 40+ kg
  • Reflective trim and dual D-rings for leash anchoring

Cons

  • NOT a dog-carrier - this is for the dog to carry kit, not for you to carry the dog
  • Designed for active fit dogs over 8 kg; puppies and recovering dogs unsuited
  • Volume is modest by hiking standards; meant for water, treats, waste bags
#3 Best value

EzyDog Summit Backpack

4.5 / 5
From £49.79

Bottom line. Best for taller owners and dogs in the 5-13 kg range, and at around 50 GBP the value pick of this comparison. The Summit Backpack earns its place on the shoulder-strap design alone - the K9 Sport Sack's shorter straps create chest pinch for owners over 6 ft. Trade-off is the limited body length, so check your dog's measurements against the EzyDog medium specifically before buying.

Pros

  • Adjustable shoulder straps with sternum and waist support for owners over 6 ft
  • Mesh ventilation panels on three sides; sun-shield over the dog opening
  • Internal harness loop accepts a standard chest harness
  • Holds dogs up to 13 kg comfortably; emergency carry rating up to 18 kg
  • Stowable water-bottle pouches on the sides

Cons

  • Body length limited - long-bodied dachshunds and corgis fit awkwardly
  • Top opening only; getting the dog in requires a lift, not a step-in
  • Below-average weatherproofing in heavy rain (pack a separate cover)

Which carrier should you buy?

Match the carrier to use-case rather than brand:

  • Frequent Tube and bus carry (small/medium dog): K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2. Worth the premium for the harness clip and shoulder padding when you carry weekly.
  • Long UK hill-walks with a working dog: Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack. Lets the dog carry the kit and survives Munro days.
  • Tall owner with a 5-13 kg dog, or budget/occasional use: EzyDog Summit Backpack. The adjustable straps fix the chest-pinch problem, and at around 50 GBP it's the value pick.

Sizing, breeds, and welfare notes

Three things matter more than headline specs:

  1. Chest girth, not weight, is the primary fit measurement. Measure around the widest part of the rib cage and add 2-3 cm for comfort. Dachshunds, corgis, and other long-bodied breeds need a length check on top of the girth.
  2. Ventilation is non-negotiable. Even a 10-minute London bus journey at 22 degrees can stress a dog in a fully-enclosed bag. Every recommended product here has mesh on at least three sides.
  3. Brachycephalic breeds (Pugs, French Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Pekingese) have airway constraints that make carrier use higher-risk than for other breeds. Consult your vet before purchasing - position the dog upright, monitor breathing throughout, and never use a carrier in temperatures above 22 degrees with one of these breeds.

Frequently asked questions

Q01Can I take a dog backpack on the London Underground?
Yes - TfL allows small dogs on Tube trains for free, provided they are carried. A ventilated dog backpack carrier satisfies the carriage requirement, with no upper size limit on the carrier itself. Buses, Overground, and DLR follow the same rule: small dogs must be carried (or on a lead). Large dogs travelling in carriers may be refused at the driver's discretion.
Q02What is the difference between a dog backpack and a dog hiking pack?
A dog backpack carrier (K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2, EzyDog Summit Backpack) is worn by the owner and carries the dog. A dog hiking pack (Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack) is worn by the dog and carries the dog's own kit. Both are 'backpacks' in the loose sense; the use-case is opposite.
Q03What size dog fits in a dog backpack?
Most carriers cover dogs from 1 kg (XXS) up to about 13-18 kg (L), with the K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2 XL reaching up to 27 kg. Above 18 kg, lift comfort becomes the limiting factor for the owner rather than the dog. For larger dogs, the Ruffwear Approach Dog Backpack (dog carries own kit) is the better hiking solution; full body-carry for a 25+ kg dog isn't realistic over distance.
Q04Are dog backpacks safe for puppies?
Yes, with two caveats. Puppies under 12 weeks shouldn't be in public-transport carriers until their first set of vaccinations is complete. From 12-16 weeks onward, puppies tolerate carriers well and the ventilated front-carry style (the K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2 in front configuration) helps with socialisation - the puppy sees the world and stays calm. Keep sessions short initially (10-15 minutes) and build up.
Q05Can short-faced breeds use dog backpacks?
Brachycephalic breeds (Pugs, French Bulldogs, English Bulldogs, Pekingese, Shih Tzu) have constrained airways and are higher-risk in any enclosed carry environment. Vet sign-off before purchase is the safest path; if you do use a carrier, choose maximum-ventilation models, position the dog upright, monitor breathing constantly, and never use in heat above 22 degrees.
Best overall K9 Sport Sack Air Plus 2
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