Hotel Towels Are Awful. Travel With a Towel Poncho Instead.

by | Jun 17, 2025 | Product Reviews | 0 comments

Hotel Towels Are Awful. Travel With a Towel Poncho Instead.

The Kfubuo Surf Poncho comes in a variety of colors and patterns. I was drawn to the blue tie-dye (pictured above), but more muted options are also available. Photo: Gina Ragona

When I bought the Kfubuo Surf Poncho about a year and a half ago, I had no idea it would become a travel essential. I was merely looking for a new bathing suit cover-up ahead of my honeymoon in Mexico, and it met all my requirements: It was large and roomy, offered full-body coverage from the sun, it came in fun colors and patterns, and, at $20, it was super cheap. That it doubled as a towel was just an added perk.

To my surprise and delight, the Kfubuo poncho has since proved to be the single best poolside cover-up I’ve ever used. I haven’t tested multiple towel ponchos for this article, and you could spend more money on a higher-quality model, but I’ve been thrilled with how this poncho has served me on trips around the world.

I was a little skeptical when it first arrived—as some reviews on Amazon have pointed out, it had a strong, plasticky smell that made me scrunch my nose, but the smell disappeared after one run through the washer-dryer.

Much of what makes this oversized poncho so effective as a cover-up is what makes it just as useful as a travel towel. Made of super-soft polyester, the sleeved, hooded poncho succeeds at what most hotel towels fail to do: It absorbs moisture rather than pushing it around my body, feels gentle on my skin, and, best of all, fits my body with plenty of room to spare.

Oversize and baggy, this poncho is able to accommodate up to a size 6XL. It fits like a muumuu, falling just beneath my knees, and has loose, three-quarter sleeves that almost reach my wrists. This full coverage comes in handy whether I’m using the Kfubuo poncho in my hotel room or down by the pool. Plus, it’s roomy enough that I’m able to fully change underneath it.

A person wearing a KFUBUO Surf Poncho, sitting down next to a swimming pool with their legs crossed.
This poncho is so roomy I can cover my knees while sitting with my legs crossed. Photo: Gina Ragona

As a shower towel, it’s also able to wick away water from hard-to-reach spots (like my back) with little effort. And it’s freeing to step out of the shower and shimmy into the poncho, knowing that I can leave the steam-box bathroom and walk around my hotel room without fear of flashing my travel companions.

As a cover-up, it keeps most of my skin protected from the unforgiving sun—but it’s thin enough that I can still sit poolside without overheating. The lightweight polyester dries quickly, especially when it’s outside in the heat, so the poncho never feels too waterlogged or heavy. The thin material also makes it the ideal travel towel; it folds down flat, taking up much less room in a suitcase than a standard bath towel.

Close-up of a person putting a 32-ounce Owala water bottle in the front pocket of the KFUBUO Surf Poncho.
The roomy front pocket fits a 32-ounce Owala water bottle, an 8-ounce tube of sunscreen, a pair of sunglasses, and a Kindle Paperwhite. Photo: Elissa Sanci

Similar in style to hooded sweatshirts, the Kfubuo poncho includes a hood and a massive front pocket. The hood has (literally) saved my skin on the occasions I have forgotten to pack a sun hat. And the front pocket is so big that it’s proven useful in all different situations: In Mexico, I used it to carry a tube of sunscreen, sunglasses, and my Kindle down to the beach; in Alaska, I stuffed it with my toiletries before trotting through the woods towards a campground shower house.

Since acquiring my poncho at the end of 2023, I’ve brought it on every subsequent trip I’ve taken this year—and I’m not exaggerating when I say it’s made traveling to new places so much more enjoyable. Because while the tiny towels stocked in hotel bathrooms still make me inexplicably mad, they aren’t my problem anymore.

This article was edited by Hannah Rimm and Catherine Kast.

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