A Digital Nomad’s Guide to Not Looking Like a Perpetual Traveller

A Digital Nomad's Guide to Not Looking Like a Perpetual Traveller
Photo: Unsplash.com

By: The Beard Club

There’s a certain look that screams, “I work from coffee shops.” It’s the combination of wrinkled linen pants, a laptop covered in travel stickers, perpetually sunburned shoulders, and that vaguely disheveled air of someone who hasn’t seen a mirror in three countries. Digital nomads have earned a reputation for prioritizing passport stamps over presentation, and while the lifestyle is enviable, the aesthetic often isn’t.

The irony is that many digital nomads work in fields where appearance matters, from consulting and client-facing roles with virtual presentations and networking events in new cities. Looking perpetually backpack-rumpled doesn’t just hurt first impressions; it can undermine credibility in professional contexts where location independence should be an advantage, not a liability.

The good news is that it’s entirely possible to maintain a polished appearance while traveling with a carry-on. It just requires rethinking some assumptions about what “low maintenance travel” actually means.

The Capsule Wardrobe That Actually Works

Most digital nomads approach packing with the mentality of “bring versatile basics.” The problem is that “versatile” often translates to “boring,” and boring doesn’t photograph well on video calls or make a strong impression in coworking spaces. The smarter strategy is to choose pieces that look intentional rather than merely functional.

Start with fabrics that resist wrinkles and maintain shape. Merino wool, performance blends, and technical cottons better withstand travel stress than traditional materials. A single merino wool blazer can transform a basic t-shirt into something suitable for client calls, and it rolls into a backpack without looking like it spent three days compressed between a laptop and sneakers.

Color coordination matters more when working with limited pieces. Nomads who stick to a tight color palette with navy, gray, white, and one accent color can mix items freely without looking like they’re wearing the same outfit repeatedly. It’s a trick borrowed from minimalist fashion bloggers, but it works equally well when the closet is actually a compression cube.

Shoes pose the biggest challenge, as they occupy disproportionate space and can’t be compressed. The most successful solution for nomads is a pair of clean leather sneakers that work for both casual exploration and semi-professional settings, plus lightweight sandals or packable flats. Anything beyond that becomes dead weight.

The Airbnb Refresh Strategy

Here’s where digital nomads gain an advantage over traditional travelers. Instead of hotel-hopping every few days, most stay in one location for weeks or months. This allows for access to washing machines, steamers, and proper mirrors. The mistake is treating temporary housing like a hotel room rather than leveraging it like a home base.

Smart nomads develop a Sunday reset routine to complete laundry, have clothes steamed or ironed, clean shoes, and plan the week’s outfits. This prevents the gradual slide into dishevelment that happens when “I’ll deal with it later” becomes a lifestyle.

The bathroom mirror becomes critical for honest self-assessment. Hostel bathrooms and coworking space restrooms often have poor lighting, so nomads may not realize how tired or unkempt they look until they see themselves in a well-lit photo. Taking five minutes each morning in natural light to check hair, skin, and overall presentation prevents those “when did I start looking like this?” moments.

The Grooming Kit That Fits in a Toiletry Bag

Another part of being a nomad is that they can’t travel with full-size everything, but they also can’t rely on hotel miniatures or hope to find something workable in their Airbnbs. The solution is to the smallest possible versions of effective products and refusing to compromise on the essentials.

A compact grooming kit covers the basics without taking up valuable luggage space. Travel-sized electric trimmers handle both hair and beard maintenance without requiring barbershop visits in unfamiliar cities. A small container of high-quality moisturizer addresses skin damage caused by fluctuating climates and water quality. For those maintaining facial hair, a compact conditioning product like beard oil helps keep it soft and lasts for months.

The key is resisting the urge to bring backup options for everything. One good trimmer beats three mediocre ones. One reliable moisturizer that works across climates beats separate products for humidity versus dry air. Nomads who master this curation look more put-together with less stuff.

The Video Call Environment Matters More Than the Camera

Most digital nomads spend significant time on video calls, yet many underestimate how much their background affects perception. Clients and colleagues don’t see the exotic location—they see the unmade bed, the pile of laundry, or the generic white wall that screams “I’m calling from somewhere I don’t actually live.”

The fix requires minimal effort but creates disproportionate impact. Find one corner of the space with decent natural light and a clean, uncluttered background. A bookshelf works well. A plain wall with one piece of artwork, too. The goal is to be intentional, rather than “I’m definitely in a hostel.”

Lighting trumps camera quality every time. A $30 ring light placed at eye level makes anyone look more professional than the best webcam with overhead fluorescent lighting. Nomads who invest in a small, packable ring light immediately elevate their video presence and avoid the underlit, shadowy appearance that makes them look perpetually exhausted.

Camera angle matters too. Laptops placed flat on desks create an unflattering upward angle that accentuates chins and the ceiling. A simple laptop stand or stack of books raises the camera to eye level, creating a more natural, confident framing. This tiny adjustment changes how colleagues perceive competence and professionalism.

The Local Barber Shop is Your Secret Weapon

One of the most overlooked advantages of slow travel is access to local services, yet many nomads avoid barbers and salons in unfamiliar cities due to communication barriers or disappointing results. This hesitation becomes evident in their appearance, and the “I’ll just wait until I’m somewhere I trust” mindset leads to months of looking progressively more unkempt.

The reality is that barbers and stylists in popular nomad destinations regularly serve international clients. They understand the basics even without perfect language overlap, and showing reference photos on a phone transcends language barriers entirely. A $10 haircut in Chiang Mai or Medellín often delivers better results than a $60 cut back home.

Regular maintenance visits also solve the “growing out” problem that plagues long-term travelers. Instead of trying to stretch a haircut for three months because the next one will be in a different country, nomads can get trimmed every four to six weeks, maintaining a consistent look that doesn’t telegraph “I’ve been on the road too long.”

Dressing for the Culture, Not the Stereotype

One telltale sign of a digital nomad is the universal uniform of convertible pants, performance fabric everything, and trail runners worn to dinner. While practical, this approach overlooks a crucial element of not standing out: adapting to local dress codes rather than imposing traveler aesthetics everywhere.

Successful nomads observe how locals dress in professional and social settings and adjust accordingly. In many European cities, that means ditching the sneakers for leather shoes or boots. In Southeast Asian coworking spaces, it might mean adding a collar to the rotation instead of living in t-shirts. 

While staying true to personal style, it’s worth making small adjustments that signal awareness and respect for local norms. The nomad who wears a casual button-down to a networking event in Buenos Aires blends in. The one who shows up in a wrinkled t-shirt and hiking pants stands out for the wrong reasons.

The Psychology of Looking Established

There’s a psychological component to appearance that goes beyond aesthetics, and it’s particularly relevant for digital nomads trying to build credibility in new environments. Looking polished signals stability, even when living out of a suitcase. It suggests someone who has their life organized, who takes their work seriously, who isn’t just drifting through cities waiting for inspiration to strike.

This perception matters in coworking spaces, networking events, and client meetings. Those who look put-together get taken more seriously, invited to better opportunities, and assumed to be more competent. Fair or not, appearance acts as social shorthand for professionalism, and nomads who ignore this pay a price in missed connections and underestimated capabilities.

The effort required is minimal compared to the returns. Fifteen minutes of grooming each morning. A Sunday reset routine. Choosing clothes that maintain shape instead of whatever compresses the smallest. These habits compound over weeks and months, creating a consistent presentation that opens doors rather than closing them.

Looking Intentional While Living Unanchored

The digital nomad lifestyle offers incredible freedom, but that freedom doesn’t mean sacrificing appearance or self-care. The ones who thrive long-term are those who figure out how to maintain professional standards while living out of a backpack, who understand that looking polished isn’t about vanity but about opening opportunities in every new city they land in.

The stereotype of the disheveled digital nomad exists because it’s the path of least resistance. But some resistance—a little effort, a little planning, a little intentionality—is exactly what separates those who look like they’re perpetually between destinations from those who look like they belong wherever they are. And in a lifestyle built on mobility, looking like you belong might be the most valuable skill of all.

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