

🎒 Escape the ordinary—play anywhere, sound everywhere!
The Traveler Guitar Escape Mark III is a compact, full-scale 25.5" mahogany acoustic travel guitar featuring a revolutionary headless design with in-body tuners. Weighing just 4.4 lbs and measuring under 30", it fits easily in airline overhead compartments with its custom padded gig bag. Equipped with a Shadow Nano Flex piezo pickup, built-in headphone amplifier, tuner, and 2-band EQ, it offers private practice and versatile sound control on the move. Trusted by touring musicians for over 30 years, this guitar blends professional playability with unmatched portability for the modern mobile musician.












| ASIN | B07JR7Y8YD |
| Back Material Type | Mahogany Wood |
| Best Sellers Rank | #48,178 in Musical Instruments ( See Top 100 in Musical Instruments ) #120 in Steel-String Acoustic Guitars |
| Body Material | Mahogany |
| Body Material Type | Mahogany |
| Brand | Traveler Guitar |
| Brand Name | Traveler Guitar |
| Color | Mahogany |
| Connector Type | 3.5mm (1/8 inch) audio jack |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 78 Reviews |
| Fretboard Material Type | BLACK WALNUT |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00851885008052 |
| Guitar Bridge System | Fixed |
| Guitar Pickup Configuration | SHADOW NANOFLEX |
| Hand Orientation | Right |
| Included Components | With Bag |
| Instrument | Guitar |
| Instrument Size | Mahogany |
| Item Dimensions | 29.5 x 10.75 x 2.13 inches |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 29.5"L x 10.75"W x 2.13"H |
| Item Type Name | Escape Mark III (Mahogany) |
| Item Weight | 4.4 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Traveler Guitar |
| Material Type | Mahogany Wood |
| Model Name | Escape Mark III |
| Model Number | MK3 MHS |
| Neck Material Type | Mahogany |
| Number of Strings | 6 |
| Operation Mode | Manual |
| Scale Length | 25.5 |
| String Material Type | Bronze |
| Top Material Type | Mahogany Wood |
| UPC | 851885008052 |
| Warranty Description | Limited lifetime. |
A**I
Work if Art!
I'm a beginner/intermediate guitar player and wanted a low profile guitar for traveling. I was a bit skeptical and watched a lot of YouTube and read a lot of reviews and finally decided on this guitar. I have to say that I was pleasantly surprised and 100% satisfied when I received it. For it's small size, it's a heavy instrument. But this is a solid body, beautiful work of art and engineering. It's not much of an acoustic guitar, but with the built-in tuner, electronics, and headphone jack, it makes a great electric sound. With the treble and base adjustments, and phase shifting, there's so much sounds to play with. The neck and the body are ascetically perfect and clean. I love to hold it in my hands, even if I'm not playing. And that's saying a lot. This is a beautiful instrument, very functional, and a lot of fun. If I had to complain, I would say it's a bit heavy, but that solid wood body is a great trade off. I'll take the extra weight and still give it five stars. Weather you're looking for a traveling guitar or just an enthusiasist, you need one of these. Highly recommend. And 100 percent real deal.
B**T
Ultimate Practice Guitar - it will make you better
This is the ultimate practice guitar. At first, I overlooked this guitar because the neck didn't detach and fold like other travel guitars. Then I realized how perfect this design is and how it doesn't need that feature, which I now think is gimmicky. I'm shocked this isn't way more popular. 1) it's tiny. My wife and mother-in-law watched me open it and they had to each ask me twice "THAT's a guitar?!?!" You will most definitely have no traveling issues and certainly fit in a carry on, overhead, flight bag. in fact, it's the same length as my Baritone Ukulele (and hence fit in their cases). I carry it everywhere: in my bed, in my car, at the park, on a hike, in a boat, with a goat, in a box, with a fox, in a house, with a mouse, here and there, I carry it anywhere! I do so like this guitar! Thank you! Thank you, Traveler! 2) despite it's size, it is a 100% full sized 25.5" scale. This was very important for me because, as a beginner, I did not want to train on a short scale just to suffer when I picked up a full scale. Trust me, you want to get used to a full scale and then if you pick up a smaller guitar, it will be easy. It kind of makes me wonder, why aren't all solid body electric guitars this size?? Seriously, why do they need to be any bigger?? 3) it's a solid body. I like this because it's QUIET. If you want to get better at guitar, you have to practice a lot, but nobody wants to hear a noob practice on a dreadnought all day. Also, the solid body makes it smaller and more durable for traveling. 4) it's an "acoustic" style. This means it uses acoustic strings, which are thicker (including a wound G-string) and at a higher tension than electric strings. Read: harder to play. I liked this from a practice perspective. Again, I think it's important I get accustomed to acoustic strings, so when I play an electric, it's like child's play and a confidence booster. If you disagree with my theory here, well Traveler also makes electric (EG-1 and EC-1), and nylon classical, versions of this guitar, so the choice is yours. Note, it uses completely standard guitar strings, so you can replace them with whatever is your favorite. 5) it has a built in tuner. nobody ever talks about this, but I love built in tuners. One less thing to carry around - especially important when we're talking about travel guitars. The electric version EG-1 has one too, but not the EC-1. 6) it has a built in headphone amp. Sounds good unplugged, but if you want to jam a little harder by yourself, just plug headphones directly in. Of course, it has a standard amp output too. 7) some have expressed concern about the in-body tuners. I think they are fabulous and have great tuning stability. In fact, I think it's even better than headstock tuners that are prone to getting shifted when it brushes up against a wall, your body, or you have young curious kids who turn them when you're not looking. Why aren't all guitars headless these days?? The tuners are nicely protected in the body. I find there is ample space to fit your fingers to tune them and the holes do not get in my way, even when I'm playing fingerstyle. It's slightly awkward crossing your arms to pick a string and tune at the same time, but really not an issue. The actual tuners seem pretty standard, so I'm sure you can replace with one of your choice, and I noticed Traveler sells a locking tuners upgrade, but I don't think they need them. 8) I think the mahogany version looks amazing. The tales are true that if you are attracted to your guitar, you will want to pick it up and play more. Conclusion: This guitar will make you play more than any other guitar = will make you better. IMO, as a beginner, you should be less concerned about tone nuances and more concerned about getting your hours in. I would definitely consider the EG-1 or EC-1 electric versions in the future. Some minor criticisms: 1) now the sound sucks. But what do you expect with a solid body "acoustic"? You're not going to be gigging in front of a huge audience with this thing. The sound is solely created from a piezo pickup under the saddle. From what I've read, piezo pickups on normal acoustic guitars are one of the least desirable ways to record your instrument. So this is piezo without any acoustic sound to help out. It sounds weird plugged in (headphones or amp), fake sounding acoustic sound, and it's got some gain/sustain, which is weird for an "acoustic". But sound quality is not why you should be buying this. Again, if this turns you off, check out their humbucked electric versions, which I assume sound like normal electric guitars. 2) the top edge of the body is razor sharp and very uncomfortable on the forearm. Also note, the black "binding" I believe is just a strip of paint for looks. The back has a rounder edge, so they should really round the top for the next generation. 3) there's no pick guard, and it definitely needs it. I was very light on it in the beginning and it already has tiny scratch marks. I've seen this happen to others too. I made my own pick guard with clear packing tape, which works very well. I highly recommend everyone make a pick guard before they start playing.
R**I
Travel partner
This is a well crafted guitar. Light, great action, built in tuner, very light and portable.
D**B
Great guitar for my van travels and is fun and educational at home too. Pretty guitar!
This is a great guitar (my first travel electric). It plays nice. The body is big enough to rest my forearm on it. Its not neck-heavy, yet light and balanced. Only 4 stars on "thickness category" because the neck could be a little thinner but no complaints here. A sales point for me was that I could plug my phone into it and play Ultimate Guitar app, YouTube or whatever to play through the amp. The 3 dot tuner doesn't compare to a Snark (which clamps nicely on the stubby head). I coupled this with a Blackstar 3W amp. Everything fits nicely in my van.
P**K
Sounds thin
I have owned many piezo pickup acoustics and this one sounded really thin and bad even after working with an EQ pedal for a while. It looks great and like it is well made. It was almost perfectly in tunes out of the box, I just thought it sounded week especially with single note flatpicking. It might work pretty well if all you are looking to use it for is strumming chords.
R**M
Well crafted instrument.
Been playing this beauty for the past two years. Such an awesome instrument for recliner practicing. It has a full scale neck in a small package. Excellent materials always produce excellent tones. This guitar is very well made and put together. Piezo pickup and built in electronics that allows for ear buds and an input for play along practice. Excellent action and playability right out of the box. I’ve bought dozens of guitars and always take them to my local tech to do a pro set up. Didn’t have to with this guitar. Even without earbuds, you can hear the ambient tone. With earbuds, it sounds like you’re playing a full box acoustic. I cannot say enough good about this instrument. Love this little guitar!
M**R
Best Travel Acoustic. Great Sound
I am planning a trip and I have my guitar, as I will be playing for a family gathering outside. So, I need to travel on an airplane with it. I need portability to the outside venue and I need a good sound. After reading so many reviews, and looking at options for several hours, I finally decided on the Mark III. I received it yesterday. I have been playing it for several hours and I have to say, I love this guitar. If you plug into a decent amp, the sound is great. It does not have the full sound of my Fender. It's a solid body, and it's better than I expected. Also, it feels the same. With headphones, it is very quiet. I highly recommend the Mark III. I am also using the Donner Mini Guitar Amp for portability.
A**R
A fine, compact instrument.
This is a great little guitar! I am very pleased to add this to my collection. I bought it for office use, but I find that I am using it to record in my studio. Plays like an electric guitar. Low action. Tone woods are good. I use a spark amp, or other plugin with DAW to get sound I want. Those who complain of native sound quality might consider lowering the guitar volume. It is a bit thumpy without modulation. All in all - i could not be more pleased.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
2 weeks ago