My flight bag is just a sport duffle.
If you wear glasses and plan on continuing on to your instrument rating I suggest an old school hood. Easier to manage and doubles as a sun visor. Also better than foggles imo.
Link
I also recommend a Sentry. Connects with FF and also has a CO monitor.
I started with DCs off of eBay. Still have them and that’s what the wife gets. I now have a pair of Lightspeed Sierras that I bought from
@pigpenracing
When I fly with a cfi or cfii I also have a voice recorder that plugs into the intercom with a pigtail. Super helpful for remembering everything your cfi tells you in the air that goes in one ear and out the other.
I prefer pen and paper in the cockpit. Some use the electronic writing, Apple Pencil or whatever. When the sheet hits the fan or just to make sure you have it, better to use paper and pen.
Two portable lights and batteries (AA and AAA).
For your written and oral you better make sure you can do everything via what is in the plane. No iPad, etc. You will need a manual E6B or something like a CX3. Just stick with the manual version it’s easier. My oral didn’t really get into the flight planning stuff in detail but yours might.
Since I fly out of a Bravo, or from under a Bravo (depends on the airport) I do keep a yoke mount for my iPad mini which I generally use every flight. It works in all of the club planes. I also carry a full size iPad as a backup along with my iPhone. And paper sectionals but not necessarily current. If I have to refer to them when all else fails I’ll probably be the subject of a thread here.
What else? I use a Garmin watch to track flights. Nice to go back and look at how approaches, holds or patterns look. Also great for exact miles flown and helping track fuel burn more efficiently. Also bring a portable charger for my phone and iPad.
I bring along water, my logbook which has my current medical taped inside, my license to drill holes in the sky, my DL and a credit card. I also bring cash along on extended trips for tips to line crew or FBOs if I use a crew car. Also if you wear glasses, a second set is recommended just in case as noted above.
Paper towels, a quality Phillips and flathead screwdriver, a portable radio and if carrying passengers barf bags. And dang close once to needing them. Wife normally is fine but felt a bit sick one flight. We think she ate too much the morning of. I landed, made it to parking, and she was like “I need out now”. Thankfully a line guy was there with a cart and he took her to the FBO right away.
All that junk fits in the duffle easily except for a second headset.