HOW TO PACK
A HIKING
BACKPACK
PROPERLY
The difference between a brutal hike and a great one is often just how your pack is loaded. Master the zones, distribute the weight, and hit the trail with a pack that works with your body — not against it.
Understanding the 5 Zones of Your Pack
Every hiking backpack has five distinct zones, each designed for a specific category of gear. Knowing what goes where is the foundation of comfortable, balanced carrying.
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Top / Lid Zone
Essentials you need during the hike without stopping — snacks, sunscreen, map, first aid, headlamp, rain jacket.
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Core Zone (closest to back)
Heaviest items packed tight against your spine — tent body, water reservoir, food bear can, stove. This is the balance point.
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Lower Zone
Lighter, bulky items that cushion the base — sleeping bag, sleeping pad (if internal), extra clothes.
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Front Pocket
Frequently accessed mid-hike items — trekking pole tips, trash bag, camp shoes, lightweight layers.
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Hip Belt Pockets
Phone, snacks, lip balm, energy gels — anything you grab every 20 minutes without taking the pack off.
How to Pack Your Backpack in 8 Steps
Follow these steps in order. Each one builds on the last — skipping steps is how packs end up uncomfortable and unbalanced on the trail.
Lay Everything Out First
Spread every item you plan to carry on the ground in front of you. Group by category: shelter, sleep system, clothing, food, water, safety, and navigation. This single step reveals what you’re actually bringing — and makes it obvious what you don’t need.
Pack the Sleep System at the Bottom
Your sleeping bag and any sleeping pad that fits internally go in first. These are the lightest and bulkiest items you’re carrying — they create a stable cushioned base and keep the heavy gear higher up where it belongs. Compress your sleeping bag as tightly as it will go before placing it.
Load Heavy Items Against Your Spine
This is the most important step. Heavy gear — tent body, food canister, stove, full water reservoir — goes in the middle of the pack pressed as close to your back as possible. This keeps the center of gravity near your own center of gravity, reducing strain on your shoulders and lower back dramatically. Never put heavy items at the bottom or far from your back.
Fill Gaps with Medium-Weight Clothing
Pack clothing and medium-weight gear around your heavy items to fill any air pockets. A fully packed pack is more stable than one with empty spaces that allow gear to shift during the hike. Roll clothes tightly — they compress better and create less dead space than folded garments.
Place Mid-Day Essentials at the Top
The top of the main compartment is prime real estate — easy to access without digging. Rain jacket, first-aid kit, water filter, sunscreen, hat, and any items you’ll need for breaks should live here. Don’t overfill: the top of the main compartment should be accessible in under 10 seconds.
Load the Lid with Trail Snacks & Map
The top lid pocket — the detachable flap on many packs — is for items you access constantly: snacks, lip balm, trail map, headlamp, and anything else you reach for every hour. On warmer days this is also where your next water bottle or electrolyte tabs live. In an emergency, the lid pocket should hold your most critical items in case you need to ditch the main pack.
Attach External Gear Carefully
Trekking poles, a wet tent fly, and sleeping pads too large to fit inside can be lashed to the outside. Keep external attachment to a minimum — every item strapped outside swings your center of gravity and catches on brush. Use compression straps to cinch everything tight against the pack body. Wet or muddy gear goes outside in stuff sacks to keep the interior dry.
Put It On and Adjust All Straps
Put the loaded pack on. Start with the hip belt — tighten it until it sits on your hip bones, not your waist. Then tighten shoulder straps until they’re snug without gaps. Pull the load lifter straps (the short straps angling up from the shoulder straps to the frame) to bring the top of the pack closer to your back. Finally adjust the sternum strap across your chest. Walk 30 steps — if something digs or sways, adjust before you hit the trail.
6 Common Packing Mistakes to Avoid
Heavy gear at the bottom
Placing tent or food at the bottom drops your center of gravity, making every step feel like you’re being pulled backward.
Fix → Heavy items mid-pack, against backWater bottle buried inside
Digging for water mid-hike leads to stops every 30 minutes. Water should always be accessible from the side pockets or hip belt.
Fix → Side pockets or hip belt alwaysAir pockets and loose space
Empty space lets gear shift every step. A pack that moves around your back costs 15–20% more energy over a long day.
Fix → Fill gaps with rolled clothingLoose shoulder straps
Shoulder straps that aren’t properly fitted put all weight on your lower back instead of transferring 70–80% to your hips as intended.
Fix → Fit hip belt first, then strapsToo much external gear
Items hanging from the outside swing and catch on vegetation, throwing off balance with every step and increasing fatigue.
Fix → Minimise external attachmentNo rain cover or dry bags
An unexpected rain shower can soak your sleeping bag through a nylon pack in under 20 minutes. Waterproofing is not optional.
Fix → Pack cover + dry bags for sleep gearThe Essential Packing Checklist
Use this checklist the night before every hike. Print it, screenshot it, or memorise the three categories — you’ll never forget something critical again.
🏕️ Shelter & Sleep
- Tent (body + poles + stakes)
- Sleeping bag (rated for temp)
- Sleeping pad
- Pack rain cover
- Tarp or bivy (optional)
- Dry bags for sleep system
🥾 Navigation & Safety
- Trail map (paper backup)
- Compass
- First aid kit
- Headlamp + spare batteries
- Emergency whistle
- Fire starter
- Emergency blanket
🍎 Food & Water
- Water (2L minimum)
- Water filter or purifier
- Meals for each day +1
- Trail snacks (accessible)
- Stove + fuel
- Cookpot + utensils
- Bear canister (if required)
PACK SMART. HIKE FURTHER.
A properly packed backpack doesn’t feel like a backpack — it feels like part of your body. When the weight is centred, the straps are fitted, and everything has its place, you stop thinking about your pack and start thinking about the trail.
Follow the five zones, keep the heavy items high and close to your back, sort your gear by access frequency, and check your total weight before you leave. Do those four things and you’ll hike further, feel stronger at the end of the day, and wake up the next morning ready to do it again.