Calculate base weight, total pack weight, Big Three, and body-weight ratio
Knowing exactly how much your backpack weighs before you hit the trail is one of the most important things you can do as an outdoor enthusiast. Carrying too much weight leads to fatigue, joint pain, blisters, and an overall miserable experience — especially on multi-day trips. Carrying too little (if that is even possible) means leaving behind gear that could be critical to safety and comfort. This free backpack weight calculator gives you a complete picture of everything in your pack, organized by category, with dual display in both pounds and kilograms. The calculator separates your gear into two fundamental categories that every experienced backpacker understands: base weight and consumable weight. Base weight is the weight of everything in your pack that you carry the entire trip — shelter, sleep system, clothing, cooking gear, safety equipment, and electronics. Consumable weight is food, water, and fuel — items that get lighter as the trip progresses. Your total pack weight is the sum of both. Understanding this distinction lets you optimize intelligently: your base weight is fixed and can only be reduced by gear upgrades, while consumable weight simply shrinks day by day. The Big Three — your shelter, sleep system, and pack itself — typically account for 60 to 70 percent of a backpacker's base weight. Experienced ultralight hikers know that optimizing these three items has the greatest impact on pack weight. Our Big Three Optimizer section breaks down exactly how much each of these categories contributes to your base weight, helping you identify where an upgrade would save the most weight. The 20 percent rule is the widely accepted guideline for safe backpacking: your total pack weight should not exceed 20 percent of your body weight. At 25 percent, you significantly increase your risk of fatigue and injury. Our calculator shows you exactly where your pack falls relative to your body weight and provides visual warnings when you approach or exceed safe thresholds. We have included gear weight estimators for consumables: food at the standard backpacking rate of 1.5 pounds per person per day, and water at 2.2 pounds per liter carried. These estimates help you plan even before you have packed your bag. Of course, you can always enter exact weights instead. Weight classifications help you benchmark your pack against established standards: Ultralight (base weight under 10 lbs / 4.5 kg), Lightweight (10–20 lbs / 4.5–9 kg), Traditional (20–30 lbs / 9–13.5 kg), and Heavy (over 30 lbs / 13.5 kg). Most recreational backpackers fall in the Traditional range, while dedicated ultralight hikers aim for Lightweight or Ultralight. Three convenient trip presets — Day Hike, Weekend Trip, and Thru-Hike — pre-fill typical gear selections to get you started quickly. You can then customize weights and check or uncheck items to match your actual kit.
Understanding Backpack Weight
What Is Base Weight?
Base weight is the total weight of all non-consumable gear in your pack — everything you carry from the first mile to the last. This includes your shelter (tent, tarp, or bivy), sleep system (sleeping bag or quilt and sleeping pad), the backpack itself, clothing layers, cooking gear, water treatment equipment, safety and navigation tools, hygiene items, and electronics. Base weight does NOT include food, water you will drink, or fuel, because those items get consumed and become lighter as your trip progresses. Base weight is the primary metric used to classify backpacking style: Ultralight (under 10 lbs), Lightweight (10–20 lbs), Traditional (20–30 lbs), and Heavy (over 30 lbs). Reducing base weight requires gear investment — swapping a heavy tent for an ultralight shelter, a synthetic sleeping bag for a down quilt, or a standard pack for a frameless ultralight design.
How Is Pack Weight Calculated?
Total pack weight equals base weight plus consumable weight. Base weight is the sum of all gear items in your pack that are not consumed during the trip. Consumable weight is the sum of food, water, and fuel you are carrying. For food, the standard estimate used by most backpackers is 1.5 pounds per person per day (approximately 680 grams); traditional backpackers may carry up to 2 lbs per day. For water, the weight is simply the liters you carry multiplied by 2.2 pounds per liter (water density is 1 kg per liter). The Big Three weight is the sum of your shelter, sleep system, and pack itself — these three categories typically represent 60–75% of base weight for most hikers. Pack weight as a percentage of body weight is calculated as (total pack weight / body weight) × 100. The recommended maximum is 20%, with 25% being the absolute maximum before injury risk increases significantly.
Why Backpack Weight Matters
Every extra pound in your pack increases energy expenditure, joint stress, and fatigue. Research suggests that each additional pound on your back increases oxygen consumption by approximately 1%, meaning a 10-pound overloaded pack costs you roughly 10% more energy over the entire hike. For multi-day trips, this compounds significantly. Joint and spine health is also at stake — packs exceeding 25% of body weight substantially increase the risk of knee pain, lower back strain, and shoulder injuries. Beyond physiology, pack weight directly affects trip enjoyment: lighter packs allow faster miles, more energy at camp, and better ability to handle unexpected terrain. The 20% guideline exists precisely because it balances carrying enough gear for safety with not carrying so much that performance and enjoyment suffer. Day hikers should target under 10% of body weight, while backpackers aim for 15–20%.
Limitazioni di Questo Calcolatore
This calculator uses estimated or user-entered weights, which may differ from your actual gear weights. Gear weights vary by brand, model, and year — always verify against your specific product specifications or weigh items on a kitchen scale for the most accurate results. The food weight estimator uses the standard 1.5 lbs/day figure, but actual caloric needs vary widely by activity intensity, altitude, temperature, and individual metabolism. Some hikers carry 2 lbs/day on high-exertion trips. Water needs also depend heavily on temperature, humidity, and exertion. The body-weight percentage guidelines (20% rule) are general recommendations, not medical advice — individual fitness levels, age, and physical condition affect how much weight any person can safely carry. Worn items (clothing, shoes, hat) are not included in pack weight calculations, though they contribute to total carried weight. Finally, this calculator does not account for pack fit, load distribution, or ergonomic factors that significantly affect how heavy a pack feels on the trail.
How to Use the Backpack Weight Calculator
Set Your Units and Body Weight
Choose imperial (oz/lbs) or metric (g/kg) based on your preference. Enter your body weight so the calculator can determine what percentage of your body weight your pack represents — the 20% rule is the key safety guideline for backpacking.
Select Trip Type and Apply a Preset
Choose your trip duration and activity type, then optionally apply a preset (Day Hike, Weekend, or Thru-Hike) to pre-fill typical gear selections. You can then check or uncheck individual items and adjust their weights to match your actual gear.
Check All Your Gear and Enter Weights
Work through each category — Shelter, Sleep System, Backpack, Clothing, Cooking, Water, Safety, Hygiene, Electronics, and Extras. Check every item you are bringing and enter its actual weight. Default weights are typical values, but accurate results require your actual gear weights (check the product packaging or manufacturer website).
Add Consumables and Review Results
Enter food, water, and fuel weights in the Consumables section, or use the estimators (1.5 lbs/day for food, 2.2 lbs/liter for water). Review your base weight, total weight, Big Three breakdown, body-weight percentage, and weight classification. Export the CSV for a printable gear list to take on your trip.
Domande Frequenti
What is the 20% rule for backpack weight?
The 20% rule states that your total pack weight (including food, water, and fuel) should not exceed 20% of your body weight. For example, a 160 lb hiker should carry no more than 32 lbs. This guideline comes from sports medicine and hiking safety research showing that packs exceeding 20% of body weight significantly increase joint stress, energy expenditure, and injury risk. Some sources use 25% as the absolute maximum. Day hikers typically aim for under 10% of body weight, while thru-hikers often target 15–20% to stay efficient over hundreds of miles.
What is base weight and why does it matter?
Base weight is the total weight of all gear in your pack excluding consumables — food, water, and fuel. It includes your shelter, sleep system, backpack, clothing, cooking equipment, safety gear, and everything else that stays in your pack the entire trip. Base weight matters because it is the weight you can actually control through gear choices. Consumable weight decreases naturally as you eat and drink, but base weight only changes when you swap, remove, or add gear. Ultralight backpackers focus obsessively on base weight, targeting under 10 lbs for maximum efficiency. Traditional backpackers typically carry 20–30 lbs base weight.
What are the Big Three in backpacking?
The Big Three refers to shelter, sleep system, and backpack — the three heaviest gear categories for most backpackers. Combined, these typically account for 60–75% of total base weight. The standard Big Three for traditional backpackers might weigh 12–20 lbs (tent 3–5 lbs, sleeping bag 2–4 lbs, pack 4–6 lbs), while ultralight hikers get the Big Three under 10 lbs using tarps or Dyneema tents, down quilts, and frameless ultralight packs. Optimizing the Big Three provides the greatest single return on investment for reducing pack weight — often cutting 5–10 lbs compared to standard gear.
How much should food weigh for a backpacking trip?
The standard backpacking food weight estimate is 1.5 pounds (680 grams) per person per day. This figure is based on typical freeze-dried and dehydrated trail food with high caloric density. Some hikers on high-exertion routes or in cold weather carry up to 2 lbs per day. At 1.5 lbs/day, a 5-day trip adds 7.5 lbs of food weight. Thru-hikers often aim for 100 calories per ounce and carry 1.25–1.5 lbs/day to stay efficient. For the most accurate estimate, weigh your actual planned food at home before your trip.
How heavy is water when backpacking?
Water weighs exactly 2.2 pounds (1 kg) per liter. A standard 2-liter carry adds 4.4 lbs to your pack. Most backpackers carry 1–3 liters depending on water source availability on the trail — desert trips may require 4–6 liters between sources. The weight of your water system also adds up: a Sawyer Squeeze filter is 3 oz, a SteriPen UV purifier is 3–4 oz, and a 2-liter hard bottle adds 12 oz. Soft flasks are lighter at 1–2 oz each. Plan your water carries carefully — it is one of the most variable and heaviest components of your pack.
What pack volume do I need for backpacking?
Pack volume depends on trip length, season, and gear choice. Day hikes typically use 20–35 liter packs. Weekend trips (1–3 nights) fit well in 35–50 liter packs if using compact gear. Week-long trips require 50–65 liters. Multi-week expeditions or winter trips with bulkier gear often need 65–80+ liters. Ultralight backpackers frequently use smaller packs than traditional backpackers because their gear compresses more. The best way to choose is to gather all your gear, compress everything as you would pack it, and measure against what fits. A pack that is too large encourages overpacking.