Hiking Packing List

Trail-ready from day one. Packster builds your hiking packing list around your route, distance, weather, and terrain so you carry exactly what you need.

36 items across 5 categories — AI-tailored to your destination

Hiking safety and comfort depend entirely on having the right gear. Too much and you're carrying unnecessary weight; too little and you're underprepared for changing mountain weather. Packster checks the forecast for your hiking destination, factors in your route distance and terrain type, and builds a list that balances safety with pack weight.

Sample Hiking Trip Packing List

Clothing

  • Moisture-wicking base layer
  • Mid-layer fleece or insulating jacket
  • Waterproof shell jacket
  • Waterproof trousers / rain pants
  • Convertible hiking trousers
  • Wool or synthetic hiking socks (2 pairs per day)
  • Merino wool underwear
  • Sun hat / wide-brim cap
  • Warm hat and gloves (alpine)
  • Gaiters (for mud/snow)

Footwear

  • Hiking boots (waterproof, ankle support)
  • Camp sandals or lightweight shoes
  • Boot laces (spare set)
  • Blister prevention (moleskin, body glide)

Navigation & Safety

  • Trail map (downloaded offline)
  • Compass
  • Emergency whistle
  • Headlamp + spare batteries
  • First aid kit
  • Emergency bivvy bag
  • Multi-tool or knife
  • Fire starter (multi-day)
  • Personal locator beacon (remote routes)

Hydration & Nutrition

  • Water bottles or hydration bladder (2–3L capacity)
  • Water filter or purification tablets
  • High-energy snacks (trail mix, bars)
  • Electrolyte tablets
  • Lightweight camp meals (multi-day)
  • Cook kit and stove (multi-day)

Pack & Shelter

  • Hiking backpack (30–70L depending on trip length)
  • Rain cover for pack
  • Trekking poles (knee protection on descents)
  • Tent or tarp (multi-day)
  • Sleeping bag (rated for conditions)
  • Sleeping mat or pad
  • Pack liner (waterproof bags inside pack)

Expert packing tips for your hiking trip

  • 01

    Cotton kills — on the trail, cotton holds moisture, dries slowly, and causes hypothermia. Choose wool or synthetic fabrics.

  • 02

    The 10 Essentials (navigation, headlamp, first aid, fire, shelter, knife, nutrition, hydration, clothing, communication) should always be in your pack.

  • 03

    Break in hiking boots at home for at least 2–3 weeks before a multi-day hike.

  • 04

    Trekking poles reduce knee strain on descents by up to 25% — worth the pack space.

Why use Packster for your hiking trip?

Weather-checked

Packster checks the live forecast for your destination and adjusts your hiking trip list accordingly — no more guessing what to pack for changeable conditions.

Tailored to your activities

Add your planned activities and Packster generates items specific to what you'll be doing — not a generic template that misses what actually matters for your trip.

Nothing forgotten

The AI cross-references your destination, duration, and activity list against thousands of trip patterns to surface the items most commonly forgotten on this type of trip.

Hiking Trip packing — frequently asked questions

What should I pack for a day hike?
For a day hike: hiking boots or trail shoes, moisture-wicking clothing, a waterproof jacket, a daypack (20–30L), 2L of water, snacks, a map and compass, headlamp, first aid kit, and sun protection. Packster generates the full day hike list based on your route distance and weather forecast.
How do I pack light for a multi-day hike?
Focus on the big three: tent, sleeping bag, and backpack. Upgrading to lightweight versions of these can cut 1–2kg immediately. Use merino wool layers (they're lighter and don't need daily washing), pack a lightweight stove system, and aim for 8–10% of your body weight as base pack weight.
What hiking clothing should I pack?
The three-layer system: moisture-wicking base layer (wool or synthetic), insulating mid-layer (fleece or down), and waterproof shell. Never use cotton — it holds moisture and causes hypothermia. Packster selects layers based on the forecast temperature at your hiking destination.
Does Packster adjust the hiking list for different terrains?
Yes. When you add activities to your trip (e.g., "alpine hiking", "jungle trekking", "coastal walks"), Packster adjusts the list accordingly — adding gaiters for alpine conditions, insect-repellent clothing for jungle trekking, or sun protection for exposed coastal routes.

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