Sweet Spot of Weight, Performance, and Cost

Venn Diagram of the Sweet Spot of Weight, Performance, and Cost

Table of Contents

Trade-off between Weight, Performance (Including Durability), and Cost

The most common mistake of beginners is to underestimate the importance of weight. They try to save money by buying heavy gear but end up wasting money because they later must upgrade to lighter gear. 

Through-hikers say, “Ounces make pounds.” They go to great lengths to shave off a few ounces–drilling holes in toothbrush handles, cutting straps off packs, and spending thousands of dollars on ultralight gear. That’s overkill for casual backpackers, but you might find that weight is more important than you expected. A 35-lb pack might not feel heavy when you carry it around your yard, but after lugging it up and down hills for 15 miles, you’ll wish you had bought lighter gear.  

Your loaded pack should weigh less than 20% of your body weight. The maximum is 35 lbs for the average, 180-lb American, but the lighter, the better. Long-distance and fast-paced backpackers carry less than 20 lbs. 

Another common mistake is to spend too much on ultralight gear that isn’t necessary for your hiking conditions. It’s always good to carry the lightest weight possible, but is it necessary to spend an extra $2,000 on ultralight gear if you are only hiking 5 miles per day on level terrain?

Three Rules of Weight, Durability, and Cost

  1. Cheap durable gear isn’t light
  2. Cheap lightweight gear isn’t durable
  3. Lightweight durable gear isn’t cheap

Sweet Spot

Low-end, High-end, and Sweet-spot Conditions

Low-endSweet SpotHigh-end
• Heavy gear
• Less than 5 miles/day
• Low elevation gain
• Uncomfortable
• Warm temperatures
• Excellent physical shape
• Not far from car
• Moderate to light-weight gear
• Less than 15 miles/day
• Moderate elevation gain
• Comfortable
• Temperatures down to freezing
• Average physical shape
• Ultralight gear
• Up to 30 miles/day
• High elevation gain
• Very comfortable while hiking
• Separate gear for each temperature range

Example Costs and Weights of Low-end, High-end, and Sweet-spot Gear

Low-end ProductWeight (oz)Cost ($)Sweet-spot ProductWeight (oz)Cost ($)High-end ProductWeight (oz)Cost ($)
Backpack (55 L)Bseash 60L64$40REI Flash 5545$199Hyperlite Mountain Gear Southwest 55 32.5$379
TentColeman Sundome109$70Lanshan Ultralight 3-Season Backpacking Tent45$160ZPacks Duplex Flex28$818
Sleeping bag (20°)SAEROVIE 20° Mummy Sleeping Bag64$37Kelty Cosmic 20 Down39$120Therm-a-Rest Hyperion 2021$550
Total237 oz$147129 oz$47981.5 oz$1747