What To Take To A Hiking Trip? | Pack Smart Now

Bring the Ten Essentials, layered clothing, water plus treatment, trail food, navigation, first aid, and trip-specific extras for a safe hiking trip.

You’re heading for dirt underfoot and views for days. The right kit keeps you comfortable, fed, and ready if plans change. This guide lays out a clear packing list for day walks and overnights.

What To Pack For A Hiking Trip: Quick Selector

Start with a core system, then tailor for distance, weather, and terrain. Use this matrix to match gear to your plan. It covers short local loops to light backpacking.

System Or Item Day Hike Overnight
Navigation Map, compass, phone GPS Map, compass, GPS + spare power
Illumination Headlamp + spare batteries Headlamp + spare batteries
Sun Protection Sunglasses, brim hat, SPF Sunglasses, brim hat, SPF
First Aid Blister care, tape, meds Full kit, meds, foot care
Repair & Tools Knife or multitool, duct tape Knife, repair kit, cord
Fire Lighter + tinder in baggie Lighter, matches, stove fuel
Emergency Shelter Ultralight bivy or space blanket Tarp, tent, or bivy
Insulation Puffy or fleece, rain layer Base, mid, puffy, rain set
Nutrition Snacks, 200–300 kcal/hour Dinner + breakfast + snacks
Hydration 2–3 L water + filter tabs 3–4 L capacity + treatment
Backpack 18–30 L daypack 40–55 L pack
Sleep System Bag or quilt + pad
Cooking Canister stove + pot
Waste WAG bag or trowel + bags WAG bag or trowel + bags

Ten Essentials, Explained

The Ten Essentials concept is a safety net for the backcountry. It groups gear by function so you can handle delays, injury, or a wrong turn. The list includes navigation, illumination, sun protection, first aid, a knife or multitool with repair supplies, fire, emergency shelter, extra food, extra water, and extra layers. For background, see the Mountaineers Ten Essentials overview.

Clothing And Footwear

Dress for movement and variable weather. Go with moisture-wicking base layers, a breathable mid layer, and a wind- and rain-ready shell. Cotton holds moisture and chills fast; quick-dry synthetics or wool manage sweat better. On your feet, trail shoes work on well-made paths; boots add ankle structure on talus or heavy loads.

Layering Tips

Build from the forecast and elevation. A breezy ridge can feel ten degrees cooler than a warm valley. Gloves and a beanie earn their keep most months. In strong sun, a brim hat and UPF shirt cut exposure and reduce sunscreen use on long days.

Fit And Comfort

Try the outfit on with a loaded pack before the trip. Hipbelt, shoulder straps, and sternum strap should carry weight on the hips with even pressure. If hot spots show up on a test walk, change socks or insole now.

Food, Water, And Treatment

Plan snacks you can eat while moving, plus a real break meal. A steady 200–300 calories per hour keeps energy steady. For water, carry at least two liters on cool short days and more in heat. Treat surface water with methods that match the source and the time you have. CDC water-disinfection guidance outlines safe methods, including boiling or a filter followed by a disinfectant when quality is uncertain.

Simple Hydration Setup

Use a soft bottle or bladder for sips on the go. Add a hard bottle for mixing electrolytes. Pack a squeeze filter or chemical tablets; both weigh little and back each other up. At higher elevations, boiling needs more time, so keep fuel in mind if you plan hot drinks.

Navigation And Communication

Carry a paper map in a zip bag and a real compass. Phone apps are handy but batteries die and screens crack. Download offline maps and lock the phone in airplane mode to save power. A small power bank helps. For remote routes, a satellite messenger sends check-ins and SOS signals when cell service drops.

Safety And First Aid

A pocket kit should handle blisters, small cuts, and aches. Add meds you use, and pack any personal prescriptions. Tape fixes more than gear: it secures bandages and seals torn shoes. Keep a whistle on your sternum strap for quick signals. Store all of this in a bright pouch so anyone in your group can find it fast.

Emergency Shelter

An ultralight bivy or heat-reflective blanket weighs almost nothing and blocks wind and rain while you sort a plan. On trips with storms in the forecast, bring a small tarp and guyline.

Weather And Season Add-Ons

Match extras to conditions. In bug season, tuck in head nets and repellent. In shoulder months, pack a warmer mid layer and a waterproof glove. Snow on the trail? Microspikes and trekking poles steady your feet. In desert heat, carry extra water capacity and sun sleeves. Before you go, read a localized mountain forecast and scan hazard outlooks for wind, storm, or fire risk.

Packing And Weight Tips

Balance comfort with preparedness. Share group items like stove and shelter. Use clear stuff sacks for quick ID. Keep the things you need while walking in the top or hip pockets: snacks, phone, map, hat, and a small tube of sunscreen.

Food And Water Planner

Use the guide below to size water and snack ideas by trip length. Adjust for heat, sweat rate, and climbing. When refilling from streams or lakes, treat before you drink.

Duration Water Goal Snack Ideas
2–4 hours 1.5–2 L total Bars, trail mix, fruit leather
4–8 hours 2–3 L total Tortillas + nut butter, jerky, gummies
8–12 hours 3–4 L capacity Wraps, ramen cup, salty chips
Overnight 3–4 L carry + treatment Dehydrated dinner, oatmeal, cocoa

Leave No Trace Basics

Good trips protect the places we visit. Pack a small trowel and bags for microtrash. Camp and rest on durable surfaces and give wildlife space. If your route passes through sensitive areas, learn the Seven Principles from Leave No Trace and apply them from trailhead to car.

Trip-Specific Extras

Tailor your kit to the hike and the crew. Kids need steady snacks and sun gear. Dogs need extra water, a collapsible bowl, and paw care. In bear country, carry a canister where required or hang food well away from camp. Near swift creeks, trekking poles add stability.

Permits And Access

Many parks limit daily entries or campsites. Secure permits in advance, and save digital copies offline. At the trailhead, post your plan with a time window so a friend knows when you’re out.

Step-By-Step Packing Flow

1) Plan: Pick the route, read recent reports, and note distance, gain, temps, water, and bail-outs. 2) Lay Out Gear: Start with the Ten Essentials, then add clothing, food, water, and extras. Pull duplicates. 3) Pack Smart: Heavy items ride close to your back; quick-grab layers on top. 4) Final Checks: Count water bottles, test your headlamp, set offline maps, and tell a contact your return window.

Sample Day Pack Loadout

Here’s a baseline loadout for a six-hour walk in mixed weather. Adjust for terrain and group size: 24 L pack; map, compass, phone in airplane mode; headlamp; brim hat and sunglasses; wind shell and rain shell; first aid with blister kit; multitool; lighter and tinder; emergency bivy; 2.5 L water capacity with a squeeze filter; snacks for 1,200–1,800 calories; trowel and bags; power bank; whistle; trekking poles.

Why This List Works

It’s flexible. The system covers comfort on trail and resilience if something goes sideways. Swap layers for season, bump water and salt on hot days, and scale food to hours and effort. Keep the functions in mind, and you’ll pack fast with fewer second guesses.

Sources and further reading embedded above: the Mountaineers’ Ten Essentials overview and CDC guidance on field water disinfection offer clear, practical standards you can apply on any route.