Fitting a Backpack


This article was reproduced from the REI Learn and Share web site.

How to Fit a Backpack

Forget about the color and the fancy logos. What really matters when selecting a new backpack is making sure that it's a good fit for your body.

You want to choose a pack well suited to your individual dimensions, then you need to customize it to your body shape. Here are some tips to help you accomplish that:

Determine Your Torso Length

Torso length is a crucial measurement. It is important to distinguish between your height and the length of your torso. Just because you are a certain height — say a 5' 9" female or 6' male — does not mean you automatically need a "large" or "tall" pack. Your torso length, not your height, determines your pack size. Here's how to measure yours: Generally, your measurement will fall into one of these frame-size categories:

Small: Up to 17 1/2".

Medium/Regular: 18" to 19 1/2".

Large/Tall: 20" and up.

Pack manufacturers typically use general terms (small, medium, large) to identify their frame sizes; look at each pack's technical specifications to find the actual numeric range. REI.com lists those numbers in a chart that accompanies each pack description.

A person with a measurement right on the border (say, 17 3/4") might want to visit an REI store to try on both a small and medium version of a particular pack. REI's product line includes adult packs sized to fit torso lengths as compact as 14" (10" for children) and as long as 23". If your measurement lies outside that range, you might require a custom-built pack.

Determine Your Hip Measurement

While not as crucial as your torso length, your hip measurement is useful to know. It's very helpful if you are considering a pack that offers interchangeable hipbelts.

Take your tape measure and wrap it around the top of your hips, the "latitude line" where you can feel your iliac crest — those two pointy bones just above the front pocket on your pants. A properly positioned hipbelt will straddle your iliac crest, about an inch above and below that line.

Test Fit Your Backpack

At REI, we acknowledge that shopping for a backpack online is not the same as examining the packs firsthand. How do you know if it's going to feel good without first trying it on? A comfortable fit, after all, is crucial to your satisfaction.

Ideally, you should visit an REI store in person and try on some packs. If that's not possible, try the procedure described below at home with any pack you order. If it just doesn't feel right, send it back. We don't want you to try and lug an uncomfortable pack into the wilds. To be fair, you need to keep in mind that no fully loaded pack ever feels truly "comfortable." What you are seeking to avoid is any sharp or unreasonable discomfort.

A Good Fit, Step by Step

If possible, start with about 20 or 30 pounds of weight to place inside the pack: sandbags or weighted pillows supplied by the store; items of personal gear packed into stuff sacks; climbing ropes. (If you're able to visit a store, throw some things in a duffel bag and bring them with you.) Distribute these throughout a pack's interior, keeping the weight close to your body with the heaviest portion near your shoulder blades. Next:

  1. Loosen the pack's shoulder straps, load-adjustment straps and hip belt.
  2. Slip your arms through the shoulder straps.
  3. Position the hipbelt so it basically straddles your hipbones (iliac crest); close the buckle and make the hipbelt straps snug.
    Tips: The belt should completely, comfortably cover your hips, but its 2 ends should not touch. If the belt is too loose or too tight, reposition the buckle pieces on the hipbelt straps. If this doesn't give you a secure fit, you may have to try a different pack or hipbelt. Do not tighten your hipbelt excessively. Keep it snug, but if it's too tight or too long on the trail, you'll have sore spots on your hips the next morning.

  4. Cinch the shoulder straps down tightly, then ease the tension slightly.
  5. Look sideways in a mirror. Check the position of your shoulder straps:
  6. Check your load-lifter straps. These should attach to your shoulder straps at a point just above your collarbone and just below the top of your shoulders. From there, they should rise up to join with the frame at an angle of between 40 and 50 degrees. If the angle is higher than that, your frame is too long. Any lower and your shoulders will carry too much of the load.
  7. Check the shoulder strap length and width:
  8. Check for a good torso fit. If the pack fits you correctly, you should be able to redistribute the weight of the pack between your shoulders and your hips simply by loosening and tightening your shoulder straps slightly.

    Tip: Make any adjustments by moving the shoulder harness up or down, using whatever means the individual pack provides. On a "ladder" system, for instance, you can rethread the webbing and fasten it at a new position on the ladder.

  9. Adjust the sternum strap. Position it about 2" below your collarbone. You should be able to breathe comfortably when the strap is fastened. It is not essential that you keep your sternum strap fastened at all times. It is most helpful when you are negotiating uneven terrain.
  10. Check for comfort:
This may seem like a lot to keep in mind, but all of the above will become automatic as you gain experience. Now walk around with your pack. Climb and descend a flight of stairs. Hop from spot to spot. Reach. Walk a line. If anything is pinching, try adjusting the various straps.

Additional Considerations

Bending the stays: The stays that serve as the frame of internal-frame packs are almost always removable and can be bent to conform to the contours of your torso. How meticulously and precisely should they be bent? It's a matter of choice. It's usually sufficient to give the stays a modest bending so they follow your spine's natural S-shape.

Ask for help from a friend. Have that person hold the bottom of 1 stay against the back of your hip, then mark with a pencil or tape the spots where your spine makes its biggest curves. Place the marked portions of the stay on the edge of a firm, durable surface and gradually bend the stay to assume the desired shape.

Breaking in your pack: Ideally, make your first trip with your new pack a short one. You can make some modest adjustments during rest stops. Over time, with regular wear, items such as internal stays and the padded hipbelt will conform to your body configuration.

How to Hoist a Loaded Backpack

Once you stuff your backpack, how do you get that big honker on your back? Try these steps:
  1. With the pack sitting upright on the ground, move one of your legs close to it and, with one hand, grab the pack's haul loop. (That's the half-circle of webbing stitched into the pack just above the shoulder harness.)
  2. Using a wide stance with knees bent, slide the pack up the side of your calf. Bring it up to your thigh and let it rest. Your thigh should be roughly parallel with the ground.
  3. Steady the pack with one hand. Slip the other arm and shoulder through one of the shoulder straps, pushing your shoulder in as far as you can.
  4. Without any abrupt or jerking motion, swing the pack onto your back and slip your arm through the other shoulder strap.
  5. Buckle the hipbelt first, then cinch down the shoulder straps. You're set to go! When you're ready to remove the pack, be sure to first loosen the shoulder straps.
Tip: As you walk throughout the day, tinker slightly with the tightness of your hipbelt and shoulder straps. A brief amount of relief might help your hips or shoulders feel less fatigued.

Understanding Backpack Specification Charts

Specification Description
Weight 7 lbs. 9 oz./7 lbs. 13 oz.
Base volume 5,577/5,912 cubic inches
Fits torso 18 - 19/20 - 21 inches
Fits waist/hips 28 - 34/34 - 40 inches
Material Cordura nylon/Spectra nylon
Frame material Aluminum
Number of stays 2
Number of pockets 5 + main compartment

Used as an example, this chart describes the Gregory Robson Pro internal-frame backpack, which REI lists in its category Internal-frame packs — extended trips. Here's how to interpret the information presented on such charts:

Weight: The description lists 2 weights, separated by a slash. This means 2 different frame sizes (designed for 2 different torso lengths) are offered. Internal packs typically weigh between 4 and 8 pounds, so this model is on the heavy side, indicating it is designed for longer, rigorous trips.

Base volume: This is the normal amount of gear-storing space inside a pack, measured in cubic inches. There's also "extended volume," which adds in the extra space made available if you use the "extendable collar" found in most internals and some externals. Typically, this adds 800 to 1,000 cubic inches of additional space.

Note: Keep in mind capacity ratings vary significantly between internal- and external-frame packs. Why? Internals carry sleeping bags in an interior compartment and consume many cubic inches of space — from 800 for a lightweight down bag to 2,500 for a 4-season synthetic bag. Bags are usually lashed to the exterior of an external-frame pack and thus have no impact on the pack's cubic-inch capacity.

Fits torso: Measure your torso as directed in our How to Fit a Backpack clinic; compare your number with the range of measurements shown in the chart. In our Gregory example, the slash indicates 2 frame sizes (medium and large in this case) are offered.

Fits waist/hips: Know your hip measurement and determine if your size is appropriate for a pack's hipbelt. Check the details of the product description to see if a particular pack offers interchangeable parts, such as a hipbelt.

Material: This describes the fabric used for the packbag. In this example 2 grades of material are used: Cordura® (a beefy nylon with a brushed feel) and Spectra® (a nylon fiber—thin, light and strong—used to create ballistics nylon and climbing cordage).

Frame material: This describes what is used in the stays of an internal-frame pack or the tubing of an external-frame pack. Sometimes internal framesheet material, such as high-density polyethylene (HDPE), is included in the description.

Number of stays: "Stays" are flat bars used in internal-frame packs that support the pack. Two is a customary number.

Number of pockets: Typically, external-frame packs will offer more than internals.