Training Science

Weighted Pack Training for Mountaineering: How to Do It Right

Most mountaineers either skip pack training entirely, or pile too much weight on too soon and break themselves before the trip. The right approach lives in the middle. Here is how to use a weighted pack as a real training tool - what to load, how heavy, how often, and when in the training cycle.

Jakob Ulcnik
By Jakob Ulcnik, Founder of Train to Mountain
The short answer

Training with a weighted pack matters more than gym strength for a mountain objective, because it rehearses the exact load you will carry on summit day. Getting it right is mostly about sensible weight progression - building duration first, then adding load gradually rather than going heavy too soon.

Why a weighted pack matters more than gym strength

Mountaineering is a load-carry sport. Every objective above 3000m involves moving a 10-25 kg pack uphill for hours, and on bigger objectives like Aconcagua or Denali, the load can be 20-35 kg between camps. Gym squats and deadlifts build hip extension power, but they do not build the specific endurance, the postural fatigue tolerance, or the muscle resilience that carrying a pack for six straight hours demands.

The transfer from unloaded hiking to loaded hiking is also not linear. A 30-minute walk with a pack feels manageable for most fit people. A 4-hour walk with the same pack reveals every weakness in the shoulders, lower back, hip flexors, and quads that a flat session of squats will never expose. The only way to train for carrying a pack is to carry a pack.

This is also why training for Aconcagua goes wrong for so many otherwise fit climbers. They arrived strong. They had not done the carry work.

How much weight: the progression

Pack weight is a training variable that has to progress, exactly like dumbbell weight or running pace. Adding too much too soon is the most common mistake. Adding too little (or nothing) is the second.

A defensible progression, calibrated to a 75 kg athlete training for a 4000-6000m objective:

Base
Build the habit. Train the postural muscles.
5 to 8 kg · weeks 1-6
Start light. The goal is consistency, not intensity. Two pack sessions per week, 60-90 minutes each. If your back complains, your pack fits wrong or you went too heavy. Pull it down to 4-5 kg and progress weekly.
Build
Add load. Add duration. Keep intensity at Z2.
8 to 14 kg · weeks 7-14
Mid-cycle. Your saturday long hike grows to 3-4 hours with a moderate pack. The midweek session stays shorter (90 min) with a similar pack weight. Add load weekly in 1-2 kg increments. Watch shoulders, hips, and knees.
Specific
Match the trip. Practice pacing under realistic load.
12 to 22 kg · weeks 15-20
Final block before the trip. At least one long hike per week with a pack matching your real summit-day or carry-day load. Five to seven hours on the long day. This is where the body learns to move efficiently under realistic stress.

Pack weight is a dial, not a switch. Most amateurs treat it like a switch.

What to load with

Whatever fills the volume and does not slide around. Specific options, ranked by usefulness:

When in the training week to use it

Pack work is high-stress on the postural and stabilising muscles, even when the heart rate stays in Z2. It pairs well with some sessions and poorly with others.

Common pack-training mistakes

How TTM uses pack weight as a training variable

What the algorithm does with your pack

A representative pack-training week (Build phase)

10 weeks out from a 4000m peak, 10 hours/week budget:

Three pack sessions per week. Pack weight progresses 1-2 kg per week through Build. Pack lives at home with a labelled fill so weight is consistent week to week. The deeper rationale for the polarised distribution is in our heart rate zones for mountaineering guide.

The takeaway

A weighted pack is the most peak-specific training tool a mountaineer owns. Used badly, it injures people. Used well, it builds the load-carry endurance that gym strength cannot. The pattern that works: start light, progress weekly, match the trip's realistic carry weight in the final block, and keep pack sessions to long Z2 days. Get this right, and the carry days on your trip stop being the hard part.

Common questions

What is weighted pack training?

Training with a loaded backpack, usually 8 to 25 kg depending on phase, to simulate the cardiovascular and structural cost of carrying climbing gear up a mountain. It is one of the highest-leverage mountain-specific sessions, because it conditions the shoulders, hips, lower back, and aerobic system in the exact pattern summit day demands.

How heavy should my training pack be?

Start at around 25 to 30 percent of your eventual trip weight (typically 6 to 10 kg) and progress upward across the block. Trip weight is reached only in the final 3 to 4 weeks. Jumping straight to trip weight risks lower-back strain and overload of the cardiovascular system before you have the work capacity to absorb it.

Where should I train with a weighted pack - hills, stairs, or treadmill?

All three work. Real hill terrain is best because it includes descent eccentric load. Stairmaster and treadmill incline are excellent indoor substitutes for the climb portion when terrain is not available. The key is consistent vertical accumulation; the surface matters less than the time-at-load.

Is rucking the same as weighted pack training for mountaineering?

Similar but not identical. Rucking is typically flat or rolling-terrain weighted walking at military-march pace. Mountain pack training is steeper, slower, and progresses pack weight toward objective-specific loads. The cardiovascular pattern overlaps; the mountain version adds the vertical and descent stimulus that flat rucking does not produce.

How often should I do a pack-carry session?

One long pack session per week during the base and build phases (60 to 180 minutes), with progression in either weight or vertical (rarely both at once). Reduce in the taper. Two pack sessions in the same week is reserved for back-to-back summit-rehearsal weekends close to the trip.

Train the pack the right way. Arrive ready.

Train to Mountain calibrates pack weight to your peak, your phase, and your fatigue state - so every weighted session lands at the right load, not too soon and not too late.

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