AllIn Pack
AllIn Pack
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90 Liters. Every Day. Every Trail. All In.
Some hikers do weekend trips. AllIn Pack is built for the ones who go further, stay longer, and never come back until the mountains are done with them. When you are packing for five days of backcountry wilderness, a multi-week expedition, or a basecamp setup that needs to carry everything from sleeping gear to cooking systems to emergency kit, you cannot afford a pack that runs out of room on day two. AllIn Pack is the 90-liter internal frame expedition backpack built for hikers and adventurers who go completely all in on the trail. The massive main compartment swallows a full expedition loadout without compression. The bottom sleeping bag compartment keeps your most critical overnight gear separate, protected, and accessible without unpacking everything above it. The padded hipbelt and internal frame transfer the weight of a full 90-liter load onto your body's strongest muscles so your back and shoulders survive the long haul. Multiple exterior compartments keep your most-accessed gear organized and reachable at every rest stop. If you are serious about going deep into the wilderness and staying there, AllIn Pack is the only pack built to match that commitment.
✅ Full 90-Liter Expedition Main Compartment AllIn Pack is built with a genuine 90-liter main compartment engineered to carry a complete multi-day expedition loadout including tent, sleeping system, clothing, food, cooking gear, and safety equipment simultaneously, which means you pack everything your trip demands without leaving critical comfort or safety items behind due to space limitations, so that you spend more nights on the mountain and less time rationing gear choices because your pack could not handle what the wilderness actually requires.
✅ Dedicated Bottom Sleeping Bag Compartment AllIn Pack features a fully separated bottom sleeping bag compartment with its own independent zip access panel below the main body, which means your sleeping bag loads and unloads independently without disturbing or unpacking any of the gear stacked above it in the main compartment, so that you access your most critical overnight warmth system quickly and cleanly at camp without turning your entire pack inside out at the end of a long exhausting day on the trail.
✅ Internal Frame Load Transfer System AllIn Pack is built with a full internal frame that runs the entire height of the pack and connects directly to the padded hipbelt suspension, which means the full weight of a loaded 90-liter expedition pack transfers off your spine and shoulders and onto your hips and legs where your body is structurally built to carry heavy loads over long distances, so that you cover serious daily mileage under a full expedition load without your upper body breaking down before the trail is finished.
Multi-Compartment Exterior Organization System AllIn Pack features multiple independent exterior zip compartments across the front, sides, and top of the pack sized for layering systems, navigation gear, first aid, food, and fast-access trail essentials, which means every category of gear has its own dedicated exterior zone completely separate from the main compartment, so that you find exactly what you need in seconds at any rest stop, river crossing, or weather change without unpacking a single item from the main body to get to it.

Cheap 80-Liter Packs Collapse Under Real Weight — The ExpeditionMax 80 Carries Your Full Expedition Load And Distributes It Like It Should
The 80-Liter Pack That Actually Distributes Weight The Way It Should.
Ready To Carry A Full Week Of Gear Without Your Pack Failing Or Your Body Breaking Down?
80 Liters That Actually Handles 80 Liters Of Weight
Instead of loading a massive pack for an expedition and watching it sag, stretch, and lose its structure under the weight by day two, the ExpeditionMax 80's reinforced construction and durable materials hold their shape and integrity under heavy loads for the duration of your trip, which means you're not nursing a failing pack when you're three days from the nearest trailhead. Just load it and trust it.
Weight Distribution That Saves Your Shoulders And Back
Instead of carrying 50-60 pounds stacked directly on your shoulders like a punishment while your waist strap does nothing useful, the ExpeditionMax's ergonomic suspension system and load-bearing hip belt transfer the weight down to your hips where your body can actually handle it, which means you're not limping into camp every night with destroyed shoulders and a wrecked upper back. Just hike the way you're supposed to.
Organized Compartments For A Week Of Gear
Instead of dumping seven days of food, clothes, gear, and equipment into one giant cavity and spending half your trip digging through it like a landfill, the ExpeditionMax 80 uses multiple compartments and pockets so your kit stays sorted — tent here, sleeping bag there, food separated from clothes, first aid accessible, electronics protected, which means you're not unpacking your entire life every time you need something. Just grab what you need and keep moving.
Water-Repellent Nylon That Holds Up To Expedition Abuse
Instead of watching your pack fabric tear, stretch, or soak through after a few days of rocks, dirt, moisture, and trail punishment, the ExpeditionMax's water-repellent nylon shell sheds rain and resists abrasion without degrading over the course of a multi-day trip, which means you're not babying your pack or arriving at the end with gear that's compromised. Just use it the way it's built to be used.
Load It Up. Strap In. Go Farther Without Limits.
Get Yours Now! 👉Here's What Other Hikers Are Saying...
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Carried 65 Pounds For Six Days Straight And The Pack Held Up Perfectly
Loaded the ExpeditionMax with a full week of gear for a backcountry trip — tent, sleeping system, food, water filtration, cooking gear, clothes, the works. Carried it for six days over rough terrain and the pack didn't sag, stretch, or show any signs of giving out. That's the kind of durability you need when you're days from anywhere.
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The Hip Belt Actually Works — First Pack I've Owned Where That's True
Used to carry expedition packs where the hip belt was basically decorative. The ExpeditionMax transfers weight to your hips the way it's supposed to. My shoulders felt normal at the end of every day instead of destroyed. That's the difference between finishing strong and barely finishing at all.
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The Organization Saved Me Hours Over A Week-Long Trip
At 80 liters you're carrying a lot of gear. Having it organized into compartments instead of one giant pile meant I could find what I needed without unpacking half my kit every time. Over a week that saved me hours of frustration. Small detail, massive impact.
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Took It On A Mountaineering Expedition And It Handled The Abuse
Rocks, ice, wet conditions, heavy loads — the ExpeditionMax took everything we threw at it and came out the other side looking like it could do another week. The water-repellent fabric worked, the stitching held, and the pack never once felt like it was about to fail. That's what expedition gear should be.
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Finally An 80L Pack That Doesn't Feel Like Carrying A Refrigerator
The weight distribution on this pack is the best I've experienced at this capacity. Fully loaded it still feels manageable because the suspension system actually works. Every other massive pack I've owned put all the weight on my shoulders. This one doesn't.
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Used It For A Thru-Hike Section And Carried Everything I Needed For Five Days
No resupply for five days meant carrying everything. The ExpeditionMax held it all — food, gear, water, the works — and the organization kept everything accessible. Didn't have to dig through chaos every time I stopped. Best long-distance pack I've used.
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My Hiking Partner Switched Packs After Day Two Because His Was Destroying Him
Was on a group expedition and my buddy's cheap 80L pack was killing his shoulders by the end of day one. He tried mine on at camp and the difference in comfort was so obvious he bought an ExpeditionMax the day we got back to civilization. Weight distribution matters that much.
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Traveled Internationally With It As My Only Bag For Two Weeks
Packed everything I needed for two weeks of travel and outdoor adventures into the ExpeditionMax and never checked a bag. The organization made airport security easy, the capacity held everything, and the comfort made it bearable to carry through cities and trails. One bag for the entire trip.
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Built My Emergency Kit Around This Pack And It's Actually Ready
Wanted a serious go-bag for emergencies — enough gear and supplies for a week of self-sufficiency. The ExpeditionMax holds everything I need and the suspension system means I can actually carry it and move if I have to. Most emergency packs are too heavy to realistically use. This one isn't.
FAQs
How much weight can the ExpeditionMax 80 actually carry without falling apart?
The pack is built for serious expedition loads — 50 to 70 pounds depending on how you pack and what you're carrying. The reinforced construction, quality stitching, and durable materials are designed around that weight range. This isn't a pack that feels fine at 20 pounds and starts failing at 40. It's engineered for heavy loads over extended trips. The frame holds its structure, the straps don't stretch out, and the seams don't split under stress. If you're doing a week-long trip where you're carrying everything — tent, sleeping system, food, water, cooking gear, clothes, emergency kit — this pack is built for exactly that load.
Does the hip belt actually transfer weight, or is it just there for show like most cheap packs?
It actually works. The hip belt is padded and structured to sit on your hip bones and take the majority of the load off your shoulders. When it's properly adjusted, you should feel 60-70% of the pack weight on your hips, not your shoulders. That's not just comfort — that's biomechanics. Your hips and legs can carry heavy loads all day. Your shoulders and upper back cannot. On a multi-day expedition with a heavy pack, proper weight distribution is the difference between finishing the trip and turning back early because your body gave out. The ExpeditionMax's suspension system is designed around that reality.
How is the 80L capacity organized? Is it just one giant compartment?
No — and that's critical at this size. There's a main compartment for your bulky gear like your tent and sleeping bag, a bottom compartment with separate access for keeping dirty or wet gear away from clean items, side pockets for water bottles and quick-access items, front organizational pockets for maps, first aid, electronics, and smaller essentials, and internal compression straps to keep everything stable and prevent shifting when you're moving. At 80 liters you're carrying a week of life on your back. If it's not organized, it becomes unmanageable. The compartment system is built around real expedition packing, not just feature-count marketing.
Is this pack comfortable enough for 8-10 hour days fully loaded, or is it built for shorter carries?
It's built for extended daily wear under heavy loads. The padded shoulder straps distribute pressure across a wider area so they don't dig in or create hot spots. The breathable back panel keeps air moving so you're not trapped in a heat pocket all day. The hip belt takes the majority of the weight so your shoulders aren't destroyed. On a long expedition day where you're carrying 50+ pounds for 8-10 hours of hiking, comfort becomes critical — not optional. The ExpeditionMax is designed for exactly that scenario. It's not a day hike pack scaled up. It's expedition gear built for expedition conditions.
What's the difference between water-repellent and waterproof, and does it matter?
Water-repellent means the fabric sheds light to moderate rain and moisture without soaking through. It's not a submersible dry bag. If you're in sustained heavy rain for hours, some moisture can eventually get through, especially at the seams and zippers. For most expedition conditions — passing storms, morning dew, light rain, splashing from streams — water-repellent is sufficient and it doesn't add the weight or bulk that comes with fully waterproof construction. If you're traveling in conditions where sustained rain is guaranteed, pack a pack cover or use dry bags for your most critical gear. The water-repellent shell handles normal expedition weather without issue.