By Michael Lanza
βHow hard will that hike be?β Thatβs a question that
all dayhikers and backpackers, from beginners to experts, think about all the
timeβand itβs not always easy to answer. But there are ways of evaluating the
difficulty of any hike, using readily available information, that can greatly
help you understand what to expect before you even leave home. Hereβs
how.
No matter how relatively easy or arduous the hike youβre considering, or where you fall on the spectrum of hiking experience or personal fitness level, this article will tell you exactly how to answer that questionβand which questions to ask and what information to seek to reach that answer. This article shares what Iβve learned over four decades of backpacking and dayhiking, including the 10 years I spent as a field editor for Backpacker magazine and even longer running this blog, and this knowledge can help ensure that you and your companions donβt get in over your heads.
Whether youβre new to dayhiking or backpacking, a
parent planning a hike with young kids, or a fit and experienced dayhiker or
backpacker contemplating one of the toughest hikes youβve ever attempted, itβs
important to have a good sense of what youβll face on a new and unfamiliar hike
and whether itβs within your abilities.
Exceeding your limits or those of someone with you can
invite unwanted consequencesβand the person with the least stamina,
abilities, or experience often dictates any partyβs pace, limits, and outcomes.
Those consequences may range from an unpleasant experience that dissuades
someone from wanting to go again, to failing to reach your destination or make
it back to your vehicle, potentially creating a more serious situation.
Making smart decisions comes down to understanding
several objective and subjective factorsβand recognizing when you may be
falling victim to misjudgment because of inexperience or simple overconfidence.

As background about my experienceβor perhaps just for entertainment valueβsee these stories about some of the hardest hikes Iβve ever done, including dayhiking the Grand Canyon 42 miles rim to rim to rim and the 32-mile Pemi Loop in the White Mountains; attempting a one-day, 50-mile traverse of Zion National Park, and a one-day, 30-mile traverse of Maineβs Mahoosuc Range; thru-hiking the John Muir Trail in seven days; and trekking New Zealandβs brutally hard Dusky Track.
The tips below cover βhardβ and βsoftβ measures to understand in evaluating the difficulty of any hike. Please share your thoughts on this article, questions, or tips in the comments section at the bottom of this story. I try to respond to all comments. And click on any photo to learn more about that trip.
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The βHardβ Measures of a Hikeβs Difficulty
Thereβs no one standard for measuring the difficulty
or strenuousness of trails, but there are βhardβ measuresβstatistics for any
hikeβthat are commonly used as reference points.
Those stats include the most obvious oneβthe
distanceβas well as the total elevation gain and loss, or how many cumulative
feet or meters you walk uphill and downhill. Those also include the
actual elevations reached on the hike, because the thinner air at higher
elevationsβgenerally, above around 7,000 to 8,000 feetβwill usually slow your
pace and increase fatigue, but can also exacerbate dehydration and cause
unpleasant symptoms like a headache or worse.

Elevation gain and loss will sometimes be described
as βcumulative,β meaning the sum of the uphill and downhill; in other words, a
hike that goes up 1,000 feet and back down again has 2,000 feet of cumulative
elevation gain and loss. Bear in mind that going downhill on a trail,
especially a rugged or steep one, can be just as tiring as going uphill, and sometimes
harder on leg muscles and joints.
Conversely, while hikes in mountains generally begin
with going uphill and conclude with going downhill, in many canyons, itβs just
the opposite: You usually go downhill first, then climb back upβand in some
places, like the Grand Canyon, you might go quite far downhill before
climbing back out. Donβt lose sight of how far youβre going downβwhich may feel
remarkably easy at the beginning of a hike, when youβre freshβand how much you
will have to hike back up again.
The table below uses distance and elevation gain and
loss to roughly define five categories of hikes: easy, moderate, hard, very
hard, and extremely hard. These are not standardized categories; they are
categories Iβve created based on more than three decades of dayhiking and
backpacking with people of all abilities, from novices to highly experienced
ultra-hikers and backpackers, including my children (and others) from when they
were very young through their teen years.
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These categories are also based on many years of
experience using resources, like hiking guidebooks that rate hike difficulty (and
Iβve written some), and consulting professionals who design, build, and
maintain trails.
The table defines each category according to distance or elevation gain and loss. For example, it rates a hike that covers either five to eight miles or more than 1,500 vertical feet of elevation gain and loss (which is the same as 3,000 feet of cumulative gain and loss) as moderately difficultβin other words, either statistic makes it that difficult. To reframe that, it means a hike on a trail of five to eight miles with little up and down would still qualify as moderate, as would a hike shorter than five miles with an uphill climb of 1,500 vertical feet.Β
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Hike Difficulty Rating Scale
Rating | Distance OR | Elevation Gain and Loss (cumulative is double) |
---|---|---|
Easy | 5 miles or less | 500 feet or less |
Moderate | 5 to 8 miles | More than 1,500 feet |
Hard | 8 to 12 miles | More than 3,000 feet |
Very Hard | 12 to 15 miles | More than 4,500 feet |
Extremely Hard | More than 15 miles | More than 6,000 feet |
Thereβs no precise way to equate the difficulty of a specific measure of distance with a specific amount of elevation gain and loss. Interestingly, the AMC White Mountain Guide, one of the oldest, most comprehensive (it describes 1,400 trails), and probably bestselling hiking guidebooks in the country, uses an estimated hiking time formula of 30 minutes for each mile of horizontal distance or 1,000 feet of vertical (more on that below). That presumably equates the difficulty of one mile and 1,000 vertical feet. And thatβs in the White Mountains, where Iβve hiked thousands of miles and which, in my experience, have some of the rockiest, steepest, hardest trails in the country.
I know trail professionals who would dispute that,
asserting that hiking 1,000 vertical feet is noticeably more strenuous than
walking a flat mile. Based on my experience, Iβm more inclined to equate a mile
of distance with 500 to 750 vertical feet of elevation gain and loss. Trail
conditions and steepness matter, too.
But that range of comparison measures provides some
parameters for judging how much a hikeβs difficulty increases depending on how
much you walk up and downhill.
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Elevation Gain Per Mile
We all know that steeper trails are harder. And while
close contour lines on a map indicate steep terrain, they donβt really reveal
how steep a trail is because that depends on the angle of the trail on the ground
and the mapβs scale. A trail that takes a more direct angle up or down a slope will
be steeperβpossibly much steeperβthan a trail that makes switchbacks, or
zigzags across the slope.Β
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Β
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Whether youβre a beginner or seasoned backpacker, youβll learn new tricks for making all of your trips go better in my β12 Expert Tips for Planning a Wilderness Backpacking Tripβ and βA Practical Guide to Lightweight and Ultralight Backpacking.β If you donβt have a paid subscription to The Big Outside, you can read part of both stories for free, or download the e-guide versions of β12 Expert Tips for Planning a Wilderness Backpacking Tripβ and the lightweight backpacking guide without having a paid membership.