The varied definitions of ‘Bikepacking’

Last modified: May 23, 2021

While updating the pages on Ride Far, I’ve realized how often I’ve written the terms bikepacking and bikepacking races as short-hand for the focus of this website: specifically on how to be successful in ultra-distance, self-supported bike races, and more generally how to ride farther while being comfortable and efficient.

I’m very pleased that bikepacking as an activity has grown immensely in popularity in recent years, but at the same time the term has acquired a variety of meanings and connotations, not all of which are appropriate or consistent. I’ve therefore broken down these varied meanings into 4 explicit definitions and made some comments about each of them:

Mixed-terrain bikepacking
Mixed-terrain bikepacking during the Torino-Nice Rally by evanoui.cc, licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

1: Mixed-terrain bikepacking

The most popular current definition of bikepacking is doing multi-day bike rides that involve riding a significant amount of trails and unpaved roads, regardless of what types of bags are being used. Wikipedia adopts this definition: searching for “Bikepacking” automatically re-directs to the Mixed terrain cycle touring page.

Commentary: I believe that this definition should be more specific, with some emphasis placed on being lightweight and riding efficiently being necessary to use the term bikepacking, otherwise bike touring is more appropriate. This is partly because the bikepacking ethos has evolved from the bikepacking races mentioned in Defition #4 below.

Paved-road bikepacking
Paved-road bikepacking around Mont Blanc by A Swiss With A Pulse

2: Paved-road bikepacking

A slightly different definition of bikepacking is doing any form of multi-day cycling in which bikepacking-style bags are used (i.e., bags that attach to the bike without rigid luggage racks). People doing lightweight tours on road bikes are now using the term bikepacking in this context even if they never venture away from paved roads, and so they’re not meeting the key criterion for the more standard Definition #1 above.

Commentary: I’m not a fan of the activity being named after the type of equipment being used, I’d prefer it to be defined by the mindset being adopted (again, lightweight and efficient bike touring), but otherwise this definition is also valid (and this alternative definition is noted on the re-directed Wikipedia bikepacking page).

Bike touring
Bike touring around Lake Constance by Kitty Terwolbeck, licensed under CC BY 2.0

3: Bike touring ≠ Bikepacking

Another definition of bikepacking is doing any form of multi-day cycling, regardless of what bags are used or surfaces are ridden. This is basically just replacing the older term bike touring (or trekking) with the more modern term bikepacking.

Commentary: I don’t like this usage because bikepacking should be reserved for a specific type of bike touring, it should not replace the more general term simply because bikepacking sounds modern and cool. Unfortunately, this is rapidly becoming the case and the photo on the right of a touring bike is an early result when doing a Google image search for ‘bikepacking’.

Bikepacking race
The start of the 2014 Transcontinental Race.

4: Bikepacking races

The definition I often had in mind when using the word bikepacking on this website is any form of multi-day cycling (regardless of surfaces ridden) in which a minimalist and lightweight approach is used to optimize efficiency and to travel as far as possible each day (regardless of whether in a race situation or not).

Commentary: There is a separate Ride Far page on the History of Bikepacking Races, which helps to explain where this definition comes from. Unfortunately, this focus on efficiency and optimization is not what people now typically think of when hearing the term ‘bikepacking’, so I may have to abandon or refine the way I use it on this site.

Other attempts to define bikepacking

A lot of confusion exists with these different definitions of bikepacking being used inconsistently and sometimes interchangeably. A good example of this is in a popular Facebook group simply entitled Bikepacking that introduces itself by trying to define bikepacking:

What’s bikepacking? The short answer: it’s backpacking with a bike. Longer answer: any ride that includes an overnight stay. This could be anything from ultralight singletrack tours to fully loaded dirt road touring …. This group focuses on off-road touring, away from cars. … We … are excited to promote this new and very exciting way to travel.

First, writing that bikepacking is “backpacking with a bike” is not at all helpful since backpacking is an even vaguer term that merits it’s own Wikipedia disambiguation page. The longer definition mostly relates to Definition #1, but they also mention the far more general Definition #3, which thereby includes Definitions #2 and #4, and this generality seems unnecessary and unwarranted. In addition, they are fools if they believe that bikepacking is a “new … way to travel”.

A lot of people share the misconception that bikepacking is something new just because the word hasn’t existed for very long. This style of riding, including what is now called ‘gravel biking’, has been common since the dawn of the bicycle, and although modern ‘bikepacking bags’ are using modern materials and designs, bicycle bags already existed in the 19th century that were not so different in concept. So bikepacking isn’t new, only the word is, and the latest surge in popularity is quite recent, but the concept and style of equipment are certainly not new.

The websites that focus solely on bikepacking, like Bikepacking.com and Bikepacking.net, all adopt Definition #1, mixed terrain bike touring. I therefore have to accept that my usage of the term bikepacking, corresponding to Definition #4 that focuses on a more efficient and optimized form of bike touring, is somewhat inappropriate and misleading compared to the current norms.

I wrote most of the first iteration of this website in 2015-’17, when the term bikepacking was still evolving and certainly wasn’t mainstream and was still heavily linked to the bikepacking races. I’ve realized that I now need to revise the language used on this site to remove most references to bikepacking because it’s now become to mean mixed-terrain bike touring (or sometimes paved-road bike touring). I could alternatively change the focus of this site to be more about mixed-terrain touring in general, which would probably bring more traffic, but that’s not my goal, so I’ve chosen to leave that to other websites.

Unfortunately, I now need to find a different short-hand way to write ‘ultra-distance, self-supported bike races’, because that is really awkward to write repeatedly. ‘Ultracycling’ is already taken by the fully supported versions of such races, like RAAM, so do you have other suggestions? Or is the term “bikepacking race” distinct enough to have a different connotation to the more general term “bikepacking”? I’d love to learn what other people understand when reading the word ‘bikepacking’.

6 thoughts on “The varied definitions of ‘Bikepacking’”

  1. I fully agree with your assessment! Having only recently been brought into the world of Bikepacking (1 year) I’ve done a lot of research. I do have many many years of biking under my belt though (cross-country, downhill, going to work and long distance).

    Your definition of Bikepacking fits No 4 and 1 squarely. I believe Bikepacking is related to 2 things : being efficient (read light) and enabled (read not restricted).

    Touring bring images of a heavy-laden bike that is mostly restricted to paved roads, where the person takes their time to view the scenery. Bikepacking is about having less equipement and not being restricted to pavement. I can view the scenery, stop when I want, decide to take a left turn onto that gravel road, not knowing if it’ll become a trail or even a single track. Bikepacking is about choices.

    1. Thanks, and I mostly agree with you. However, there are lots of people that I would put in the bike touring category who do a lot of riding away from paved roads. Carrying more equipment certainly doesn’t restrict your choice of routes very much, IMO.

  2. My understanding is about the same as yours—”bikepacking” is self-supported, multiday, minimalist cycling.

    This wouldn’t be the only term of art in cycling with competing definitions, or with a definition broad enough to cover things that aren’t really the same, or even with a definition that needs to change as technology changes. You define how you’re using it on the front page banner. I think you’re fine.

  3. Hi Chris,
    This is a first post here so before anything I just wanted to say thanks for all the work put into this site and for the amazing information we can find.
    I’m new to this discipline and indeed could notice the semantics and difference of views that many sites have on the definition. IMO the most distinctif term for is the “ultracycling” one (emphasising long days, long distance, which de facto implies a light bag setup), this also means a very challenging sport for the mind and body, with need of preparation, training etc. This doesn’t say much on the type of terrain… but so doesn’t bike packing really either.
    Regards to you all from Belgium.
    Gaetan

    1. Thanks, I agree, ultracycling would be a pretty ideal term. But unfortunately, as mentioned at the end of the post, ultracycling is almost exclusively associated with ultra-distance races in which each rider has a full support crew following them. The World UltraCycling Association (WUCA) runs Ultracycling.com and most such races are affiliated with them. I wrote a blog post a few years ago on Unsupported vs. supported ultra-distance bike races and they are really very different disciplines.

  4. Hi Chris,
    I would also like to add my appreciation of the wonderful information you have accumulated here.
    Unfortunately age (74) and lack of ability make participation in your ‘bikepacking / unsupported-ultracycling’ riding exploits more than a little beyond my capabilities – but I have learnt a lot from reading your site (and it helped me prepare bike & body to complete a 200-mile-one-day event back in 2017, and train for a repeat in 2020 until covid-19 came along).
    I have no inspiration as to an ideal descriptive term, albeit ‘unsupported-ultracycling’ covers what I think your site is about.
    Greetings from Canada
    Peter

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