Almost every first-time pilgrim makes the same mistake: they pack too much. After a few kilometres, every extra item feels heavier. So let's get this right before you go. Here's the beginner's packing philosophy, from the Camino Francés. THE GOLDEN RULE: your full backpack should weigh no more than about 10% of your body weight. For most people that's 6–8 kg, water included. Write that number down — it's the filter for every "should I bring this?" decision. THE BIG THREE (get these right, the rest is easy): • BACKPACK: 30–40 litres is plenty. Bigger just tempts you to overpack. • SHOES: comfortable, broken-in trail shoes or light boots. Never brand-new. Your feet are everything out here. • SLEEP: a lightweight sleeping bag or liner for the albergues (pilgrim hostels). THE ESSENTIALS: about 3 sets of walking clothes (wear one, wash one, dry one), a warm layer, a rain jacket, a sun hat, flip-flops for showers, a basic first-aid and blister kit, a water bottle, and your documents. That's genuinely most of it. WHAT TO LEAVE AT HOME: "just in case" items, jeans, more than one book, heavy toiletries, and half the clothes you first laid out. Spain has shops — you can buy anything you truly need along the way. One kind tip: on most routes you can pay a small daily service to carry your pack ahead to your next stop, so you walk with just a daypack. Good to know if weight worries you. ***Want the full printable packing checklist and honest gear advice with no sales pitch? Join our free community of beginner pilgrims — share your packing questions and we'll lighten that bag together. 🎒 From someday to Santiago.