Sleeping Bag vs Quilt

A sleeping bag fully surrounds you with a hood and zipper for maximum warmth and draft protection; a backpacking quilt drops the crushed-flat underside (and often the hood and zipper) to save weight, attaching to your sleeping pad instead. Bags are warmer and cozier; quilts are lighter and favored by ultralight backpackers.

Aspect Sleeping Bag Backpacking Quilt
Coverage Fully encloses you, with hood Drapes over top; open back
Weight Heavier (extra fabric & zipper) Lighter for the same warmth
Warmth Warmer, more draft-proof As warm if strapped well; drafts possible
Bottom insulation Yes (but crushed flat, wasted) None — relies on pad's R-value
Best for Cold, comfort, restless sleepers Ultralight, warm-to-mild trips

Choose a sleeping bag if…

  • You want maximum warmth and draft protection
  • You camp in cold conditions
  • You value cozy, sealed comfort

Choose a quilt if…

  • You want to cut pack weight
  • You camp in warm-to-mild conditions
  • You're chasing an ultralight setup

Verdict

A sleeping bag is the warmer, more forgiving all-rounder; a quilt is the lighter choice once you're comfortable managing drafts and pairing it with a well-insulated pad. Cold sleepers and cold trips favor the bag; gram-counters favor the quilt.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a sleeping bag and a quilt?

A sleeping bag fully encloses you with a zipper and hood; a quilt removes the insulation under your body (which gets crushed flat and stops insulating anyway) and usually the hood and zipper, then straps to your sleeping pad. The quilt is lighter and less bulky but less draft-proof.

Is a quilt as warm as a sleeping bag?

It can be, in mild-to-cool conditions and when strapped snugly to a well-insulated pad, since the crushed underside of a bag doesn't insulate much anyway. In cold, windy conditions a hooded bag seals drafts better, so quilts are best reserved for warmer trips or experienced users.

Why do ultralight backpackers use quilts?

Because dropping the underside insulation, hood, and zipper shaves significant weight and bulk for the same top-side warmth. Paired with a good sleeping pad (which provides the ground insulation), a quilt delivers ultralight comfort, which is why thru-hikers and gram-counters favor them.

Related: Sleeping Bag · Backpacking Quilt · Sleeping pad · R-value · Mummy bag