-
DIMENSIONS
64 cm x 30 cm x 23 cm (H x W x D)
-
VOLUME
30+10 L
-
WEIGHT
1000g
-
LAPTOP POCKET
/
Millet Prolighter 30+10L - The Expandable Alpine Backpack for Bigger Routes (1,000 g)
You're an hour above the car and the rope is already biting into one shoulder; the bivvy ledge is somewhere up in the dark, and the climbing doesn't even start until tomorrow. This is the outing that needs more than a summit pack and less than an expedition haul. The Millet Prolighter 30+10L is built for that middle ground: a 1,000-gram alpine pack that opens from 30 to 40 litres, carries skis, a rope and ice axes outside, and still climbs light when the difficulty kicks in.
The 10-litre extension collar is the whole argument for the pack: cinched flat it climbs like a 30, opened up it takes the layers, food and bivvy kit a multi-day route forces on you. Around it sit the tools of a real alpine sack - a side ski carry, a rope stash under the two-buckle flap, Millet's FPP™ ice-axe attachment, a hauling handle for the pitch you'd sooner haul the pack up than climb with it on your back, and a removable ergonomic hip belt you strip at the crux. You pack it to the route, not the route to the pack.
Where a rope and rack grind against it day after day, Millet armours the pack with tougher PA 1000D; everywhere else it runs the lighter PA 210D Honeycomb Robic ripstop over a Recycled PES 250D lining, water-repellent to 1,000 mm and at least 17 % recycled. Light where it can be, armoured where the route bites. It carries the name of a house building alpine packs in Annecy since 1921 - and when the collar or a strap finally wears through, Millet repairs it in its own workshop rather than selling you another.


What Makes the Real Difference on the Mountain
The Prolighter 30+10L is built around one idea - one pack that scales with the route - and gives you the alpine carry systems to back it up, all at a weight that keeps it climbable.
- 🎒 30→40 L extension collar: compact for the climb, expandable for the approach and bivvy.
- 🪶 1,000 g for 40 L: light for its capacity, no dead weight.
- 🪢 Rope stash under the flap: held securely by the two-buckle closure.
- ⛏️ FPP™ ice-axe + side ski carry: real tool attachments for alpine and ski lines.
- 🧗 Hauling handle: built to be hauled up technical pitches.
- 💧 Hydration compatible: bladder sleeve to drink without stopping.
The carry adapts to the day: a removable ergonomic hip belt and shoulder straps with load-lifter straps on belt and harness settle a full 40 litres on the walk in, then strip back when you want freedom of movement on the climb. A two-buckle removable flap opens the main compartment fast, with a zip pocket on the flap and one beneath it - the spot for a headtorch, a phone, the topo and the gels you don't want migrating to the bottom - and gear loops to rack what won't fit inside. Loaded for the walk-in it carries like a proper pack; cinched back to 30 litres with the belt stripped, it sits flat against your back and lets you climb.
Who This Backpack Is For
The Prolighter 30+10L is for climbers and ski mountaineers whose routes don't fit a single fixed volume - who need a pack that's compact on the climb and roomy on the approach, without carrying two bags.
- You go multi-day in the mountains - bivvy routes, hut-to-hut alpine lines, ski traverses.
- You carry a full alpine kit - rope, rack, ice axes, skis, with attachments that hold under load.
- You want one adaptable volume - 30 litres cinched for the climb, 40 litres open for the walk in.
- You still count grams - 1,000 g for a 40-litre technical pack with a strippable hip belt.
It's a specialist, so be clear on the use. There's no integrated rain cover and no panel-style access - for a do-everything 4-season pack with built-in weather protection and a suitcase opening, the UBIC 40L is the better all-rounder. And if your days are fast single ascents with a light kit, the smaller Prolighter 22L is all you need. But for committing alpine routes where the load changes between the approach and the crux, the Prolighter 30+10L is the pack that adapts. Part of the wider Millet backpack range we carry.

Technical Specifications
General Information
- Brand: Millet
- Reference: MIS2272
- Volume: 30+10 L (expandable)
- Weight: 1,000 g
- Back length: 46 cm
- Dimensions: 64 x 30 x 23 cm (H x W x D)
- Activities: Mountaineering • Ski Mountaineering • Alpine Climbing
Materials & Protection
- Main fabric: PA 210D Honeycomb Robic (ripstop)
- Secondary: PA 1000D (high-wear zones)
- Lining: Recycled PES 250D (1,000 mm, DWR)
- Treatment: Durable DWR water-repellent finish
- Recycled content: ≥ 17 %
Carry & Adjustments
- Ergonomic shoulder straps
- Adjustable chest strap
- Removable ergonomic hip belt
- Load-lifter straps on belt and harness
- Hauling handle
Organization & Attachments
- 2-buckle removable flap closure
- 10 L extension collar
- FPP™ ice-axe carry
- Side ski carry + rope stash under flap
- 1 zip pocket on flap + 1 beneath flap
- Gear loops
- Hydration system compartment
FAQ
The pack has a 10-litre extension collar under the flap. Cinched and buckled down, it's a compact 30-litre pack that climbs well; opened up and extended, it grows to 40 litres for the approach, the descent or a bivvy load. The two-buckle flap floats up and down to cover whatever height you've packed, so one pack covers both the climb and the carry-in without you owning two.
All three. It has a side ski carry, a dedicated rope stash held under the flap, and Millet's FPP™ ice-axe attachment for one or two tools, plus gear loops for racking. These are purpose-built alpine attachments designed to hold a real load on the approach and the climb, which is what separates the Prolighter from a general hiking pack.
Yes - that's the point of the Prolighter line. At 1,000 g for up to 40 litres with full ski, rope and ice-axe carry, it sits well below most touring or alpine packs of the same volume. The weight is kept down by the Robic ripstop main fabric, a minimal frame and a removable hip belt you can strip on technical ground - without dropping the reinforcements where a rope and rack grind against the pack.
It's a reinforced haul loop built to take the pack's weight when you sack-haul it up a technical pitch rather than climb with it on - common on harder alpine and big-wall routes. It also makes the pack easier to clip, hang at a belay or pull out of a crevasse - the kind of detail you only notice when it isn't there.
Same light-and-fast philosophy, different scope. The Prolighter 22L (630 g) is a fixed-volume pack for fast summer summit days and ski approaches. The Prolighter 30+10L (1,000 g) expands from 30 to 40 litres and adds a rope carry, a hauling handle and a more supportive belt for multi-day and committing routes. Pick the 22L for fast days, the 30+10L when the route carries more kit.
No - it's a stripped alpine pack, so there's no integrated rain cover. The fabrics carry a 1,000 mm rating and a durable DWR finish for snow and showers, but for sustained rain you'd add a separate cover or a dry liner inside. If a built-in rain cover and full weather features matter more than a technical climbing feature set, the UBIC 40L is the better-equipped all-rounder.
Empty the extension collar and every pocket, shake out the grit a multi-day route leaves behind, and let the pack dry fully before storing. Hand wash at no more than 40 °C with a mild soap, and avoid the tumble dryer, bleach, iron and dry cleaning that degrade the DWR. Re-proof the finish from time to time, and when the collar, a strap or a seam wears after hard seasons, Millet repairs it in its own workshop rather than replacing the pack.