Headlamp runtime specs are measured under controlled conditions that often don't match the field. Here's how to interpret them accurately and estimate real-world needs.
How Runtime Is Measured
Most headlamp manufacturers use the ANSI FL1 standard for runtime measurement: the headlamp runs at a specified output level until output drops to 10% of initial. The test is conducted at room temperature (68°F) with a fresh, fully charged battery. Real-world runtime differs because: (1) temperature affects battery capacity; (2) the specific output setting used in the field may differ from the tested setting; (3) battery age reduces effective capacity over time.
The Output Setting That Matters
Maximum lumen runtime (often 1-2 hours) is irrelevant for most backpacking use. The runtime at the brightness level that will actually be used on trail — typically 100-300 lumens for camp tasks and established-trail hiking — is what determines whether the headlamp needs mid-trip recharging. Most headlamps in this roundup provide 4-8+ hours at moderate output, covering 2-3 nights comfortably on a single charge.
| Headlamp | Max Output Runtime | Mid-Level Runtime (est.) |
|---|---|---|
| Petzl NAO RL | ~2.5h at 1500 lumens | ~7h on Reactive mode |
| Black Diamond Storm 500-R | ~3.5h at 500 lumens | ~70h on lowest setting |
| Nitecore NU25 | ~1.5h at 360 lumens | ~8h at mid-output |
| Petzl Tikka Core | ~2h at 450 lumens | ~6-8h at mid-output |
Cold Weather Adjustments
For winter camping or shoulder-season trips in cold conditions: use lithium AA or AAA batteries instead of alkaline for AAA-powered headlamps — lithium maintains near-full capacity down to -40°F where alkaline loses 30-50% at 20°F. For rechargeable headlamps: keep the headlamp warm in a sleeping bag overnight or inside a jacket in extreme cold to preserve battery capacity.
How Much Battery Does a Trip Actually Need?
- Weekend (2-3 nights): 2-4 hours total use. Any headlamp in this roundup covers this on a single charge.
- Week-long trip (6-7 nights): 6-12 hours total. Most rechargeables cover this; carry a power bank for the last 2-3 nights.
- Extended or thru-hiking use: Recharge at town stops. One town stop per 5-7 days is sufficient for most hikers.