Search  for anything...

5.11 Tactical RUSH24 Military Backpack, Molle Bag Rucksack Pack, 37 Liter Medium, Style 58601

  • Based on 4,001 reviews
Condition: New
Checking for product changes

Notify me when this product is back in stock

$199.99 Why this price?

Buy Now, Pay Later


As low as $33.33 / mo
  • – 6-month term
  • – No impact on credit
  • – Instant approval decision
  • – Secure and straightforward checkout

Ready to go? Add this product to your cart and select a plan during checkout. Payment plans are offered through our trusted finance partners Klarna, PayTomorrow, Affirm, Apple Pay, and PayPal. No-credit-needed leasing options through Acima may also be available at checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Selected Option

Free shipping on this product

This item is eligible for return within 30 days of receipt

To qualify for a full refund, items must be returned in their original, unused condition. If an item is returned in a used, damaged, or materially different state, you may be granted a partial refund.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.


Availability: Unavailable
Fulfilled by Amazon
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Color: Black


Features

  • Nylon lining
  • Zipper closure
  • Quite simply the best tactical military backpack on the market. This Rucksack bug out bag features a roomy main storage area, dual zipping side pockets and a stuff-it pocket with integrated draw cord and glove friendly pull tabs
  • Rush24 Tactical Molle bag has a reinforced grab-and-go handle, hydration pocket, zippered fleece-lined eyewear pocket and wrap-around MOLLE/SlickStick web platform
  • Military Backpack has 2275 cubic inch / 37 liter total capacity with Twin drainage grommets, and self-repairing YKK zippers. Perfect to use as a patrol backpack or trekking pack
  • Also has three mesh admin compartments, zippered side water bottle pocket and a hook and loop area for nametape and flag patches. Water-repellant coating and has two external compression straps and a contoured yoke shoulder strap system
  • The Rush24 tactical military backpack can be used as a multipurpose pack, bug out bag, range bag, hunting backpack, survival back pack, army backpack, sling bag, hiking rucksack, or every day outdoor backpack

Description

Our most popular tactical backpack, the RUSH24 is a high-performance tactical pack suitable for active duty, hunting and recreation, or grab-and-go. Compatible with 5.11 Tier System and Scabbard, the pack features unmatched storage capability, a wrap-around MOLLE and SlickStick-compatible web platform, adjustable shoulder and sternum straps, a 60-oz. hydration pocket, and durable, water-resistant construction. It's a back pack built to be ready for anything. Shop the Rush Collection.


Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 14 x 5 x 14 inches; 3 Pounds


Item model number ‏ : ‎ ACKAM112


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ March 9, 2009


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ 5.11


Frequently asked questions

This product is currently out of stock. Please check back later for shipping info.

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

  • Klarna Financing
  • Affirm Pay in 4
  • Affirm Financing
  • PayTomorrow Financing
  • Apple Pay Later
Leasing options through Acima may also be available during checkout.

Learn more about financing & leasing here.

Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great bag, must have.
Color: Black
*Update 11-30-15* I went on my day trip to Universal Studios in Florida. I spent the day at both parks on my feet with the bag on my shoulders. My back was not at all sore at the end of the day. The when the bag was completely packed from buying crap I didnt need it was difficult to fit it into the park lockers. However, even when loaded down it fit fine under the seat on the airplane. One thing I have found is if I am going to be wearing the bag for an extended period of time with my laptop inside of it, if I put it in the main pocket in one of the pouches it is easier to carry than if I place it in the water bladder pocket. I love this bag more every time I use it. I am on day 3 of this bag. YouTube has hundreds of reviews of this bag. And they all pretty much state the same thing. The bag has a lot of space and lots of organization. I spent a few days watching videos of different load outs and different views on all of the pockets. I ended up with this bag because a few friends recommended 5.11 as a great company that puts out a great product. I started my search for a new backpack due to a trip that I am taking in a couple of months. I am going to Universal Studios, I will be on the road for a little under 24 hours. I need a bag that I can pack a change of clothes, a Nikon D7000 and two lenses, a 13'' MacBook, an iPad mini, and food. The world of backpacks is wide and varietied, (<---- That might not be a real word.). I have an Eddie Bauer backpack that would be perfect for my needs. But that bag is about 7 years old and I can see light coming through tiny holes in the bottom of the bag. I wanted a "military" style bag. But I am not, nor have I ever been in the military and did not want to come off as someone pretending. So that means I did not want a camouflage pattern. The bag also needs to be able to be a carry on bag for plane travel. These are just a few, but main concerns for picking a new bag. Here will be a list of how it fits my needs based on the list above. 1) The main pocket will hold two sets of clothes easily. 2) There are several medium pouches in the main pocket. I will put two lenses in one pouch and the another will hold the camera body. 3) The bag has a hydration pack pocket. I will not be using a hydration pack with this bag as I use a camelbak when I am biking. It holds my laptop with plenty of room. Many reviews say that you should put some form of a closed cell foam into the bottom of the back to add some extra protection. 4) In the front admin pocket there is a zippered pocket that fits my iPad mini with water proof case with a little extra space. 5) I like to pack little packs of animal crackers and cheeze-its and Cliff Bars, those can fit anywhere. I am using everything listed above except for the clothes as an "EDC" (Every Day Carry) bag. Even with the clothes I do not think I will have this bag filled more than half way. I have added a few add ons. The bag is built to be customized as needed. There is a pretty large amount of aftermarket support for this style bag. The bag has webbing to attach external water bottle holders, ammo pouches, general purpose pouches, map holders, holsters, and just about anything else. One of the things that I was looking forward too was the velcro patches. I added a few flag patches, USA and Maryland flags. I also put on some Star Wars patches. I bought a roll of double sided .5" velcro and added more places to put velcro patches onto the webbing. I went crazy with that actually. I put on two large carabiners from my climbing harness. And lastly to break up the sold black color I put about 30' of neon orange paracord onto the bag. I wrapped the grab handles in paracord. That helped to soften up the grip handle. I also made a couple zipper pulls out of the orange cord. A few future uses. I go camping a couple times a year. I will have no problems loading everything into and on this bag. During the warmer months I do not pack a tent. I use a small hammock. But even when camping in the winter when the temps drop down to freezing or below I will have no problem attaching my tent and sleeping bag to the sides and bottom of the bag. I can not attest to how comfortable the bag will be at full weight, but the yolk style straps are the most comfortable straps I have ever used. I will be using this bag to go rock climb. Whether I am climbing indoors, I can just clip my harness and shoes to the webbing on the bag. But this bag will handle a large volume of rope if I am climbing outside. As stated earlier, I do travel by plane for work a few times a year. It would not be a problem to pack for a week and not need to take a checked bag. I will easily take a large amount of clothing. One or two quarkie things. There are upper compression straps. There are no lower compression straps. Had I not been researching backpacks I would not have known any different. But when you do not load the bag completely you want the bag compressed as much as possible to keep the weight close to your body. This makes it easier to carry for a longer period of time. Not having the lower compression straps means the contents of the bag can spread out in the bottom. But you can purchase clip on straps that will work. I have seen them at a wide price range, as low as $5 and upwards of $35 and more. I am going to play with paracord to make something if it becomes a problem. Along the lines of the compression straps are a belt strap. I have used bags with these and they do help on longer hikes or climbing if your bag is loaded down. There are mounting points to add one latter. This is not by any means a deal breaker. Just it is not there. The arm straps are comfortable and they have a chest strap to help keep the pack centered on you while hiking. They work fine for me so far. I am 6'2'' and 210 pounds. Not a big guy, but not small. They use the webbing that is on the arm straps. The adjustments are about 1"-1.5" apart from each other. It has not become a problem yet. If it does, then I will use more paracord to gap the difference between built in adjustments. Paracord can fix anything I have discovered. It is almost as useful as duct tape. The bag is made of a heavy nylon, 1050d I think is the type. It is very stiff right out of the packaging. I am hoping it does soften up some. There is a hard plastic backing board in the hydration pack pocket. I am leaving it in there for now. As I have my laptop there I think it will add some extra protection. The only negative I have seen so far There are drainage holes in the bottom of the bag. I understand the need for these. However, I know that I will set this bag on something wet, if not in small puddles. This is just inviting water into the bag. This is not anything bad enough to make me return the bag. Bottom line I am very happy I bought this bag. For me, it is perfect for an every day use bag. Plus, I can use it to travel. It will get abused. I plan to update this review after my trip, and then again after a year or so. These reviews are so much better after the product has been used. I also want to get a body armor plate. They fit nicely into the slot for the hard plastic backer board. I do not plan on being shot, but it would be fun to have. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on September 11, 2015 by Jeff Blake

  • upgraded "yolk" shoulder straps are a deal breaker, 1st version straps are more comfortable...
Color: Black
REVISED from 3 stars to 4 stars! 10/17/15 - check bottom for most recent update - man, i really wanted to like this pack! i have it's smaller cousin, the moab 10 slingpack & love it! with molle pouches that little thing averages 15lb.+ for my edc & it can fit a lot more! it was time to step up to a larger capacity pack for travel & day/overnite trippin', so my first choice was the rush 24 based on how useful the moab 10 has been... organizationally speaking, the rush 24 is a well thought out & executed design, more pockets & compartments than any day pack i have seen... but, & this is a bummer, the shoulder strap design simply does not work for me, the "yolk" design limits the width the shoulder straps will spread out & forces them flat instead of resting evenly on the contour of the shoulder/neck area, the result is the inside edge of the stiff, thinly padded strap dug into my neck, this made it unwearable after 5 minutes loaded only to 20lb. i was really bummed about this, i would have kept the pack for my upcoming trip etc., but it just would not be comfortable loaded to capacity, which would've definitely been in the 20-30lb. range easy based on the size of the pack & what i needed to be carrying, which would have included most of what goes into my moab 10, plus extra clothes, food, & my macbook slipped into the hydration bladder compartment (a perfect fit by the way & very checkpoint friendly, in effect making the rush 24 a "laptop pack"), the size of the rush 24 is perfect for all of this & more i'm sure, but because the shoulder straps are insufficient for a big load &, dare i say, have a design flaw... actually the yolk is a good idea, but the straps either need to spread wider, or have more padding, i've seen many other day packs of this capacity with straps that are almost twice as thick with padding, the straps themselves have a nice curve that fits anatomically correct, but they should really have more padding for heavy loads, &/or be tailored so they spread wider & have a bit of sloping to follow the contour of how the shoulders rise up into the neck, if this last issue was fixed, the padding on the shoulder straps would be adequate, albeit minimal.... having said all that, another thing in the rush 24's favor is the addition of fixtures to mount a waist belt, the 5.11 brokos belt would be a great addition to distribute the heavy loads to the hips taking some pressure off the shoulders, theoretically this pack could be loaded very heavy, at least 40lb., & a hip belt would be very helpful to make it a truly useful "day" pack, something maybe 5.11 should consider, that the capacity isn't the only thing that makes a day pack, the ability to wear the pack all-freakin-day is a very important consideration & i would love to see this pack with better designed shoulder straps & better hip belt options... so i will, regretfully, be returning the rush 24... (3 stars only because of the poor shoulder straps & limited hip belt options, for organization & overall construction this pack is 5 star all the way) update 11/16/13: i have only found two backpacks that come close to offering the organizational features of the rush 24, while simultaneously offering improved shoulder strap & waist belt options, these would be the comparably sized camelbak motherlode & it's bigger sibling the camelbak BFM... unfortunately the camelbaks are considerably more expensive than the rush 24... so i plan on finding the rush 24 used for cheap so that i may modify the yolk shoulder straps & add a waist belt... i only go to this trouble because except for the shoulder straps & lack of waist belt the rush 24 is the daypack for me! i will update later with details on this project... update 10/17/15: i now have 2 rush 24 backpacks... i had bought the first used at auction so i had a less costly one to modify, after loading it up & trying it out what i realized was that becuz my used one was the older version, the yoke was more forgiving & didn't pinch the neck so bad... i think part of the redesign was to reinforce the yolk which had a middle seam that failed a few times, & this caused it to be too stiff so that it didn't spread wide enuf to lay on my shoulders comfortably... i did have 2" tri-glides attached at the base of the shoulder straps like the upgrade on the newer version so that i could run a waist belt there, the 5.11 brokos belt works great for this & is fairly easy to attach & remove... the only problem is the shoulder straps are almost too short, when wearing pack low so waist belt effectively carries more weight than shoulders i have the straps let out completely & the end of the shoulder pad rests just above my armpit, if it just had a couple three more inches it would be golden, so i may still replace the shoulder straps to see if i can make it any better, but i am mostly happy with this configuration... so when i found another 1st version rush 24 used at auction i snatched it up so i would have a backup! i can load this up to 30-40lbs. easy... it carries very comfortably at those weights with the added waist belt... i've done long plane trips with it as well as day hikes... would definitely fit enuf gear for 1-3 day outings, especially with some strategically placed pouches mounted on molle to increase capacity... for any longer trips requiring more than 40lbs. it would be best to use pack with external or internal frame, i have my eyes on the army's molle II external frame pack system for an actual long term indefinite BOB... so i've revised the rating to 4 stars since i was able to modify this to fit comfortably & it works well, but still hold back a star simply becuz it doesn't come complete with integrated waist belt.... ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 30, 2013 by happyboy

  • This is not "sandstone"
Color: Sandstone
Great bag, fantastic layout. I was a little disappointed that the color was actually more green than sandstone (brown) so i knocked off a star. Otherwise the bag is so good that i plan on buying the Rush 12 next time but in the multicam color.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 9, 2022 by Mike

Can't find a product?

Find it on Amazon first, then paste the link below.