XTR1 Bed Rack on Jeep Gladiator

How to Choose the Right Bed Rack for Your Truck

Why You Need a Bed Rack

A bed rack is the foundation of any truck-based overland build. It's the platform that holds your rooftop tent, cargo boxes, recovery gear, and anything else you need up top. Without a proper rack, you're limited to whatever fits in your bed — and once you start overlanding, you realize that's never enough.

Key Factors When Choosing a Bed Rack

1. Weight Rating

This is the most important spec. You need to know two numbers:

  • Static load capacity — how much weight it holds when parked
  • Dynamic load capacity — how much weight it holds while driving
A rooftop tent weighs 100-200 lbs. Add two people (300+ lbs) and you're looking at 400-500 lbs of static load at camp. While driving (dynamic), the tent alone plus vibration and road forces mean you need a rack rated for at least 500 lbs dynamic.

2. Material

  • Aluminum — lightweight, rust-resistant, strong. The best option for most builds. Slightly more expensive but worth every penny.
  • Steel — heavier but cheaper. Fine for budget builds, but adds significant weight and can rust if the coating chips.

3. Vehicle-Specific Fit

Generic "universal" racks rarely fit well. They require drilling, shimming, and compromises. Vehicle-specific racks bolt directly to your truck's bed using existing mounting points — cleaner install, better fit, no drilling.

4. Height

Rack height matters for two reasons:

  • Cab clearance — the rack needs to clear your cab roof so the tent doesn't hit it when mounted
  • Overall vehicle height — taller rack = taller vehicle = potential garage and clearance issues
  • Bed access — a rack that sits too high makes it hard to reach into your bed
Most racks offer adjustable height or multiple height options to dial in the perfect fit.

5. Accessory Compatibility

Good racks have channels, slots, or crossbars that accept standard accessories:

  • Awning mounts
  • Light bar mounts
  • Hi-Lift jack mounts
  • Shovel and axe mounts
  • Crossbars for cargo boxes

6. Bed Access

Some racks allow you to still use your truck bed underneath. Look for designs that keep the uprights at the edges of the bed rather than blocking the middle. Removable crossbars are a bonus — you can take them off when you need full bed access.

Our Pick: The XTR1

The Xtrusion Overland XTR1 Bed Rack is built from extruded aluminum with vehicle-specific fitment for major truck models including Toyota Tacoma, Jeep Gladiator, Ford F-150, Chevy Colorado, and more.

What makes the XTR1 stand out:

  • Modular design — adjustable height, removable crossbars, accessory channels on every surface
  • Vehicle-specific — bolt-on install, no drilling required
  • Aluminum construction — lightweight and rust-proof
  • 500+ lb dynamic load rating — handles any RTT plus gear
  • Lifetime warranty
At its current sale price, the XTR1 is a serious value for an aluminum rack with this level of fitment and capability.

Installation Tips

1. Read the instructions first — seriously, the whole thing 2. Have a helper — bed racks are awkward to handle solo 3. Use a torque wrench — don't guess on bolt tightness 4. Check bed liner clearance — spray-in liners are fine, but drop-in liners may need trimming at mounting points 5. Test fit before final tightening — get everything loosely in place, check alignment, then torque down

Bottom Line

A bed rack is a one-time purchase that transforms your truck's capability. Don't cheap out on it — a quality rack like the XTR1 will outlast your truck and can even transfer to your next vehicle if you stick with the same model. It's the foundation everything else builds on.

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