
MaxxHaul 70108
The MaxxHaul is the rack I leave on my truck for active hauling weeks. Heavy-gauge steel, 500-pound capacity, and the mesh floor handles awkward loads like firewood and gear bags. It does not fold, so it stays mounted, but the trade-off is rigidity. No rattle at highway speeds with a hitch tightener installed.
I have hauled coolers, camping gear, and luggage on hitch racks across long road trips. Here are the five hitch cargo racks that earned the spot.
I have used hitch cargo racks for cross-country drives, family camping trips, and runs to the dump. They are simpler than a rooftop box, easier to load, and they do not destroy your fuel economy as badly. The catch is fit, weight rating, and whether the rack tilts so you can still open your trunk. After cycling through five hitch racks across two vehicles, here are the picks that survived.
| Rack | Receiver | Capacity | Best For |
| — | — | — | — |
| MaxxHaul 70108 | 2 inch | 500 lb | Heavy duty hauling |
| Curt 18153 | 2 inch | 500 lb | Best overall build |
| Mockins Folding Cargo | 2 inch | 500 lb | Storage when not in use |
| Apex JUSC-502-T Tilt | 2 inch | 500 lb | Trunk access while loaded |
| Reese Explore Pro | 1.25 or 2 inch | 300 to 500 lb | Best value |
How we picked
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Top picks compared
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MaxxHaul 70108 | 2 inch | Check price | |
| Curt 18153 | 2 inch | Check price | |
| Mockins Folding Cargo | 2 inch | Check price | |
| Apex JUSC-502-T Tilt | 2 inch | Check price | |
| Reese Explore Pro | 1.25 or 2 inch | Check price |
Our picks up close

MaxxHaul 70108
The MaxxHaul is the rack I leave on my truck for active hauling weeks. Heavy-gauge steel, 500-pound capacity, and the mesh floor handles awkward loads like firewood and gear bags. It does not fold, so it stays mounted, but the trade-off is rigidity. No rattle at highway speeds with a hitch tightener installed.
Curt 18153
The Curt is the best-built rack at its price. Powder coat is thicker than the MaxxHaul, welds are cleaner, and the raised lip is a bit higher to keep soft bags from sliding off. It is also fully assembled out of the box, which the MaxxHaul is not. If I were buying one rack to keep forever, this is it.
Mockins Folding Cargo
The Mockins folds upright when empty, which is the feature that sold me on it for daily driving. When you are not hauling, the rack flips up flat against the vehicle and adds maybe 6 inches to your length instead of 24. The hinge feels solid and has not loosened over a year of use. Comes with a hitch pin and stabilizer.
Apex JUSC-502-T Tilt
The Apex tilts away from the vehicle so you can open a rear hatch or tailgate without unloading the rack. That feature alone justified the upgrade for me with an SUV. The release pin is easy to operate one-handed. Slightly less weight capacity feel under heavy loads, but for vacation luggage it has been perfect.

Reese Explore Pro
The Reese is the budget pick that still has solid fundamentals. Available in both 1.25 inch and 2 inch versions, so it fits more vehicles. Capacity is lower on the 1.25 version (around 300 pounds) so know your hitch class. Build quality is fine for weekend use, just not commercial-grade.
Quick answers
Most cargo racks rated for 500 pounds require a 2-inch Class 3 receiver. Some lighter racks fit 1.25-inch Class 2 receivers but are weight-limited to about 200 pounds. Check your vehicle's hitch class before buying.
If the rack is open mesh and you are hauling soft luggage in any weather, yes. A waterproof cargo bag is non-negotiable. Hard cases like coolers tolerate weather but still benefit from a bag for road debris.







