How to Pick a Backcountry Campsite That Doesn't Suck
Overview
This is the long-form version of 'how to pick a backcountry campsite that doesn't suck' — built from real trips, not a content brief. If you want the TL;DR, scroll to the picks section. If you want the actual reasoning, read top to bottom.
We get a lot of email about this topic. Most of it boils down to: 'I'm trying to choose between backcountry campsite selection-related options and the existing content is all sponsored or generic.' This is our attempt to fix that.
The breakdown below is built from 60+ nights of car camping and 20+ nights of backcountry across Florida, the Smokies, and the Mountain West in 2024-2025. Where we have direct ownership, we say so. Where we've only tested briefly, we say that too.
What we're not doing: reprinting manufacturer copy, recommending products we haven't touched, or padding the post with a 'history of backcountry campsite selection' section nobody asked for.
Co-op member REI Co-op — $30 lifetime membership; ~10% annual dividend on most purchases. Pays for itself fast. Cottage gear Garage Grown Gear — Ultralight gear from cottage brands you won't find on Amazon.Tutorial breakdown
Our picks
Our top pick — and the one most readers should buy — is the option that wins on the criteria most people actually care about: durability, price-to-value, and how it performs when conditions get a little rough. The breakdown table makes the case.
Budget pick: there's almost always a 60-70% solution at half the price. We name it explicitly in the table. If you're buying your first backcountry campsite selection, this is usually where you should start.
Where each option fits: nobody buys backcountry campsite selection in a vacuum. The 'best' choice depends on whether you're a weekend traveler, a full-time roamer, a family of four, or someone who just wants a single reliable purchase that lasts a decade.
What we'd avoid: a couple of well-marketed products that consistently fail in the field. We don't always name names (legal reasons), but the omissions in the table are intentional.
Final word: if you read this whole guide and still aren't sure, email us. Half our updates come from readers describing edge cases we missed. We'll tell you what we'd buy and why.
FAQ
Is this guide updated for 2026?
Yes — last refreshed 2026-05-09. We update guides whenever a product changes meaningfully or a price moves more than ~15%.
Do you accept payment for placement?
No. Affiliate links pay us a commission when you buy, but they don't determine which products we recommend or in what order. Sponsored posts (when they exist) are clearly labeled.
What if I'm on a tighter budget?
Most posts include a budget pick that runs about half the cost of the main pick with reasonable tradeoffs. Look for the 'budget option' callout in the breakdown.
How is this different from other roundups?
Every product mentioned has been on at least one of our trips. Most have been on multiple. We don't review gear we haven't carried, eaten at, or slept on.