The Best Backpacking Tents of 2024: Tested

From ultralight solo shelters to spacious four-person hideaways, there’s a perfect tent for every backpacker.

Ryan Wichelns| Updated August 8, 2024

69 reviews with an average rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars
Two people at a campsite in the desert

Take the long way home with the year's best backpacking tents. These nine dependable shelters prove that you don't need to sacrifice quality in order to create the perfect backcountry living space.

Our 22 member-testers spent the last two years evaluating the best backpacking tents sold at REI. (Read more about the process here.) They hiked to remote deserts, wind-whipped summits and far-flung alpine lakes, considering everything from a tent's aerodynamics to how neatly it stows into its stuff sack. After a couple seasons of tough love, they reported back. We've distilled their feedback into this guide.

Whether you're backpacking with your family, a partner, your pup or by yourself, you're sure to find a shelter that suits you.


Test Results

For quick recommendations, check out the results of our round-robin here, or scroll down for in-depth reviews.

Other Top Performers


Bigger tents come in bigger packages—a real bummer if you're planning on shouldering your shelter for a backcountry adventure. So rub your eyes and look again: The Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL lineup is spacious and light across the board, an impressive balance that earned it an REI Editors' Choice Award. The two-person variety tips the scales at just over 3 pounds, while the three- and four-person versions shave even more weight at 3 pounds 14 ounces and 5 pounds 11 ounces, respectively (or less than a pound and a half per person if you split up components). 

For a barely there tent like this, you might expect confined quarters or a lack of features, but the Copper Spur makes for a remarkably comfortable backcountry hangout. It has a whopping 14 (ish) feet of floor space per sleeper in all capacities—plenty of room to spread out after a day of hiking. Our testers appreciated the tent's high-volume architecture, crediting its steep walls and tall peak height. Another nice touch? Dual vestibules (with the exception of the one-person version) that are positioned on either side for easier entry and exit. And an additional zipper allows you to prop up the fly over trekking poles to create a veranda. 

Even durability isn't a trade-off. Our testers returned from a month in Washington's Cascades with nary a snag on the Copper Spur, even after camping in alpine zones with barnaclelike rocks. And the line's bikepacking-friendly version (in one-, two- and three-person capacities) features shorter poles, perfect for stashing in handlebar rolls, as well as a couple of other bike-specific features. Buy here. 

Other capacities: One-person, three-person, four-person 

Bottom Line: You won't sacrifice comfort in this surprisingly lightweight tent—the roomy, feature-packed Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL is as much a joy to sleep in as it is to carry.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 52
  • Testing states: California, Colorado, New York, Utah, Washington
  • Best testing story: "There are few places I've ever felt so far from the rest of humanity," one tester says of his trip down a random slot canyon along the Escalante River in Utah. "Since it was a moonless night, we pulled the fly off the Copper Spur and got a serious star show."

Never leave the dog at home, says our Washington-based tester, even if that means toting a larger shelter. With a three-person tent as light and packable as the Mineral King by Mountain Hardwear, your pup can become a backcountry regular. The tester and his partner regularly bring their 70-pound husky on multi-day backpacking trips, and this shelter is plenty spacious for two adult humans and a sprawled-out pup. And at a little over 7 pounds, it’s hardly a chore to carry for many miles. The two-pole design is simple and space efficient and, divided among three people, the tent practically disappears. “I took the poles, [my partner] took the body, and [our other friend] the fly—I had to remind him he had it when we got to camp to set up.” 

The testers packed it on a five-day trip along Montana’s The Beaten Path trail without issue. The tent even kept them out of sopping overnight mountain storms. “We stayed comfortable and dry and, considering the generous head space (the tent has a 48-inch peak), we were able to sit up and play cards with another friend until things dried off outside,” one of the testers said. Almost 21 square feet of vestibule area make it even easier to stay comfortable in damp conditions. When the weather improves, users can roll the fly back to the peak, exposing the tent’s top half for primo stargazing. (The fly will continue to cover the back half of the tent to block any breezes and can be quickly replaced if a squall rolls in.) There’s plenty of interior storage, and the doors are large enough to make leaving and entering a cinch. Buy here. 

Other capacities: Two-person 

Bottom Line: Interior space normally comes at a premium with backpacking tents—not with the Mineral King 3.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 12
  • Testing states: Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington
  • Best testing story: While backpacking in Colorado’s San Juan Mountains, one tester and a couple friends spent an afternoon hiking up Wetterhorn Peak before hiking back out. But when a surprise afternoon storm rolled in, they only had time to pull out the fly and huddle beneath it. “Extremely comfortable? No. Dry? Mostly.”

Four's a party. But in the ultra-spacious Tungsten from Marmot, a crowd of stinky backpackers hardly posed a problem. During a winter trip out to the Utah desert, the tent's generous 93- by 82-inch floor handled a quartet of puffier shoulder season sleeping bags (and their four occupants) with ease. One gray morning, more than 4 feet of peak height and vertical interior walls left enough room for everyone to sip coffee without jostling. Two giant doors make getting in and out smoother and the vestibules offer ample space for gear storage, keeping your belongings out of the sleeping area.

The Tungsten held condensation to a minimum—a rarity for high-capacity tents like this—thanks to big vents on top of the fly. Two lampshade pockets in the eaves held a light for some after-dark poker, too. Weight and packability are always a ding with tents this large and the Tungsten is no exception. At almost 9 pounds, this is a load you'll want to share with your trailmates. Buy here.

Other capacities: One-person, two-person, three-person

Bottom Line: When you’re bringing a crew and need elbow room, the spacious Tungsten is hard to beat.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 3
  • Testing states: Utah
  • Best testing story: Setting up the Tungsten is a breeze, even when the pressure is on. "When we got to camp, the wind was really starting to blow," our tester says. "The whole tent is just two cross poles and two brow poles—It felt like we had it up and staked down in 30 seconds."

A brand-new pair of performance backpacking boots cost more than this tent—not bad for backcountry digs. On a trip to the Wind River Range, our testers lauded the REI Co-op Half Dome SL 2 for its ample space and plethora of pockets, all without realizing it was the most budget-friendly shelter in our test. This roominess, combined with an intuitive setup, makes the Half Dome a win for backcountry beginners who want a tent that's both affordable and uncomplicated.

The trade-off for the value is weight (it's nearly 5 pounds), though our testers still deemed it big-mile-ready, especially when divided between packs. If you're new to the trail, chances are you're probably sharing it with a friend who can help shoulder some of the lift. And livability is top-notch: A generous, rectangular floor plan and steep sidewalls left enough room for two adult hikers and a small dog to wait out a squall in general comfort. Buy here.

Other capacities: Three-person

Bottom Line: You’re not sacrificing much with this feature-rich, budget-friendly backpacking tent.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 15
  • Testing states: Wyoming, Utah, New York, Montana
  • Best testing story: During a cloudless night backpacking along Montana’s Beaten Path, our tester decided to leave the fly off and got a great night of sleep—until her dog ripped through the mesh after spotting a mountain goat. “Maybe keep the fly on if you have curious pups,” she recommends.

When you don’t have the option of splitting a tent among a handful of inhabitants’ backpacks, you notice every ounce. But prioritizing weight savings can come at the expense of space and comfort. The Hornet by NEMO was both light and roomy option for solo trekkers.   

During a three-night backpacking trip in Silverton, Colorado, and in Utah’s Bears Ears National Monument, one tester appreciated the tent’s light weight (at 2 pounds and 4 ounces) and packability. “This thing compresses pretty small,” he said, “especially compared to other tents I’ve used made of DCF.” DCF (Dyneema® Composite Fabric) is used by a lot of premium ultralight brands for hyperefficient weight savings. “I’d definitely consider it on an ultra-endurance thru-hike, especially if I wanted something I knew could handle bad weather and high winds.” One 6-foot, 8-inch tester fit snugly but comfortably and still had room for toiletries, some food and a stash of clothes inside the tent; the rest of his pack lived in the vestibule.  

The Hornet is semifreestanding, meaning that a portion of the tent needs to be staked out in order for it to reach its full size. The Hornet has two corners on the foot-side that should be staked out—simple to do and not 100% necessary in good weather. Plenty of guyouts and attachments from the fly to the tent body help pull out the body to allow a little more shoulder room. A Nightlight Pocket™ makes it easy to organize in the dark, and the large door and vestibule make entrances and exits less of a chore than other 1-person tents. Buy here. 

Other capacities: Two-person and three-person 

Bottom Line: Have your cake and eat it, too, with the spacious and weight-conscious single-person NEMO Hornet OSMO.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 9
  • Testing states: Colorado, Utah
  • Best testing story: This isn’t meant to be a 4-season tent, but when a surprise storm rolled in on our tester while camping in Silverton, Colorado, he was even more impressed: “The night brought 20 to 30 mph winds and about 6 to 8 inches of freshly fallen, wet snow.” He woke up perfectly dry.

We’ve long lauded the Big Agnes Fly Creek line for its light weight and interior spaciousness, but this new variant is ideal for a specific type of adventure: bikepacking. This version of the Fly Creek has bike-specific features, like a beefed-up compression sack that attaches to your handlebar and a strap to hold your bike helmet near the tent’s apex. The most critical upgrade, though: shorter tent poles. The 12-inch folded length (about 4 inches shorter than standard tent poles) makes it far easier to store them on your front bar, in your frame bag or in a pannier. “I was able to pack the tent in my handlebar bag with the poles, a stove, a bear bag and my sleeping pad,” says our North Carolina–based tester.  

She also loved the Fast Fly setup, which allowed her to leave the bulky tent body at home on trips she felt confident in the weather, setting it up with just the fly and footprint (sold separately). The two-person tent had ample room for her and her 6-foot, 4-inch husband. (“He was very excited he could sit up without ducking.”) Multiple interior pockets and the popular Big Agnes ceiling “shelf” made storage easy on wet days bikepacking in the Pisgah National Forest. Buy here. 

Bottom Line: If you’re primarily traveling on two wheels, the Big Agnes Fly Creek’s bikepacking-specific features are a major win.

Testing Stats:

  • Nights out: 8
  • Testing states: Arizona, North Carolina, Virginia
  • Best testing story: The bikepacking features of this tent don’t preclude you from using it on non-bikepacking trips. The tent became another tester’s go-to shelter for solo backpacking trips. She lauded the daisy chains that run along the tent’s top ridge, meant for air-drying equipment and clothes: “Biking isn’t the only time you get sweaty socks.”

Other Top Performers

Clearly, the designers at Sea to Summit are aliens who have never seen a tent before, tasked to make a lightweight backpacking shelter from scratch… and the out-of-the-box design they came up with is genius. During a winter of desert backpacking trips, our tester fell hard for the Telos' myriad innovations. The first stroke of brilliance comes from the upside-down looking brow pole across the top, which pulls the top corners of mesh way up and out. The result: You and your partner can both sit up and get dressed without your heads or shoulders brushing the tent material (plus, you get taller, easier-to-enter doors). A full-width vent along the very top of the tent kept things breezy during a warmer-than-usual spring trip to Moab, Utah. And three stuff sacks (for the body, fly and poles) separate easily to split up the load (and double as a light bar or storage), then reconnect for stashing. And on top of all that, the body of the tent easily clips to the poles even when the fly is already on: Our testers could set up the fly first in a rainstorm to keep the body dry, roll the fly back halfway on clear nights and set the fly up as a sun shelter big enough for three camp chairs. So, why is this shelter an Honorable Mention? While this tent is a similarly solid pic for small backpacking groups, the Mineral King (Best for Small Groups) won in the category thanks to providing slightly more space for campers. The Telos TR2 is a tighter squeeze. Buy here.

Thinking of pushing your tent into winter use? The REI Co-op Arete ASL 2 is a three-season tent that can pinch-hit in four seasons. When one pair of testers took it into Washington's remote Picket Range, 30 mph winds hardly ruffled their roomy mountain chalet, thanks to a beefy pole structure (two cross poles and two brow poles create a sturdy dome) and guyout points at every intersection. Nice touch: The stake-out points can accommodate skis, ice axes or ski poles, if you're camping in snow. The same sturdy architecture led a pair of co-op editors to declare the Arete "earthquake-ready" after a magnitude 4.6 shaker barely stirred our sleepers. ("That was an eventful camping trip," one said after the fact.) Inside the Arete, adjustable vents keep condensation to a minimum, and a large window on the top of the tent body keeps airflow churning (and becomes a giant skylight in good weather). Buy here.

Shop All Backpacking Tents


Buying Advice

A tent with mountains in the background

Unlike with car-camping tents, weight matters when you're planning to shoulder your tent in your pack. Finding the right backpacking tent is an exercise in juggling how much capacity, livability, seasonality, weight and size, and additional features matter to you because even one of those things adds ounces to the equation. (Just remember this old thru-hiking adage: Ounces make pounds, and pounds make pain.) 

Capacity

How many people will be sharing the sleeping space? The number in the name of the tent is the brand's honest assessment of how many sleepers can fit shoulder to shoulder. Keep in mind that backpacking tents are cozier than their car-camping counterparts, so you can expect snug quarters if you max out the capacity. 

Capacity of each tent in this guide:

That said, many models come in multiple capacities, which we've listed at the end of each review. Pick a capacity that will work for the number of backpackers you typically plan to have in your tent. If you crave extra space and are willing to carry a heavier tent, you can also go larger (say, buying a three-person shelter for two sleepers). 

Livability

Tents can come with all kinds of features that will make it more enjoyable to spend time inside them, and one of the most important is roominess (or lack thereof). Pay attention to the specified floor space and peak height to get an idea of how comfortable the tent will feel. Specs alone won't tell you if a tent feels livable, though; it's important to know what the tent looks like pitched. More vertical walls that don't angle in steeply will usually weigh more but feel less claustrophobic when sitting up. And while it won't actually add square footage to your space, a bright fly color will transmit more light inside the tent, making the interior feel spacious. 

If you're moving fast or only planning to sleep in your tent, tight quarters may not matter. If weather is going to sideline you inside your tent or you're planning on using it to basecamp, perhaps more livability will serve you best. 

Tent Seasonality

Most backpacking tents are classified as 3-season (designed for spring, summer and fall) or 4-season (also designed for winter). Most users only need a 3-season tent; 4-season tents, while more durable and more livable, tend to be heavier than 3-season shelters. That can make them worth it for alpine and winter adventures but overkill for summer trips. Every tent in this lineup is a 3-season tent, with the exception of the REI Co-op Arete ASL 2, which is something like a 3.5-season tent: great for occasional snowy weather, not expeditions. 

Weight and Size

You'll often see several specs related to weight and size in a tent's description, all of which will tell you just how much brands mean it when they say they're "ultralight" (a term they can use pretty liberally). 

Key tent specs:

  • Minimum trail weight: This is the best spec to use when comparing your options. It's the weight of the bare essentials: the tent body, rainfly and poles.
  • Packaged weight: This is the weight of everything that comes with the tent when you buy it: body, rainfly, poles, stakes, stuff sack, pole sack, instructions and more. Obviously, you won't be bringing all of this on the trail, so the actual weight you'll pack will likely be somewhere between this number and the minimum trail weight.
  • Packed size: This is the amount of space the tent takes up in a pack, which you can reduce by splitting up components with a partner.

Reducing weight and packed size will usually result in trade-offs with space, livability and durability, though you can also pay a premium for ultralight-yet-strong materials. Consider whether you could do without features like a second door or vestibules big enough to hang out in. One feature that is worth a few extra ounces: ventilation like mesh windows and adjustable rainfly vents to prevent condensation buildup

Ease of Setup

Tents offer a range of features to help make the pitching process easier and faster:

Freestanding design: Most tents are freestanding, which means that they can stand without the use of stakes, making them easier to set up and lift to move to a new spot. Non-freestanding tents may be lighter because the pole structure doesn't have to be as robust. The six freestanding tents in this guide are the Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL2, Mountain Hardwear Mineral King 3, Marmot Tungsten 4P, REI Co-op Half Dome SL 2+, Sea to Summit Telos TR2 and REI Co-op Arete ASL 2. The three semifreestanding tents are NEMO Hornet OSMO Ultralight 1P and the Big Agnes Fly Creek HV UL2 Solution-Dyed Bikepack.

Pole hubs: These junction points for side and roof poles help take the guesswork out of assembly, and they create a more spacious interior by allowing tent walls to be more vertical. Most tents on this list, including the Mountain Hardwear Mineral King 3, Marmot Tungsten 4P, REI Co-op Half Dome SL 2+ and Sea to Summit Telos TR2, have pole hubs. 

Pole clips: Do you slip poles through sleeves, connect them to tent canopies with clips, or both? Sleeves provide more fabric tension and a stronger pitch, but slipping poles through them during setup can be tricky. Clips attach to poles easily and allow more airflow underneath the rainfly, which is good for reducing condensation. All tents on this list include pole clips. 

Color coding: Many tents will color match, say, pole tips with tent corners so you know at a glance how to orient your setup—an especially handy trick if your tent is wider or taller at one end. The REI Co-op Arete ASL 2, Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL2, Marmot Tungsten 4P, REI Co-op Half Dome SL 2+, Sea to Summit Telos TR2 and NEMO Hornet OSMO Ultralight 1P have some form of color coding to match pole tips with attachment points. 

Note that, even if your tent has a lot of features that make setup easier, you should still do a practice run at home before setting up a tent in the wilderness. It's a lot harder to get the hang of it if your first pitch is in the dark or in a rainstorm (or both). At home is also a better time to discover if any pieces are missing.

Durability

Tents designed to be ultralight, bordering on minimalistic, trade off some degree of durability in the materials. One fabric spec you occasionally see is denier (D), which is the weight in grams of a 9,000-meter length of the yarns that make up that fabric (you can typically find this number listed online under the tent’s specs). A higher denier number signals a more rugged fabric, while lower denier numbers are found in more lightweight but less durable fabrics. However, it won't be an apples-to-apples comparison unless you're comparing identical fabrics. 

Weather Resistance

Features like a robust pole architecture, bathtub-style floor, ceiling vents and windows, and guyout points are great if you plan to camp in wet, windy or exposed areas. Rounded dome designs eliminate flat roof spaces where snow and rain can collect. And, partly because they're often built with those specific features, 4-season tents will almost always be stronger than 3-season tents. If you're only planning on backpacking in milder climes, picking a tent with large mesh window, door or ceiling panels will provide great stargazing when sleeping without the fly. 

Should You Get a Footprint?

Available for many tents, a footprint is a custom-cut ground cloth accessory that's specifically designed to match the tent's floor shape. Using a footprint helps protect the floor from abrasion and makes packing up cleaner. Some campers choose to bring a generic ground cloth or tarp, but because those will generally extend beyond the perimeter of the tent floor, they can collect rainwater. 

Some tents also offer an ultralight setup option where the (separately sold) footprint, poles and rainfly can be pitched together without the main tent, which is a great option if you're camping in temperate climates and going minimalist with weight. 


Methodology

A smiling woman sitting in a sleeping bag in her tent

Starting in the summer of 2019, we began sending the best new backpacking tents sold at REI into the field with a team of expert gear testers doing everything from family backpacking trips to light-and-fast thru-hikes to mountaineering and bikepacking trips. After a season or two of use for each individual tent, we asked testers to grade their home away from home on its weight and packability, spaciousness and comfort, weather protection, durability, features and price. We also regularly test updated models to make sure their capabilities, statistics, reviews and scores as a whole stayed true. 

All said and done, the Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL2, Big Agnes Fly Creek HV UL2, Mountain Hardwear Mineral King 3, NEMO Hornet OSMO 1P, and Marmot Tungsten scored high in all categories. We tested the two-, three- and four-person versions of the Copper Spur. The Sea to Summit Telos TR2, REI Co-op Half Dome SL 2+ and REI Co-op Arete ASL 2 scored high in most categories, carving out respectable niches for specific users. 


Related Articles