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A group of people at a campground prepare a meal and stoke a fire. Text overlay reads: Roll up, spread out. Campground Camping Guide.

SleepEatFurniture
Someone prepares a camping meal as two people in camp chairs tend a fire in front of a large tent.

Campground Camping Essentials For 2024

If you’re sleeping where you parked, these gear recs and pro tips are for you.


We can’t argue with the ease of rolling up to our campsite, spreading out our gear, and immediately proceeding to take it easy. Whether you’re heading to an a National Park, a State Forest, or a KOA campground, these gear picks have a parking pad, picnic table, and nearby pit toilet or restroom facility in mind.

The back of a car is packed with camping gear. Text overlay reads: Camping Checklist, read our shortcut for packing up.

Sleep

We don’t worry about weight when choosing gear for a weekend at a campground. Instead, we pack tents and sleep systems that are exceedingly comfortable and loaded with extra features.


How We Choose A Tent

Here’s what we expect from the perfect campground tent:

Comfort: Our favorite tents have generous floor plans and taller standing heights. When deciding size, we use the n+1 rule, which gives each individual a bit more personal space. For example, if we have 3 people in our group, we’ll pick a 4-person tent.

Extra features: Does the tent have multiple entrances? Is there a loop to hang a lantern from or storage pockets on the side walls for a phone, book, or headlamp? How about windows or a mesh top to sleep under the stars on clear nights?

Ease of setup: If assembly is a struggle, we start looking for a different tent.

Here’s what we DON’T worry too much about:

Weight: This isn’t backpacking. The farthest we carry a campground tent is the 20-foot distance from where we park to where we pitch. That means we’ll pack a heavier tent that’s both larger and (typically) less expensive.


Best Tent

Image of a large brown tunnel-style tent. Text overlay reads: Gearhead top pick, Snow Peak Vault Tent.

Snow Peak 2-In-1 Vault Tent


Weekenders, party of four! One of the many reasons we love Snow Peak’s camp gear is the thoughtful versatility baked into each item. The Vault 4-person tent is no exception.


This spacious 170-square-foot shelter meets our snooze needs with ease whether we’re laying out two double pads or three singles. Internal storage pockets keep the interior mess-free, and a large vestibule gives us space to store packs and shoes. We especially love that the rain-fly doubles as a sunshade. We like to pitch it alone for daytime cookouts at the campground.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

More options to cover your crew, rain or shine.

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How We Choose A Sleeping Bag

We recommend picking a sleeping bag based on your height, fill-type, and the temperature where you’ll be camping.

Height: Pick a bag that is slightly longer than you are tall. A too long bag will leave you with cold feet. Meanwhile, a too-short bag won’t cover your head and shoulders and will feel constricting.

Fill: Durable, lofty, and warm, down fill is a more expensive option and doesn’t insulate well if it gets wet. Meanwhile, synthetic fill is less expensive than down and is our preferred choice for wet conditions.

Temperature: We like to choose a sleeping bag based on our campsite’s likely lowest temperature. Note, however, that a bag’s temperature ratings are not comfort ratings.

  • A 30 degree bag will keep you alive in temperatures freezing or warmer.

  • We generally recommend 30+ degree bags for summer use, though a cooler-rated bag is appropriate if you’re camping in colder places.

  • Meanwhile, 15–20 degree bags are appropriate for 3-season camping (spring, summer, and fall).

  • For winter camping, we choose a 0- or –15-degree sleeping bag.


Best Campground Sleeping Bag

An orange and brown rectangular sleeping bag. Text overlay reads: Gearhead Top Pick, stash pocket for a headlamp

Stoic Groundwork 20 Sleeping Bag


Summer camping calls for a versatile sleeping bag. This 20° bag’s hollow-fiber synthetic insulation offers toasty warmth on chillier high-elevation nights, and an all-around zipper lets us convert it into a quilt for sprawling out when our tent feels warm. (We’re definitely fans of the one leg in and one leg out method for keeping cool on hot nights!) We love the durable 20D mini-ripstop shell—it’s perfect for protecting our gear when the pups want to snuggle.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

We picked a happy-medium 15° temp rating. Find a wider range in our runners up.

How We Choose A Sleeping Pad

Unlike your mattress at home, one sleeping pad likely won't serve all your camping needs. And in this case, we aren’t talking about how squishy a pad is (in fact, all our favorites will put at least a few inches of foam and air between you and the cold, hard ground). You’ll get better sleep on average by packing the right sleeping pad for the season and location based on its R-value.

R-value is a measurement of thermal resistance, which tells you how well a sleeping pad slows transfer of your body heat to the ground beneath you. Higher R-values stall heat loss in the coldest conditions, while lower R-values make most sense when it’s warmer. A common misconception is that high R-values are only for cold weather. However, thermal resistance doesn’t heat you up—it just prevents heat loss. This means that a pad with a high R-value can be used year-round, so long as it doesn’t have any heat reflecting properties.


Best Campground Sleeping Pad

Image of rectangular sleeping pad. Text overlay reads: Gearhead Top Pick, 3” of cushy inflatable foam

Stoic Cloud Camp Bed


It’s called the Cloud for a reason! This inflatable foam pad gives us 3 inches of loft, and a reinforced bottom ensures that rocks and sticks can’t burst our perfect-sleep bubble when we elect to sleep cowboy style. A soft, stretchy upper fabric has a comfy feel when we inevitably sprawl out of our bags on hot nights. While this isn’t the lightest or most-compact sleeping pad thanks to an 8.5 R-value and plenty of foam, we love it for car camping because it’s just so dang comfortable.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

Not into our top pick and don’t want FOAMO? There’s more sleep squish to go around.

Explore More Camping Content

Top Picks From The Backcountry Bulletin


Eat

Save your freeze-dried vittles for backpacking. Embrace your inner outdoor gourmand.

How We Choose A Camp Stove

You can certainly roast weenies over an open flame, but a camp stove simplifies just about every other type of meal prep. For campground cooking, we like a setup with multiple propane burners for cooking more complex dishes (or multitasking!). We also look for sensitive dials and high-BTU outputs (10k is a great place to start), so we can simmer a pot of chili all evening or sear a hamburger in a flash.


Best Campground Stove

A product image of a green Coleman Cascade grill appears with the words “Flat griddle & cast-iron grill”. A close up shot of the grill appears behind the first image.

Coleman Cascade 3-In-1 Stove


Small yet mighty, Coleman’s Cascade is exactly what we want in a camp stove. Because our dinner parties are small (after all, there are only so many seats in the van), this high-power double burner gets the job done without taking up too much space in the back of our vehicle. Rotary ignition eliminates the need for matches or a lighter, and 12,000 BTU-output per burner gives us the even heat we need for chilaquiles breakfast scrambles and fajita-style tacos alike. What really seals the deal is the two extra cook surfaces: a flat griddle for flapjacks and cast-iron grill for those perfect bratwurst char lines. 

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Gearhead® Top Picks

We were cooking with gas before, but we’ll cook over open flames, too.

How We Choose A Cooler

Over the years, we’ve tried a lot of coolers, from mini mart Styrofoam numbers to trendy hard-shell ice chests. For environmental reasons, we avoid single-use coolers or chests that won’t stand up to a full year of use. When it comes to durable hard-shell options, we’re always on the hunt for a cooler with a secure seal and lengthy insulation duration to keep food fresh longer. Added bonuses include organizing trays, split cooling zones for sorting food from fire-side beverages, and tech innovations (battery-powered, for example) from our wildest dreams.


Best Camp Cooler

A product image of a blue YETI cooler appears with the words “Fits 509+ cans!”. A close up shot of a man holding an aluminum can appears next to the cooler.

YETI Tundra 45 Cooler


Just because it’s starting to cool off out there doesn’t mean we don’t need a cooler. The YETI Tundra 45 Cooler is heavily insulated, UV-resistant, and practically bombproof, making it perfect for everything from days on the lake to camping trips. This model is the ideal size for cooling enough wares for a small crew on weekend trips, while the burly side handles make hauling from car to campsite simpler. The PermaFrost insulation, and ColdLock gasket keep ice frozen for days, and its bear-tested, extra-thick Fatwall design is virtually indestructible.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

More high-tech coolers and sticker-able standard insulators to keep food fresh.

How We Choose Water Storage

Most campgrounds have water that’s safe to drink available, and just about any large water tank with a spigot, air release valve, and handle works well for refills at the communal spout. If you ever dabble in dispersed camping or overlanding, then you know that potable water isn’t so readily available. Our top pick for hydration knocks it out of the park for all three types of camping. It holds plenty of water—and it’s a top-notch filtration system, too.


Best Campground Hydration Station

A person pours water from a tan water jug on a tailgate into a red cup. Text overlay reads: Gearhead Top Pick, holds 5.28 gallons.

Lifesaver Jerrycan


It’s water storage. It’s water filtration. It’s exactly what your campsite needs. Before we hit the road, we like to fill up this 18.5L jerrycan from the tap. And when we run through our supply, we fill it up again at whatever water source we have available. Its replaceable activated-carbon Ultra Filtration system removes viruses, bacteria, cysts, parasites, chlorine, and odor from 20,000 liters worth of water, so you can guarantee hydration for trip after trip.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

Camel up for a week or the weekend with more water storage and purification picks.


Camp Furniture

Let the good times roll with essential camp furniture that brings the whole crew together. When selecting daytime furniture for our campsite, comfort, durability, and ease of use are top of mind. Seriously, if you need a multi-step manual to assemble, it’s not on our top picks list.


Best Camp Table

A person prepares a meal on a camp stove beside a camp table and cooler in a campsite. Text overlay reads: Gearhead Top Pick, made from bamboo & aluminum.

Snow Peak Single Action Table


With our collective camp stoves, grocery bags, and board games, sometimes us Gearheads run out of room at the picnic table. Rather than crossing your fingers you find a nice flat rock, pack this auxiliary bamboo and aluminum table. Its swift folding design assembles and stashes in a flash, and its standard height and uniform surface make it ideal for both outdoor dining and post-grub games.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

More top table picks to round out your camp kitchen.


Best Camp Chair

Two people sit back-to-back in a two-person camp chair. Text overlay reads: Gearhead Top Pick, holds up to 400lbs.

Kelty Low Loveseat


Nothing beats making memories with new friends and old, and this double camp chair knows it. Half as high and twice as wide, the Low Loveseat brings you and someone from the crew closer to the fire—and each other. So when the day’s over but you’re not ready to hit the hay, this chair is the spot to be.

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Gearhead® Top Picks

One chair’s company, two’s a crowd, and three’s a party. We like a party.