A complete starter camping kit for two people in the US typically costs between $400 and $625, covering shelter, sleep, cooking, and safety essentials at price points that last through multiple seasons.
Walking into an outdoor store with a $500 budget and zero gear is overwhelming. The aisles are packed with $400 tents and $300 sleeping bags that look necessary but aren’t. The real question is simpler: what do you actually need to sleep comfortably outdoors for a weekend, keep yourself fed, stay safe, and not hate every minute of it? Here’s the list that gets you there without the waste.
Shelter: Where You Sleep
Size your tent for one or two more people than will actually sleep in it—a 2-person tent is tight for two adults plus gear. The Coleman Skydome 6P Tent ($129) fits six with a 5ft 11in center height and sets up in about ten minutes. For two people who want something lighter, the Kelty Grand Mesa 2 ($149) weighs 4 lbs 1 oz with a clean, simple design. Ultralight hikers should look at the Lanshan 2 Pro ($180), a trekking-pole tent at just 36.5 oz. Replace the included stakes with Y-style budget stakes (~$10) — cheap wire stakes bend on the first rocky site and leave you chasing a tent across the field. Buy a footprint separately or use a basic tarp under the tent floor.
Sleep System: Bags, Pads, and Warmth
Choose a sleeping bag with a comfort rating at or below the lowest temperature you expect to encounter. The Kelty Cosmic 20 ($89) has a genuine 20°F comfort rating and packs reasonably small. If budget is the only concern, the Coleman Brazos 20 ($59) works for car camping where weight doesn’t matter. Pair either with a sleeping pad that adds insulation between you and the ground. The Sea to Summit Camp SI pad ($45) self-inflates and provides decent cushion. For more warmth and lighter weight, the NEMO Switchback ($210) is a mid-range choice. A Therm-a-Rest Z Seat ($25) is a small upgrade that makes sitting around camp far more comfortable — and doubles as a warm spot for changing clothes in the tent.
See our full tested roundup of budget camping gear for side-by-side comparisons on more shelter and sleep options.
Kitchen: Stove, Pot, and Eating Gear
The Coleman Cascade Classic ($45) is a reliable two-burner stove for car camping. For backpacking, the MSR PocketRocket 2 ($45) weighs just 83g and boils water fast; the PocketRocket Deluxe (~$75) adds an integrated windscreen that saves fuel on windy nights. The TOAKS Titanium 750ml pot (~$45) is ultralight and packs inside itself with the stove. Pair it with a Snow Peak Titanium Spork (~$15) that won’t crack like plastic. For car camping, bring a generic 2qt/4qt pot set with a 9″ pan (~$40) and Lexan plates and utensils (~$15). Keep fuel canisters separate from food and fire-starting tools.
Water treatment is non-negotiable — carry at least one gallon per person per day. The Grayl UltraPress Bottle (~$90) filters viruses and bacteria in about ten seconds with a push-down action. The Platypus QuickDraw Filter (~$35) is a lighter, cheaper option that works well for most US backcountry water sources.
Lighting, Safety, and Comfort
A headlamp with a red-light mode preserves night vision and doesn’t attract bugs like a white beam. The Black Diamond Astro 300 ($40) puts out 300 lumens; the Nitecore NU25 UL (~$45) hits 400 lumens at just 45g. Bring at least two fire-starting methods — matches and a lighter (~$5) kept in separate dry bags. A generic first aid kit (~$20) covers cuts, blisters, and minor burns. Dr. Bronner’s Organic hand sanitizer (~$8) keeps hands clean before every meal. A sharp knife belongs in every camp kit for food prep and cordage cutting — a basic Mora or Opinel is fine.
For seating, the Coleman Cooler Quad Chair ($45) has a built-in cooler pocket for drinks. Ultralight hikers should consider the Helinox Chair Zero (~$120) at just 510g. A 5-gallon utility bucket (~$10) is cheap and endlessly useful — carry water, use as a seat, wash dishes in it.
How to Stay Under $200
A true starter setup for two on a tight budget works like this: basic tent with groundsheet (~$75), two sleeping bags rated to the expected low (~$60 each), two closed-cell foam pads (~$20), a single-burner stove and fuel canister (~$30), a cook pot and two sporks (~$20), one headlamp ($15), and a first aid kit and hand sanitizer (~$25). That’s roughly $200–$250 for two people who get weekend trips out of it. The trade-off is weight and comfort — foam pads are less cushioned, and single-burner cooking means slower meals — but the gear works reliably for a full season.
FAQs
What is the most common beginner camping mistake?
Buying a cheap tent with wire stakes and no footprint, then struggling with setup on the first trip. Upgrade to Y-style budget stakes (~$10) and use a tarp under the tent floor — that alone prevents most frustrations at the campsite.
Should I buy a sleeping bag or a quilt for budget camping?
Sleeping bags are easier to find under $100 and seal drafts better for beginners. Quilts save weight but require a good sleeping pad with straps, adding cost. Stick with a bag for your first few trips unless you’re hiking long miles.
Do I need a camp chair, or is a log good enough?
If you camp at established sites with picnic tables, a chair is optional. If you’re tent-camping on open ground or expect rain, a chair keeps you off wet dirt and makes the trip more comfortable. A $45 Coleman Cooler Quad Chair is worth the space in the car.
References & Sources
- Switchback Travel. “The Best Budget Camping Gear.” Used for pricing and budget-gear recommendations throughout.
- Outside Online. “The Best Camping Gear and Accessories.” Verified headlamp and water-filter recommendations and safety practices.
- OutdoorGearLab. “Best Camping Gear of 2025.” Cross-checked tent and sleep-system specs and criteria.
