Best backpacking tents UK 2022: lightweight tents for hiking and camping UK, from Vango and Berghaus

Head out into the wild and experience everything the great outdoors has to offer with these brilliant backpacking tents

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Hiking holidays are a particular form of joy, and if you take a tent with you, you can well and truly get away from it all. You need light and portable one-person tent that can fit into a small rucksack. Enter: the backpacking tent.

As the name suggests, backpacking tents sit at the smallest end of the tent spectrum, and are designed to be carried with you on your adventures – they’re portable and compact enough to fit into backpacks or bike panniers, and are designed with hikers, wild campers, bike packers and anyone else covering long distances and setting up a new camp each evening in mind.

What size shall I go for?

You’ll see tents sold according to the amount of people they can sleep - one-person tents really do only fit one, and you may still want to choose a two-person tent if you want extra space and comfort. Most two-person tents should fit two campers plus their backpacks, and while these are heavier, they can usually be divided up to share the weight.

What is the ideal weight for a hiking tent?

Weight is at a premium on hiking and fastpacking adventures – after all, you have to carry all of your camping equipment with you. A one-person tent that weighs under two kilos or a two-person tent under four kilos is your best choice, although there are tents that weigh as little as 700g in our round-up.

Be aware: hiking tents are small

While getting a comfortable night’s sleep is important, a backpacking tent isn’t designed to be roomy like family or festival tents – many have low ceilings and limited space, as they’re designed to just be used at night rather than as living space. We recommend picking a tent you can at least sit up in, and tents with an outer sheet that can be pegged out to create a porch are also useful, offering extra storage space for your boots and other kit.

Make sure it will stay dry

Waterproofness is your other priority. The model you pick should be a ‘twin skin’ (a tent with an outer ‘fly’ layer as well as an inner tent) and feature a waterproof rain fly as well as a built-in nylon floor to stop water seeping in from the ground.

You’ll see both rounder dome tents and narrower tunnel tents available - if you’re planning on sleeping on exposed mountain sides, a dome-style tent is a good choice for better wind resistance, and guy ropes will further help you to secure the tent against high winds.

Key specs – Capacity: Two-person; Weight: 2.19kg;

Kelty’s Dirt Motel may sound playful, but it’s a spot-on name for this lightweight tent – it really delivers on comfort and space even when you’re camped out in the wild.

The Dirt Motel is a simple tent to pitch, and once erect it offers plenty of head room plus two wide doors and two porches, make it an easy tent to share as a duo.

An inner mesh tent can be used alone in warm climates and protects from insects, or add the waterproof fly on top, which we found reliable against bad weather even when we tested the tent out in the wet and windy Welsh mountains.

Great for backpacking and traditional camping trips alike.

Key specs – Capacity: Two-person; Weight: 4.24kg;

A great all-rounder if you’re after a two-person tent, Berghaus’s roomy Berg Grampian 2 works well for festivals and traditional camping weekends away as well as for dedicated backpacking trips, and can easily be split between two packs in order to share the 4.24kg load.

Two generous porches take extra gear, and the Grampian’s geodesic design leaves a good amount of living space inside and makes the tent stand up very well in windy or stormy weather. Our only critique would be that that bright red colourway isn’t exactly subtle – pick the green version if you’re into wild camping.

Key specs – Capacity: Two-person; Weight: 1.9kg;

Tunnel tents offer a great space to weight ratio but tend to be on the narrow side, and can feel rather coffin-like to sleep in. Not so Vango’s generously sized F10 Xenon UL 2.

With decent headroom and a wide sheltered porch ideal for storing kit or sitting in while cooking, there’s plenty of space for two people to get comfy, and at just under 2kg this tent is still a great weight if you’re going it alone. We love the wide storage pockets that line the tent (most backpacking tents offer rather limited storage).

The F10 Xenon also pitches in just a few minutes, which is very welcome after a long day in the outdoors, and is windproof and waterproof enough to take nigh-on anywhere you roam.

Key specs – Capacity: Two-person; Weight: 1.9kg;

Tunnel tents offer a great space to weight ratio but tend to be on the narrow side, and can feel rather coffin-like to sleep in. Not so Vango’s generously sized F10 Xenon UL 2.

With decent headroom and a wide sheltered porch ideal for storing kit or sitting in while cooking, there’s plenty of space for two people to get comfy, and at just under 2kg this tent is still a great weight if you’re going it alone. We love the wide storage pockets that line the tent (most backpacking tents offer rather limited storage).

The F10 Xenon also pitches in just a few minutes, which is very welcome after a long day in the outdoors, and is windproof and waterproof enough to take nigh-on anywhere you roam.

Key specs – Capacity: Two-person; Weight: 2.77kg;

We’ve never met an MSR tent we didn’t like – they stand out for their quality, and are a great choice if you want a backpacking tent that’s built to last for years of camping trips to come.

It’s the work of minutes to click together the Elixir’s poles, and the inside of the tent is roomy enough for two people, with more than enough space to sit up plus well-placed pockets for your belongings. There are wide porches outside the two doors, perfect for storing extra kit.

On a hot night you can even pitch the mesh inner tent on its own, which is great for a spot of stargazing. The outer fly is waterproof in rain, but some water does creep in during really stormy weather.

A one-person version is also available.

Key specs – Capacity: One-person; Weight: 700g

The impressive Project Hydrogen is one of the lightest backpacking tents on the market at just 700g.

It packs down to the size of a loaf of bread, and is a doddle to carry in smaller rucksacks or bike panniers – you’ll barely notice you’ve got a tent on you, even if you’re walking, cycling or racing over long distances.

Inside, there’s enough space to fit one person rather snugly, but there’s still room to sit up and the porch can store extra kit.

The Project Hydrogen is an ‘air’ tent and its hollow poles are inflated using an included bike pump, which is quick and fuss-free, and well-placed guy ropes make the erected tent sturdy in stormy weather. A pricy option, but well worth it for dedicated ultralight explorers.

Key specs – Capacity: One-person; Weight: 1.3kg;

The most affordable backpacking tent in our round-up is Decathlon’s rather nifty 3 Seasons Trekking, which we reckon is perfect if you’re in the market for a one-person backpacking tent on a budget.

It weighs just 1.3kg, although it doesn’t pack down as small as some other one-person tents on test, so you’ll need a larger backpack to carry it in. The 3 Seasons Trekking is well-sized for one, with big storage pockets and a porch.

We found it waterproof on test and windproof enough to work for most camps besides high mountain conditions, although it does need regular drying out to stop condensation from forming, so it performs best in dry weather.

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