Backcountry Water Purification Guide 2026: Filter vs Chemical vs UV vs Boil

June 24, 2026 | Water Filter GuideUltralight GearBeginner Checklist

Giardia cysts are 5-14 microns. Cryptosporidium oocysts are 4-6 microns. Bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella, Campylobacter) are 0.2-5 microns. Viruses (norovirus, hepatitis A, rotavirus) are 0.02-0.2 microns—roughly 1/100th the size of bacteria. Your water treatment method either removes these mechanically (filter), kills them chemically (iodine/chlorine), damages them with radiation (UV light), or denatures them with heat (boiling). Each method has failure modes. Here they are.

MethodRemoves BacteriaRemoves Protozoa (Giardia/Crypto)Removes VirusesRemoves Sediment/ChemicalsTime to 1LWeightLifespanPrice
Hollow Fiber Filter (0.1 micron)Yes (bacteria 0.2-5μm are larger than 0.1μm pores)Yes (protozoa 4-14μm are much larger)No (viruses 0.02-0.2μm pass through). Add chemical treatment for virus areas.No (chemicals dissolved in water pass through).30-60 seconds (squeeze/gravity)2-6 oz1,000-100,000 liters depending on model$25-50
Chemical (Chlorine Dioxide)Yes (requires 30 min contact for bacteria, 4 hours for Crypto)Yes (but 4 hours—plan ahead)Yes (15-30 minutes)No. Actually adds taste (chlorine).30 min to 4 hours (waiting, not active time)1 oz30-120L per bottle$10-15
UV Light (SteriPEN)Yes (DNA damage prevents reproduction)YesYesNo. Murky water shields pathogens from UV—pre-filter required.90 seconds per liter5 oz8,000 treatments (battery-limited)$50-90
BoilingYes (1 min at rolling boil at sea level, 3 min above 6,500 ft)YesYesNo (sediment settles; chemicals not removed).5-10 min (fuel + boil time)0 (stove/fuel already carried)Unlimited (fuel-dependent)Fuel cost only
Gravity Filter (Platypus GravityWorks)YesYesNoSome (activated carbon removes taste/odor)2.5 min (passive—hang and wait)11 oz1,500L$120
Pump Filter (MSR Guardian)YesYesYes (0.02 micron hollow fiber—only portable filter that removes viruses without chemicals)No2 min (active pumping)17 oz10,000L$390

Hollow Fiber Filters: The Standard for 90% of Backcountry Trips

A hollow fiber filter is a bundle of microscopic plastic tubes with pores precisely 0.1 or 0.2 microns in diameter. Water flows through the pores; anything larger is mechanically blocked. This works for bacteria and protozoa but not viruses. In North America, viruses in backcountry water are rare (the CDC reports that virtually all US and Canadian backcountry gastrointestinal illness is bacterial or protozoan—Giardia and Crypto cause 90%+ of cases). In developing countries and some parts of Southeast Asia, viral contamination is common and a filter alone is insufficient. The Sawyer Squeeze ($30, 3 oz) is the thru-hiker standard: 0.1 micron absolute hollow fiber, 1,000,000 gallon lifetime guarantee (roughly 3.8 million liters—essentially infinite for a single hiker), fits on a Smartwater bottle thread for gravity system conversion. View Sawyer Squeeze →

Chemical Treatment: Lightest, Slowest, Most Complete

Chlorine dioxide (ClO₂) tablets differ from iodine. Iodine kills bacteria and viruses but has poor efficacy against Cryptosporidium and leaves an aggressive taste. Chlorine dioxide kills all three pathogen categories and leaves a milder taste (or none—many users report no taste difference). The Aquamira Water Treatment Drops ($15, treats 30 gallons/120L) is a two-part system: Part A (stabilized chlorine dioxide) and Part B (phosphoric acid activator) are mixed 7 drops each in the cap, allowed to activate for 5 minutes (solution turns yellow), then poured into water. Wait 15 minutes for bacteria/viruses, 30 minutes for Giardia, 4 hours for Crypto. This is the correct treatment for areas with viral risk (international travel) or as a backup to a filter. View Aquamira →

UV Light: Fast, Fragile, Battery-Dependent

The SteriPEN Ultra ($70, 5 oz) uses a UV-C lamp at 254nm wavelength to damage microbial DNA. It treats 1L in 90 seconds and kills everything—bacteria, protozoa, viruses. The problems: (1) It requires clear water—UV light is blocked by turbidity. Floaty bits = shadowed pathogens. Pre-filter through a bandana or coffee filter for murky sources. (2) It requires batteries—USB rechargeable (treats 50L per charge per manufacturer spec, but cold temperatures reduce battery life 30-40%). (3) It breaks. A SteriPEN dropped onto granite fails silently—the bulb externally appears fine but no longer emits sufficient UV-C. For a 1-week trip with clear mountain streams, it is the fastest treatment method. For a 6-month thru-hike, the fragility is disqualifying. View SteriPEN →

Boiling: The Only Method That Is 100% Reliable

Boiling water for 1 minute at a rolling boil at sea level (3 minutes above 6,500 feet / 2,000 meters, per CDC guidelines) kills everything—bacteria, protozoa, viruses, worm eggs. Boiling is the gold standard to which all other methods are compared. The downside is fuel: boiling 1L on a canister stove consumes roughly 7g of fuel (isobutane/propane mix), so a 110g canister provides approximately 15L of purified water. Boiling is the correct backup method when a filter fails, chemicals are exhausted, or water is suspected of chemical contamination (filters do not remove dissolved chemicals—boiling concentrates them by evaporation, which makes this worse; distillation is required for chemical contamination). View Camp Stoves →

The Two-Stage System for Any Water Source

For absolute safety in any backcountry water in the world: (1) Pre-filter coarse sediment through a bandana. (2) Filter through 0.1 micron hollow fiber (Sawyer Squeeze) to remove bacteria and protozoa. (3) Treat filtrate with chlorine dioxide (Aquamira) to kill viruses. Total time: 30 seconds of active work + 30 minutes waiting for chemical treatment. Weight penalty: 4 oz (filter + chemical kit). This two-barrier system is standard practice for international expedition medicine and eliminates all three pathogen categories.

Disclosure: BestCampGear is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. Pathogen size data from CDC water treatment guidelines and EPA drinking water standards. Filter specifications from manufacturer published data.