Camping First Aid Kit Checklist 2026: What to Actually Pack (Not What Amazon Sells You)

Last updated: June 24, 2026 — BestCampGear Editorial Team | Related: Beginner Checklist

⚠️ Medical disclaimer: This is an equipment guide based on widely accepted wilderness first aid protocols (NOLS, WFR, Red Cross Wilderness & Remote First Aid). It is not medical advice. Take a wilderness first aid course before relying on a first aid kit in a remote area. In a life-threatening emergency, call 911 or activate your satellite messenger.

Pre-made first aid kits are a scam. A typical $25 "200-piece" first aid kit contains 150 small adhesive bandages, 30 alcohol wipes, a pair of tweezers that cannot grip anything, and a single 2×2 gauze pad. Real first-aid supplies for backcountry injuries—a SAM splint, an irrigation syringe, a hemostatic dressing—are absent from retail kits because they cost more than the entire kit sells for. Build your own. This checklist is based on NOLS (National Outdoor Leadership School) wilderness medicine protocols and the items actually used by backcountry guides.

The Core Kit: Treat Bleeding, Blisters, and Burns

ItemQuantityPurposeApprox. Cost
Nitrile gloves (non-latex)2 pairsProtect yourself from bloodborne pathogens when treating someone else. Nitrile because latex allergies are common.$2
4×4 sterile gauze pads6-8 padsAbsorbent, non-stick wound dressing. 4×4 is big enough to cover a 3-inch gash.$3
Trauma pad (5×9 in)2 padsLarge-format absorbent dressing for major bleeding. An ABD pad absorbs 10× its weight in fluid.$3
Medical tape (1-inch cloth tape)1 rollSecures gauze to skin. Cloth tape stays on when wet. Paper tape dissolves in rain. Duct tape works in a pinch but pulls skin when removed.$3
Butterfly wound closures6 stripsClose gaping wounds that would otherwise need stitches. Do NOT use on dirty, infected, or puncture wounds.$3
QuikClot or hemostatic gauze1 packetStops severe bleeding that direct pressure cannot control. Used primarily for junctional wounds (armpit, groin, neck) where a tourniquet cannot be applied. QuikClot's kaolin-based formula is the standard.$12
Moleskin / Blister treatment1 sheetCut to size. Apply at the first sign of a hot spot. A blister 4 miles from the trailhead turns a pleasant hike into a painful march.$3
Irrigation syringe (10-30cc)1Flush dirt and debris from wounds under pressure. Wound irrigation with clean water is the single most effective infection prevention step in the backcountry (NOLS field research).$1

Tendons and Splints

ItemPurposeCost
SAM Splint (36-inch)A thin aluminum strip sandwiched in foam. Molds to immobilize a broken wrist, forearm, ankle, or collarbone. Weighs 4 oz, packs flat. Buy one—the item most frequently absent from commercial kits.$12
Elastic bandage (ACE wrap, 3-inch)Wraps sprains (ankle, wrist) and holds the SAM splint in place. Also doubles as a pressure bandage for major bleeding.$6
Triangular bandage (40×40-inch muslin)Sling for arm injury, cravat to secure splint, improvised tourniquet, head wrap, or splint padding. Weighs 2 oz. Covers the SAM splint + ACE wrap combination for immobilization.$4

Medications

ItemQuantityPurposeNotes
Ibuprofen12 tablets (200mg)Pain relief, anti-inflammatory for sprains and strainsNSAID. Do not take on empty stomach. Avoid if allergic to aspirin.
Acetaminophen12 tablets (500mg)Pain relief, fever reduction (ibuprofen alternative)Can be taken on an empty stomach. Do not exceed 3,000mg/day.
Benadryl (Diphenhydramine)6 tablets (25mg)Allergic reactions—bee stings, poison ivy, unknown rashesCAUSES DROWSINESS. Do not continue hiking after taking Benadryl. The person stays at camp, observed.
Antibiotic ointment (Bacitracin or triple-antibiotic)4 single-use packetsApply to cleaned wounds before bandaging to reduce infection riskSome people are allergic to neomycin (in triple-antibiotic). Bacitracin-only is safer.
Anti-diarrheal (Loperamide 2mg)6 tabletsControls diarrhea from bad water, camp food gone wrong, or stressDehydration from diarrhea in the backcountry is dangerous. Electrolyte powder should accompany this.
Electrolyte powder (single-serve packets)4 packetsReplaces salts lost from sweating, diarrhea, or heat exhaustionLook for ~300mg sodium per serving. Pedialyte has a lower sugar content than Gatorade.

Tools

ItemPurposeCost
Tweezers (pointed, not flat-tip)Removing splinters, ticks, and debris from wounds. Pointed tips can grab a tick by the mouth parts embedded in skin. Flat-tip cosmetic tweezers cannot.$5
Trauma shearsCut clothing to expose a wound. Safer than using a knife near injured skin. Cuts through denim, nylon webbing, and boot leather.$5
Safety pins (large, 2-inch)Securing bandages and slings, improvised gear repair. At least 4 pins.$1
Small notepad + penRecord vitals (pulse, respiration, time of injury), medications administered, and evacuation notes for SAR. Memory fails under stress.$1

What to Skip (And Why)

The Container

A dry bag (Sea to Summit 2L Dry Sack, $20) is the best container for a first aid kit. It is waterproof (critical—bandages degrade when stored in damp nylon pouches), bright-colored (red or orange for visibility day and night), and compresses to fit in a backpack or camp bin. Label it with a red cross drawn in Sharpie on both sides. Do not use a zippered nylon pouch—water seeps through zippers.

Total Cost and Weight

Building this kit from individual items: roughly $65-75. A pre-made kit with the same depth (including SAM splint and hemostatic gauze) costs $100-120—not because it has better items, but because someone assembled it for you. Weight: approximately 14 ounces including the dry bag. This is the kit for a group of 2-4 people on a 3-day car-camping or backpacking trip.

When to Add More

Add a satellite messenger (Garmin inReach Mini 2, $400 + $12/month subscription) if you camp in areas without cell service. A first aid kit cannot help you if you cannot call for help. For backcountry trips beyond cell range, this is not optional—it is the difference between a 4-hour evacuation and a 4-day one. This is the most expensive single item in your entire camping setup, and the most important.

Disclosure: BestCampGear is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. This guide is based on NOLS Wilderness Medicine protocols and standard Red Cross Wilderness & Remote First Aid course materials. It is not a substitute for professional training.