June 24, 2026 | Beginner Checklist • Budget Gear
| Item | Buy Price | Rent/Day | Break-Even (Nights) | Rent or Buy? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tent (2P) | $250 | $15-25 | 10-15 nights | Rent first trip. If you camp 3+ times/year, buy. A rented tent has unknown care history—a stressed pole splinters on night 2 of your first trip. |
| Sleeping bag (20°F) | $300 | $12-18 | 17-25 nights | Buy. Rented sleeping bags are the most-borrowed item. You sleep inside other people's sweat. For $50 you can buy a Kelty Cosmic 20—cheap enough to own from day 1. |
| Sleeping pad | $100 | $8-12 | 8-13 nights | Buy. A Therm-a-Rest Z Lite is $45 and worth owning for picnics and guest beds even when you're not camping. |
| Backpack | $200 | $15-20 | 10-13 nights | Rent until you know your torso length. A rented backpack that fits correctly is better than a purchased backpack that doesn't—and first-time campers do not know their size. |
| Stove + cookware | $100 | $10-15 | 7-10 nights | Buy. A PocketRocket 2 ($45) + GSI pot ($20) = $65 total. Renting costs half the purchase price in one weekend. |
Bottom line: rent the big three (tent/backpack/sleeping bag) for your first trip to test camping as a hobby. If you go three times and keep going, the break-even math strongly favors buying—a $600 rental budget spent across 4 weekend trips buys an entire beginner kit. See our beginner camping checklist for the complete first-trip gear list.
Disclosure: BestCampGear is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. Rental pricing from REI, Outdoors Geek, and local outfitter averages. Break-even calculated as purchase price ÷ daily rental cost.