Quick answer: What is the best camping stove for a festival in the UK?
The MSR PocketRocket 2 (~£40–£55) is the best festival camping stove — it weighs 73g, packs to the size of a matchbox, boils 1L of water in 3.5 minutes, and runs on standard isobutane canisters available at most outdoor stores. Budget pick: the standard camping gas burner with piezo ignition (~£8–£20) — heavier and slower, but does the job for morning porridge. Only bring a stove if your festival allows it — check the rules first.
A camping stove transforms your festival campsite from a place you sleep to a place you actually live. Morning coffee and porridge before the arena, noodles at midnight when the food vendors have queues 40 minutes long — a stove pays for itself in food savings and quality of life within the first morning. But only if your festival allows it. For a full campsite kit, see our festival camping checklist UK.
Are camping stoves allowed at UK festivals?
Quick answer: Can I bring a camping stove to a UK festival?
It depends entirely on the festival. Most UK festivals ban open flames and LPG stoves in campsites due to fire risk — Reading, Leeds, and Download all prohibit gas stoves in standard camping. Some festivals have dedicated campfire or cooking zones. Boutique and smaller festivals (Green Man, End of the Road) are more permissive. Always check the specific festival’s list of banned items before packing a stove. Getting one confiscated at the gate is an expensive lesson.
| Festival | Stoves allowed? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Reading / Leeds | ❌ No | Gas stoves are banned in all camping areas |
| Download | ❌ No | Open flames and stoves are banned |
| Green Man | ✅ Check rules | More permissive — check current year rules |
| Latitude | ⚠️ Check rules | Some stove types permitted — check policy |
| Smaller boutique festivals | ✅ Often yes | Always verify with the specific festival |
| Campervan fields | ✅ Usually yes | Campervan areas typically permit stoves |
Top festival camping stoves
| Stove | Weight | Price | Boil time (1L) | Best for | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSR PocketRocket 2 | 73g | ~£40–£55 | 3.5 min | Best overall — light, fast, reliable | Amazon |
| Jetboil Flash | 371g | ~£80–£100 | 100 sec | Fastest boil, integrated cup — premium | Amazon |
| Campingaz Twister Plus | ~300g | ~£20–£35 | ~5 min | Budget-friendly, easy-to-find gas canisters | Amazon |
| Generic piezo gas burner | ~250g | ~£8–£18 | ~6–8 min | Cheapest functional option — festival porridge | Amazon |
| BioLite CampStove 2 | 935g | ~£130–£150 | ~4.5 min | Wood-burning + USB charging — no gas needed | Amazon |
Types of festival camping stoves explained
| Type | Fuel | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canister gas stove | Isobutane/propane canister | Light, fast, easy to use | Canisters may be banned; needa separate purchase |
| Liquid fuel stove | White gas/petrol | Works in cold, refillable | Heavy, complex, and almost always banned at festivals |
| Wood-burning stove | Twigs, wood | No fuel to carry or buy | Open flame — banned almost everywhere |
| Solid fuel tablet | Hexamine tablets | Ultra-light, cheap, packs flat | Slow, low heat, open flame risk |
| Electric / induction | 12V or battery | No flame — most likely permitted | Needs a power source — portable power station |
What to cook at a festival campsite
Quick answer: What should I cook at a festival?
The rule: pack food that requires only boiling water. Instant porridge, instant noodles, couscous, freeze-dried camping meals, and hot drinks. These need one pan, one heat source, and minimal prep. Avoid raw meat entirely — no refrigeration, no hygiene facilities, a serious food-poisoning risk. The campsite stove is for hot water, not cooking.
- Instant porridge sachets — breakfast sorted in 3 minutes
- Instant noodles or pot noodles — midnight fuel
- Freeze-dried camping meals (~£6–£10 each) — proper food in 10 minutes
- Camping coffee bags or pour-over sachets — morning non-negotiable
- Stainless steel camping mug (~£6–£12) — the only cookware you need for a stove-based festival setup

Festival stove tips
- Check if your festival allows stoves FIRST — all other tips are moot if it is banned
- Bring a windshield — a foil windshield (~£4–£8) halves boil time in any breeze
- Buy gas canisters before you arrive — many festivals do not sell them on site, and local shops near festival sites sell out early
- Never cook inside your tent — carbon monoxide poisoning kills at festivals every year. Always use a stove outside with ventilation
- One 230g canister per weekend — sufficient for 2–3 people’s boiling needs over 3–4 days
Related guides
Frequently asked questions
Can I bring a camping stove to Reading Festival?
No — gas stoves and open flames are banned in all Reading Festival camping areas. This also applies to Leeds Festival. Check the specific banned items list for any festival before packing a stove.
What is the best camping stove for a festival?
The MSR PocketRocket 2 — 73g, packs to matchbox size, boils 1L in 3.5 minutes. For budget: any canister gas stove with piezo ignition under £20 handles festival porridge and hot drinks perfectly well.
Can you use a camping stove inside a tent?
Never. Carbon monoxide poisoning from stoves used in enclosed spaces kills people every year. Always cook outside with good ventilation, even in the rain. Use the porch area of your tent at the absolute minimum — never inside the sleeping area.
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