What Sets It Apart
The case for disposable batteries in a headlamp is straightforward: global availability. In North America and most of Europe, USB charging is universally accessible and rechargeable headlamps are practical. In rural international destinations, a dead rechargeable headlamp is a problem with no immediate solution; a dead AAA headlamp is solved at the nearest shop. For hikers who travel internationally or to very remote areas, this reliability matters more than the per-unit cost advantage of recharging.
IPX8 waterproofing on a $35 AAA headlamp is notably good for the price tier. Black Diamond builds its waterproofing standards consistently across its headlamp lineup, and the Spot 325 inherits the same submersion-rated housing as more expensive models in the Storm family — a meaningful specification for hikers in wet conditions.
Who This Is For
The Spot 325 is right for: international travelers who need resupply-anywhere battery simplicity, backpackers who camp in remote areas without reliable charging access, and hikers who prefer the straightforward logistics of disposable batteries without the management overhead of rechargeable systems.
How It Compares
Ranks #8 of 14 headlamps in this category.