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MSR PocketRocket 2
#1 — Best Ultralight Canister Stove

MSR PocketRocket 2 Review (2026)

2.6oz, boils 1L in 3.5 minutes, fits in your palm — the ultralight stove that most AT hikers carry

★★★★★
9.0/10
Reviewed by William • Updated May 2026 $50

The MSR PocketRocket 2 is the stove answer for AT backpackers who cook anything beyond just rehydrating. At 2.6oz it weighs almost nothing. It simmers properly — you can cook real food, not just boil water. It folds small enough to disappear into a pack pocket. The piezo igniter works reliably. At $50 versus the Jetboil Flash's $120, it is a better value for hikers who bring their own pot. MSR's reputation for quality is earned: this stove has been the AT backpacking standard for good reason.

TrailCraft Score

What I Liked

  • 2.6oz — lightest quality canister stove tested
  • Good simmer control — actually cooks food, does not just boil
  • $50 — $70 less than Jetboil Flash system
  • Works with any pot — not limited to proprietary cup
  • Piezo auto-igniter (carry a lighter as backup)
  • MSR lifetime warranty

Limitations

  • Boil time (3.5 min/L) slower than Jetboil Flash
  • No integrated cup — bring your own pot
  • Wind performance degrades without windscreen (Jetboil fan-assisted flame is better in wind)

At a Glance

Weight2.6oz / 74g
Boil Time3.5 min per 1L
FuelStandard isobutane-propane canisters
SimmerGood — adjustable flame
IgniterPiezo auto-igniter
Pot CompatibilityAny pot
WarrantyMSR lifetime
Price$50

Score Breakdown

Weight
10.0
Simmer Control
9.0
Fuel Efficiency
8.8
Value for Money
9.6
Versatility
9.2

Field Notes

Primary AT cook stove for two seasons paired with a 550mL titanium pot. The 2.6oz stove weight is genuinely light — the canister and pot are the heavy components, not the stove. Simmer control is real: I have cooked oatmeal and instant mashed potatoes without burning them. Windscreen is necessary in exposed camping — I carry a lightweight aluminum foil windscreen (0.3oz) folded in the pot.

2.6oz, simmers properly, works with any pot — the ultralight canister stove most AT hikers carry for good reason

Who This Is For

The MSR PocketRocket 2 is right for: backpackers who cook beyond just boiling water, AT hikers who want the lightest possible stove at a fair price, and anyone building a backpacking cook kit from scratch.

Note: Prices are current as of May 2026. Some links are affiliate links.

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Common Questions

MSR PocketRocket 2 vs Jetboil Flash?
MSR PocketRocket 2 (9.0/10): 2.6oz stove, $50, works with any pot, better simmer. Jetboil Flash: 100-second boil speed in the integrated system, $120, proprietary cup only. For freeze-dried meal only hikers who just need fast boiling water: Jetboil Flash. For anyone who actually cooks: PocketRocket 2.
What fuel canisters work with the MSR PocketRocket 2?
Any standard EN417 isobutane-propane canister: MSR IsoPro, Jetboil, Snow Peak, REI brand, and others. All interchange regardless of brand. Carry a 100g canister for 2-3 day solo trips; 230g for longer sections.