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MSR Titan Kettle
#2 — Best Value Ultralight

MSR Titan Kettle Review (2026)

4.2oz, 850mL, hard-anodized aluminum — better heat distribution than titanium at lower cost

★★★★★
8.8/10
Reviewed by William • Updated May 2026 $50

The MSR Titan Kettle is the pot I recommend when people ask for an alternative to the Snow Peak Trek 700. At $50 it is $20 cheaper, at 4.2oz it is actually slightly lighter, and the hard-anodized aluminum distributes heat more evenly than titanium. For hikers who occasionally want to simmer a sauce or cook something that is not just add-boiling-water, the Titan Kettle is the better choice. The 850mL size is also more useful for two people sharing a pot than the Trek 700’s 700mL.

TrailCraft Score

What I Liked

  • 4.2oz — lighter than the Snow Peak Trek 700
  • $50 — $20 less than the Trek 700
  • Hard-anodized aluminum distributes heat more evenly than titanium
  • 850mL — more useful volume than 700mL
  • Strainer lid included
  • Lifetime MSR warranty

Limitations

  • Aluminum less durable than titanium over very long term
  • No nested fuel canister as elegantly as Snow Peak
  • Hard anodize can chip if dropped on rock
  • Handle design is functional but less refined than Snow Peak

Specifications

Weight4.2 oz / 119g
Capacity850mL
MaterialHard-anodized aluminum
LidIncluded — strainer design
HandlesFolding
Volume MarkingsYes
WarrantyMSR limited lifetime

Score Breakdown

Weight
10.0
Heat Distribution
9.2
Cook Performance
9.0
System Value
8.8
Value for Money
9.6

Field Notes

Used on a 3-night AT section in Pennsylvania, cooking ramen and actually trying to simmer a sauce one evening. The even heat distribution compared to titanium is genuine — I could hold a sauce at a low simmer without constant stirring. The 850mL volume handled one portion of pasta without overflowing. The strainer lid is a practical addition that the Snow Peak lacks.

4.2oz, better heat than titanium, $50 — the smart choice for hikers who actually cook

Who This Is For

The MSR Titan Kettle is right for: hikers who want an ultralight pot at lower cost than Snow Peak, anyone who occasionally cooks real food rather than just boiling water, and solo-to-two-person trips where 850mL is a more practical size than 700mL.

I review gear the way most people actually use it — weekend trips in the mid-Atlantic, day hikes on the AT, car camping in the Smokies and down at the Outer Banks. Normal outdoor life for normal people.

A note on pricing and links: Prices are current as of May 2026. Some links are affiliate links.

How It Compares

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Common Questions

MSR Titan Kettle vs Snow Peak Trek 700 — which is better?
The MSR Titan Kettle (8.8/10) edges out the Snow Peak Trek 700 (9.1/10) in value and heat distribution. The Trek 700 wins on brand prestige and the elegant fuel-canister nesting system. For most backpackers, the $20 savings and better heat distribution make the Titan Kettle the smarter buy.
Is aluminum or titanium better for camp cookware?
Aluminum distributes heat more evenly, making it better for actual cooking. Titanium is slightly lighter and more durable long-term. For freeze-dried meals: either is fine. For real cooking with simmering: aluminum (MSR Titan Kettle) is the better choice.
Does the MSR Titan Kettle work with any stove?
Yes — the Titan Kettle works with any backpacking stove. The base is sized to sit stably on canister stoves (MSR PocketRocket 2, Jetboil), integrated system stoves, and alcohol stoves. The wide base improves stability compared to narrower pots.
How durable is the MSR Titan Kettle?
Hard-anodized aluminum is durable for backpacking use. The anodized coating can chip if the pot is dropped hard on rock, exposing bare aluminum. This does not affect function but can lead to corrosion over time. For granite-heavy terrain, titanium is more drop-resistant. Backed by MSR's lifetime warranty for defects.