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MSR Windburner Solo
#1 — Best All-Weather Backpacking Stove

MSR Windburner Solo Review (2026)

A radiant burner sealed inside a pressure-regulating system — wind that kills other stoves barely slows this one

★★★★★
9.4/10
Reviewed by William • Updated July 2026 $160

The MSR Windburner Solo is built around solving the single biggest reliability problem canister stoves face in the backcountry: wind. Its radiant burner and integrated windscreen work together to maintain consistent output in conditions that would reduce a standard canister stove to a barely-flickering flame. The pressure regulator adds a second layer of reliability by compensating for the pressure drop that occurs as a canister empties or as temperatures fall — two more situations where unregulated stoves underperform. For anyone who camps in exposed alpine terrain, coastal ridges, or any environment where wind is a consistent variable, the Windburner earns its premium over a lighter, cheaper option.

TrailCraft Score

What Works

  • Sealed windscreen built into the design eliminates wind as a meaningful variable
  • Pressure regulator maintains consistent output as the canister empties and temperature drops
  • 1L pot, stove, and accessories pack into a single integrated unit
  • Better simmering control than most integrated cooking systems
  • Radiant burner heats from the side rather than below, making the design nearly impervious to crosswind

Limitations

  • 15.2oz system weight is heavier than a standalone canister stove plus separate pot
  • $160 is the most expensive stove in this roundup
  • Only works with MSR WindBurner-specific pot and accessories
  • The sealed system makes it harder to cook anything that requires stirring or watching the pot

Specifications

Weight15.2 oz / 431g (stove + 1L pot)
FuelIsobutane/propane canister (Lindal valve)
Boil Time4.5 min per liter
Output7,650 BTU/hr
Flame ControlYes, including simmer
Packed Size1L pot with stove and accessories inside
SimmerYes (better than most integrated systems)
WarrantyMSR limited lifetime warranty

Score Breakdown

Cooking Performance
9.2
Weight / Packability
8.6
Ease of Use
9.4
Wind Performance
10.0
Value for Money
9.0

What Sets It Apart

Most canister stoves use a conventional upright burner that radiates heat upward, making the flame inherently vulnerable to crosswind. The Windburner's radiant burner element glows and radiates heat from within a sealed chamber, with the combustion occurring inside the windscreen rather than in open air. This design, derived from MSR's Reactor system, maintains output in crosswinds that extinguish conventional canister stove flames entirely.

Pressure regulation matters most at two predictable points: when a fuel canister is running low (pressure drops as propane vents first and colder isobutane has difficulty vaporizing) and when ambient temperatures fall below freezing. An unregulated stove produces noticeably less heat in both situations. The Windburner's regulator compensates automatically, maintaining a consistent flame rather than requiring the user to warm the canister manually or accept slower boil times.

A radiant burner sealed inside a pressure-regulating system — wind that kills other stoves barely slows this one

Who This Is For

The Windburner Solo is right for: alpine hikers and mountaineers where wind is a constant, shoulder-season backpackers who need reliable performance in cold mornings, and anyone who has had a trip compromised by a conventional stove failing in wind. It is not the right choice for lightweight-obsessed hikers who cook primarily in sheltered conditions.

A note on pricing and links: Prices are current as of July 2026 and may change. Some links are affiliate links — if you buy through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

How It Compares

Within this category, the MSR Windburner Solo ranks #1 out of 14 products compared.

See the full comparison

All 14 camp stoves ranked side by side — specs, scores, and pricing.

View Full Comparison →

Common Questions

Does the MSR Windburner really perform in wind?
Yes — the sealed radiant burner design is genuinely wind-resistant in a way conventional canister stoves are not. In independent testing, the Windburner maintains near-rated output in crosswinds that reduce standard burners to a fraction of their output or extinguish them entirely.
Can the Windburner simmer?
Better than most integrated pot systems. The radiant burner provides more even heat distribution than a conventional burner, and the flame control valve allows meaningful adjustment, making it suitable for meals that need actual cooking rather than just boiling — though it still doesn't match the precision simmering of a wide freestanding burner.
Why does it only work with MSR Windburner pots?
The pot locks onto the stove via a proprietary connection that forms the sealed windscreen system, so third-party pots can't replicate the wind-resistant geometry. MSR offers WindBurner-specific pots in 1L, 1.8L, and a personal pot format.
Is the Windburner worth $160 versus a $50 PocketRocket?
For fair-weather cooking in sheltered campsites: no. For reliable cooking in wind, cold, or at altitude: yes. The PocketRocket is lighter and cheaper and does everything the Windburner does under ideal conditions. The Windburner is the better tool when conditions are not ideal, which is when a stove choice actually matters.