Field Notes
Taken on a car camping weekend to the Outer Banks where space in the cooler bag was at a premium. The X-Pot fits flat in a side pocket where a rigid pot would not go. Boiled pasta and made soup over a canister stove without issues — though I kept one hand on it during boiling because the flexible sides feel less secure than a rigid pot. Cleaned in seconds because food residue does not stick to silicone. Not my first choice for backpacking but a clever solution for car camping.
Collapses to 1.4 inches — the pot that fits where no rigid pot can go
Who This Is For
The Sea to Summit X-Pot is right for: car campers with limited vehicle space, hikers who need a large-volume pot but have a small pack, kayak campers and canoe campers where gear must compress tightly, and anyone doing base camping where multiple pieces of gear compete for volume.
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
Common Questions
Is the Sea to Summit X-Pot safe to cook in?
Yes — the BPA-free silicone is food-safe and heat-resistant to 428°F/220°C. The aluminum base sits directly on the stove and distributes heat into the silicone body. It boils water and cooks food normally. The main caution is stability: the flexible body requires a flat, stable stove surface.
Can the Sea to Summit X-Pot go on an open fire?
Not recommended — direct campfire contact can damage the silicone body at the sides even though the base is aluminum. It is designed for stove use. For campfire cooking, use a cast iron or stainless steel pot.
Does silicone absorb flavors and odors?
Silicone can absorb strong odors (fish, curry, garlic) over time. Wash immediately after cooking with soap and warm water. For persistent odors, fill with water and a tablespoon of baking soda, let sit for an hour, then rinse. This is a minor but real limitation versus metal pots.
How do you collapse the Sea to Summit X-Pot?
Push the sides inward and downward toward the aluminum base, then press firmly to lock in the collapsed position. Fully collapsing requires getting all the silicone folds aligned. It takes 3-4 tries to get it right the first time. Once learned, it collapses in about 10 seconds.