Field Notes
Six years, maybe 80 trail nights. The Trek 700 has been boiled on a MSR PocketRocket 2, a Jetboil Flash, and directly over a small campfire. The titanium has darkened slightly from campfire use but otherwise looks and performs identically to new. I have dropped it down a rocky slope in Shenandoah (it rolled 20 feet) and it came back without a dent. For solo cooking — boiling water for coffee and freeze-dried meals — it is the definitive tool.
4.9oz, six years of use, zero failures — the titanium pot that never lets you down
Who This Is For
The Snow Peak Trek 700 is right for: solo hikers cooking freeze-dried meals, ultralight hikers who want the lightest complete pot system, and anyone who values quality over finding the lowest price.
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 Snow Peak Trek 700 good for backpacking?
Yes — it is the standard solo backpacking pot. At 4.9oz for a complete pot-and-lid system that nests a fuel canister inside, it is the most space-efficient solo cooking setup available. The 700mL capacity is ideal for boiling water for one person's freeze-dried meal and a morning coffee.
Can you cook food (not just boil water) in the Snow Peak Trek 700?
You can cook food, but titanium's poor heat distribution means hot spots are common. Stir constantly, use the lowest flame that maintains a boil, and keep food moving. For freeze-dried meals and boiling water, it is perfect. For sautéing or anything that requires even heat, the MSR Titan Kettle (aluminum) is better.
What fits inside the Snow Peak Trek 700?
A 100-110g isobutane fuel canister fits inside the pot. A small camp stove head (MSR PocketRocket 2, for example) fits on top of the fuel canister inside the pot. This nesting system saves meaningful pack volume and is one of the Trek 700's main advantages.
How do you clean the Snow Peak Trek 700?
Rinse with clean water, scrub with a camp scrubber or paper towel, and dry before storage. Titanium does not rust. For burned food, add water and bring to a boil to loosen residue. Snow Peak recommends against metal scrubbers that could scratch the surface.