Hydration & Water Filtration

Hydration & Water Filtration

Shop hydration reservoirs, filter bottles, and trail-ready filtration gear that keep longer hikes simpler to plan and easier to recover from. Start here for the water system, then complete the trai...

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Hydration & Water Filtration

7 products

Filters

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Price

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Guided Buying Path

Build your kit from the essentials first

Start with water purification, first aid, bug out bags, and emergency food to cover the core pieces of a dependable readiness setup.

001

Cover water first

Water access is the single highest-leverage prep. Gravity filter for camp, squeeze filter for carry, purification tablets as backup.

Shop Water Purification →
002

Add a carry platform

A proper pack keeps the kit organized and deployable. Choose based on duration — 24-hour, 72-hour, or extended retreat.

Shop Bug Out Bags →
003

Build the tool layer

A quality multi-tool and fixed blade cover repairs, food prep, and first aid tasks across every scenario.

Shop Multi-Tools →

Mission Kit Paths

Build faster with mission-ready paths

Prep Lane

72-Hour Readiness Kit Path

Start with water, first aid, food, and a carry platform — core readiness covered in the right order.

Build Readiness Path →
Water Lane

Backcountry Filtration Kit Path

From primary filtration into gravity support, bottle carry, and backup treatment for camp and trail.

Build Water System →

Common Questions

Frequently asked

What should I buy first for a preparedness kit?

Start with water purification — it's the highest-leverage item. A quality squeeze filter or gravity system covers most scenarios. From there, add a first aid kit, emergency food, and a carry platform.

How much water do I need to store for a 72-hour kit?

Plan for one gallon per person per day — that's three gallons minimum for 72 hours. A portable water filter lets you extend that supply indefinitely when natural sources are available.

What is the difference between a filter and a purifier?

Filters remove bacteria and protozoa using physical barriers. Purifiers also eliminate viruses, typically using UV light or chemical treatment. For most backcountry use in North America, a quality filter is sufficient.

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Ready-made survival kit paths

Skip the guesswork — browse pre-built kit sequences organized by mission.