MSR PocketRocket 2 stove review: fast, tiny, and bombproof

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A hot meal and a hot drink do more for morale in the backcountry than almost anything you can carry. The MSR PocketRocket 2 is the stove we point most hikers to first: it is tiny, it is fast, and after years on the market it has earned a 4.8-star average across more than 4,000 verified ratings. For simple boil-and-go cooking, it is hard to beat.

Our field rating 4.8

The verdict

A pocket-sized canister stove that boils fast, simmers well, and packs down to almost nothing — about 2.5 ounces. No assembly, cheap fuel, and solidly built. If you want a hot meal or purified water with minimum fuss and weight, this is the one.

What it does

The PocketRocket 2 is a screw-on canister burner that threads onto standard isobutane canisters. It folds down to fit in a small pot, weighs about 2.56 ounces, and puts out enough heat to bring roughly a liter of water to a boil in a few minutes. Pot supports fold out to hold everything from a mug to a small pot, and the valve gives you real flame control from a rolling boil down to a simmer.

MSR PocketRocket 2 stove — click to enlarge.

What verified buyers say

Across verified-purchase reviews, the same points come up:

  • Fast boils. One owner boiled a quart in about 2.5 minutes with a finned pot; a first-time canister-stove user hit drinkable water in about 5 minutes even with the flame turned low.
  • Adjustable and reliable. Buyers love the flame control, and note it held its flame in wind where a cheap lighter would not. “Light but doesn’t feel flimsy — good quality when you’re unfolding and folding it back up.”
  • Beginner-friendly. No assembly and cheap canisters (around 5 dollars locally) make it an easy first stove; several keep a spare canister for practice at home.
  • Packs to nothing. Compact and light enough that it disappears in your kit.

Worth knowing

The PocketRocket 2 is a bare burner, not an all-in-one system: you supply your own pot, and it has no built-in igniter, so always carry a lighter or matches as backup. In strong wind or at altitude, integrated systems (like a Jetboil) are more fuel-efficient — but they cost and weigh more.

Who it is for

If you cook simple backcountry meals — boil water for dehydrated dinners, coffee, and oatmeal — this is the sweet spot of weight, price, and reliability. Groups melting snow all day or cooking elaborate meals may want a more wind-resistant or higher-output system, but for the vast majority of trips the PocketRocket 2 is all the stove you need.

Specs at a glance

Type: canister burner (isobutane) · Weight: ~2.56 oz · Boil: ~1 L in a few minutes · Igniter: none (bring a lighter) · Best for: solo/duo boil-and-go cooking

Check price on Amazon

Bottom line

The MSR PocketRocket 2 does one job — turning fuel into a fast, controllable flame — and does it about as well as anything at its size and price. Pair it with a lighter and a small pot and you can cook dinner or boil water to purify almost anywhere. It also earns a spot in your kit as a backup way to make water safe; see our guide to purifying water in the backcountry.

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