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Camping Stoves NZ — Complete Buying Guide (2026)
Camping Stoves NZ — Complete Buying Guide (2026)
From a quick brew on a day hike to cooking dinner for the family at a campsite, the right camping stove makes outdoor cooking easy. Here's our guide to choosing the best camp stove for NZ conditions.
Types of Camping Stoves
Portable Butane Stoves
The most popular camping stove in NZ. Uses cheap, widely available butane gas canisters.
- Power: 2,000-3,500W — Good for boiling, frying, general cooking
- Fuel: Standard 220g butane canisters (available at supermarkets)
- Best for: Car camping, family camping, fishing trips
- Pros: Cheap, easy to use, stable, good heat output
- Cons: Bulky, butane struggles below 5°C, not great in wind
Compact Backpacking Stoves
Lightweight screw-on stoves that attach directly to a gas canister.
- Weight: 50-150g — pocket-sized
- Fuel: Isobutane/propane mix canisters (screw-thread)
- Best for: Tramping, day hikes, ultralight camping
- Pros: Ultralight, compact, fast boil times
- Cons: Small pot support, tippy, wind-sensitive
Dual-Burner Stoves
Two burners side by side — cook two things at once.
- Best for: Family camping, extended trips, base camps
- Fuel: Propane or butane
- Pros: Cook like at home — boil water while frying
- Cons: Heavy, bulky
Camp Stove Fuel Guide
| Fuel Type | Pros | Cons | Availability NZ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Butane (220g can) | Cheap, easy | Poor in cold | Everywhere |
| Isobutane/propane | Works in cold, light | More expensive | Outdoor shops |
| Propane | Most powerful, works in all temps | Heavy canisters | Hardware/gas stores |
| Methylated spirits | Ultra-simple, silent | Slow, low heat | Supermarkets |
Choosing the Right Stove for NZ
- Summer car camping: Portable butane — cheap, easy, plenty of heat
- Winter camping / alpine: Isobutane/propane — works below 5°C
- Multi-day tramping: Compact backpacking stove — light and fast
- Family base camp: Dual burner — cook proper meals
Safety Tips
- Never cook inside a tent — Carbon monoxide risk + fire hazard
- Use a windscreen — Improves efficiency and reduces fuel waste
- Check connections — Make sure canisters are properly seated before lighting
- Carry spare fuel — One 220g canister lasts about 1-2 hours of cooking
Shop Camping Stoves at Action Outdoors
Browse our camping equipment range or call 09 820 8023.
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