LifeStraw Personal Water Filter Review: The $17 Survival Tool That Still Holds Up

Key Features
Filters 1,000 Gallons
One straw handles about 4,000 liters of water. For most hikers, thats years of trail use.
0.2 Micron Hollow Fiber
Removes bacteria, parasites, microplastics and sediment. Protozoa too.
Ultralight & Compact
Weighs 2 oz. Fits in any pocket or side pouch without feeling like you packed it.
No Chemicals, No Power
No iodine taste, no batteries, no chlorine. Just suck and drink.
Our Experience
The LifeStraw is one of those gear items that ends up in everyones pack because it just works. We threw it in a day pack for a weekend hike and used it to drink straight from a creek, no questions asked, water tasted clean. No plasticky after taste, no funny smell.
Flow rate is slower than chugging from a bottle but fine for sipping. The effort is like drinking a thick shake. If you are dehydrated you can still get water in fast enough. The only real limitation is that you cant store filtered water, it filters as you drink.
At under $20 there is really no argument against having one in your go bag, glove box, or emergency kit. We now keep two, one for hiking and one for emergencies.
Pros & Cons
What We Liked
- Crazy cheap for what it does
- Lasts through roughly 1,000 gallons
- Zero batteries, chemicals or setup
- Weighs almost nothing in the pack
Worth Knowing
- Cant store filtered water, drink as you go
- Does not remove viruses or heavy metals
- Harder to use for filling cookware
Full Specifications
| Filter Type | Hollow fiber membrane |
| Pore Size | 0.2 microns |
| Capacity | 4,000 liters (1,000 gallons) |
| Weight | 2 oz / 57g |
| Filters Out | Bacteria, parasites, microplastics |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does it remove viruses?
How long does it last?
Will it freeze damage?
Final Verdict
The LifeStraw is still one of the best piece of emergency prep gear you can buy, and probably the best $17 you will spend on hiking kit this year. Doesnt matter if you are a day hiker, car camper, or just want peace of mind in a go bag, this belongs in your pack.
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