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Hubba Hubba NX 2

MSR - Hubba Hubba NX 2

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Reddit Reviews:


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11
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2

Based on 1 year's data from Jan 28, 2026 How it works

Liked most:

1924

560


"I even washed them accidentally and still worked perfectly fine afterwards."


"Been using them for about four years working out in my gym, and cycling daily (45+ minutes on a bicycle outdoors)."


"They last absolutely forever (I know 1980s models still in daily use)"

59

12


"It's huge, has more than enough room for two and has enough height for me to sit upright in (I'm 6'4")."


"It's very spacious and high enough. I can literally sit in it with my helinox Ground chair and be totally fine!"


"It's very spacious and high enough. I can literally sit in it with my helinox Ground chair and be totally fine!"

5

0


"The MSR Hubba Hubba I found really awesome for setting up fly-first. ... You can set up the fly without staking anything into the ground. Just stick the pole into one corner eyelet of the fly, bend it and stick it into the opposite corner. Attach it at the top in the center. Then do the other pole. Now you have a free-standing roof that took like 40 seconds to set up and you can crawl under to attach the inner tent. ... this one I found extremely quick and easy to set up in the rain. ... the original Hubba Hubba that I bought 15 years ago and used until maybe 5 or 6 years ago pitched fly-first without any hacks. It didn't even have to touch the ground. You could do it all in the air."


"super easy to set up and store"


"Drizzle is fine, it only takes a minute to stake out the inner and secure the poles so it doesn't get too wet."

20

7


"I’ve bought both to festivals with multiple severe thunderstorms and was much dryer than people who brought much more expensive tents."


"camped out in the rain for 5 days with it and my tent was the only one still bone dry on the inside when we were packing up"


"I have a Coleman instant up cabin tent and it’s completely waterproof."

5

4


"I camped for many years in the Pacific Northwest with a MSR hubba hubba and never got wet. ... There is no place on a properly tensioned hubba hubba that the fly touches the tent."


"Still water tight"


"MSR Hubba Hubba 2: A good balance of weight, durability, and weather resistance. ... I use a MSR Hubba Hubba NX 2man tent and love it."

Disliked most:

48

32


"when it comes to height support, I find that Durston tends to overestimate. ... I'm 198 cm tall, and only X-Mid Pro 2+ is usable for solo use. ... I definitely wouldn’t go for the one-person X-Mid 1 if you're around 193 cm or taller."


"I had a lanshan pro 2 and it was way too small, both hair and toes got soaked from condensation."


"at 183cm with some extra space for the bag with 450g of down to get the loft that tent was not enough. My head was barely touching the mesh doors of the inner, while my feet were already pushing the inner against the fly (with the tent properly tensioned!) Woke up with wet bag and cold as hell feet. Didn't bother to use it again."

17

18


"Personally snapped a three season tent on rainier from the wind a few seasons ago. Granted it was a big Agnes tiger wall."


"Hubba tent has a single top tube, this design is made to be lightweight but it cannot withstand wind."


"I saw over a dozen gazelles that totally failed during a storm at an Overland event two years ago. ... They did not hold up well at all. ... Guy lines were used etc, but they were some of the worst fairing tents among them all. ... I was a volunteer and had to go around taking stock of the damage and help people and after that I would not buy one of their tents. ... I was a volunteer at an overland rally two years ago and saw a bunch of gazelle tents fail in a wind storm. ... It was wild. they were the worst failing tents of all the tents there. ... esp if they are going to fail in bad weather."

1

1


"Old style was just too heavy."

15

20


"It will leak, you will wake up with everything wet."


"Leaked in moderate rain and ruined our week."


"Constantly leaks"

0

1


"If you have a dog in your tent the bottom will rip over time. ... I’ve had this tent repaired twice."

Reddit IconAlaskanarrowusa 1.0
r/hikinggear2p backpacking tent lightweight
4 months ago

If you can stretch the budget just a llittle or do some sales hunting, consider the Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL2 OR MSR Hubba Hubba NX 2 OR Durston X-Mid 2. [11 Best 2-Persons Tent for Camping and Backpacking](https://alaskanarrows.com/11-best-2-person-tent-camping-and-backpacking/) can help with the others. They’re are all 3-season tents with better fabrics, stronger pole architecture, roomier vestibules and more thoughtful details (doors, vents, zips) than budget models. They’ll be heavier and cost more than the Cloud-Up versions but they’re way more durable and comfortable long term, take it from me, I’ve gone on countless trips with various types of tents so yeah! If $300 is a hard cap, watch for sales or used tents online, you’ll find something!

r/backpackingBackpack setup - need gear and pack advice
3 months ago

Make sure you first start by measuring your torso and try on packs loaded before you buy! Torso length and hip-belt fit matter way more than the brand. You’re pretty tall so look at packs with XL/long/adjustable torso options and real frames so you have support for multi-day loads. Backpack shortlist: - Osprey Atmos/Aether; or - Gregory Baltoro/Deva #gear shortlist: - tent or tarp with a footprint like the MSR Hubba Hubba NX 2 or Big Agnes Copper Spur. - sleeping pad like a Therm-a-Rest NeoAir XTherm (or XTherm MAX) - a stove like the MSR PocketRocket 2 or Jetboil MiniMo boiling efficiency - water supply - a Sawyer Squeeze or Katadyn BeFree works Others - [52 Last Minute Hiking and Backpacking Gears to Pack](https://alaskanarrows.com/hiking-and-camping-gears-checklist/) #underrated essentials: 1. Trekking poles 2. Good rain cover for the pack 3. Waterproof stuff-sack for electronics 4. Repair kit (cord, duct tape on a pen, extra zip ties, pole splint, needle/thread) 5. Camp shoes (ultralight sandals or crocs) 6. Gaiters for scree/snow

r/backpackingBackpack setup - need gear and pack advice
3 months ago

From the two, I’d lean towards the Hubba NX 2 tbh, it’s kinda designed with durability as it’s priority

Reddit IconIntelligent_Run3825 1.0
r/backpackingTent opinions
8 months ago

I had a hubba Hubba nx2 but wanted lighter so I got a hornet osmo 2P. Returned it because I couldn’t get in the tent during rain without the poorly designed fly dropping water on tent body mesh. Now I have a Durston xmid2 pro for most trips and a BA copper spur 1 if its platform tenting. I love the hubba. Old style was just too heavy. All the Durston products are fantastic!

r/backpackingJust getting started, rate my gear
3 months ago

That will be so easy to drop a ton of base weight when you get a good tent. I was at 6 lb 2 person eureka. Got a 3.75 lb MSR Hubba Hubba in 2020. Last 2-3 years I have had the extreme pleasure of carrying the just over 1 lb Durston xmid pro 2. It’s pricy but the regular xmid is much more affordable. And double wall vs single wall of the pro. Nemo Hornet and any of the BA tents are great too.

Reddit IconLivexslow 1.0
r/backpackingTent opinions
8 months ago

I’ve had my MSR hubba hubba nx2 for probably 9 years now…it’s still going strong no issues. I replaced the shock chord in the poles last year and it’s good as new

r/backpackingTent recommendations
12 months ago

i’ve had an MSR hubba hubba nx2 for 6+ years and I love it. can set it up in about 5 minutes or less. it’s light enough, and there’s plenty of room inside. i’m 6’4 and can sit up inside to get dressed etc. Six moon design also makes some good ultralight tents i’ve heard.

Reddit IconPurpleCaterpillar82 1.0
r/UltralightIs Big Agnes Copper Spur HV UL 2 still a good buy in 2025 for $509 CAD?
11 months ago

My current backpacking tent: a **2014 MSR Hubba NX tent.** **Pros:** Still works, paid off and I’ve liked the design/pitch/liveability/features.  **Cons:** roomy enough but I do prefer a larger floor size even if I’m solo.  I’ve often thought it would be nice to have extra floor room, especially on rainy, hot humid nights. Still water tight but I did have to re-proof it/re-applied new seam sealant due to degradation a few years ago.  = thinking a 2 person tent might be the next evolution for me for that extra space. Yes there will be a weight penalty. I WAS just going to wear my MSR tent into the ground but with looming economic instability/tarrifs/exchange rates, a replacement a year from now might cost considerably more than today. The Copper Spur HV UL2 is on sale 25% off for $509 CAD (Reg $680).  Anyone own this tent and really like it?  What don’t you like about it? I also considered Tiger Wall (not fully free standing and more fragile), fly creek (I like doors at the feet end but not convinced) and the new Durston X Dome (innovative and beautiful, limited availability, narrower footbox and I’m not sure how I feel about non-aluminum poles).  Should I consider any others? Make your case for my next tent. I camp in Ontario along the Canadian Shield and like to do ultralight canoe tripping. 

Reddit IconEvening-Buy-5298 0.9
r/lightweightGood durable beginner 2 person tent under 4 pounds
6 months ago

I like my Hubba Hubba nx. I use it as a one person tent so I have room to have my rucksack and so on inside with me. The tension ridge or whatever it is on the top makes it spacious inside, and its interior height is excellent at 100cm. I am six foot and need at least 93cm to be able sit up. That 100 cm is well distributed too, it's not just at one point. I think it's great as a tent you can backpack with, about 1.5kg, but also big enough you could hang out in it for a day without feeling like you're in a coffin. My daughter really likes the sea to summit equivalent which is about the same size and price.

Reddit Iconbergsteroj 0.4
r/CampingGearIs a 2 person tent actually big enough for 2 people?
8 months ago

My wife and I backpack a fair bit (multi day up to two weeks). Our primary tent is an MSR Hubba Hubba 2 from a couple years ago (not sure if I’d recommend them now as company changes have affected their gear a bit, but just using it for reference). The tent floor is 84”x25”. We use Nemo Tensor Regular Wide sleeping pads which are 72”x25”. So, they fill the entire floor width with only a handful of inches top or bottom. I am 5’10 with wide shoulders and over 200lbs. She is 5’4.5 (the extra half inch is important to her) and 130’s. We are able to put our packs at our feet and sleep fine. She sleeps on her back. I tend to sleep on my side or stomach (and then feet end up on the pack or under knees if I do end up on my back for a while). We also have Nemo Fillo Elite pillows (with and inch of memory foam on top of the air bladder). Comfort is import to us while trying also be efficient about size and weight (but not ultra light). For packing, we mostly carry all our own individual stuff (quilts, clothes, headlamps, personal items, food, water, etc). A few random things get split; stove versus battery versus shit kit, etc. For the tent, the way we handle it is I carry the whole tent, but she then gets my sleeping pad and pillow to offset the volume and some of the weight. This is what works for us. For a two person backpacking tent, you will be cozy and hopefully like being near the person you’re sharing it with. I wouldn’t want to share it with a random person or someone I wasn’t very comfortable sleeping very close to. Carrying a 3 person backing tent would not be a bad decision if you want the extra space. You pay for it with about an extra pound of weight and a slight bit more volume in the pack, but it’s your choice to make on what is important to you (as well as what money you can spend). I personally prefer freestanding tents (and then still stake them down as best I can) because I’m in Colorado and find that staking can be hard enough to do that I really don’t trust trekking poles type tents that rely on staking. Too much risk of a staking pulling out due to poor ground. Means I will never have the lightest tent due to carrying tent poles, but I’m the one that has to carry them (not the randos online that are measuring the eight of a ziplock bag).

Reddit IconCheap-Pension-684 0.4
r/backpackingTrekking pole tent
6 months ago

I will second this. When I’m using a trekking pole tent, the x-mid 1 is my go to. I use both a free standing Hubba hubba 2 (love that tent) and an x-mid 1 for backpacking. The choice depends on the terrain primarily and a little bit on weather.

r/AppalachianTrailWhat's the best 2-person backpacking tent? Any suggestions?
6 months ago

MSR Hubba Hubba 2. Double walled free standing. Got me through an AT thru last year and NEVER leaked. Very roomy.

Reddit IconMoto-Ent 0.4
r/wildcampingintheukIs 2P tent needed if you're short?
about 2 months ago

For 1p tents, there’s a wide range. I started with an elixir one which is on the smaller end but now have an akto which is huge along with my x mid. All of these tents I’ve spent a week plus straight in them and not had an issue. I’ve got an hubba 2 and only use it with my partner.

Reddit IconSpicycoffeebeen 0.4
r/CampingGearBackpacker looking for one man tent that packs down to smallest size but not a bivvy
9 months ago

I’ve owned a Hubba Hubba 2 and Mongar 2 for years. Very very similar designs. Ironically the Chinese copy lasted a lot better than the original, with a bit of a weight penalty. Considering nearly every backpacking tent company has a similar tent design (double y with a short cross pole), I don’t really have a problem with intellectual property theft. It’s not exactly an exclusive or original concept.

Reddit IconIronCavalry 0.4
r/backpackingTent opinions
8 months ago

How tall are you? I tried lying down in last year‘s hubba hubba two person, and it was too small for me to lie straight across. I’m 6 foot four. I could go on a diagonal if I was by myself, but I wanted to be with a friend. Ended up getting a three person copper spur.

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