Camping is often seen as a low-impact way to enjoy nature, but in practice, it can generate a surprising amount of waste. Many campers rely on single-use plastics, including:
- water bottles
- food wrappers
- disposable cutlery
- travel-sized hygiene products.
Cheaply made gear breaks after one or two uses and ends up in landfill. These habits quietly undermine the very environments we go outdoors to enjoy.
If you are wild camping for the first time, heading to one of the UK’s best sustainable campsites, or planning a day camping adventure, these 50 habits will help you tread more lightly and enjoy it more fully.
Planning and Packing
The most sustainable camping trip starts at home. Careful planning reduces waste, cuts costs, and lowers your carbon footprint before you even leave the driveway. The Met Office’s sustainable travel guidance consistently emphasises that transport choices are among the biggest factors in a trip’s overall environmental impact.
- Pack only what you truly need. Fewer items mean less clutter, less waste, and a lower environmental cost from transporting unnecessary gear.
- Choose lightweight gear to reduce fuel use. Lighter loads mean your vehicle uses less fuel — a simple way to cut carbon emissions before the trip begins.
- Borrow or rent equipment instead of buying new. Sharing gear avoids unnecessary manufacturing and is ideal for items you’ll only use occasionally.
- Buy second-hand camping gear. Pre-owned equipment extends the life of products. Check Vinted or eBay for quality used kit.
- Avoid duplicate items. One of each essential is enough; over-packing duplicates is one of the most common and easily avoided forms of camping overconsumption.
- Plan meals in advance. Meal planning helps you bring the right quantities and avoid throwing away unused food.
- Prep food at home to reduce packaging. Chopping and portioning before you leave reduces the need for packaged convenience items bought en route.
- Use a checklist to avoid overpacking. A simple list keeps you focused on essentials and prevents impulse packing.
- Travel closer to home. Shorter journeys significantly reduce your environmental impact. The UK has extraordinary camping staycations on your doorstep.
- Carpool or use public transport. Sharing a ride lowers per-person emissions meaningfully. See Met Office sustainable travel tips for more.
Reducing Single-Use Plastics
Single-use plastic is one of camping’s most visible problems and one of the easiest to address. Pairing natural-fibre camping accessories with these swaps creates a noticeably more considered kit.
- Bring a reusable water bottle. Refillable bottles eliminate disposable plastic entirely. Look for insulated stainless steel options.
- Use refillable containers for food. Glass jars and silicone bags keep food fresh while cutting single-use packaging.
- Swap cling film for reusable wraps. Beeswax or plant-based wraps replace plastic film and look far nicer at a camp table.
- Pack reusable shopping bags. Useful for camp shop runs and prevents the need for plastic bags.
- Use metal or bamboo cutlery. Durable utensils can be washed and reused indefinitely.
- Bring a reusable coffee cup. Essential if you stop at a café en route, most takeaway cups are lined with plastic and difficult to recycle.
- Avoid individually wrapped snacks. Buy in bulk and divide yourself. Nuts, dried fruit, and oatcakes work well in reusable bags.
- Use refillable toiletry bottles. Bring only what you need without buying travel-sized plastics every trip.
- Switch to bar soap and shampoo. Solid toiletries last longer, are lighter to carry, and usually come with minimal packaging.
- Skip disposable plates and cups. Reusable dishware is sturdier and more enjoyable. Enamelware is particularly popular for campfire meals.
Sustainable Food and Cooking
Food preparation is where many camping trips quietly generate the most waste. Simple cooking also tends to be the most memorable; there is something deeply satisfying about a one-pot meal around a well-made campfire.
- Buy food in bulk before your trip. Bulk buying reduces packaging and often saves money. Local markets and zero-waste shops are ideal.
- Choose foods with minimal packaging. Loose vegetables, unpackaged bread, and simple whole foods cut down on what you carry and dispose of.
- Store food in reusable jars or tins. Durable containers keep food organised and stack far better than loose packets in a cool bag.
- Bring a cooler instead of disposable bags. A well-insulated box keeps food fresh for days, a genuine long-term investment.
- Compost food scraps where possible. Many eco-certified UK campsites now offer on-site composting.
- Cook simple meals with fewer ingredients. Simpler meals reduce packaging, prep time, and leftover waste, and often taste the best after a long day outdoors.
- Avoid food waste by portion planning. Estimating carefully ensures you eat what you bring and carry a lighter pack home.
- Bring a reusable cloth instead of paper towels. A few cotton cloths replace an entire roll of paper towels and take up barely any space.
- Use biodegradable dish soap. Eco-friendly soap breaks down more safely in the environment and is essential for washing up near streams or lakes.
- Eat local produce to reduce food miles. Choosing food grown near your campsite supports local farmers and cuts transport emissions.
Eco-Friendly Gear Choices
Your gear is a long-term investment. Choosing well once beats replacing a cheap kit every season. UK camping shops increasingly stock durable, responsibly made gear. The Arun District Council sustainable shopping guide offers useful tips on longer-lasting products.
- Invest in durable, long-lasting gear. High-quality equipment costs more upfront but dramatically reduces waste over time. Think cost-per-use, not sticker price.
- Repair equipment instead of replacing it. Tent repair kits, sleeping bag patches, and boot resoling are all worth learning.
- Choose products made from recycled materials. These create demand for recycled resources. Look for honest certification labels.
- Avoid cheap gear that breaks easily. Low-quality products often fail within a season. Slow fashion applies to outdoor gear too.
- Use solar-powered lights or chargers. Read our guide to solar panels for camping trips for practical off-grid advice.
- Rent speciality gear for occasional trips. Kayaks, paddleboards, and climbing equipment are ideal for renting rather than buying.
- Choose multi-use items. A good camping blanket wrap, for instance, serves as insulation, a picnic layer, and a windbreak all at once.
- Look for repairable products with warranties. Products designed to be fixed are far more sustainable than those intended to be discarded.
- Avoid fast fashion outdoor clothing. Consider natural fibres for camping blankets and base layers for longer-lasting warmth.
- Store gear properly to extend its lifespan. Drying tents before packing and hanging sleeping bags loosely keeps kit usable for years. See Met Office advice on preparing gear for all conditions.
Waste Reduction and Disposal
The “leave no trace” principle is the foundation of sustainable camping. The GOV Countryside Code and the Lake District National Park reinforce the same message: take everything out that you brought in, and leave each site better than you found it.
- Follow the “pack it in, pack it out” principle. Take all the waste home. No exceptions, not even “natural” food scraps.
- Separate recyclables from general waste. Sorting properly dramatically increases the chances materials are actually recycled.
- Bring reusable rubbish bags. Durable bags last multiple trips and reduce the need for disposable bin liners.
- Dispose of waste at designated facilities. Many UK campsites now have recycling and composting stations on site.
- Avoid leaving any litter behind. Even a bottle top or crisp wrapper can harm ecosystems and wildlife.
- Pick up litter you find along the way. Research confirms that active engagement with nature also boosts personal wellbeing.
- Minimise packaging before you leave home. Decant everything into reusable containers the evening before you set off.
- Use biodegradable products where possible. Middlesbrough Council’s green tips give useful everyday guidance on making these swaps.
- Keep food waste sealed to avoid wildlife issues. Proper storage keeps both campers and wildlife safe, particularly important in the Lake District and other sensitive habitats.
- Leave your campsite cleaner than you found it, the most powerful habit of all and the one that matters most to the landscapes we love.
Sustainable camping is not about perfection. It is about making better choices where you can. The joy of camping, the profound wellbeing benefits, the stronger family bonds, and the genuine stillness of being outdoors are inseparable from the health of the landscapes that make it possible.
From bell tent camping to UK glamping, these habits travel with you. Planning a festival season? Our guides to the best dog-friendly UK festivals and top festival raincoats cover the kit worth investing in. For staying warm sustainably, 10 easy ways to stay cosy when camping is a good place to start.
Further Reading
- Camping in wind and rain — Met Office UK
- Camping in Hampshire’s countryside — Hampshire County Council
- Wild camping — Lake District National Park
- Top tips for going greener — Middlesbrough Council
- Think green, live green, shop sustainably — Arun District Council
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