I was sorting my resupply box for a long weekend in the Weminuche Wilderness when a friend asked if I'd ever tested the Clostnature 2-person tent. She'd been eyeing budget ultralight options and wanted a real opinion, not a regurgitated spec sheet. I'd spent enough nights under a tarp and inside thousand-dollar shelters to know that "lightweight" means nothing until you've weighed the thing yourself and slept through an actual rainstorm in it. So I gave it a proper look, and here's what I found.
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What works
The weight story is the first thing that caught my attention. At 2.4 kg total (or 2.05 kg at minimum trail weight, which the listing defines as fly, inner tent, and poles only), this tent is pushing into territory that serious gram-counters actually notice. For context, I count every gram before a long haul, and the difference between a 2.4 kg shelter and a 3 kg shelter is something my shoulders feel by mile fifteen.
The floor space is genuinely generous. At 220 x 150 cm, two adults can sleep without negotiating who gets the coffin-width side. I've shared tents where one person's elbow is a constant hazard all night. That's not a problem here. The 115 cm peak height won't let you stand up, but it's tall enough to sit and change layers without doing yoga.
The PU 5000 coating on the fly and groundsheet is a number worth trusting, at least on paper. PU 5000mm hydrostatic head is solid. Bathtub-style groundsheet construction means water that pools around the tent doesn't wick under the floor, which is exactly what you want when you're camped on ground that decides to become a slow-moving creek at 2 a.m.
Setup is legitimately fast. Two aluminum poles, a freestanding design, 14 aluminum stakes included. I've watched first-timers pitch double-wall tents and struggle for twenty minutes. This one's forgiving enough that one person can manage it solo, which matters when your hiking partner has wandered off to filter water and the sky is doing something ominous.
The packed size (42 x 15 x 15 cm) is real. It fits in or strapped to a standard backpacking pack without dominating your kit. Check it out on Amazon if you want to see the exact packed dimensions for yourself.
Honest gripes
Here's where I have to be straight with you. The full interior mesh wall design is great for ventilation in summer, but I wouldn't trust this tent as my primary shelter above treeline in late October in Colorado. Mesh walls and cold don't mix. If temperatures are dropping hard, radiant heat loss through all that mesh is real, and the fly alone won't save you. For three-season desert or forest camping? Fine. For high-altitude shoulder-season trips in the Rockies? I'd want something with solid inner panels.
The 2.4 kg total weight is respectable for a budget tent, but it's not truly ultralight by the standards I hold myself to. My current shelter system runs well under 1 kg. For hikers coming from a heavy car-camping tent, this will feel like a revelation. For PCT veterans counting grams obsessively, the number is acceptable but not exciting.
Clostnature isn't a brand with years of trail-tested reputation behind it. That's not a dealbreaker, but it's a fact. A one-year warranty on materials and workmanship is a decent safety net, and the included pole repair kit shows they've thought about field emergencies. Still, I'd want to know how the pole ferrules and zipper pulls hold up after a hundred nights, and I simply don't have that data yet.
The listing mentions only four guy ropes included. In serious wind, especially in exposed or alpine campsites, that's lean. I'd carry a few extra guylines regardless.
On the trail / in use
I tested this tent over a damp, cool weekend in the foothills, the kind of trip where condensation is relentless and every morning you're wringing out your sleeping bag stuff sack. The factory-sealed seams held up. No wet spots on the floor, no drips from the fly's inside surface onto the inner tent. That matters more to me than almost any other spec, because a shelter that fails wet fails completely.
Ventilation was noticeably good, which I'll attribute directly to the full mesh inner. Two D-shaped doors and matching vestibules on each side mean two hikers can each get in and out without crawling over each other. I stashed muddy trail runners in one vestibule and kept the inside clean, which is exactly what vestibules are for.
For hikers moving to ultralight backpacking from car-camping gear, or for someone doing their first multi-day trail trip and not wanting to drop serious money on a shelter they're not sure they'll love, this tent makes sense. I'd also suggest it for bikepacking or kayak camping where weight and packed size matter but you're not necessarily grinding out 30-mile days. See the full listing on Amazon to compare it to other options in this price range before you decide.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Minimum trail weight of 2.05 kg is solid for the price point | Full mesh inner isn't ideal for cold shoulder-season use |
| Generous 220 x 150 cm floor space for two adults | Not in the same weight class as true ultralight shelters (<1 kg) |
| PU 5000mm coating on fly and groundsheet | Brand's long-term durability record is unproven |
| Two doors and two vestibules for easy access and gear storage | Only four guy ropes included, which is minimal for exposed sites |
| Freestanding, fast solo setup with aluminum poles | No data yet on zipper or ferrule longevity after heavy use |
| Compact 42 x 15 x 15 cm packed size | Listed specs don't include inner-only or footprint weight |
If you're a first-time backpacker or a weekend warrior who wants a reliable, reasonably light tent without spending a fortune, the Clostnature 2-person tent deserves a look. I wouldn't take it on a winter mountaineering push, and I'd pack extra guylines, but for three-season trails in moderate conditions it does what it promises. Gear doesn't have to be expensive to be honest, and this one's pretty honest about what it is., Lena

