Star X2 Cooking System
Saturn Gas Stove with Preheat Tube
Star X1 Cooking System
Star X2 Pro Cooking System
Maverick Wood Stove
Polaris Pressure Regulator Cooking System
GreenPeak Gas Stove with Electric Ignition
Saturn X Gas Stove
FMS-125 PRO Stove with Electric Ignition
Blade 2 Titanium Backpacking Stove with preheat tube
Hornet Ⅱ Titanium Gas Stove | 1.7oz | 2500W
Sunflower X Dual-Mode Radiant Heater & Stove
FMS-300T Titanium Gas Stove
Mars Radiant Stove System
Star X3 Cooking System for Coffee
GreenPeak II Gas Stove | Pressure-regulator
FMS-105 Gas Stove with Electric Ignition
Petrel Titanium Ultralight Remote Stove
Polaris Pressure-regulator Gas Stove
Petrel Quickboil Pro Integrated System
About Our Camping Stoves Collections
Fire Maple has engineered outdoor cooking gear since 2003, trusted by campers, hikers, and overlanders in 50+ countries. Every camp stove in this lineup delivers reliable ignition, fuel-efficient output, and a compact footprint that travels as well as it cooks. Whether you’re outfitting a solo trail run or feeding a group at a fixed campsite, this is the complete Fire Maple stove collection.
Backpacking & Ultralight Stoves
For trail travel and ultralight trips, Fire Maple backpacking stoves and ultralight stoves are the starting point. Titanium models start at 1.6 oz, pair with standard isobutane-propane canisters, and hold up on long routes like the PCT or AT. These are built for solo hikers and thru-packers who need a reliable camp stove without the weight penalty — covering everything from a quick weekend out to a full thru-hike.
Cooking Systems, Stove Kits & Pressure-Regulated Stoves
Fire Maple cooking systems and stove kits pair the burner with a matched pot or full cookware set — cutting boil times and reducing gear count versus a standalone stove-and-pot combo. The pressure-regulated stove range adds consistent output in cold and high-altitude conditions where standard canister stoves lose pressure.
High-Power Gas & Basecamp Stoves
Fire Maple high-power gas stoves and basecamp stoves deliver higher BTU output, wide pot support, and a stable platform built for larger cookware and group meals. These are the right portable camping stoves when output and stability matter more than pack weight — ideal for car camping crews and truck or van kitchens.
Wood, Liquid Fuel & Camp Heater
For off-grid and bushcraft trips, the wood and liquid fuel stove range burns wood, leaves, or liquid fuel with no canister required — a reliable option for remote expeditions and international travel. Dedicated wood burning stoves cover pure wood-fuel setups, while the Sunflower X dual-mode radiant heater and stove handles both cooking and shelter heating for cold-weather campers.
How to Choose a Camping Stove
Not all camping stoves are built for the same trip. Here’s what matters most when choosing:
- Weight vs. output: Ultralight backpackers prioritize sub-100g builds. Car campers can go heavier in exchange for higher BTU and larger pot support.
- Fuel type: Canister stoves (isobutane-propane) are easy, consistent, and widely available. Wood-burning stoves eliminate fuel carry but require open-fire conditions.
- Group size: Solo stoves boil 1L efficiently. Group cooking benefits from higher-output models or larger pot compatibility.
- Wind resistance: Look for built-in windshields or models compatible with Fire Maple windscreen accessories.
- Altitude performance: Most canister stoves lose efficiency above 5,000 ft (1,500m). Check product specs if alpine camping is on your itinerary.
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of camping stoves does Fire Maple make?
What types of camping stoves does Fire Maple make?
Fire Maple offers backpacking stoves, ultralight stoves, cooking systems, stove kits, pressure-regulated stoves, high-power gas stoves, basecamp stoves, wood and liquid fuel stoves, wood burning stoves, and the Sunflower X dual-mode heater and stove.
What fuel do Fire Maple camping stoves use?
What fuel do Fire Maple camping stoves use?
Most models run on standard isobutane-propane canisters. The wood and liquid fuel range burns wood, leaves, or liquid fuel with no canister needed — useful for remote or international trips.
Are Fire Maple stoves reliable in cold weather?
Are Fire Maple stoves reliable in cold weather?
The pressure-regulated range — including the Polaris and GreenPeak II — maintains consistent output where standard canister stoves lose pressure in the cold. Check individual product pages for rated low-temperature specs.
What’s the difference between a cooking system and a stove kit?
What’s the difference between a cooking system and a stove kit?
A cooking system integrates the burner and pot into one efficient unit for faster boil times. A stove kit bundles the stove with matched cookware for a complete ready-to-cook camp kitchen setup.

