Our readers keep the lights on and my morning glass full of iced black tea. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.7 Best Camping Stove For Campervan | Ditch the Cold Breakfast

If you cook inside a campervan, the single thing you need from a camping stove is raw heat output that does not take up your entire counter. A weak burner means cold oatmeal and a 20-minute wait for coffee before you can hit the road. The right stove boils water before you finish packing the bedding, fits into a shallow drawer, and does not fume up the cabin with unsafe fumes when used properly with ventilation.

I’m Mo Maruf — the co-founder and writer behind The Tools Trunk. This guide is built by comparing the manufacturers’ published specifications and the patterns across verified customer reviews, so you get each pick’s real strengths and trade-offs instead of marketing spin.

Whether you need a single-burner butane powerhouse for espresso at dawn or a full two-burner propane setup for a full van-life feast, this guide to the camping stove for campervan breaks down the seven best options by output, size, fuel type, and real-world reliability.

How To Choose The Best Camping Stove For Campervan

Choosing a stove for a campervan is different from buying one for a car-camping trip. You have less counter space, you care more about wind resistance when the van door is open, and you often need a stove that runs on a fuel type you can find at any gas station. Here are the three specs that matter most for your van.

Heat Output — BTU (British Thermal Units)

BTU is the number that tells you how fast the stove can heat a pan. In a campervan, where your propane tank might be small and you want to cook fast before the van gets steamy, look for at least 10,000 BTU per burner. A 20,000 BTU total stove will boil a small pot of water for coffee in about 3-4 minutes. Higher BTUs also mean the stove can handle windy conditions better because the flame is strong enough to stay lit.

Fuel Type — Propane vs. Butane vs. Dual-Fuel

Propane is the standard for campervans — it works in freezing temperatures, the 1-pound green tanks are widely available, and you can refill them from a larger bulk tank using an adapter. Butane performs weakly below 32°F because the fuel does not vaporize well in the cold. Dual-fuel stoves (propane and butane) give you flexibility: you can grab whatever canister you find on the road, and some designs use a heating strip to keep butane flowing in cool weather.

Physical Size and Storage Fit

Your van’s counter is precious real estate. Measure the depth and width of your cooking area before buying. Foldable two-burner stoves with a locked design often pack down to about the size of a laptop bag (around 10 x 9 x 5 inches). Single-burner stoves are much slimmer — around 13 x 11 x 4 inches — and slide into a drawer. Pay attention to the stove’s depth (the front-to-back measurement) because many van kitchens have a shallow counter and a stove that overhangs is unstable.

Quick Comparison

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Model Category Best For Key Spec Amazon
Camp Chef Everest 2X Premium Serious van cooks who need maximum heat and a huge cooking surface 40,000 BTU total (20,000 per burner) Amazon
Hisencn 30,000 BTU All-in-One Kit Premium Van lifers who want a complete cookware set included in one box 30,000 BTU total with pot, pan, and kettle Amazon
GasOne 15,000 BTU Dual Fuel Mid-Range Flexible cooking that runs on either butane or propane canisters 15,000 BTU with patented dual-fuel versatility Amazon
LILTSDRAE 20,000 BTU 2-Burner Mid-Range Budget-friendly two-burner cooking with an included griddle 20,000 BTU total (10,000 per burner) Amazon
BODEGA 20,000 BTU Foldable Mid-Range Van travelers who pack small but need full-size burner spacing 20,000 BTU, 2.8 pounds with folding design Amazon
Iwatani Cassette Feu VA-30 Premium Single-serve cooking where precision and build quality matter 12,000 BTU butane with automatic safety shutoff Amazon
Cofiyard 20,000 BTU 2-Burner Mid-Range Van owners who want a durable folding stove with wind resistance 20,000 BTU, foldable design, 4.5 pounds Amazon

In‑Depth Reviews

Top Performer

1. Camp Chef Everest 2X 2-Burner

40,000 BTUMatchless Ignition

20,000 BTU per burner (40,000 BTU total) makes the Camp Chef Everest 2X the top pick for anyone who wants to cook two high-heat dishes at once in a campervan — searing a steak while boiling pasta, for example, without either burner losing power. It boils a small pot of water in under 3 minutes.

The 215-square-inch cooking surface fits two 12-inch pans side by side with room to spare, per reviewer reports. The folding lid doubles as a windscreen, useful when the van door opens on a breezy afternoon. At 15 pounds, this is a stove you set up and leave in the van rather than pack away after each meal. The matchless piezo ignition works every time, according to buyers.

The honest trade-off is size — at 27 inches wide, it demands dedicated counter space that some small campervans lack. For a van with room, its heat output and wind protection are unmatched here. If you want the two-pan cooking power of a proper kitchen stove, this is your stove.

Why it’s great

  • Massive 40,000 BTU total output boils water in under 3 minutes.
  • Built-in windscreen in the folding lid keeps flames stable in breezy conditions.
  • Matchless piezo ignition (electronic push-button starter) works every time.

Good to know

  • At 15 pounds and 27 inches wide, it is the largest and heaviest stove here.
  • Some buyers report the gas knob springs back when dialing down, making fine simmer control slightly less precise.
Best Kit

2. Hisencn 30000 BTU 2-Burner with Cookware Set

30,000 BTUIncludes Cookware

Unlike the Camp Chef Everest 2X, which is just the stove, the Hisencn gives you one box with everything to cook a full meal from scratch. The stove itself delivers 30,000 BTU total (15,000 per burner) — 10,000 BTU less than the Everest 2X — but it ships with a griddle pan, a cooking pot, a kettle, a cutting board, and a gas hose, all packed into a foldable unit that closes to 10 x 9 x 4.3 inches. That foldable design means it stores in a shallow drawer, unlike the Everest 2X which needs a permanent spot.

Reviewers report that the dual burners handle beach wind perfectly thanks to a foldable wind guard (a metal shield that blocks drafts), which is a real-world bonus for van-side cooking in exposed spots. The two burners can run independently, so you can simmer coffee on one side while frying eggs on the other. At 8.6 pounds, it is over 6 pounds lighter than the Camp Chef Everest 2X (15 lbs vs. 8.6 lbs), making it much easier to lift in and out of a van cabinet.

The standout spec is the complete cookware package — the pot and kettle alone save you from buying another set, and the integrated cutting board is a clever space-saver for a tiny van kitchen. Choose this over the top pick if you want to open one box and have everything you need for a full van-cooked meal, instead of building a kitchen piece by piece.

Where it shines

  • Complete cooking kit — includes pot, kettle, griddle, cutting board, and carry bag.
  • 30,000 BTU total output with a foldable wind guard for breezy cooking spots.
  • Folds down compactly to 10 x 9 x 4.3 inches for easy storage.

Worth noting

  • Pans included are not non-stick, so bring cooking oil or spray to prevent sticking.
  • Some owners mention the stove is loud when running at full power due to high gas flow.
Best Overall

3. GasOne 15,000 BTU Dual Fuel Stove

15,000 BTUDual Fuel

Imagine pulling into a campsite in the mountains where the temperature drops to 35°F at night. If you only brought butane canisters, most stoves would struggle to vaporize the fuel (turn the liquid butane into gas for burning). The GasOne 15,000 BTU solves that by running on either butane or propane (a propane adapter is included), so you can choose the fuel that works best for your weather and availability.

The stove delivers 15,000 BTU from its single burner. Customers note that “it started right up on a windy afternoon and brought a good sized pot of water to a hard boil shockingly fast on Kovea butane/propane mix.” It includes a heavy-duty windblocker on all four sides of the burner head (physical metal walls that block drafts), a feature that matters when your van door is open. The unit measures 12.9 x 10.9 x 4.5 inches and weighs 6 pounds, making it easy to slide into a drawer or under a van bench. It is heavier than the single-burner Iwatani VA-30 (3.1 pounds) but lighter than any two-burner stove here.

The patented pressure sensor cartridge ejection system is a safety standout — if the canister pressure rises unsafely (meaning the gas is getting too hot or the canister is faulty), the stove automatically ejects the cartridge and cuts off gas flow. For a campervan stove that handles both fuel types and fits in tight storage, this is the spec that gives peace of mind. The honest skip: if you want two burners for multi-dish cooking, the GasOne only gives you one burner, so choose the Hisencn or the Camp Chef Everest 2X instead.

What stands out

  • Runs on both butane and propane (adapter included), adapting to fuel availability on the road.
  • 15,000 BTU output with a heavy-duty windblocker for consistent flame in breezy conditions.
  • Patented pressure sensor ejects the cartridge if gas pressure rises unsafely.

The trade-offs

  • At 6 pounds, it is heavier than single-burner alternatives like the Iwatani VA-30 (3.1 pounds).
  • Not suitable for backpacking — it is designed for car camping and van kitchen use.
Best Value

4. LILTSDRAE 20,000 BTU 2-Burner

20,000 BTUIncludes Griddle

The single number that matters most in this category is BTU per dollar, and the LILTSDRAE delivers 20,000 BTU total (10,000 per burner) at a price that undercuts most competitors while adding a 1.5mm thick cold-rolled steel griddle in the box. That griddle means you can fry bacon and pancakes without buying an extra pan — a real advantage for van kitchens with limited storage. The 20,000 BTU output is identical to the BODEGA (20,000 BTU) and the Cofiyard (20,000 BTU), but the LILTSDRAE adds the griddle at the same price as those stoves alone.

The catch you accept at this price point is the lack of a built-in windblocker. Reviewers point out the stove “lacks wind block,” so if you plan to cook with the van door open on a breezy day, you will need to set up a portable windscreen or cook in the lee of the vehicle. The two burners are spaced 5.02 inches apart, giving you room for two medium pans or one large griddle across both burners. The built-in piezo ignition lights both burners without matches.

For a van owner who needs a solid two-burner propane stove, wants a free griddle, and is willing to manage wind carefully, this is the price-to-performance value champion of this list — the low cost plus the griddle makes it the budget buyer’s pick over the Hisencn or Camp Chef Everest 2X.

The upsides

  • 20,000 BTU total output (10,000 per burner) with a 1.5mm thick steel griddle included.
  • Padded tote bag with side pockets organizes the stove, griddle, and gas hose.
  • Built-in piezo ignition (push-button) lights both burners without matches.

Keep in mind

  • No wind guard — flames may flicker or extinguish in breezy conditions unless shielded.
  • Some reviewers found the grill top too small for large pans; best for standard 10-12 inch cookware.
Compact Performer

5. BODEGA 20,000 BTU Foldable 2-Burner

20,000 BTU2.8 lbs

At 2.8 pounds, the BODEGA is more than 2.1 times lighter than the GasOne dual-fuel stove (6 lbs), yet it still offers 20,000 BTU of total heat across two burners. That weight savings is massive for a van owner who needs to move the stove between the counter and a storage compartment — it is over 12 pounds lighter than the Camp Chef Everest 2X (15 lbs). Reviewers describe it as “much smaller and lighter than standard 2-burner stoves, yet same cooking space,” meaning you do not sacrifice burner room for portability.

What you give up for that lightness is overall ruggedness — the 304 stainless steel body is corrosion-resistant but may feel less solid than the 15-pound Camp Chef Everest 2X. The BODEGA includes a baking tray with a heat-resistant handle for grilling, plus a woven carry bag, so you can grab it and set up outside the van quickly. The flexible propane hose allows you to position the tank away from the stove, which helps balance the setup on uneven ground.

This is the exact stove for the van traveler who prioritizes packing small and light over brute-force heat output, but still wants the full cooking area of a two-burner stove. At 20,000 BTU total, it matches the LILTSDRAE and the Cofiyard in power while being far lighter — making it the most portable two-burner option in the guide.

Why we’d pick it

  • Only 2.8 pounds — more than 12 pounds lighter than the Camp Chef Everest 2X (15 lbs).
  • 20,000 BTU total with two independently adjustable burners and a baking tray included.
  • Flexible propane hose allows versatile tank placement away from the stove for better balance.

A few caveats

  • The lightweight build may feel less durable than heavier, premium alternatives.
  • Included baking tray is compact; you will still need separate pans for larger quantities.
Premium Single-Burner

6. Iwatani Cassette Feu VA-30 Butane Stove

12,000 BTUSafety Shutoff

If your campervan kitchen is a narrow galley with just one small space for a burner, the Iwatani VA-30 is built specifically for that tight fit. It is a single-burner butane stove that delivers 12,000 BTU — high for a single burner, boiling a small pot of water in about 5 minutes — and it includes a hard carrying case that stores the stove and a butane cartridge together in a compact package measuring 13 x 11 x 3.8 inches. That 12,000 BTU output is less than the GasOne’s 15,000 BTU, but the Iwatani is lighter at 3.1 pounds (vs. 6 pounds for the GasOne).

The magnetic canister attachment is the feature that serves the single-burner user best: you simply push the butane can onto the magnet and it locks in safely. Reviewers call it the “easiest setup” they have used. The advanced heat panel ensures you burn the entire canister of butane without leaving residual fuel (liquid fuel left behind), meaning you get more cooking time per cartridge. The automatic safety shutoff triggers if internal pressure rises too high, cutting gas flow and extinguishing the flame automatically.

The honest limit is that this is a butane-only stove, so it struggles below 32°F unless you use a cold-weather butane mix (a blend that burns at lower temperatures). For a van that stays in moderate climates or for quick indoor/van-side meals where you control the temperature, the Iwatani VA-30 is the most thoughtfully engineered single-burner stove in this range, offering precision flame control that the GasOne or any budget single-burner cannot match.

Strong points

  • 12,000 BTU output with an advanced heat panel that uses the entire butane canister with no fuel waste.
  • Magnetic canister lock — just push the butane onto the magnet for instant, secure attachment.
  • Automatic safety shutoff stops gas flow if canister pressure reaches unsafe levels.

Before you buy

  • Butane-only fuel means poor performance in freezing temperatures (below 32°F).
  • Single burner limits you to one pot at a time — not ideal for multi-dish van meals.
Budget Champion

7. Cofiyard 20,000 BTU 2-Burner Foldable

20,000 BTUBuilt-in Ignition

The Cofiyard undercuts nearly every two-burner stove here on price while still delivering 20,000 BTU of total heat output and a foldable design — matching the LILTSDRAE and BODEGA in power. For the price of a few tank refills, you get a stove that fits two 12-inch pans, includes a built-in ignition button for matchless starting, and folds down to 10.5 x 9 x 6 inches for storage in a van compartment or trunk. At 4.5 pounds, it is heavier than the BODEGA (2.8 lbs) but lighter than the Camp Chef Everest 2X (15 lbs).

What that lower price actually gets you is solid construction with one specific weakness: shoppers say that the rigid regulator tube (the hose connecting the stove to the gas tank) adds weight and leverage on the right side, which can cause the stove to tip on uneven surfaces. The workaround is simple — support the tank area with a small block or position the stove on a flat surface. The stove is made with iron and stainless steel for corrosion resistance, and the company provides a 1-year warranty with 24/7 customer support. There is no windscreen included, like with the LILTSDRAE, so you will need to block the wind yourself.

The one clear reason to choose the Cofiyard over the rest of the field is if you need a reliable two-burner propane stove for your van on a tight budget and you are comfortable with the minor stability quirk.

What we like

  • 20,000 BTU total output with a foldable design for easy storage in small van cabinets.
  • Built-in ignition button lights both burners without needing matches or lighters.
  • Includes a padded woven carry bag, propane regulator, and a 1-year warranty.

The downsides

  • Rigid regulator tube can unbalance the stove on uneven surfaces — you may need a shim or flat spot.
  • No windscreen included; the stove relies on its burner design for wind resistance in mild conditions.

Understanding the Specs

BTU — British Thermal Units

BTU is the measurement of heat energy the stove produces per hour. In plain terms, higher BTU means faster boiling and better performance in wind. For a campervan stove, look for at least 10,000 BTU per burner. A 20,000 BTU two-burner stove boils a pot of water for pasta in about 4 minutes, while a 12,000 BTU single burner takes closer to 6 minutes. The highest BTU in this guide is the Camp Chef Everest 2X at 40,000 BTU total, which brings water to a rolling boil in under 3 minutes.

Fuel Type — Propane vs. Butane vs. Dual-Fuel

Propane is the standard for campervans because it vaporizes in temperatures down to -44°F, so your stove works in freezing weather. Butane stops vaporizing effectively below 32°F, making it a warm-weather choice unless you use a cold-weather butane mix. Dual-fuel stoves, like the GasOne 15,000 BTU, let you swap between fuel types depending on what you find on the road — you can run butane canisters from an Asian grocery store or propane tanks from a gas station. Dual-fuel stoves give you the most flexibility for long van trips across different climates.

FAQ

Can I use a butane camping stove safely inside a campervan?
Yes, but only with proper ventilation. All gas stoves — propane or butane — consume oxygen and produce carbon monoxide as a byproduct of combustion. You must open a window, roof vent, or door while the stove is running. Never use a camping stove as a permanent indoor heater or cook for extended periods without active air exchange. A battery-powered carbon monoxide detector is an essential safety addition for any campervan kitchen.
How much counter space do I need for a two-burner folding stove?
Most folding two-burner stoves measure between 10 and 15 inches deep and 9 to 12 inches wide when folded. When opened for use, they typically require about 20 to 24 inches of width and 12 to 15 inches of depth. Measure your van counter front-to-back — if your counter is less than 10 inches deep, you will likely need a single-burner stove or a very shallow model like the BODEGA (10.3 inches deep when folded, about 12 inches when open).
Will a 12,000 BTU single burner be enough for two people in a van?
For simple meals like pasta, stir-fry, or eggs and coffee, a 12,000 BTU single burner is plenty — it boils a small pot of water in about 5 minutes. The limitation is sequential cooking: you boil pasta, then drain the pot, then heat sauce in the same burner. If you cook full meals with multiple hot components (meat, vegetables, rice) simultaneously, a 20,000 BTU two-burner stove saves you 15-20 minutes per meal.

Final Thoughts: The Verdict

If you want one dependable pick, the camping stove for campervan winner is the GasOne 15,000 BTU Dual Fuel Stove because it combines a solid 15,000 BTU heat output with the rare ability to burn both propane and butane, so you never get stuck unable to find the right fuel canister on a trip. If you want maximum two-burner heat and have the counter space, grab the Camp Chef Everest 2X. And for a complete no-hassle kit that includes pots, a kettle, and a cutting board out of the box, the standout is the Hisencn 30,000 BTU with Cookware Set.

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