Here鈥檚 a surprising stat: according to Walmart, the company sells two million tents and three听million sleeping bags each year. If those figures are accurate, it likely makes Walmart the largest retailer of tents and bags in the nation. But, the majority of those sleeping bags cost less than $30 and are intended for car camping or other casual uses.听
Walmart is betting that some of the customers who buy such听products are ready to ramp into lighter backcountry gear and deepen their connection with the outdoors. Today听the chain announced the launch of Lithic, 听priced as much as 40 percent lower than similar products on the market. It鈥檚 also releasing Allforth, a 听that had a soft launch听last fall, with prices ranging from $15 to $35 and availability in larger sizes (up to 3XL for men and 2XL for听women). The idea, says Eoin Comerford, general manager of e-commerce for Walmart鈥檚 outdoor division, is to increase outdoor participation by offering more inclusive apparel and lowering the cost barrier to backcountry use. 鈥淭he outdoor industry will not grow without attracting a more diverse customer base, and diversity will not happen without inclusivity,鈥 he says.
Lithic gear ranges from one-to-three-person tents听to down sleeping bags to stoves. Judging by the gear 国产吃瓜黑料 has tested, it鈥檚 of similar quality to products offered by specialty manufacturers. Lithic is already available online and currently in about 50 Walmart stores, all west of the Mississippi, as well as in all 11 Moosejaw shops, the specialty retailer that Comerford founded and Walmart purchased in 2017 (Comerford remains the CEO). Allforth apparel consists of 15 models of shirts, shorts, and pants made of performance fabrics and featuring technical specs like venting and zip-off legs. It is available exclusively online.

Walmart鈥檚 foray into backpacking gear has the potential to impact outdoor retailers and manufacturers that have been hit hard by COVID-19 store closures and the deepening recession. Mindful of that, and of Walmart鈥檚 failed and controversial launch of an online specialty outdoor gear shop听in 2018, Comerford points out that听鈥渢he vast majority of Walmart customers who will buy Lithic gear have never walked into a specialty retailer鈥 and are therefore not competition for those shops, nor for specialty brands.听
Furthermore, he says, the new Walmart brands should help create new customers for specialty retailers and manufacturers听by providing affordable entry gear for听backcountry pursuits. 鈥淭he most likely source of beginner backpackers are car campers who already know and enjoy life in a tent,鈥 Comerford wrote in an . 鈥淭his trend is reflected in the most recent 听that shows car camping is becoming more diverse. Non-white active camper householders increased from 12 percent of the total in 2012 to 31 percent in 2018.鈥澨
In our reporting, we haven鈥檛 encountered industry backlash that contradicts this. In fact, says Rich Hill, president of the independent specialty retailer group Grassroots Outdoor Alliance, Lithic鈥檚 customers don鈥檛 overlap with those of his trade group. 鈥淲e have to embrace lower-cost gear like this, because it is how most people gain entry into outdoor adventure,鈥 he says. 鈥淚deally, every shop would carry some very low-cost options. Then, once the customer is ready to upgrade, the shop can sell them a sleeping bag that stuffs to half the size.鈥
However, the quality of this new gear is better than most will expect鈥攖he result of being designed by Moosejaw employees and manufactured听by some of the same partners that outdoor-retailer stalwarts use, Comerford says听(though he听declined to name which ones).听
We tested the 听($129).听At 35.5 square feet and weighing 5.42 pounds, it has specs, materials, and structure comperable to something like MSR鈥檚 Elixir, but it costs $121 less. The Lithic tent stood up fine to 30-mile-per-hour gusts听补苍诲 includes a separate footprint and top-shelf aluminum stakes. On our sample, though, one of the hooks that helps hang the inner mesh tent body from the poles was mistakenly sewn hanging into the tent body鈥檚 interior.听
The 听($109) features a 35-degree听rating and 600-fill down stuffing听补苍诲 weighs 1.87 pounds. By comparison, the North Face鈥檚 Gold Kazoo has the same temperature rating and听weighs 1.81 pounds, albeit with听a slightly more lofty 700-fill down听补苍诲 a few design niceties, like a vaulted footbox and a draft collar. But at $240, the North Face bag is also more than twice the price.
We didn鈥檛 test any Allforth gear, but online reviews following the company鈥檚 soft launch have largely been favorable, and the prices are impressively low. 听($35), with zip-off legs and two-way stretch fabric, is similar to the听Silver Ridge Convertible pant from Columbia and retails at close to half the price. The technical shirts also offer comparable savings.听
Walmart can build gear more cheaply because, as the , it can exert considerable pressure on material suppliers and manufacturers to lower their prices. The company also likely takes less margin on each product than specialty manufacturers, says Comerford, and, of course, it鈥檚 cutting out the middle man by manufacturing its听own brands.
鈥淲e have to embrace lower-cost gear like this, because it is how most people gain entry into outdoor adventure,鈥澨齭ays Rich Hill, president of the Grassroots Outdoor Alliance.
Walmart isn鈥檛 the only retail behemoth to recently enter the American outdoor industry听boasting such prices. In 2019, European outdoor retail giant Decathlon launched an online presence and two physical locations in the U.S. in a bid to capture the lower end of the market. Like Walmart, Decathlon manufactures its own gear, enabling the company听to boast astronomically affordable prices. (The brand听offers an听 and a 听for just $149 each.) However, it has yet to make a sizeable dent in the outdoor world and has not yet made good on its plans to open more stores outside the San Francisco Bay Area.听
Of course, Walmart already has 4,756 store locations in the United States听补苍诲 legions of customers who buy inexpensive camping gear there. But will those customers be interested in making the switch to products that are both pricier and more pared down? Lithic鈥檚 prices听鈥渟eem really cheap to us,鈥 says Hill, 鈥渂ut those are high-dollar items for Walmart.鈥 In an effort to get the products in front of new users, Walmart decided to place them in stores that are relatively close to backcountry destinations, including Hood River, Oregon;听Tucson, Arizona; and Gallup, New Mexico. The products, says Comerford, are being stocked as a collection, featured on the endcaps of听aisles.听
As for Comerford鈥檚 goal of getting the gear into the hands of a more diverse customer base, those locations seem like a mixed bag. Southwest and Intermountain West locations certainly have a considerable number of Latino customers, but of the 50 Walmart locations, only the three Phoenix stores would seem serve truly ethnically diverse populations.
Comerford points out, though, that the gear is available in Moosejaw shops across the upper Midwest, including Chicago and Detroit, and online.听
Jos茅 Gonz谩lez, the founder emeritus of Latino Outdoors, says that his own introduction to outdoor brands was through Walmart, where he found听鈥渁ffordable and accessible gear.鈥 He says that Lithic and Allforth are听鈥渁 great start in getting more diverse populations outdoors,鈥 though he personally wouldn鈥檛 buy the products because of the company鈥檚 history of and .
Gonz谩lez听points out that charitable giving tied to the Lithic and Allforth products could go a long way toward听repairing that reputation. So could donating a certain percentage of product听revenue to nonprofits that specialize in loaning gear to new and minority users, which would also help the company market its gear to its target consumers. (Organizations like and the Appalachian Mountain Club鈥檚 have large gear libraries that loan gear to urban populations new to camping.)
Garrett Dempsey, who runs a gear library for Detroit Outdoors, says that while some of his clients don鈥檛 shop at Walmart for ethical reasons, many others shop there regularly. 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to tell a parent without considerable means that they shouldn鈥檛 buy suitable Walmart gear for their child,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f this gear is well priced and accessible, it absolutely would help lower the cost barrier for some folks.鈥
Even beyond the debate over cheap gear鈥攚hether increased access for all outweighs the听labor abuses all too common in the garment industry鈥攖here is one unequivocal bright spot: Walmart鈥檚 inclusive marketing strategy. Allforth鈥檚 models represent a wide range of skin colors, ages, and body types. Gonz谩lez notes听that Allforth surpasses even REI鈥檚 efforts to feature diverse models in that it听includes a wider range of ages. 鈥淚t鈥檚 positive that I can see people here who look like my parents,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 lot of communities of color do spend money on outdoor products. It鈥檚 important to acknowledge that.鈥