Best Smokeless Fire Pits Under $300 (2026 Outdoor Guide)
By Sam Hollis · Updated June 2026
Independent editorial guide. Affiliate links may be present; we never accept payment for coverage.
Quick Take
Under $300, the Solo Stove Ranger 2.0 is the best all-around smokeless fire pit for a small patio or back deck. It is the most compact of the Solo Stove line, uses the same double-wall airflow design as the larger Bonfire and Yukon, and lands at $229.99 on Amazon with the 2.0 ash pan that fixed the cleanup complaint people had about the original.
The under-$300 cap is real and it forces tradeoffs. Breeo and the larger Tiki Brand pits are quality but they sit above this budget. Within the cap, the realistic decision is: wood with the cleanest smokeless burn (Solo Stove), propane with no smoke and no ash at all (Outland Firebowl), or a portable wood pit you can take camping (BioLite FirePit+). All three are below $230 and each owns a different use case.
Jump to our recommended fire pits below, sorted by use case, with the tradeoff each one is actually making. See picks ↓

Smokeless fire pits are not literally smokeless. They are double-wall stoves: cool outside air enters vent holes at the base, gets preheated as it rises through the wall cavity, and re-injects out the top inner ring. That secondary burn ignites the volatile compounds that would otherwise leave the fire as smoke. When the pit is loaded correctly and the fire reaches working temperature, smoke output drops sharply.
Under $300 the field narrows fast. Solo Stove dominates the wood-burning category with the Ranger 2.0 and Bonfire 2.0 both landing under the cap. Breeo X19 and the Tiki Brand 25-inch sit just above. Propane pits are a different animal entirely (no real smoke because no wood is burning), and the Outland Firebowl line is the established value pick there. BioLite is the only credible portable option in this price tier.
What "smokeless" actually means
The double-wall design only works when the inner chamber is hot enough to ignite escaping gases on contact with the secondary air ring. Cold start, damp wood, or overloading the pit will all produce smoke until the burn stabilizes. Owners consistently report a smokeless burn after 10-15 minutes of dry-wood operation, and smoke return whenever logs are added too aggressively. This is a real-world spec, not a marketing claim: the secondary combustion needs heat to function.
Propane pits are smokeless by definition because there is no wood combustion. The tradeoff is no crackle, no wood smell, and a flame that reads as decorative rather than primal. Owners pick propane for HOA reasons, no-burn-ban compliance, and zero-cleanup.
The under-$300 cap (and what falls just above it)
Solo Stove Ranger 2.0 ($229.99 on Amazon at time of writing) and Bonfire 2.0 ($199.99 in the same listing run) both fit under $300. The Yukon 2.0 ($449.96) does not. Breeo X19 lists at $399 and the Tiki Brand 25-inch is $395. Both are well-reviewed but outside scope of this guide. If the budget is firm at $300, the realistic shortlist is Solo Stove for wood, Outland for propane, BioLite for portable.
Solo Stove Ranger vs Bonfire (both under $300)
Ranger is the 15-inch model. It is the right pick for a small patio, balcony, or any setting where the fire is meant to be intimate rather than the centerpiece of a six-person gathering. The Bonfire is 19.5 inches and is the more common backyard size. Both use the same airflow geometry and the same 304 stainless construction. The 2.0 versions added a removable ash pan that addresses the single biggest complaint about the original models (cleanup required tipping the pit and the ash would clog the bottom vents).
If the question is just "which one," pick by the space and the group size. Ranger for couples, decks, and travel. Bonfire for a backyard with chairs around it.
Propane: when the Outland Firebowl is the smarter call
The Outland Living 893 Deluxe Firebowl ($199.99) and the smaller 870 model ($123.58) are CSA-certified, run on a standard 20-lb propane tank with about 7-9 hours of burn time per fill, and produce no smoke or ash whatsoever. They are the default answer for: condo patios with smoke restrictions, regions with frequent burn bans, anyone who does not want to source and store dry firewood, and households where lighting and extinguishing a wood fire feels like more friction than the ambiance is worth.
The compromise is honest: a propane fire reads as decorative. There is no crackle, no wood smell, and the flame pattern is uniform. Buyers who want "camping by the campfire at home" will not be satisfied. Buyers who want a warm light on the patio with a switch-on experience will be.
Portable: BioLite FirePit+ is the only credible option under $300
BioLite FirePit+ ($119.95) is a wood-and-charcoal pit with a fan-driven airflow system powered by a rechargeable battery pack. The fan controls the burn rate from a phone app or a button on the unit, and the same battery doubles as a USB power bank. It weighs about 20 lbs, packs into a carry bag, and is the realistic pick for car campers, tailgates, and renters who need the pit to live in a closet between uses.
Tradeoffs versus Solo Stove: the BioLite is smaller, the build is less heavy-duty, and the battery is one more thing to charge. In exchange the buyer gets a pit they can actually move and a unit that doubles as a grill with the optional grill grate.
What about Tiki Brand and Breeo
Both are excellent pits and both sit just above the $300 cap that defines this guide. The Tiki Brand 25-inch ($395) is the most direct Solo Stove competitor with a similar double-wall design and a wood pellet pack option for cleaner ignition. Breeo X19 ($399) is a heavier-gauge American-made pit with the SearPlate grilling accessory ecosystem and the Outpost cooking arm. Both are worth considering if the budget can stretch by $100. Below the cap, Solo Stove remains the wood pit to beat.
Buying notes
Solo Stove and BioLite both run frequent direct-from-manufacturer discounts that occasionally undercut Amazon by 10-20%. Worth checking both before purchase. Outland sells through Amazon and big-box primarily and rarely discounts the Firebowl line.
Cover and stand accessories are sold separately for all three brands. For Solo Stove, the lid plus stand combo adds roughly $80 to the ticket. For deck use, the stand is not optional: the pit base gets hot enough to scorch composite decking without one.
Recommended
Products related to this guide.
What owners say
Real owner reports from the threads and editorial sources we drew on for this guide.
“These were made on an Breeo open fire pit with pecan wood and took 6-7hrs.”
— r/BBQ / PitSpecialist
Amazon reviews by pick
Verbatim verified-buyer feedback for each of the products recommended above. Read the full review threads on Amazon via the links below.
Solo Stove Ranger 2.0
★★★★★4.8 from 576 Amazon reviews
“I was tempted to go with one of the cheap copycat versions, but these are great quality and I didn’t want to risk being disappointed. I would love to have a larger version to leave in my backyard all the time, but this is better for taking places. It works great if you are cutting your own firewood, but might be a little small for the stuff you buy at the gas stations and stores. It’s big enough to have a good sized fire that puts off a lot of heat, and if you use fairly thick pieces of wood, it will burn for quite a while.”
— RW, verified Amazon buyer
“This is a very nice stove. Came with stand a really heavy duty carry bag. I fired it up and was amazed at how clean and efficient it ran.”
— Amazon Customer, verified Amazon buyer
“I live near a beach that has a well visited camp ground along its shore. One of the things that is fun to do is check out peoples gear. The Solo Ranger is one of the things we kept noticing and now I know why. They are great for camping, use in the backyard, evening at the beach, anywhere you want a safe, contained fire with easy clean up and packability. They also have add ons that work great! Highly recommend.”
— Sada, verified Amazon buyer
Solo Stove Bonfire 2.0
★★★★★4.6 from 356 Amazon reviews
“This is the perfect size to keep four people warm. Easy to start a fire, very little amount of smoke and essentially none when the fire is burning fully. The wood burns down quickly and leaves very little coals. Easy transport and cools down quickly. Definitely an essential item for any off-road trip.”
— Stacey M., verified Amazon buyer
“I teased my son in law when he got one as a gift. I bought my own when they moved out. Works awesome and saves a ton of wood vs open fire pit.”
— Chickenman40, verified Amazon buyer
“It was good it did the job I wanted. It was movable easy to start fires kept everything clean smoke free.”
— Todd222, verified Amazon buyer
Outland Living 893 Deluxe Firebowl
★★★★★4.8 from 4,424 Amazon reviews
“Surprised by the weight and build quality of this, especially given the price I got it for (~$100). The steel is substantial and all the parts are heavy duty and feels like it will last. My order for this firepit had two components, the firepit itself off Amazon and the Natural Gas Kit 785 straight from the manufacturer.”
— K, verified Amazon buyer
“We had a very nice propane firepit that we used on our camping trips with our 5th wheel however when we jumped to the motorhome suddenly there wasn't adequate space to haul it. Thus the quest to find a replacement which resulted in purchasing the Outland Firebowl 870.”
— VickiKay, verified Amazon buyer
“We purchased this fire bowl to take on vacation or to the mountains. Much easier than finding firewood and then having to extinguish the fire. Simply turn on, then turn off when you are done!”
— RA, verified Amazon buyer
BioLite FirePit+
★★★★★4.7 from 154 Amazon reviews
“If you're considering getting the BioLite Firepit, and you intend to cook on it, definitely get this lid.”
— B. R., verified Amazon buyer
“Makes cooking much more efficient by retaining heat. Combined with a cast iron griddle we’ve been able to fry, deep fry, and bake. I had to add an external thermometer because it does not come with one. Hence the 4 star rating. But otherwise COMPLETELY satisfied with this lid. Gentle handle it carefully. It’s not super rugged. But you have to have a trade off if you want lighter weight.”
— Jason, verified Amazon buyer
“This helps to contain the fire for more of a controlled burn or for long, slow cooking.”
— Jeffrey S, verified Amazon buyer





