Get Better Trail in your inbox.

Subscribe here.
MENU

Katadyn Hiker Microfilter Review

John Ellings author bio photo
ByJohn Ellings
Feb 03, 2026
When you buy through our links, we may receive a commission.
Our Take:
3.5/5

The Katadyn Hiker ($90) is a classic pump filter that’s a decent fit for backpacking, but it feels increasingly outclassed by modern squeeze and gravity systems. It’s durable, pretty reliable, and has a useful pre-filter that helps with murkier water sources, and the replaceable cartridge makes it a longer-term value proposition than many squeeze filters. But the Hiker is also bulky, slower than much of the competition, and filtering water for a group can turn into an arm workout in a hurry. For most hikers, there are easier—and cheaper—ways to get clean water.

User Friendliness

User Friendliness

2.5/5
Filtering Speed

Filtering Speed

3.5/5
Weight & Packed Size

Weight & Packed Size

3/5
Durability

Durability

4.5/5
Maintenance

Maintenance

2.5/5
Sustainability

Sustainability

1.5/5

Type

Pump

Flow rate

1 L/min

Weight

11 oz.

Size

6.5 x 3 x 2.4 in.

Lifespan

750L

Pore size

0.2 microns

Best for

Backpacking

Pros

Solid construction makes it a long-term option, though you’ll need to perform periodic maintenance and filter swaps.
Pre-filter helps keep sediment and larger debris from gumming up the system.
You can filter as much as you want without constantly refilling—assuming your arms are up for it.

Cons

Bulkier and heavier than squeeze filters.
Pumping can feel increasingly fatiguing as you filter more water.
Less flexible with shallow water sources unless you carry a separate collection bottle.

For this season's top models, see our guide to the Best Backpacking Water Filters.

The Katadyn Hiker Microfilter works like most pump filters: It’s functional, but it asks more of you than a squeeze or gravity setup. The basic process is straightforward. You drop the intake hose and pre-filter into a sufficiently deep water source, attach the output hose to your clean-water vessel (the output hose has a wide-mouth bottle attachment), and start pumping. If you’re filtering for a large group, the effort stacks up fast, and the Hiker becomes the kind of tool you either rotate between people or resign yourself to using while your arms slowly burn out.


Pump filters aren’t going to be as user-friendly as a gravity set-up, period, but compared to a smoother design like the MSR Guardian Purifier (with its side-action lever), the Katadyn Hiker Microfilter feels more tiring and less refined. The pump handle sits on top and slightly off to the side of the main housing, and while the grip is comfortable enough, it’s small—about palm-sized—and the pumping motion quickly gets repetitive after a couple of liters. It’s usable and reliable, but not a piece of gear I look forward to using.


The Hiker’s biggest limitation, though, is how dependent it is on the water source itself. If water is scarce—say you’re dealing with a trickle coming off a rock face or a very shallow flow—you’ll need to collect water into a vessel first, then put the intake hose into that, which adds an extra step. I have less-than-fond memories of doing water duty with this filter on family backpacking trips in the Adirondacks, where grabbing enough water for dinner and the next morning felt like the kind of task that made you wish you’d packed something more hands-off.

Katadyn lists the Hiker’s flow rate at 1 liter per minute, with 48 pump strokes per liter. These numbers align with how it feels in typical backcountry conditions—not terrible, but not exactly impressive by today’s standards (by contrast, the MSR Guardian has a flow rate of 2.5 liters per minute, with 35 pump strokes per liter). The first few liters can feel efficient enough, especially if you’re filtering from a clear stream or lake, but the longer you go, the more the pump’s pace becomes limited by fatigue rather than the filter itself. You may start strong, but by the end of a longer water session, you’re likely pumping slower and taking more breaks.


That said, the Hiker does have a couple of advantages. Because it’s a pump, you can filter into virtually any container you want—bottles, cooking pots, jugs for car camping—without being locked into the liter-at-a-time cycle that most squeeze water filters create. And the intake hose’s pre-filter (rated to 150 microns) does a nice job of catching larger debris before it reaches the main filter. In murky water, that can prevent the dramatic, immediate slowdown you sometimes get with squeeze filters when sediment overwhelms the fibers, or the need to use a pre-filter like a handkerchief or a coffee filter.


Still, even when it’s working perfectly, the Hiker is simply slower than many alternatives. As mentioned above, the Guardian purifies at 2.5 liters per minute, the Platypus GravityWorks filters at 1.75 liters per minute with no pumping required, and fast squeeze filters like the Platypus QuickDraw (3L/min) or Katadyn BeFree (2L/min) make quick water stops feel dramatically easier. The Hiker gets the job done, but it rarely feels fast.

At 11 ounces and 6.5 x 3 x 2.4 inches, the Katadyn Hiker is heavy and bulky for a modern filter. The filter comes with a zippered carrying case, which is a nice way of containing the various hoses and paraphernalia attached to the main housing.


In a pack, it takes up the kind of space you usually reserve for a large stove or a first aid kit, and it’s not something you can casually jam into a side pocket or hipbelt pouch the way you can with a squeeze filter. Even many gravity setups pack down smaller when you consider how compressible soft-sided reservoirs are. And while the Hiker is smaller and lighter than the MSR Guardian, it doesn’t come close to reaching the purifier’s performance. In the end, the Hiker won’t impress anyone trying to pack light, which limits its use to more casual backpacking trips.

The Katadyn Hiker’s durability is one of its strongest traits. Its rigid plastic housing feels tough enough to handle the kind of normal backpacking abuse that would chew up softer systems: getting crammed into a pack, tossed around camp, or roughly set down on rocks. Over multiple years of use, I never had issues with the pump mechanism breaking down or the moving parts feeling fragile. In that sense, it’s the kind of filter you can own for a long time without constantly worrying about it (you might have to lubricate the pump every so often, though).


That said, this is still a hollow-fiber-style filtration system, and the usual warnings apply. Don’t drop it from a real height onto hard ground, and never let the filter freeze. Katadyn rates the Hiker’s cartridge to 750 liters, which is relatively low compared to many of the water filters we’ve tested. (The BeFree is 1,000L, for example, while the Platypus GravityWorks is 1,500L.) The upside is that the filter cartridge is replaceable, so you don’t have to toss the whole system when it wears out. Replacements cost $60, which is a meaningful expense, but it does mean the Hiker can theoretically live in your gear closet indefinitely if you’re willing to maintain it.

Maintenance is another area in which the Hiker feels old-school. Unlike squeeze filters that you can backflush in seconds (or others that you can swish clean), not to mention the Guardian's self-flushing design, the Hiker requires actual disassembly for proper cleaning. To access the cartridge, unscrew the top of the housing with the disassembled pump handle, remove the filter, and then lightly scrub sediment from the exterior with a sponge. Some people also soak the filter in vinegar or a diluted bleach solution to disinfect it and remove clogs. None of that is terribly complicated, but it’s the kind of upkeep that is better suited for home than the field.


Doing this kind of maintenance mid-trip would be annoying, and it’s a much bigger hassle than what most modern filters require. The good news is that the pre-filter helps reduce the amount of gunk that reaches the cartridge, which makes the Hiker slightly less prone to rapid clogging in the first place. But when it does start to slow down, getting it back to peak performance is more involved than it should be in 2026. The Katadyn Hiker works—and it works reliably—but it asks more of you both in effort and upkeep than many alternatives.

Select icon to view details:

Icon
Icon
Icon
Icon
Icon
Icon
Icon

Longevity

Choosing durable outdoor gear and keeping it in use for longer is one of the best ways to reduce environmental impact. Our proprietary longevity rating assesses factors like overall build quality, materials, fabric denier, component durability, and real-world performance. A green check indicates that we expect the product to be long-lasting relative to its peers, a yellow check mark indicates average longevity, and a red X indicates a product that may have a limited lifespan.

Platypus GravityWorks 4.0L ($135): No Hands Required
The evolution of backcountry water filters has largely relegated pump models like the Hiker to the scrap heap of history, and the Platypus GravityWorks is one of our favorite examples of why. Instead of being relegated to pumping at your water source, you simply fill and hang the 4-liter dirty reservoir and let gravity do the work—freeing you up to cook dinner, relax, or wrangle camp chores. The GravityWorks also filters faster at 1.75 liters per minute and excels at filling large bottles and cookware in one go, rather than the Hiker’s labor-intensive, one-liter-at-a-time approach. If minimizing effort and maximizing clean water are priorities, the GravityWorks makes the Hiker’s pump-driven design feel unmistakably outdated. For a deeper dive, read our review of the Platypus GravityWorks.


MSR Guardian Purifier ($400): Spring for a Major Upgrade
Yup, the Guardian costs four times more than the Hiker. Yes, it’s heavier and bulkier. But this comparison is a no-contest when you factor in performance. The Guardian’s pump action is both faster and smoother than the Hiker’s, and it never left us feeling like we’d been pumping iron at the gym. With a 0.02-micron pore size, the Guardian is also a purifier (i.e., it eliminates viruses in addition to bacteria), making it easier to use with a wider variety of water sources. And unlike the Hiker’s upkeep, which requires taking apart the housing, the Guardian features an ingenious self-flushing mechanism that keeps it flowing fast. This makes it reliable on expeditions, where we think the Hiker would feel like a hindrance. If you want the best of the best, go with the Guardian. To learn more, check out our Guardian Purifier review.

Katadyn Hiker ($90)
Katadyn Hiker backpacking water filter laid on rock
3.5/5

Pump filters’ glory days are long in the past, and the Katadyn Hiker Microfilter feels increasingly outclassed by modern squeeze and gravity systems despite its solid, reliable construction. Its bulky build, slow flow rate, and arm-fatiguing pump action make it a tougher sell than lighter, faster, and more hands-off alternatives.

Type
Pump
Flow rate
1 L/min
Weight
11 oz.
Size
6.5 x 3 x 2.4 in.
Lifespan
750L
Pore size
0.2 microns
Best for
Backpacking
Icon

User Friendliness

2.5/5
Icon

Filtering Speed

3.5/5
Icon

Weight & Packed Size

3/5
Icon

Durability

4.5/5
Icon

Maintenance

2.5/5
Icon

Sustainability

1.5/5
Platypus GravityWorks 4.0L ($135)
Platypus GravityWorks 4L Water Filter System filter detail
4.4/5

If you think “group water duty” and “low effort” are diametrically opposed, let us introduce you to the GravityWorks. This gravity setup has everything you need for a no-hands filtration system, so you can focus on other things at camp. It’s not light or recommended for solo hikers or single-day missions, though.

Type
Gravity
Flow rate
1.75 L/min
Weight
11.5 oz.
Size
3.3 x 9.5 in.
Lifespan
1,500L
Pore size
0.2 microns
Best for
Backpacking
Icon

User Friendliness

4/5
Icon

Filtering Speed

4/5
Icon

Weight & Packed Size

3/5
Icon

Durability

4.5/5
Icon

Maintenance

3.5/5
Icon

Sustainability

4/5
MSR Guardian Purifier ($400)
Top view of MSR Guardian Purifier backpacking water filter
4.8/5

It’s by far the most expensive product in the category, but if your trip involves remote basecamps, questionable water sources, or group filtering for days on end, the fast, self-cleaning Guardian is worth every penny. That said, it’s overkill if you’re just going on run-of-the-mill backpacking trips.

Type
Pump
Flow rate
2.5 L/min
Weight
1 lb. 1 oz.
Size
8.3 x 4.4 in.
Lifespan
10,000L
Pore size
0.02 microns
Best for
Expeditions, backpacking
Icon

User Friendliness

4/5
Icon

Filtering Speed

4.5/5
Icon

Weight & Packed Size

2.5/5
Icon

Durability

5/5
Icon

Maintenance

5/5
Icon

Sustainability

3.1/5

Is the Katadyn Hiker for You?

If you want a durable, serviceable pump filter for backpacking trips—and you don’t mind expending effort to earn your clean water—the Katadyn Hiker Microfilter can still be a decent choice. It’s best for hikers who value reliability, want to filter into large containers, and don’t want to squeeze a reservoir or hang a gravity bag. That’s about all it has going for it, though; we wouldn’t recommend it for packing-space-conscious trips or anyone who wants the easiest possible water routine. The Hiker is a fairly dependable classic, but it’s best looked back upon fondly as the product of another time.

Ski Kit Mash Up

curated for you

Better Trail Backpacking Kits

Getting into backpacking for the first time or looking for gear to match your specific style? We've got a kit for that. Check out our curated backpacking kits for every type of trail-goer, from beginner or budget-oriented to the ultralight curious. All there's left for you to do is grab your boots (or trail running shoes) and hit the trail.