Is it worth it to splurge $600 for a tent when there are聽$100 models out there? Absolutely. Except, of course,聽when it isn鈥檛.
Bear with me. A tent with a higher price tag often comes with more features and better construction, but that could mean complicated, time-consuming setup and accessories you may have no use for. To wade through the differences between budget and high-end four-person tents and determine if the extra scratch pays dividends, I enlisted engineer, reformed dirtbag, and personal friend Ryan Pyles. He pitted the against the 聽in a series of head-to-head tests to see how they stacked up.
The Contenders

Coleman Sundome Four-Person ($54)
Floor space: 63 square feet
Center height: 4 feet聽11 inches
Weight: 9.7 pounds
Wall material: Polyester

MSR Papa Hubba NX ($600)
Floor space: 53 square feet
Center height: 3 feet聽8 inches
Weight: 6.5 pounds
Wall material: Nylon
The Tests
1. Setup
To simulate a car-camping experience, Pyles and partner聽Macayla Sparks聽set up the Coleman and MSR聽tents in the evening after a couple of beers. This was the first time either of them had seen these two tents.
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Setup time: 13 minutes聽3 seconds
Complexity: 4/10
Frustration: 2/10
鈥淭his is a classic tent structure. Two crisscrossed poles attach to the main body with clips and sleeves,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淎 third, shorter pole聽keeps the rain fly taut. The rain fly is color-coded well enough that even the most alcohol-addled brain should be able to place it correctly.鈥
MSR聽Papa Hubba NX
Setup time: 14 minutes聽44 seconds
Complexity: 7/10
Frustration: 6/10
鈥淭his one is much more complicated,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淚t, too, has three poles that give it structure. Two shorter poles hold the sides up and out, while a third forms the backbone. But the backbone聽pole is聽composed of three separate sections all attached by swivels. Combining聽these pieces was a baffling experience.鈥
2. Waterproofing
Because it hadn鈥檛 rained in weeks in Pyles鈥檚 hometown of Bozeman, Montana, he staked each of the tents within firing range of some sprinklers. Then聽he sprayed them down with a hose for 15 minutes while Sparks checked for leaks inside.
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Waterproofing: 7/10
Pyles and Sparks were pleasantly surprised at how well the Sundome sloughed off water. 鈥淯nder full blast, the聽walls showed no signs of leakage, even though I hit it from every angle,鈥 Pyles says. The exception was the huge mesh windows;聽since the fly doesn鈥檛 cover them completely, they聽leaked like聽sieves when open and the wind was聽blowing.
MSR聽Papa Hubba NX
Waterproofing: 10/10
鈥淭his tent didn鈥檛 leak a drop,鈥 Pyles says. While both tents repelled water extremely well, the Papa Hubba scored higher for its massive rain fly, which totally covered the windows. 鈥淭here is no way any water is ever getting past that thing,鈥 Pyles says.聽Keep the windows open for some fresh air, even in the rain.
3. Durability
Using one of the quickest ways to bring destruction down on a tent's floors, walls, and mesh windows, Pyles let a couple of dogs loose in each and then riled them up to see how much havoc they鈥檇 wreak.
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Damage: 0/10
Anxiety: 0/10
鈥淭he heavy-duty material and bulky construction make this thing feel pretty invincible. And sure enough, the dogs didn鈥檛聽rip through the fabric,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淏ut because of the low replacement cost, I wasn鈥檛 too worried about it either way.鈥
MSR聽Papa Hubba NX
Damage: N/A
Anxiety: 10/10
Pyles鈥檚 concern over ruining a $600 tent led to him to abort聽this part of the聽test before the dogs even entered. 鈥淚 had no desire to see how many holes they could poke in the thin floor,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is the tent you place far, far away from a campfire circle.鈥 However, he did concede that the聽Hubba鈥檚 burly 30-denier nylon would聽probably have been fine.
4. Space
Both Coleman and MSR聽built their tents for four people. But to see if the Sundome and Papa Hubba could fit those four people comfortably, Pyles enlisted three male buddies to join him in each of them. He also took the two聽tents camping to gauge the convenience of features like pockets and door size.
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Space: 7/10
Convenience: 4/10
鈥淭he Sundome was pretty damn comfortable,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淚t fit four people, although those at the ends were pretty close to the walls. This isn鈥檛 a big deal when a tent鈥檚 dry聽but can lead to unhappy campers in a rainstorm鈥 or when condensation builds up inside. Coleman鈥檚 tent really suffered on聽user-friendliness. 鈥淭here are two pockets, but they鈥檙e accessible only if you鈥檙e on the end,鈥 Pyles聽says.聽鈥淭he narrow doors make it impossible to get out without crushing skulls.鈥
MSR聽Papa Hubba NX
Space: 9/10
Convenience: 7/10
鈥淗ere聽the superior design of the Papa Hubba wins out,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淭he side poles pull the walls almost vertical, so there鈥檚聽a ton of space, preventing the people on the end from sleeping with a face full of tent. The doors are super wide to allow聽easy entry and exit. I would have given it a nine or ten for convenience, but the side pockets are fairly small, and there isn鈥檛 an overhead mesh shelf for anything. I assume these are聽weight trade-offs.鈥
The Takeaway
Do you get your money鈥檚 worth from MSR鈥檚 Papa Hubba? Absolutely. With its remarkable amount of floor space and (almost) backpacking-worthy sub-six-pound weight, the聽investment聽delivers an objectively better tent, despite how pleased Pyles was with the Coleman.
But it鈥檚 important to consider how you鈥檒l be using your tent. 鈥淚t should come as no shock that $600 buys way more tent than $100 does,鈥 Pyles says. 鈥淏ut I take my outdoor adventures any way I can get them, whether leaving after work to car-camp at a trailhead or just heading to a lake with friends.鈥 If that鈥檚 more your speed, and you aren鈥檛 looking for something to pull double duty for a summit attempt, the plucky polyester Sundome should do you just fine.