From a spendy double sleeper to a budget bag, these three nests are worth every dollar.
(Photo: REI/Canva)
Published June 26, 2026 03:51AM
A sleeping bag is a non-negotiable for camping—unless, of course, you’re a masochist or a vampire who doesn’t want or need a good night of sleep. The best sleeping bag for car camping keeps you warm and toasty when the mercury falls but doesn’t stick to your skin or absorb sweat when temperatures rise. No matter the price, you make tradeoffs in size, weight, temp ratings, fabrics, and more. But the three bags below check almost every box, for almost every budget.
Best Sleeping Bags for Car Camping: At a Glance
Best Budget Sleeping Bag: The North Face Wawona 20 Sleeping Bag ($150-$160)

Dimensions: 78″ x 32″ (regular)
Comfort rating: 20F and 35F
Pros and Cons
+ Good value
+ Soft liner fabric
+ Incorporates recycled materials
– Large pack down size for a single
– Comfort rating is off
– No hood
If your budget is tight, the Wawona 20 is a perfectly good three-season sleeping bag for car camping. Its strengths are not in its packability and winter warmth but in its roominess, coziness, and durability. This bag is best for 40-degree F nights—or 30 if you wear a beanie and base layer to bed. The 50-denier polyester taffeta lining is soft against bare skin, the polyester fiber batting stays lofty and plush, and the recycled and water repellant polyester ripstop exterior won’t snag if dragged on rocky ground. Testers appreciated the chest-height storage pocket in the lining for stashing ear plugs, AirPods, and lip balm. Extra flex: Zip together two Wawona bags for an affordable double bed.
Best Mid-Range Sleeping Bag: Rumpl Wrap Sack ($250)

Dimensions: 82″ x 35″
Comfort rating: 20-30F
Pros and Cons
+ Wide temperature range
+ Roomy
+ Smart design
– Too cold below 30F
– Clips could be uncomfortable to roll on
Voted the overall best sleeping bag of 2026 by testers, the Wrap Sack is the equivalent of an adult swaddle. Two wings on either side wrap around you and secure with four easy clips, or you can zip up the outer layer like a traditional sleeping bag for chillier nights. It’s nearly perfect except that it isn’t a true 20-degree bag. Most testers stayed comfortable down to about 40 degrees F, but temperatures below freezing were less snug. The exterior is made out of a robust fully-recycled nylon while the inside offers two different amounts of Rump’s proprietary recycled synthetic insulation. A roomy, rectangular cut gave active sleepers plenty of space to toss, turn, and stretch out unlike a mummy bag. Packed down, it’s about the size of a watermelon.
Best Splurge Sleeping Bag: Nemo Jazz Double ($380)

Dimensions: 78″ x 129″
Comfort rating: 32F
Pros and Cons
+ As comfortable as home bedding
+ Integrated, removable bed sheet
+ Passed its comfort rating with flying colors
– Bulky packed size
For families and couples who prefer sleeping in the same bag, this is the best setup money can buy. Two adults and a six year old, all with different heat preferences, snoozed comfortably between the supple recycled taffeta interior while testing riverside in Northern California. Double zipper pulls on either side of the bag helped dump heat if they got too toasty, while a removable polyester-stretch bedsheet added warmth on colder nights. Unlike the other two bags on the list, this one lives up to its promoted 32-degree comfort rating when we coupled it with the NEMO Roamer Double sleeping pad. Our only complaint: It weighs almost 9 pounds and is extremely bulky. But what do you expect out of a literal bed that fits so many people?
