








💧 Stay hydrated, stay unstoppable — filter your way to adventure!
The Sawyer Mini Water Filtration System is a compact, lightweight, and NSF-certified filter that removes nearly all bacteria, protozoa, and microplastics from water. Designed for outdoor enthusiasts and travelers, it fits standard bottles and hydration packs, weighs just 2 ounces, and filters up to 100,000 gallons. Its included backflush plunger ensures easy maintenance, making it the ultimate portable water purifier for safe, reliable hydration anywhere.













| ASIN | B000FAGUKO |
| Best Sellers Rank | #282 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #4 in Camping & Hiking Water Filters |
| Brand | Sawyer |
| Brand Name | Sawyer |
| Color | Red |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (43,076) |
| Date First Available | April 5, 2006 |
| Hand Orientation | Ambidextrous |
| Installation Type | Portable/Freestanding |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.5 x 1.5 x 1.5 inches |
| Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 5.67 x 3.98 x 1.38 inches |
| Item Weight | 1.79 ounces |
| Manufacturer | Sawyer Products |
| Maximum Flow Rate | 0.01 Gallons Per Minute |
| Model Name | MINI Water Filter |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Package Information | Bottle |
| Package Weight | 0.05 Kilograms |
| Part Number | SP120 |
| Power Source | Manual Operation |
| Product Dimensions | 1.35"L x 1.35"W x 1.35"H |
| Size | 1-Pack |
| Special Feature | NSF certified |
| Style | Filter Only |
| Suggested Users | Unisex-Adult |
| Supported Water TDS Level Maximum (PPM) | 1000 |
| UPC | 050716001204 |
| Upper Temperature Rating | 60 Degrees Celsius |
| Warranty Description | 100,000 gallon rated |
G**D
Essential Backpacking Gear
UPDATE: So I recently added the CNOC Vecto 2L bladder to this rig and got rid of my Survivor collapsible canteens. I don't think I'll be going back. The Vecto has a large opening to fill, and a 28mm bottle cap to dispense. The Mini screws on perfectly and now I can filter 2L at a time with no issues. Loving this. I also have gotten rid of all my Nalgenes from my backpacking/camping setup. I use them for the office now. I have replaced them with Smartwater bottles. The SW bottles weight less than 2 ounces each, cost $1-2 each and fit the Mini. I have also found I can get two 32 oz SW bottles into a single water bottle pocket on my pack. That means I can either carry 4 liters of water without affecting my internal storage. I have come to really value that decision. When a SW bottle wears out or breaks, I can replace it at pretty much any grocery store for less than $2. ORIGINAL REVIEW (May, 2017): Did some back country camping this past weekend and took the Sawyer Mini out with me for the first time. Reviews on it were good and I was looking for ways to cut down on weight and footprint on my old filter system (a pump). The mini is excellent. I've seen a few reviews complaining about the bag it comes with and the time it takes to squeeze "x" amount of water through it. All I have to say is, yes the bag is too small. 16 oz is kind of lame. The quality of the bag? Seems decent enough. I'll end up replacing it anyway with a pair of Survivor Filter collapsible canteens (32 oz each). As far as the filter goes, I tried it on just some regular old tap water to function test it and get familiar before taking it out. I filtered two liters of water through it (2 Nalgenes) and then back flushed it. I was shocked to see the brown much it filtered out of the tap water! I may get a second on and just screw it onto a SmartWater bottle for drinking at work! The system was easy to use. I don't know what kind of rush others are in when backpacking, but I'm not. I move at my pace and take my time. i'm not in a race when I'm backpacking or camping. I don't mind taking a couple minutes to filter some clean drinking/cooking water. The Sawyer Mini works great. I have zero complaints. I appreciate that it comes with the syringe to back flush it and keep it working well. The 16 oz bag is too small, but it works, and unless you're Hulking out on the thing, it should last just fine. That's one piece I'll upgrade, but the filter alone is well worth the cost of the set.
T**H
Small, great flow, cheap, safe - this is a perfect product
Wow. I've been hiking the Appalachian trail solo as out-and-back day hikes this year. Over the summer, I started taking 2 water bottles with me for my 12-mile and longer hikes. And I would refill them, unfiltered, from water sources along the trail. My brother pointed out that I as certifiably insane to do such a thing. After some thought, I decided to agree with him. After some searching, I ended with this setup. I wanted something I could take with me that was ultra-light and ultra-small. I usually have my iphone and some trail mix in one pocket of my running shorts, a water bottle in my hand, some backup carbs on the other pocket, ID and cash in the back pocket. That's it. While it's reasonable to do 5 miles this way, or even 8 if you have water at your destination, 12-15 miles requires a refill. And this is how you refill. The filter is tiny, and if you're using clear water from a moving stream or spring, the flow is pretty fast. As fast as my Katadyn hiker filter that I've had for years. After a few trips with this baby, I'm hooked. A couple tips and things I've learned: 1) You're carrying 2 water bottles anyway - one to fill from a water source, and one to drink from. I fill the clean bottle with filtered water, and fill the other bottle with unfiltered water. 2) The bags are unreliable. I haven't had one break yet, but it's a common thing. So don't rely on 1. Bring a backup. Or, 3) Use another bottle with a cap that fits. The package says the filter fits on most water bottles. I have not found that to be the case with 2 different house brands of water bottles. I did find that the house brand 0-calorie clear soda (it comes in peach, blackberry, etc, you know what I mean) bottles did fit. So for 68 cents, I have an unfiltered bottle I can use. I think that soda bottles will reliably fit, but that's just a guess. 4) lastly, because the equipment is so small and light, it is easy to lose. I started off on a 15-mile hike last week and 3 miles in discovered that my water bag was gone. I assumed I had left it in the car accidentally or it had dropped on the trail. I went ahead and did the hike anyway, refilling at a clear spring, right at the source, without filtering. I found the bag on the side of the trail on my way back. So use a zipper pocket, bundle the items to something bigger with a rubber band, do something to protect yourself. I have not used this for a camping trip yet, but I would not hesitate to do so. It's amazing. I would make sure to take the backwash plunger with me if I was backpacking, though. I love this system - it simply can't be beat.
J**.
Outstanding product!
This thing works very well and is small.
T**G
Lots of water filtration potential - excellent gold standard quality
Filters arrived in a bulk clear plastic bag with cleaning tool. The sale price was very good, $10 per filter was very fair. Would buy again. Highly recommended. Excellent for preparedness kits and backup home water filtration needs.
R**0
Tiny But Mighty
The Sawyer MINI is a top pick for ultralight backpackers, travelers to remote destinations, or anyone building an emergency kit where weight and pack space matter. It hits a great balance of filtration performance, portability, and overall value. However, if you’ll be filtering large quantities of very silty water, or you need faster output, or you’re treating water with virus risk, then you might want to look at a bigger system or supplement it with another method. In short: lightweight, capable, versatile—just know its modest flow rate and application limits.
B**E
Easy to use water filter
Used this on a backpacking trip this past weekend at Gem Lake in WA state. I was very try surprised how well this worked and how easy it was to use. It’s small and compact easy to fit in a small zipper, the water capacity I got is 16oz and worked will for me, the speed of it was depending on how your squeezed the water out, and I felt that the quality was pretty good for what I paid for. I would like to get a larger water bladder as it took me a good 15 min out es to fill up a 3L bladder. Also, I was worried about a weird taste from the filter and surprisingly I did t have an issue. If you do a little liquid iv or gatorlite can help with the taste if needed.
W**E
Great for backpacking
Lightweight, effective. It has served me for many miles.
D**O
No sé si sea original venía solo en una bolsa de plástico cualquiera sin logos sin nada de empaque
A**Z
Wir haben viele YouTube Videos geschaut um das richtige für uns zu kaufen. Die Literzahl der Benutzungszeit und das Preis Leistungsverhältnis hat uns überzeugt. Aber Achtung er filtert natürlich weniger als der Kohlefilter heraus. Bitte nicht überstürzt am nächst liegenden Bach benutzen, das Wasser darf nicht vom Menschen verunreinigt sein.
L**L
I am very happy with my purchase!
N**S
Excellent produit. Filtration fine pour boirr toutes les eaux mêmes polluées. Super pour un sac de survie ou de rando. Différentes possibilités de prendre l'eau (adaptateur bouteille, tuyau...). Compact.
G**S
Ce filtre est surprenant. Il filtre a 0.1 microns alors que des filtres a 350 euro sont encore a 0.2 microns Une capacite de filtrage hallucinante (378,5 m3 ca represente une duree de vie de plus de 378 000 litres...). Il y a un pas de vis qui permet de visser dessus des bouteilles de type Coca/Soda et ces bouteilles, vides, se compriment super facilement dans un sac. Cela permet donc d'emporter une bouteille qu'on ecrase bien, et on peut visser le filtre dessus sans probleme. Apres chaque filtrage, utiliser un peu de l'eau filtree pour nettoyer le filtre avec la seringue fournie. En mecanisme je l'utilise avec deux poches Platypus (celles que l'on peut ouvrir au sommet, et qu'on peut nettoyer facilement puisqu'on peut glisser la main dedans pour bien nettoyer dans les coins la poche interne). Dans une premiere poche de 2L je recupere l'eau. Le tube de la premiere poche va jusqu'au filtre Sawyer et sa sortie va dans une seconde poche de 2L. En fixant sur un arbre la premiere poche et par simple gravite, en 10 minutes je filtre 2 litres d'eau sans aucun effort. Le filtrage retire protozoaires et bacteries, et il ne me reste plus qu'a faire bouiller les 2L pendant 3 minutes en faisant 1 litre a chaque fois, et je depose chacun de ces litres dans une gourde 1L pour un emport total de deux litres : 1L de chaque cote du sac pour equilibrer la charge. Permet de se construire facilement avec du Platypus un mecanisme de filtrage par serie de 2L. Une duree de vie incroyable et un filtrage vraiment impressionnant. Attention : ne supporte PAS du tout le froid. Il faut absolument preserver le filtre du froid donc a conserver dans une poche interne de blouson pendant l'hiver pres du corps et a garder au chaud. Ne pas laisser le filtre tomber en temperature negative, car il est alors "foutu". Si vous randonnez l'hiver il faut faire attention sur ce point et proteger le filtre.
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