The best water filter bottles for every trip

Find the bottle that fits your travel plans best.
By , , and
Joseph Green
 on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.

Overview

Jump to Details
Best For Tech

LARQ PureVis

Jump to Details
Best For Serious Travellers

GRAYL UltraPress

Jump to Details
Best For Tight Budgets

Philips GoZero

Jump to Details
See 1 More

Table of Contents

This content originally appeared on Mashable for a US audience and has been adapted for the UK audience.

What were your goals for this year? Are you trying to get out more? You're probably also trying to stay hydrated. There’s a way of bringing those two things together: a water bottle made especially for travelling. And travelling can mean anything, whether you go hiking in the wilderness for fun, go camping regularly, or you’re back and forth from the gym every day. Being on the move requires water.

But you can go one better. How about a bottle that filters water from all its impurities and unwanted elements? From the taste of chlorine to sickness-inducing bacteria.

If that sounds good to you, we’ve rounded up a selection of filter water bottles. But first up, here’s some information to help you decide which of these bottles suits you and you're lifestyle best.

Do you need a filter water bottle?

There are lots of reasons to get a filtered water bottle. Putting your health aside, it’s better for the environment. Having a reusable bottle of any kind can save anything in the range of 400 to 700 single use plastic bottles. And there are other reasons, of course. Whether you just want to remove the taste of chlorine, or if you’re visiting somewhere with an unclean or uncertain water supply.

How do filter water bottles work?

Filter water bottles work in a variety of ways. Some use filters that have a membrane with microscopic pores, which trap dirt and bacteria, while carbon capsules absorb elements too. Some trap unwanted elements while still allowing healthy minerals to pass through. Others infuse the water with goodness and minerals. There are even tech-based filters, which use UV technology to kill bio-contaminants. As well as killing unwanted nasties, filters can also remove the taste of chlorine. That means you can fill it up with tap water and still get that fresh, natural taste.

Can you take filter water bottles hiking?

Some bottles are made for outdoor pursuits. You can use them to scoop water from natural sources — lakes, rivers, puddles, or streams — and drink without worry. These bottles are designed to remove waterborne bacteria, protozoan parasites, and viruses — not to mention sediment, silt, chemicals, and metals. These bottles are essential items for campers, hikers, and lovers of the great outdoors.

What is the best filter water bottle?

Ultimately, that’s a “you” decision. Because only you know where and how you’ll make use of a filter water bottle — where you’re clambering up a mountain or simply clocking up the miles on the daily commute. What we can do is help point you in the right direction.

These are the best filter water bottles in 2025.

The Good & The Bad

  • Dual filtration system
  • Filters waterborne bacteria and parasites
  • No unpleasant aftertaste
  • Replaceable filters
  • Clips on to rucksacks
  • Not much as this price

Why We Like It

The popular LifeStraw Go bottles are BPA-free, reusable, and they can remove most waterborne bacteria and protozoan parasites. These water bottles are ideal for bringing along on holidays or camping trips where you’re unsure of the quality of water.

You can scoop water straight from streams, lakes, rivers, or puddles. LifeStraw’s hollow fibre membrane removes the bacteria and parasites, while its activated carbon filter is able to reduce odour and chlorine, providing you with clean water without any aftertaste. And both filters can be easily replaced.

For every bottle sold, a school child in need will receive safe drinking water for a full school year, so you can feel good about buying a LifeStraw Go.  

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Adds minerals to water
  • Made from glass
  • Plastic-free
  • Smaller capacity
  • Weighs a little more
  • Doesn't remove bacteria

Why We Like It

While all reusable bottles are eco-friendly, the pH Hydrate is plastic free. Made by Invigorated Water, a top purifying brand, it also lives up to its name.

It has an alkaline water filter, in which there's a little pouch of goodness-dispensing pebbles. The filter removes heavy metals, chlorine, and fluoride while also increasing the pH and adding minerals that include zinc, magnesium, selenium, and iron.

Just be aware that this bottle doesn't claim to remove bacteria or other pathogens, so it's not made for filtering water from natural sources. Also keep in mind that since the pH Hydrate is glass, it weighs more than other bottles on this list.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • UV-C LED technology
  • Self-cleaning
  • Unique design
  • Double-wall insulation
  • For hot and cold drinks
  • A pricey option

Why We Like It

It's safe to say we all love reusable bottles, but that musty smell that gets trapped inside between washes is the absolute worst. The LARQ PureVis bottle works to combat that smell with an advanced purification system.

While other bottles run the water through a filter straw, LARQ filters your water with a UV light that coats the inner surface. Just press the top of the cap to activate the purification process. It neutralises 99.99% of harmful germs and the battery lasts up to one month on a single charge. 

It also self-cleans every two hours unless you choose to put it in travel mode, which locks the system in order to conserve battery. It essentially takes filtered water a step further by ensuring the bottle you're drinking from is also clean.

Details

The Good & The Bad

  • Top water filter brand
  • Uses PureTaste technology
  • Colour selection
  • Rolling filter costs

Why We Like It

A reusable bottles can save up to 400 single-use plastic bottles. Not only that, but you'll be saving money as well. Because not every reusable bottle costs the earth — even a filtered bottle. The Brita Filter Bottle Active comes from one of the top brands in water filtering and costs under £12.

It uses a filter disc with PureTaste technology, which not only reduces impurities and unwanted elements, but ensures that any water from any tap tastes fresh. It does mean some rolling costs as the filter discs do need replacing, but they're cheap in the long run, giving you around 60 litres of filtered water per disc. It's a matter of pennies.

The robust, lightweight build also makes this a great option for the gym. Just throw it your bag and go. It can easily withstand some rough and tumble.

Details

GRAYL UltraPress water bottle

GRAYL UltraPress

Best For Serious Travellers

The Good & The Bad

  • Removes waterborne nasties
  • Easy pressing action
  • Fast-flowing spout
  • Purifies 500ml in 10 seconds
  • Handy carry features
  • Expensive
  • Too specialist for some

Why We Like It

Consider the GRAYL UltraPress the Ferrari of filtered bottles. It eliminates 99.99% of viruses as well as illness-causing bacteria and protozoa cysts — but that’s not all. It’s also able to filter out silt, sediments, chemicals and heavy metals. That makes this a serious piece of kit of serious outdoors types.

Just fill your bottle up — from a lake, puddle, stream, or other source — and press down on the cap. It takes just 10 seconds to filter the full capacity of 500ml of water. It's ideal for bringing on trips where you’re uncertain about the quality of water you’ll have access to, or in the case of an emergency.

Other nice details include a flip-up handle, a multifunctional vented cap, and a RiverFlow spout that allows you to quickly chug your water.

Details

Philips GoZero water bottle

Philips GoZero

Best For Tight Budgets

The Good & The Bad

  • Carbon fibre filtration
  • Removes chlorine and other elements
  • Award-winning design
  • Possible to filter natural source water
  • Extra filter sold separately

Why We Like It

The Philips GoZero is another super cheap option — it costs just a touch more than £10 — and it comes from a brand you can trust. Sure, you probably think of Philips as an electronics brand. So, it stands to reason that this bottle is packed with impressive technology. Even at this price.

The Philips GoZero has an option of two filters. The GoZero Fitness Filter reduces chlorine, lead, and pesticides, turning your tap water fresh and tasty. That makes it a great option for the gym or everyday use.

The Adventure Filter, however, uses electro-absorptive technology to eliminate 99% of viruses and bacteria. That means you can filter water from lakes and streams — perfect for the great outdoors. The catch is that it only comes with the Fitness Filter, so you’ll have to buy the Adventure Filter separately.  

Details

Topics Outdoors

Photo of Joseph Green
Joseph Green
Global Shopping Editor

Joseph Green is the Global Shopping Editor for Mashable. He covers VPNs, headphones, fitness gear, dating sites, streaming, and shopping events like Black Friday and Prime Day.

Joseph is also Executive Editor of Mashable's sister site, AskMen.


Recommended For You
How to create a custom camera filter on a Samsung Galaxy phone
A Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra smartphone.

TikTok removes AI 'chubby' filter after body-shaming criticism
A woman seen looking at a smartphone with a TikTok logo displayed in the background.




Trending on Mashable
NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for April 10, 2025
Connections game on a smartphone

Dire wolves have been brought back from extinction. What does this mean?
Dire wolves Romulus and Remus next to each other in the snow at five months old.

Wordle today: Answer, hints for April 10, 2025
Wordle game on a smartphone

'Black Mirror' fans, be warned: DO NOT start with 'Common People'
Chris O'Dowd and Rashida Jones star in "Black Mirror: Common People."

NYT Mini crossword answers, hints for April 10, 2025
Close-up view of crossword puzzle.
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!