Top 20 Male Camping Influencers on Instagram (May 2026)

We found 121 camping Influencers
These influencers mention 'camping' in their Instagram bio. Here are the top 20. To run a custom search, check out Modash's influencer discovery features (free to try).
05/10/2026
profile picture

1. Iron Tazz

🏕️ Backpacking • Hiking • Camping ⛰️ PCT Thru Hike 📚 Author of -Hike It- 🌀 @leavenotraceorg Ambassador 🫶

Followers
176.9k
Fake followers
22.62%
Engagement rate
2.37%
Average Reel plays
54k
Audience gender
female
36.11%
male
63.89%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
United States
30.97%
Turkey
5.68%
Mexico
3.71%
Brazil
3.58%
Chile
2.89%
profile picture

2. Corey Kirwen

Australia

I have really bad luck with project cars. DIY: Camping, 4x4 and car content. Owner of @packedgear Tiktok 110k/Youtube 15k

Followers
85.4k
Fake followers
21.66%
Engagement rate
2.24%
Average Reel plays
27k
Audience gender
female
44.82%
male
55.18%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
Australia
41%
United States
14.23%
Brazil
4.49%
United Kingdom
4.1%
Indonesia
2.28%
profile picture

3. CamIsExploring

United Kingdom

🏔️Hiking, Camping, Everything Outdoors ⛺️Passion for Nature & Filmaking 🎥YouTube & TikTok ↓ 📧Cam.occleston@gmail.com

profile picture

4. Locate the best jubi

India

🌎You can enjoy new sights with me 📩DM collaboration 📞+918590102676 @jubi_______r Video creator 📸 Resort camping | travel | food | adventure |

Followers
64.2k
Fake followers
8.49%
Engagement rate
4.28%
Average Reel plays
39.6k
Audience gender
female
13.19%
male
86.81%
Top performing Reels
  1. 147.1k
  2. 45.2k
  3. 39.4k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
India
87.37%
United Arab Emirates
4.94%
Saudi Arabia
2.54%
Qatar
1.45%
Oman
0.95%
profile picture

5. The Little Rig

Australia

Every Pin Stripe Tells A Story! 🤙🏼 ⬇️ YouTube and Discount Links

Followers
63.5k
Fake followers
21.73%
Engagement rate
2.3%
Average Reel plays
15.8k
Audience gender
female
10.9%
male
89.1%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
Australia
33.12%
United States
7.41%
Brazil
5.18%
Japan
3.5%
Chile
3.22%
profile picture

6. Mohamed Amin El Ouaazizi

Morocco

Video maker 🎬 Photographer Hiking..Climbing.. Camping 📍Alhoceima ⵣ DM me for collaboration

Followers
50.8k
Fake followers
23.08%
Engagement rate
3.79%
Average Reel plays
24.4k
Audience gender
female
35.07%
male
64.93%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
Morocco
75.15%
Spain
5.56%
France
3.4%
The Netherlands
1.67%
United States
1.45%
profile picture

8. Scotty’s Gone Walkabout

Australia

Adventure camping in the Aussie Bush 🏕🥾🎣🛶 🌿 @seatosummitaustralia Ambassador 👇🏼180k+ subs on YouTube👇🏼

Followers
42.8k
Fake followers
11.55%
Engagement rate
3.21%
Average Reel plays
18.8k
Audience gender
female
21.17%
male
78.83%
Top performing Reels
  1. 974.9k
  2. This is a question I get asked all the time. 🏕️ Wild camping (also known as self reliant bush camping) refers to camping outside of designated camping areas. While many people think this isn’t allowed, in many national parks (and most state forests) it is allowed. But there are some rules to it. Every state has its own rules. Some states are more strict than others (such as QLD). I’m going to be talking about NSW as that’s what I know best. To find out if a national park allows wild camping, you have to look up the national parks plan of management. Under the section on camping and recreation, it will say if ‘self reliant bush camping’ is allowed or not and if there are any rules regarding it. Quite often, you’ll need to be camping at least 200-500m away from any road, picnic area or designated camping area. It may also recommend camping a certain distance away from rivers, creeks, lakes and the coastline. It may also prohibit camping in certain areas of the park. In state forests, the rules are a lot more relaxed and you can usually pretty much camp anywhere (though not if they are logging. So always be aware.) 🔥 As for campfires, the same rules apply. Some national parks allow campfires outside of designated fire pits, other parks don’t. If you can have a fire, please keep it small, well contained and always clear the leaf litter for a 2m area around the fire to prevent the fire escaping. It should go without saying, but always make sure the fire is completely extinguished before you leave. As for firewood collection, the same thing applies; some national parks allow it, some don’t. Generally speaking, firewood collection is permitted in backcountry (more remote) areas and only for use in the park. You cannot take firewood outside the park to use at home. (Refer to the NSW Government Firewood Policy). Make sure you’re only using fallen timber (nothing that is gonna provide habitat for animals) and PLEASE don’t cut down any living tree’s. It won’t burn anyway. Wild camping should be a basic human right for all people. Let’s do the correct thing so we can continue it for generations to come. 🌱 Feel free to share this post to spread the word 🤙🏼
    466.1k
  3. As a self confessed ‘greenie’ who loves the idea of wilderness and champions for the conservation of our environment, I do think there needs to be a shift in the way we view conservation, land management and the idea of ‘wilderness’ here in Australia. 🌱 The conservation movement of the last 50 years has been extremely important to protect what natural areas we have left from land clearing and development, but that doesn’t mean we should lock up these parks and not manage them properly. You just have to read books like Bill Gammage’s ‘The biggest estate on Earth’ to know that the Australian bush was a well managed ecosystem prior to settlement, and regular cultural burns were the main driver of this. Nowadays, we lock up large chunks of land in the name of conservation, let the fuel loads accumulate and the bush thicken, until a fire so destructive comes through it decimates the entire landscape. Leaving everything to a burnt crisp. That’s hardly conservation in my eyes. Conservation has become so extreme that even the idea of picking up a small stick (to clarify; I mean a stick, not timber that can be habitat) for a camp fire is considered destruction to some. Or eating bush tucker from our own country is considered illegal. What better way to get people to care for country and want to protect it, then by allowing people to connect to the land via bush tucker in a responsible way. 🌱I’ve also come to realise that ‘wilderness’ is a modern day construct. We revel in the ideal of wild places far from human touch. But that’s a fantasy. Humans are as much apart of this earth as any other animal. The Australian continent was managed for 10’s of thousands of years by aboriginal people and I can guarantee that if the country had continued to be managed appropriately, there’s no way the Black Summer fires would have been so destructive. It’s been 4 years since the fires and we still haven’t learnt. Weeds, feral animals, diseases, dangerous fuel loads. The bush is sick. We can do better. We need to do better. 🌱
    261.5k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
Australia
72.14%
United States
6.86%
United Kingdom
4.21%
Canada
1.92%
New Zealand
1.4%
profile picture

9. GRANT ⚡︎ Travel | Nature | Vibes

United States

✨ Inspiring your solo traveling adventures 🌴 San Diego, CA based ⛺️ Hiking, Camping, Overlanding & 📸🏔️ 📧 grant@solosenders.com

Followers
41.3k
Fake followers
14.94%
Engagement rate
2.45%
Average Reel plays
8.8k
Audience gender
female
43.07%
male
56.93%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
United States
47.12%
United Kingdom
4.88%
Canada
4.1%
India
3.5%
Mexico
2.44%
profile picture

10. SALIL R. NAIK 🕉 | GOA_INDIA 📍

India

nature videographer | explorer | outdoor cooking ASMR | camping | trekking | 🏕️🌲🪵🍜 B A C K U P 👉 @salil_goan_camping Youtube channel link below ⬇️

Followers
36.2k
Fake followers
8.03%
Engagement rate
9.12%
Average Reel plays
617.1k
Audience gender
female
23.03%
male
76.97%
Top performing Reels
  1. 552.9k
  2. 364.4k
  3. 319.3k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
India
92.61%
United Arab Emirates
1.85%
United Kingdom
1.45%
United States
0.63%
Qatar
0.3%

Search & filter 350M+ influencers

Find creators with the perfect audience for your brand using Modash's discovery tools. Try for free, with no credit card required.

profile picture

15. OA🥾🏔

United Kingdom

Outdoor enthusiast - Hiking | Wild camping | Travel🏔️ tag @outdoor.archives_ to feature📸 E-mail or DM for enquiries 📩 Community Chat ⬇️

profile picture

17. Subbu.k

India

Film making🎬🎬 Love traveling 🚗🚗 Foodie Camping Cooking 🍴 Listening music🎵🎶 ** No plan is the best plan * *

Followers
28.8k
Fake followers
18.42%
Engagement rate
29.77%
Average Reel plays
178k
Audience gender
female
13.92%
male
86.08%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
India
96.25%
United States
1.31%
United Arab Emirates
0.36%
Australia
0.31%
Canada
0.17%
profile picture

18. CHOTU ஜோதி

India

☮︎𝐌𝐀𝐇𝐀𝐃𝐄𝐕🔱📿 ✿︎𝐑@𝐀𝐃𝐇A𝐊𝐑𝐈𝐒𝐇𝐍𝐀 🙌 KURUMA’s Adventure🧗🏻‍♂️🚵🏻‍♂️🚣🏻‍♀️🏔️ Montenegro Travel 🇮🇳 Nature🌲🌴World🌍Trekking 👨🏻‍🦯 Camping⛺️SpecialEvents.

Followers
28.3k
Fake followers
14.49%
Engagement rate
6.76%
Average Reel plays
62.3k
Audience gender
female
6.62%
male
93.38%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
India
94.42%
United States
0.87%
Malaysia
0.52%
Brazil
0.52%
Germany
0.35%
profile picture

19. Natur ❁ Reisen 𖣔 Camping ᨒ

Germany

💭 bisschen Alltagsromantik #JUSTFORFUN

Followers
26.9k
Fake followers
21.21%
Engagement rate
2.93%
Average Reel plays
11.7k
Audience gender
female
34.73%
male
65.27%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by country
Germany
16.24%
United States
11.08%
Spain
10.75%
United Kingdom
7.13%
France
5.04%
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
How do I find Male Camping influencers?
Who are the top Male Camping influencers?
How can I see more detailed data about these influencers?

End-to-end influencer marketing platform for Shopify

14-day free trial • No credit card required