A giant sculptural figure crouching and cradling people in its hands on the Black Rock Desert playa at Burning Man, with attendees and cyclists scattered around it and mountains in the background.

How Much Does Burning Man Actually Cost in 2026 (Beyond the Ticket)

Cost calculator

Estimated per-person cost for a group of 5 (Tent, Drive, Minimal food, Low costume budget)

CategoryPer person
Ticket & vehicle pass$630
Transportation (Drive)$180
Camp setup (Tent)$200
Food & water (Minimal)$250
Costumes & gifts (Low)$100
Fees & extras$40
Total per person$1,400
Group total (5 people)$7,000

Based on current Burning Man pricing and August 30 - September 7, 2026 festival dates.

Use the interactive calculator above to adjust for your group size and preferences.

The ticket to Burning Man feels like the expensive part. It is not. For 2026, official ticket tiers start at $550, with higher-priced tiers up to $3,000, and vehicle passes cost $165 each. For a group of four to six people, tickets represent roughly 35-40% of total spending. The rest—transportation, shelter, food, water, and the survival supplies no other festival requires—is where the money actually goes.

Burning Man requires full self-sufficiency for essentials like water, food, shelter, and shade, with limited on-playa paid exceptions such as Arctica ice. Four people in an RV will spend significantly more than four in tents, but both groups are dealing with a different expense profile than Coachella or Electric Zoo.

The short version:

Per-person costs for a group trip: see the tier breakdown below.

The full cost breakdown

CategoryBudgetBalancedPremium
Ticket & Vehicle Pass$630$630$630
Transportation$180 (drive)$280 (drive + RV fuel)$550 (flight + RV)
Camp Setup & Gear$200$400$800
Food & Water$250$400$600
Costumes & Gifts$100$250$500
Fees & Extras$40$140$280
Total per person$1,400$2,100$3,360

Tickets & Vehicle Passes

The 2026 ticket tiers are: Get the Gift ($550, $675), Pay Your Way ($775), Give the Gift ($975, $1,500, $3,000). Vehicle passes are $165 per vehicle. If five people split one vehicle pass, that's $33 per person. If you're in two vehicles, it's $66 each.

The Sunrise Sale (early bird) starts in February at premium prices ($975+). The main sale begins April 29 with the broadest pricing: $550 Get the Gift tickets cover general admission. The FOMO sale sits between early bird and main sale pricing. For a group, buy together during main sale. Skip the premium early bird unless you're coordinating arrival and parking logistics that justify splitting an extra vehicle.

Getting There

This breaks into three paths: drive from California, drive from elsewhere with an RV, or fly.

Bay Area to Black Rock City (12-14 hours): Gas for a car is roughly $40–$60 round trip depending on your vehicle. A group of five in one car means $8–$12 per person.

Flights: Reno is about 3 hours from the playa. Round-trip flights from major West Coast cities (LA, SF, Seattle) run $200–$400 per person during festival season. Factor in ground transportation from Reno: car rental is $40–$70 for the 8-day period, or Burner Express shuttle was $149+ one-way in 2025 (2026 pricing TBD). A flight + rental car combo is roughly $350–$500 per person total. Flying East Coast to Reno runs $400–$600.

RV Rental: Class C motorhomes (3–7 person capacity) rent for $4,500–$6,000 for 8 days from Reno. From Los Angeles it's cheaper: $3,500–$4,500. For a group of 5 splitting a Class C from LA, that's $700–$900 per person plus $40–$60 in gas round trip. Reno rentals cost 2–3x more than LA or Las Vegas, so picking up elsewhere and driving saves money.

Camp Setup & Gear (One-Time Investment)

Most people attend Burning Man multiple times, which changes the math. But on a per-trip basis (assuming you're not buying gear to keep):

Budget Approach:

Mid-Range Approach:

Premium Approach:

The real variable is whether this is your first burn or fifth. A group can pool gear across years. If three friends already own tents and shade structures, the incoming person needs only sleeping gear ($100–$150).

Food & Water

Burning Man requires 1.5 gallons per person per day: that's 12 gallons for one person for eight days, or 60 gallons for five people. A filtered water company in Reno delivers water to camps and costs roughly $25–$35 per delivery.

Food is pure arithmetic: decide what you're eating and buy it in Reno. No markups, no surprise prices, no food trucks.

Budget Approach ($50/person for 8 days):

Mid-Range Approach ($80/person for 8 days):

Premium Approach ($120/person for 8 days):

One unspoken cost: ice. Arctica sells ice on the playa (historically $3/bag; check official sources for 2026 pricing). A group with multiple coolers will buy 5–10 bags during the week. Budget $20–$30 for ice alone. Ice is the only consumable you can purchase at the playa. Center Camp Café coffee operations were discontinued in 2022, so no beverages or food are available for purchase.

Costumes & Gifts

This is self-determined. The playa operates on "gifting"—people exchange items freely. It's not required, but it's the culture.

Budget Approach ($100–$150/person):

Mid-Range Approach ($250–$300/person):

Premium Approach ($400–$600/person):

Costumes can be entirely thrifted. Many burners reuse the same outfits yearly. Gifting can be homemade granola bars or printed cards.

Fees & Extras

Processing fees on ticket purchase: 2–3% depending on tier, roughly $15–$20.

Early arrival: Setup Access Passes (SAPs) are issued by Burning Man to pre-placed theme camps, artists, and volunteers only. Regular attendees cannot purchase early arrival. Plan to arrive on the official gate opening day or later.

Bike rental at playa: Burning Man is large; walking is brutal. Standard bike rental is $100–$150 for the week. If your group rents two bikes to share, that's $25–$30 per person. Some groups bring bikes from home (add $50–$100 to shipping or car space).

Post-event cleaning: If you rent an RV, expect a cleaning fee of $200–$400 if you don't clean it yourself thoroughly. Split among 5 people, that's $40–$80 per person.

Generator fuel (RV groups): A small generator burns roughly $20–$40 of fuel for the week.

Miscellaneous: sunscreen ($15), dust masks ($10), first aid supplies ($20). Total extras: $40–$80 per person.


Hidden Costs (The Things People Forget)

Gate Wait Time and Arrival Logistics: Arriving during peak hours (Wednesday afternoon/evening) means 3–8 hours in line. Gate opens Sunday before the event. Arriving early in the week means shorter waits but more setup time in the heat. No fee, but time cost is real.

Ice and Post-Playa Vehicle Cleaning: Ice at Arctica costs $3/bag historically. A group with multiple coolers spends $20–$40 during the week. RV rental companies charge $200–$400 for cleaning after return. A car you own will need $75–$150 in detailing because dust gets into everything.

Bikes, Gear Loss, and Consumables: Burning Man is 1.5 miles in diameter. Bike rental is $100–$150 per week. Cheap 10x10 pop-ups and single-use coolers often get abandoned rather than transported home. Budget an extra $50–$100 for disposable setup if you're minimizing.


Participation Methods: Mutant Vehicles & Theme Camps

Mutant Vehicles (Art Cars)

Mutant vehicles—art cars and mobile installations—are a signature part of the Burning Man experience. Many burners participate in or travel via mutant vehicles for community, transportation, and immersive art. If your group is organizing a mutant vehicle or consistently riding with one, budget an additional $50–$150 per person for fuel and operational costs, plus potential transport donations ($0–$50 per person, variable by camp). Some groups contribute to vehicle upkeep collectively; others split gas for fuel stops in Reno.

Theme Camps

Most burners belong to or create a theme camp—a communal gathering space with a shared vibe, often centered around an activity, art installation, or service. If joining an established theme camp, expect per-person costs of $50–$200 to help cover shared supplies, shade structures, decorations, and camp gifts or food contributions. If creating a new camp, coordinate gear pooling with your group and budget $200–$500 per person for camp setup and materials (tent, shade, coolers, furniture, communal tools). Many camps span multiple years, so gear costs amortize over time.


How the three tiers actually feel

BudgetBalancedPremium
SleepTent camping with DIY Aluminet/PVC shadeCar camping with 10x10 shade structure, camp furnitureRV with generator, durable shade, camp furnishings
EatRice, beans, vegetables, basic proteins ($50/person)Varied proteins, fresh produce, coffee ($80/person)Quality meats, specialty items, prepared meals ($120/person)
DrinkWater delivery, basic coffee/teaWater delivery, coffee, electrolyte drinksRV water + ice supply, specialty drinks
Get thereDrive from California, split gas 5 waysDrive from CA or budget flight + shared rentalFlight to Reno + Class C RV rental from LA
Costumes & giftsThrifted single outfit, homemade giftsMix of thrifted and new, modest gift contributionsNew coordinated looks, meaningful art/camp contributions
Per person~$1,400~$2,100~$3,360

All estimates assume a group of 5 sharing transportation and major gear purchases. First-time burners will spend more on gear; returning groups amortize costs over multiple years.

How groups keep it together

1. Designate a Camp Treasurer

Assign one person to collect money and manage purchases before the trip. Split costs equally per person or by consumption (some people don't eat as much, some skip alcohol). Log each shared expense as it happens so the group can see the running total. Settle up after the burn or collect upfront for big-ticket items like the RV deposit.

2. Bulk Buy in Reno

Go to Costco or Walmart in Reno together before arriving at the playa. Pool money for group purchases: water, bulk food, ice, communal supplies. A group of five can coordinate this in 2–3 hours and save 20–30% vs. individual shopping. Assign two people to grab the big items (water, oil, basics) while others focus on personal needs.

3. Split Gear Costs Across Multiple Burns

If your friend group is committing to years at Burning Man, buy mid-range gear together and share it. A $400 quality shade structure lasts 5+ years; cost per person per year drops to $80. Invest in one good 10x10, two quality tents, and communal coolers. Rotate who buys what each year.

4. Set Costume/Gift Budget Beforehand

Agree on a per-person costume budget ($100? $300?) before shopping. Group costume coordination (matching pieces, theme) can actually save money—buy basics together, personalize individually. For gifting, some camps set a collective contribution budget ($500 for camp art or food to give away) rather than individual spending.

5. Handle the RV Deposit Carefully

RV security deposits are $1,000–$1,500. Collect this from the group upfront and establish who covers cleaning costs (often $200–$400). Some groups split this; others assign it to whoever was dirtiest. Clarify this before pickup.


The bottom line

Burning Man costs what you choose to bring. A tent-camping group can spend $1,400 per person. An RV group with a generator and full supplies can spend $3,500. Both are valid.

The key difference from other festivals: there are no hidden markups, no vendor surcharges, no forced spending. What you pay is what you decided to pack. There's no deception in the cost structure.

Use the calculator above to model your travel style, group size, and comfort level. Then coordinate with your group on the actual numbers.


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