The Open Range Deluxe is an unfolding camp kitchen that fixes onto the Yakima modular hitch rack or stands on its own legs. So, you can cook like a pro anywhere in the backcountry.
Cooking while camping usually involves compromise. There’s never enough counter space for prep. Washing dishes is typically awkward and unpleasant. And there’s rarely easy access to the tools of the trade, like utensils, spices, and plates.
Plus, provisions are often packed away somewhere they’re hard to find and keep track of.
But now, Yakima’s Open Range Deluxe camp kitchen lets camp chefs step it up. The rotomolded plastic box has a metal side table for a stove, a bamboo table with a built-in sink and cutting board, a silverware drawer, a utensil holder, a lantern hook, and more. And when you’re packing up, nearly all the parts and pieces store inside the box.
What’s more, the kitchen sits on a quick-adjust freestanding base, or it clicks into Yakima’s modular Exo rack. Which leaves more space inside the car for other gear.
In short: The Yakima Open Range Deluxe is one of the most robust and utilitarian camp kitchen setups we’ve tested. Not only does it provide ample storage and organization opportunities, and not only does it pack down into an easily storable container, but it also fixes onto a hitch system so you don’t even have to fit it in the car.
It’s an expensive piece of gear (starting at $1,199). But it’s one that significantly upgrades any campsite you’re using it at. For car campers who wish they had a van, this kitchen will help bridge the gap.
The Exo System
In 2021, Yamika introduced the Exo hitch rack, a modular rack with a host of mix-and-match accessories. The available add-ons included an upper deck, a bike rack, spacious storage boxes, cargo racks that convert to a wagon, a ski holder, a table, and more.
The Open Range Deluxe is the latest Exo accessory.
Yakima Open Range Deluxe: Review

Packable and Portable
What’s most unique about the Open Range Deluxe is that most of the kitchen — everything but the metal table made to hold your camp stove — fits inside the locking Open Range box. That includes the wood side table with cutting board, the collapsible wash basin and drain hose, the flexible fuel hose and hanging fuel canister pouch, and Yakima’s CookOut two-burner stove.
When I got to camp, I had everything to get set up at my fingertips, all in one place. That let me assemble my kitchen in minutes.
Like all of the Exo accessories, the Open Range sits on the Yakima’s Exo’s Swing Base or Top Shelf. It clicks in place with twisting, locking knobs. The box closes with SKS latches that can also be locked.
The kitchen can be used with Yakima’s Open Range Leg Kit, a $199 base that’s sold separately. Because I like to set up camp with the option to drive to a trailhead without packing up, the leg kit was essential for me.
The Open Range’s rotomolded plastic box is the core of the system. It has a rubber door gasket that kept rain, dust, mud, and mice out. I stored the various Open Range accessories in the box for transport and at home. And when I got to camp and set up my kitchen, I loaded food into the 85L locking box where I could access it easily.
The box was also a handy spot to leave pots and pans, as well as glasses, silverware, and plates. A mesh utensil holder slid into channels at the back of the box. That’s where I stored spoons and spatulas, as well as paper towels, spices, and a lighter.

What I Loved


Room for Improvement
Price Prohibitive?
Yakima Open Range Deluxe: Conclusion
