Verdict
Head-to-head · Best Camping Coolers Under $200

Coleman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QT vs Ninja FrostVault 30 QT

Which is the better buy? Side-by-side on rating, price, strengths, and watch-outs — with the published ratings we averaged to get there.

The short answer

Ninja FrostVault 30 QT comes out ahead by a clear margin (4.0 vs 4.4). The gap is mostly about Picnickers, tailgaters, and boaters who want food kept cold and dry and easy to reach without digging through ice water. — read the strengths below before deciding.

Coleman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QT
Ranked #4 in Best Camping Coolers Under $200
Coleman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QT
$57.28as of Jun 7

The Coleman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QT is the value-and-capacity champion. For under $90 it holds around 100 cans and, in OutdoorGearLab's testing, kept contents at beverage-safe temperatures for nearly five days. It is the least rugged cooler here and its thin foam-insulated shell is not built for abuse, but as a cheap, lightweight, high-capacity cooler for car camping and big gatherings, it is tough to beat on price.

Strengths
  • Huge 70-quart capacity holds around 100 cans for big groups and long weekends
  • Maintained beverage-safe temperatures for nearly five days in OutdoorGearLab testing
  • Extremely affordable, routinely available for under $90
Watch-outs
  • Foam-insulated build is not airtight, leakproof, lockable, or especially durable
  • Ice life depends heavily on pre-chilling and ice ratio to reach the 5-day claim
  • Thin plastic shell flexes and is less rugged than rotomolded or blow-molded coolers
Ninja FrostVault 30 QT
Higher ratedRanked #2 in Best Camping Coolers Under $200
Ninja FrostVault 30 QT
$199.95as of Jun 7

The Ninja FrostVault 30 QT earns its spot on the strength of one genuinely useful idea: a sealed Dry Zone drawer that keeps food at refrigerator temperature without burying it in melting ice. Reviewers from GearJunkie to Tom's Guide praised both the dry storage and the cooler's solid multi-day ice retention. It is heavier than its capacity suggests and the base version skips wheels, but for picnics, tailgates, and boat days where you want dry, easy-access food, nothing else here matches it.

Strengths
  • Unique fridge-temp Dry Zone drawer keeps food cold and dry, separate from the melting ice
  • Tom's Guide kept drinks cold for eight days with ice still present after five in their test
  • Heavy-duty insulated build that testers strapped to a cargo tray and hauled across four states
Watch-outs
  • Heavy for its 30-quart size, and the base model has no wheels
  • GearJunkie found it lost ice slightly faster than some rivals with larger ice volumes
  • The Dry Zone is easy to forget to empty, and food left in it can spoil

How they stack up

Coleman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QT

The largest and cheapest cooler here, holding far more than the RTIC Ultra-Light 32 or Ninja FrostVault 30, but it is also the least rugged and has no sealing gasket like the RTIC Ultra-Light 32. It shares Coleman's budget DNA with the 316 Series 52, but trades that cooler's marine-grade hardware for sheer capacity and a lower price.

Ninja FrostVault 30 QT

The only cooler here with a dedicated dry-storage drawer, which sets it apart from the RTIC Ultra-Light 32 and the budget Coleman and Igloo chests. It is heavier per quart than the RTIC Ultra-Light 32 and holds less than the Coleman Xtreme 70 or Igloo BMX 52, trading raw capacity for its clever Dry Zone design.

Specs side-by-side

SpecColeman Xtreme 5-Day 70 QTNinja FrostVault 30 QT
Capacity70 qt (~100 cans)30 qt (48 cans without ice)
ConstructionBlow-molded, foam-insulatedInjection-molded, insulated lid
InsulationInsulated lid + thick wallsHeavy-duty closed-cell foam
Ice RetentionUp to ~5 days (tested)~5 days (field-tested)
LatchNo-gasket lid
ExtrasHave-a-Seat lid, cup holders
DrainChannel drainLeak-resistant drain plug
Lid RatingSupports ~250 lb
Empty Weight~20 lb
Dry ZoneSealed fridge-temp drawer
ModelFB131WH
← See the full ranking of best camping coolers under $200