Key Takeaways

  • TIKI Social Fire Pit, 44% off: The 20-inch TIKI Social is a top-ranked smokeless pit and the cleanest deal in the bunch this week.
  • Best for a crowd: The TIKI Reunion 27.5-inch runs big and burns clean, but it carries the highest price here even after the cut.
  • Propane without the smoke: The Outland Firebowl 870 lights with a knob and skips the ash mess entirely.
  • Budget tabletop: The Cuisinart Cleanburn is the cheapest smokeless option and small enough for a camper.

We finally hit the stretch of June where the evenings stay warm past dark, and that’s the whole point of a backyard fire pit in West Virginia. The bugs back off once the sun drops, the holler cools down, and you can sit out without a jacket. This is the season people stop talking about getting a fire pit and start actually buying one.

Going through the garden deals for this week’s WV Finds, the smokeless pits stood out. Almost everything worth listing is a wood-burning or propane pit with secondary airflow, and TIKI showed up three separate times with real markdowns instead of the inflated original-price routine you see all summer. I also noticed the propane fire tables piling up, which tells me the gas crowd is getting some attention too.

Heavy on full-size wood burners this week, with one tabletop option and a few accessories that make the whole setup easier. Prices verified June 20, 2026.

What’s the best smokeless fire pit for a backyard?

For most backyards the sweet spot is a 20 to 21-inch stainless steel pit with a double wall and secondary burn, and the TIKI Social leads that group right now. It burns hot, settles the smoke, and the price is the lowest of the wood-burning bunch.

TIKI Social Fire Pit 20-Inch

The TIKI Social is a 20-inch stainless pit that comes with a stand, cover, and removable ash pan, which is the whole kit most people want. The double-wall design pulls air up through the sides so the flames burn off most of the smoke once it gets going. It’s a bestseller for a reason, and at 44% off it’s the easiest pick here for a normal-sized patio or deck.

  • 20-inch stainless steel
  • Removable ash pan
  • Includes stand and cover

OneSetNuf 21-Inch Smokeless Pit

OneSetNuf’s 21-inch pit uses dual airflow with secondary combustion, the same idea as the pricier names, at a friendlier price. It’s stainless with a detachable ash pan and packs down for camping. Not a brand I knew before this week, but the build specs read like the bigger players and the discount is solid.

  • Dual airflow secondary combustion
  • Detachable ash pan
  • Portable for camping

EAST OAK Camber Smokeless Pit

The EAST OAK Camber is a 21-inch 304 stainless pit that ships with a poker, stand, and removable ash pan. The 304 steel is the better grade for outdoor use, so it holds up to rain and repeated burns. It costs more than the OneSetNuf, but you’re paying for thicker material that lasts.

  • 21-inch 304 stainless steel
  • Includes poker and stand
  • Removable ash pan

GOLABS Portable Smokeless Pit

GOLABS makes a 19.5-inch stainless pit that takes wood, charcoal, or pellets, and it has real handles plus a fire cover for hauling it around. Sized for two to six people, it’s a good middle ground if you want something portable but not tiny. The limited-time tag means this price may not hang around.

  • 19.5-inch stainless steel
  • Wood, charcoal or pellet
  • Handles and fire cover

Which smokeless fire pits work for big gatherings?

If you regularly host a crowd, go bigger or go propane. The TIKI Reunion runs 27.5 inches for a real bonfire, while the Outland and Endless Summer options skip wood entirely so you spend your time visiting instead of tending the fire.

TIKI Reunion 27.5-Inch Pit

The TIKI Reunion is the 27.5-inch big brother, built for a yard full of people in folding chairs. It burns clean like the smaller TIKI pits and comes with the ash pan and weather cover. It’s the priciest item in this roundup even after 28% off, so it’s for someone who actually hosts and wants the size.

  • 27.5-inch for gatherings
  • Removable ash pan
  • Weather-resistant cover

Outland Firebowl 870 Propane

The Outland Firebowl 870 is a 19-inch propane pit that lights with auto-ignition and puts out 58,000 BTU, so there’s no smoke and no ash to clean. It comes with a cover and a carry kit, which matters if you ever take it camping or to a tailgate. For folks who hate babysitting a wood fire, this is the easy answer.

  • 19-inch auto-ignition
  • 58,000 BTU propane
  • Cover and carry kit

Endless Summer Hayden Gas Pit

Endless Summer’s Hayden is a 38-inch square gas fire pit with dual heat, doubling as a low table when the flame is off. It reads more like patio furniture than a camp pit, so it fits a finished deck setup. At 42% off it’s one of the deeper cuts in the gas category this week.

  • 38-inch square
  • Dual heat gas
  • Converts to table

Is a tabletop smokeless fire pit worth it?

For ambiance on a small patio or a camper trip, yes, a tabletop pit earns its keep. It won’t heat the yard, but it gives you a real flame in a footprint that fits on a side table.

Cuisinart Cleanburn Tabletop

The Cuisinart Cleanburn is a 7.5-inch tabletop pit with a removable ash base and a carry bag, light enough to toss in the truck for an RV weekend. It’s the cheapest smokeless option here and the one I’d grab for a cabin porch where a full pit won’t fit. Just know it’s for atmosphere and roasting a marshmallow, not for warming a group.

  • 7.5-inch tabletop
  • Removable ash base
  • Carry bag included

What accessories make a fire pit better?

A cover, a set of cooking tools, and good fire starters do more for your nights than another gadget. These three round out a setup you already own or are about to buy.

Solo Stove Mesa Accessory Pack

The Solo Stove Mesa Accessory Pack adds four mini roasting sticks with rests, a pellet scoop, a lid, and a carry case for the Mesa tabletop pit. If you own a Mesa, the lid alone makes it usable as a small table between burns. Only worth it if you have the Mesa, but for those owners it’s a tidy bundle at 40% off.

  • 4 mini roasting sticks
  • Pellet scoop and lid
  • Carry case included

TIKI Tabletop Fire Pit Cover

This TIKI tabletop cover is a 25.6-inch stainless lid that turns a celebration-size TIKI pit into a usable table when the fire’s out. It’s weather-resistant and protects the bowl from rain between uses. A simple accessory that keeps your patio from losing a surface to the fire pit.

  • 25.6-inch stainless lid
  • Weather-resistant
  • Converts pit to table

GEROSSI Pine Fire Starters

GEROSSI’s natural pine fire starters come 60 to a pack with a 10-minute burn time, and they work in a pit, grill, smoker, or fireplace. They’re odorless and burn in any weather, which beats fighting damp kindling on a cool WV evening. Cheap insurance against a fire that won’t catch.

  • 60-pack
  • 10-minute burn time
  • All-weather and odorless

Frequently asked questions

Are smokeless fire pits actually smokeless?

No, they’re low-smoke, not zero-smoke. A double-wall design pulls air up through the sides and burns off most of the smoke once the fire is hot. You’ll still see some smoke at startup and when you add fresh wood.

What size smokeless fire pit do I need for a backyard?

A 19 to 21-inch pit covers most backyards and seats a small group comfortably. Go up to 27 inches or larger if you regularly host a crowd. Tabletop pits around 7 inches are for ambiance, not warmth.

Is propane or wood better for a smokeless pit?

Propane lights instantly, makes no smoke, and leaves no ash, so it’s the low-effort choice. Wood gives you the crackle and the campfire smell but needs tending and cleanup. Pick based on how much fuss you want.

Can you cook over a smokeless fire pit?

Yes, with the right accessory. Wood-burning pits handle roasting sticks for marshmallows and hot dogs, and some take grill grates. Propane pits are better left for warmth and ambiance rather than cooking.

The discount range this week landed mostly between 24% and 44%, with the TIKI wood-burning pits and the Endless Summer Hayden carrying the deepest legitimate cuts. These read like real markdowns, not the inflated-original-price routine that clutters summer patio listings. Compared to a normal June, this is a stronger fire pit week than usual, probably because sellers are clearing stock ahead of the midsummer rush.

If I’m buying one thing, it’s the TIKI Social. It’s a top-ranked pit, it comes with the stand and cover so you’re not nickel-and-dimed on add-ons, and 44% off is the best price-to-quality line here. The TIKI Reunion is the better pit if you host a lot, but the price is a real commitment even discounted, so I’d only point a serious entertainer at it. I’d skip the Solo Stove accessory pack unless you already own a Mesa, since it does nothing on its own.

Watch the propane fire tables over the next couple weeks. There were a lot of them sitting at 22% to 30% off, and that kind of inventory usually means deeper cuts are coming as we get into July. If you’re set on wood, the TIKI prices are good enough today that I wouldn’t wait. If you want gas, give it two weeks and see if the tables drop further. For everything else, you can browse all deals while the summer markdowns are still live.