6-8 Person Inflatable Glamping A-Frame Tent with Stove Jack – Luxury Family Camping Tent
- Regular price
- USD 609.00
- Sale price
- USD 609.00
- Regular price
-
USD 739.00
- 🔥 Stove Jack Ready
- ⚡ 5-Min Fast Setup
- 🌧️ Waterproof Rainfly
- 🚚 Fast US Shipping
1-Year Warranty & 30-Day Returns
**1-Year Warranty** against manufacturing defects in materials, workmanship, air columns, seams, and zippers under normal use.
**30-Day Returns** on unused items in original packaging.
- Defective on arrival: we cover it.
- Changed your mind: customer covers return shipping.
See This Tent in Action
Specs, Materials & Care
Specification
What's in the Box
- 1 Inflatable A-frame tent (165 in × 118 in × 100.3 in, beige)
- 1 Rainfly with integrated stove jack (sun-blocking silver-gel coated)
- 1 Hand pump
- 1 Reinforced carry bag
- 1 Peg and guyline set
Why an A-Frame — and Why Inflatable
Most modern camping tents are domes or rectangular cabins. This one isn't. The A-frame is older, simpler, and — for the way most people actually camp — more capable.
What the A-frame geometry does:
- Sheds wind along sloped surfaces rather than presenting flat vertical walls to a gust. Cabin tents catch wind like a sail; A-frames cut through it.
- Sheds rain and snow off the roof without pooling. No flat roof = no sagging under wet snow load.
- 100.3 in / 2.5 m peak height down the centerline gives full standing clearance — taller than most cabin tents — without the wide vertical walls that fight the wind.
And why inflatable instead of poles:
- Raft-grade PVC frame — the same structural material used in inflatable river rafts. Built to flex under load, hold pressure for days, and shrug off the kind of impact that snaps aluminum or fiberglass poles.
- Zipper-reinforced structural members — the frame doesn't just hold air, it's locked in place by zippered sleeves that distribute load across the fabric.
- 5–10 minute setup with the included hand pump. No pole sorting in the dark, no broken sections to splice.
Old geometry, modern frame. The result is a shelter that goes up fast, holds up in weather, and feels like a room rather than a tent once you're inside.
The Floor That Doesn't Leak
Most camping tents use a separate groundsheet — a flat sheet of PE or PVC that sits under the tent body, with seams stitched along the floor-to-wall junction. Those seams are usually where water gets in.
This tent doesn't use a groundsheet. It uses a molded tub floor: a single seamless high-walled base where the floor and the lower wall are one continuous piece. The result:
- No floor seams to leak. Water can pool around the tent without finding a way in.
- High wall lip — the tub floor extends several inches up the wall, creating a bathtub-style barrier against ground moisture, runoff, and pooled rain.
- Built into the tent. Nothing to forget at home, nothing to set up wrong, nothing to puncture from underneath.
This is the kind of detail that doesn't matter on a sunny weekend, and matters a lot when the kids drag wet shoes inside or the campsite turns to mud overnight.
Bright by Design — Why Beige
Color isn't a cosmetic choice. The Grand Air Cabin is finished in beige / cream Oxford-style fabric for a specific reason: lighter outer fabrics transmit more diffused daylight into the interior than darker shells. The result is a tent that feels sunlit during the day instead of dim and cave-like.
What the beige shell does:
- Diffused daylight inside — even with the rainfly on, the interior reads bright. Useful for families with kids, slow morning routines, indoor reading, and anyone who finds dark tents claustrophobic.
- Heat-resistant Oxford-style weave — light color reflects more direct sun than dark fabrics, which keeps the interior cooler under midday exposure. Bright doesn't mean hot.
- Photography-friendly interior — soft, even ambient light is easier to shoot in than harsh shadows. The clear TPU front window and roof skylight pull in additional natural light, which works for family shoots, anniversary content, and outdoor brand work.
- Visual fit with natural settings — neutral beige blends with meadow, lakeside, and woodland backdrops. Doesn't carry the tactical look of darker green shelters.
If you want the same A-frame structure in forest green for hunting or tactical use, see our A-Frame Hunting Tent (separate product). The Grand Air Cabin is built for the opposite job: a bright, photo-worthy basecamp where the tent is part of the experience.
Built for All Four Seasons
The Grand Air Cabin is engineered for sustained outdoor use, not just weekend trips.
- Winter: Two integrated stove jacks — one on the tent body, one on the rainfly. When the rainfly is deployed for cold-weather camping, the rainfly stove jack lets you safely run a chimney without compromising the rain layer. Both accept standard wood-burning camping stove pipes.
- Summer: Dedicated AC / heater port (zippered) sized for portable climate gear. Double-layer mesh windows manage cross-flow with insect protection. The beige shell reflects direct sun rather than absorbing it.
- Rain: Breathable canvas-style outer fabric is water-resistant. Sun-blocking silver-gel coated rainfly adds a second weather layer when deployed. Molded tub floor blocks ground moisture from soaking up. The A-frame geometry sheds water off the roof rather than pooling it.
- Sun: The rainfly's silver-gel coating reflects direct UV — extends as a separate canopy for shaded outdoor space when not deployed over the tent.
- Wind: A-frame sloped surfaces distribute wind load along the geometry rather than catching it like a vertical-wall cabin. The raft-grade PVC frame flexes and recovers shape under gusts.
The breathable canvas-style outer fabric is also worth flagging on its own: it's specifically chosen to reduce interior condensation compared to fully sealed synthetic fabrics. Fully sealed tents trap exhaled moisture overnight, which condenses on cold walls and drips. Breathable fabric lets moisture vent gradually, which keeps the interior drier in cold weather. Stove and AC unit not included.
Rainfly Doubles as a Canopy
The rainfly isn't single-purpose. It serves two distinct functions:
Mode 1: Deployed over the tent — adds a second weather layer for prolonged rain, heavy snow, or sustained sun. The integrated stove jack stays usable.
Mode 2: Deployed as a standalone canopy — set up separately from the tent as a sun/rain shelter for outdoor dining, gear staging, group seating, or a shaded play area for kids. Useful when you want a covered outdoor space outside the sleeping area.
Same piece of gear, two jobs. Useful for family camps where you want a clean separation between sleeping quarters and daytime hangout space.
Who the Grand Air Cabin Is For
The Grand Air Cabin is one of two A-frame inflatable shelters in our lineup. Picking the right one matters.
Grand Air Cabin (this product) — pick this if you want:
- Family camping trips where the tent is part of the experience, not just shelter
- Glamping retreats with bright, photo-worthy interiors
- Anniversary and romantic getaways at lakeside or meadow sites
- Multi-day basecamps for small groups (4–6 people) with kids in the mix
- A neutral beige aesthetic that blends with natural settings
A-Frame Hunting Tent (separate product) — pick that if you want:
- Forest green tactical-look shell for hunting camps and overland trips
- Lower-visibility setups in woodland environments
- Use cases prioritizing function over aesthetic
Same A-frame geometry, same 135 ft² of interior, same raft-grade PVC frame, same molded tub floor, same dual stove jacks. Different jobs.
Design Background
The A-frame is one of the oldest tent geometries in modern camping — refined in 1970s Scandinavian outdoor design, where simple sloped-wall shelters were standard for cold-weather use across Norway, Sweden, and Finland.
The structural reasoning hasn't changed: in cold, wet, windy environments, a sloped wall outperforms a vertical one. Wind slides along the surface instead of hitting it head-on. Snow slides off instead of accumulating. Rain runs off instead of pooling.
This tent updates that geometry with a raft-grade PVC inflatable frame, a molded tub floor, and modern stove/AC integration — but the underlying shape is doing exactly what it was designed to do fifty years ago. Old principles, current materials.
Shipping
Ships from our CA and NJ warehouses via FedEx. Estimated delivery: 3–7 business days after order processing.
- Continental US only (lower 48 states)
- No shipping to Alaska, Hawaii, US territories, PO boxes, or APO/FPO addresses
- Tracking number provided once the order ships
Note: due to packed weight (86 lbs), this product ships as a single oversized parcel. A signature is typically required at delivery.
Warranty & Returns
1-Year Warranty against manufacturing defects in materials and workmanship, covering the inflatable frame system, seams, zippers, molded tub floor, and outer fabric under normal use.
Warranty does not cover damage from improper setup, sharp objects, exposure to open flame outside the stove jacks, sustained winds beyond rated tolerance, or normal wear from extended commercial use.
Returns: unused items in original packaging may be returned within 30 days of delivery. For non-defective returns, return shipping is the customer's responsibility. Defective items: contact us with photos or video and we'll arrange replacement or refund.
Before You Order
A few things worth knowing before this lands on your doorstep:
- The Grand Air Cabin ships in beige / cream only. If you want a darker forest green tactical-look A-frame, see our A-Frame Hunting Tent (separate product).
- This is the heaviest tent in our lineup at 86 lbs. Two-person carry from the vehicle to the campsite is realistic; single-person carry over distance is not. Designed for vehicle-accessible sites.
- Two stove jacks, one chimney at a time. Use the tent body stove jack when the rainfly is off; use the rainfly stove jack when the rainfly is deployed. Don't run a stove without an anti-fire mat underneath (sold separately).
- Stove, heater, and AC unit not included. Both stove jacks accept most standard wood-burning camping stove pipes; the AC/heater port is sized for portable climate gear. All sold separately.
- Outer fabric is water-resistant; the rainfly adds a second weather layer for prolonged rain or snow. The molded tub floor is fully waterproof and won't soak through from below.
- Some interior condensation in sustained heavy rain is normal. Hydrostatic pressure during prolonged storms can cause minor moisture on interior surfaces. The breathable canvas-style outer fabric is specifically designed to reduce this compared to fully sealed synthetics, but in extreme weather some condensation is physics, not a defect.
- Inflation needs the included hand pump. The raft-grade PVC frame requires the included pump's pressure profile — bike pumps and standard inflators won't seat or pressurize correctly.
- Dry it fully before storage. Pack only when completely dry — trapped moisture causes mold, which is not covered under warranty.
