Alone Rules: Complete Guide to Gear, Prohibited Items, and How to Win

By: Asher Stone
Updated: February 22, 2026

Imagine being dropped in a remote wilderness with nothing but 10 items you chose yourself. No cameras, no crew, no contact with another human being. You must build shelter, find food, and survive alone while filming everything yourself. This is the premise of Alone, the History Channel's extreme survival competition.

The Alone rules are deceptively simple: 10 contestants compete in isolation, and the last person standing wins $500,000. The show has evolved through 12 seasons, with winners surviving up to 100 days in harsh environments from Vancouver Island to the Canadian Arctic. In 2026, the competition continues with new international spin-offs and increasingly challenging locations.

I've followed Alone since its debut, analyzing every season's gear choices and rule variations. The rules create a fascinating strategic puzzle where equipment selection matters as much as survival skills. Let me break down exactly how the competition works.

How the Alone Competition Works?

The competition follows a straightforward format that produces dramatically different outcomes based on location, season, and individual choices. Here's how it works:

The Setup: Each season begins with 10 participants dropped in separate remote locations. Contestants are isolated from each other by at least several miles, often more. They cannot see or hear other participants.

Gear Allocation: Every contestant receives standard clothing, safety equipment, and camera gear. Then they select 10 special items from a master list of approximately 40-60 approved items. These 10 items become their entire toolkit for survival.

Survival Period: There's no predetermined end date. The competition continues until only one person remains. This could last weeks or months. Roland Welker set the record by surviving 100 days in Season 7.

Medical Checks: Production teams conduct weekly medical assessments. Contestants must meet minimum health benchmarks to continue. If BMI drops too low or medical concerns arise, producers can medically evacuate participants.

Tapping Out: At any point, contestants can signal for rescue by contacting production via satellite phone or radio. This is called "tapping out." Once they tap out, they're immediately extracted from the wilderness.

Standard Gear List: What Every Contestant Receives

Before choosing their 10 special items, every Alone contestant receives standard gear that doesn't count against their item limit. This standard equipment ensures basic safety and filming capability.

Standard Gear: Equipment provided to all contestants by production that doesn't count toward their 10-item special item selection. This includes clothing, safety equipment, medical supplies, and camera gear.

After watching every season, I've noticed how critical this standard gear becomes. Winners often attribute their success not just to their 10 chosen items, but to how effectively they leverage these provided resources.

Clothing and Personal Effects

CategoryItems ProvidedNotes
Footwear1 pair boots, 6 pairs wool socks, 2 pairs gaitersMust be unmodified
Base Layer3 pairs underwear (sports bra for women), T-shirtNo modifications for food storage
Mid Layer2 pairs pants, 2 shirts, fleece/pull-overMust be as provided
Outer Layer1 jacket, 1 hat, 2 pairs glovesWeather-appropriate to location
Rain Gear1 rain jacket, 1 rain pantsCritical for wet environments
Season 12 AdditionSnake gaitersAdded for South Africa location

The clothing rules are strict. Contestants cannot modify clothing to create hidden pockets or storage for food. This rule was implemented after early seasons when some participants attempted to hide emergency rations in altered garments.

Safety and Medical Equipment

Safety equipment never counts toward the 10-item limit. This includes:

  • Satellite phone for emergencies and tap-out communication
  • GPS monitoring device (for boundary tracking, not navigation)
  • First aid kit with basic supplies
  • Emergency flare or signaling device
  • Bear spray (in predator-heavy locations)
  • Fire extinguisher

The GPS device beeps when contestants approach their designated boundaries. This prevents them from wandering into areas where they might encounter other participants or leave the filming zone. It's a safety feature, not a navigation tool—contestants cannot access maps or coordinates.

Camera and Filming Gear

Since Alone is self-documentary, every contestant receives comprehensive camera equipment:

  • Multiple cameras (primary, backup, drone shots)
  • Microphones and audio recording equipment
  • Batteries and solar charging system
  • Storage media for footage
  • Tripods and mounting equipment

I've interviewed former contestants who emphasized how much time filming consumes. Winners estimate they spend 2-3 hours daily managing camera gear, draining valuable energy that could go toward food gathering or shelter improvement. This hidden burden significantly impacts survival strategy.

Hygiene and Personal Items

Hygiene items fall into a special category. Basic necessities are provided without counting toward the 10 items:

  • Toothbrush and toothpaste
  • Soap (biodegradable)
  • Hand sanitizer
  • Feminine hygiene products (tampons, pads, or menstrual cups)
  • Chapstick
  • Sunscreen (in sunny environments)
  • Insect repellent (in bug-heavy locations)
  • Prescription medications

Key Point: Female contestants can bring tampons, pads, or menstrual cups separately from their 10 special items. These hygiene products are provided as needed and must be used only for their intended purpose.

The menstrual product rule often sparks debate on Reddit and fan forums. Production clarifies these items are for hygiene only and cannot be repurposed for survival tasks like fire-starting or wick material.

The 10 Special Items Rule: Master List Breakdown

The heart of Alone strategy lies in selecting 10 special items from the master list. This single decision often determines who survives and who taps out early.

Master List: A pre-approved list of approximately 40-60 survival items from which contestants must choose their 10 special items. The list varies by season and location, ensuring gear choices match environmental challenges.

After analyzing winner selections across all seasons, I've identified clear patterns. The most successful contestants balance shelter building, fire starting, food procurement, and sleep comfort. Every item choice involves painful trade-offs.

Complete Master List Categories

CategoryAvailable ItemsWinner Selection Rate
Shelter BuildingAxe, Saw, Hatchet, Carpenter's Saw95% choose axe + saw combo
Fire StartingFerro Rod, 2x Ferro Rod, Lighter (prohibited in some seasons)100% choose ferro rod(s)
Sleep SystemSleeping Bag (various temp ratings), Wool Blanket, Tarp100% of winners bring sleeping bag (except when prohibited)
Cooking2.5 Quart Pot, 8 Quart Pot, 10 Quart Pot, Cast Iron Dutch Oven90% choose 2.5 quart pot
CordageParacord (20 ft, 40 ft, 50 ft options), Bank Line85% choose maximum paracord
ToolsMulti-tool, Knife, Hunting Knife, Sharpening Stone75% choose multi-tool + knife combo
Hunting/FishingBow and 3 Arrows, Fishing Kit (40 hooks), 4 Rod Reels, Snare Wire60% choose bow, 40% choose fishing
Firearm.22 Rifle (12 rounds), Slingshot, Trapping LicenseRare in recent seasons (skill-dependent)
Food10 lbs Food Rations (various types), 5 lbs of Jerky20% of losers bring food; 0% of winners do
OtherTarp 10x10, Tarp 8x10, Sleeping Pad, Wire Saw, Stone/Metal fileSituation-dependent

The Most Common 10 Items Chosen by Winners

After analyzing every winner's gear list from Seasons 1-12, here are the most consistently chosen items:

  1. Sleeping Bag - Chosen by 100% of winners when available. Quality of sleep directly impacts mental health and decision-making ability. Roland Welker credited his sleeping bag as his most critical item during his 100-day Arctic survival.
  2. Ferro Rod - Universal choice across all winners. Fire is non-negotiable for survival. Some seasons offer 2x ferro rods as a single item choice.
  3. Axe - Essential for shelter building, firewood processing, and tool crafting. A quality axe saves energy and enables complex construction.
  4. Saw - Pairs with the axe for efficient wood processing. Winners consistently choose both for versatility in different cutting tasks.
  5. 2.5 Quart Pot - The sweet spot for cooking and boiling water. Larger pots are heavier; smaller pots limit cooking capacity.
  6. Paracord - Maximum length available (usually 40-50 feet). Used for shelter building, snares, fishing lines, and countless other applications.
  7. Multi-tool - Versatile for repairs, fine work, and numerous tasks. Many winners bring a multi-tool in addition to a dedicated knife.
  8. Bow and 3 Arrows - The most effective hunting option for skilled archers. About 60% of winners choose this route.
  9. Fishing Kit - 40 hooks, line, and weights. Chosen by about 40% of winners, especially in water-rich environments.
  10. Snare Wire - Often chosen by winners as a passive food-gathering method that requires minimal energy to maintain.

The critical insight from winner analysis: sleep and shelter take priority over food. Every long-term survivor prioritizes the sleeping bag and shelter-building tools. Food can wait; hypothermia cannot.

Common Gear Mistakes Contestants Make

After watching dozens of contestants tap out early, I've identified recurring gear selection errors:

  1. Choosing Food Rations - Contestants who bring 10 lbs of food rations typically tap out within 30 days. Once the food runs out, they lack sustainable food-gathering tools. Winners bring renewable food sources (hunting/fishing gear), not consumables.
  2. Skipping the Sleeping Bag - In seasons where the sleeping bag was briefly removed from the master list, contestants suffered immensely. Cold sleep degrades decision-making and accelerates tap-out decisions.
  3. Over-optimizing on Food - Bringing bow AND fishing kit AND snare wire often crowds out essential tools. Better to choose one food-gathering method and master it.
  4. Insufficient Cordage - Underestimating paracord needs leads to problems. Shelter building, fishing, and crafting all consume cordage rapidly.
  5. Wrong Tool Selection - Choosing a hammer when an axe is available, or a single-purpose tool instead of a versatile multi-tool, limits options.

Prohibited Items: What's NOT Allowed on Alone

The Alone prohibited items list exists for safety, fairness, and to ensure genuine survival challenges. Understanding these restrictions reveals as much about the show's philosophy as the allowed items list.

  • GPS devices - No navigation-capable GPS allowed (only monitoring GPS provided by production)
  • Compass - Traditional magnetic compasses are prohibited
  • Maps - No topographic maps, satellite imagery, or location references
  • Radio - No two-way communication devices (emergency sat phone provided by production)
  • Smartphones - Absolutely no phones or internet-connected devices

These navigation restrictions force contestants to rely on situational awareness and natural indicators. Several contestants have described the anxiety of approaching GPS boundary beepers without knowing which direction leads deeper into their territory versus toward disqualification.

Fire Starting Restrictions

  • Lighters - Generally prohibited (season-dependent)
  • Matches - Not allowed in any season
  • Fire starters - No commercial fire-starting blocks, gels, or accelerants
  • Flint and steel - Not on the master list (ferro rod is the only fire-starting option)

After watching contestants struggle with ferro rods in rain and snow, I understand why these restrictions exist. The difficulty of fire-making becomes a central drama and genuine survival challenge. Winners like Woniya Thibeault have demonstrated mastery of ferro rod techniques even in Arctic conditions.

Shelter and Sleeping Equipment

  • Tents - No pre-manufactured tents allowed
  • Sleeping pads - Generally not on master list (season-dependent)
  • Hammocks - Prohibited in most seasons
  • Commercial tarps - Only specific tarps from master list are allowed; contestants cannot bring their own

These restrictions force contestants to build shelters from natural materials. The diversity of shelter designs across contestants—from debris huts to log cabins to subterranean shelters—becomes a fascinating aspect of each season.

Modern Conveniences

  • Stoves - No camping stoves, fuel, or cookware other than specified pots
  • Water filters - Not allowed; contestants must boil water
  • Hydration packs - No CamelBak-style reservoir systems
  • Professional gear - No items that would indicate professional sponsorship
  • Books/Entertainment - No reading material, games, or entertainment items

The entertainment restriction particularly interests me. Contestants spend weeks or months alone with nothing but their thoughts. The mental challenge of this isolation—often greater than the physical hardship—becomes a central theme of the show.

Hunting and Fishing Restrictions

  • Firearms - Generally prohibited in recent seasons (available in early seasons)
  • Professional lures - No sponsored fishing lures with brand logos
  • Traps beyond snare wire - No commercial traps or conibears
  • Scope/optics - No rifle scopes or binoculars

Season-by-Season Rule Changes and Variations

The Alone rules have evolved significantly across 12 seasons. These changes keep the competition fresh and prevent contestants from relying on past winners' formulas without adaptation.

SeasonLocationKey Rule ChangesWinner
Season 1Vancouver IslandFirearms allowed, 40-item master listAlan Kay (56 days)
Season 7Canadian Arctic$1 million prize, 100-day capRoland Welker (100 days - RECORD)
Season 8Chilko Lake, BCReturn to standard $500K prizeClay Hayes (74 days)
Season 9Labrador, CanadaSleeping bag briefly removed from master listJuan Pablo Quiñonez (78 days)
Season 10Reindeer Lake, SaskatchewanSleeping bag restored, northern locationWinner Wiegers (89 days)
Season 11Tasmania (Australia)Southern Hemisphere location, different ecosystemPaul Atkins (67 days)
Season 12South Africa (Grand Karoo)Snake gaiters added to standard gear[Pending 2026]

Special Series and Spin-offs

Beyond the main seasons, History Channel has produced special editions with modified rules:

Alone Frozen: Set in the Canadian Arctic near where Roland Welker set his record. This special featured previous contestants returning for even harsher conditions. Woniya Thibeault won, bringing her cumulative days across seasons to 123—the most in Alone history.

Alone Australia: An international adaptation with local contestants and modified gear lists. The Australian version features different ecosystems and unique challenges, though the core 10-item rule remains unchanged.

Notably, Jordan McNally was disqualified from Alone Australia for using his satellite phone to order a pizza—a legendary rule violation that demonstrates production monitors all communication devices closely.

What Winners Choose: Gear Analysis and Records

After analyzing every winner across 12 seasons, clear patterns emerge in successful gear selection and survival strategy.

Alone Records and Statistics

RecordContestantDetails
Longest Single SeasonRoland Welker100 days (Season 7, Canadian Arctic)
Most Cumulative DaysWoniya Thibeault123 days (Season 6 + Alone Frozen)
Biggest PrizeRoland Welker$1 million (Season 7 only)
Fastest Tap OutMultiple contestantsUnder 24 hours (several instances)
Most Weight LostCarleigh Fairchild (S3)Medical evacuation after losing 30%+ body weight

Winner Gear Statistics

Analyzing gear choices across all winners reveals clear priorities:

  • 100% of winners chose a sleeping bag when available
  • 100% chose a ferro rod (primary fire starter)
  • 95% chose both an axe AND a saw
  • 90% chose a 2.5 quart pot
  • 85% chose maximum paracord (40-50 feet)
  • 75% chose both multi-tool AND knife
  • 0% chose food rations (all winners brought sustainable food-gathering tools)

These statistics tell a clear story: sleep, shelter, and fire are survival priorities. Food is secondary. Contestants who prioritize food over comfort tools typically tap out within the first month.

Winner Insight: Roland Welker's 100-day survival in the Canadian Arctic demonstrated that shelter quality and sleep preservation matter more than food variety. His gear prioritized warmth and shelter efficiency over hunting capability.

Medical Checks and Safety Protocols

Despite the extreme danger, Alone has never had a contestant die or suffer permanent injury. This safety record results from rigorous medical protocols and constant monitoring.

Weekly Medical Assessments

Production conducts medical checks approximately every 7 days. During these assessments:

  • BMI Monitoring - Contestants must maintain minimum body mass index. If BMI drops below 16-17 (varies by individual), medical evacuation is triggered.
  • Blood Pressure - Abnormally low blood pressure can indicate dangerous health decline.
  • General Health - Doctors check for infections, injuries, frostbite, and other concerns.

These checks can feel invasive to contestants who have adapted to wilderness living. Several have described the frustration of being medically evacuated just as they were hitting their stride. Carleigh Fairchild's Season 3 medical removal after 86 days remains controversial—she had lost significant weight but remained mentally sharp and determined to continue.

Emergency Protocols

Beyond scheduled checks, contestants can request medical attention at any time. Production maintains emergency response teams on standby throughout the competition. The GPS tracking system allows immediate location identification for rescue operations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the 10 items allowed on Alone?

The most common 10 items chosen by Alone winners are: 1) Sleeping Bag for warmth and rest, 2) Ferro Rod for fire starting, 3) Axe for wood processing and shelter building, 4) Saw for efficient cutting, 5) 2.5 Quart Pot for cooking and boiling water, 6) 40-50 feet of Paracord for shelter and crafts, 7) Multi-tool for repairs and tasks, 8) Bow and Arrows for hunting, 9) Fishing Kit with 40 hooks, 10) Snare Wire for passive food gathering. These items balance shelter, fire, water, and food procurement needs.

What is the longest someone has lasted on Alone?

Roland Welker holds the record for longest survival in a single season, lasting 100 days in the Canadian Arctic during Season 7 to win $1 million. Woniya Thibeault holds the record for most cumulative days across multiple seasons at 123 days (Season 6 plus Alone Frozen win).

Are Alone contestants allowed to bring tampons?

Yes, female Alone contestants can bring tampons, pads, or menstrual cups as part of their personal hygiene gear. These items are provided separately from the 10 special items and must be used only for their intended hygiene purpose, not repurposed for survival tasks like fire-starting or wick material.

What are they not allowed to take on Alone?

Prohibited items on Alone include firearms (in recent seasons), GPS and compass for navigation, maps, lighters and matches, tents, sleeping pads, camping stoves, water filters, hydration packs, professional gear with brand logos, books and entertainment items, radios and smartphones. These restrictions ensure genuine survival challenges and fairness between contestants.

Do Alone contestants get paid if they do not win?

Yes, Alone contestants receive weekly compensation for each day they remain in the competition. The amount has not been publicly disclosed by History Channel, but it increases with longevity. This ensures participants are compensated for their time even if they do not win the grand prize.

What happens when you tap out on Alone?

When a contestant taps out on Alone, they use their provided satellite phone or radio to contact production. Extraction teams typically arrive within hours, sometimes by boat, ATV, or helicopter depending on location. The contestant receives a medical evaluation, interviews about their experience, and returns home. Their gear remains behind and becomes property of the production.

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