Andrew Price's Alone Season 13 Gear List: All 10 Items
2026-05-19
Spoiler note: this covers Andrew Price's status in the still-airing Alone Season 13.
Andrew Price is a 51-year-old wilderness skills educator from Wales who founded his own bushcraft school after learning foraging from his grandfather and traveling the world studying indigenous survival techniques. He is one of ten castaways dropped into the Richardson Mountains of Canada's Northwest Territories, inside the Arctic Circle, for Alone Season 13, the show's first World Championship format, with a $500,000 prize and the title of first-ever Alone World Champion on the line. One sourcing note: season 13 gear lists so far come from a single detailed piece of pre-season coverage rather than multiple confirmed sources, so treat the specifics as reported until the season fills in the record.
As of the most recently aired episode, Price had not been eliminated. Two of the ten castaways were already gone: David Young tapped out on day 3, and Dave Booth followed on day 4. Price's placement and days lasted are not recorded in our data, which is itself a reasonable proxy for "still in it." Full background on the season, the cast, and the near-Arctic setting is on our Season 13 guide; Price's own page is here.
The full list
Price's ten items are recorded at the category level in our data, with no specific brand or model attached to any of them. That is worth stating plainly rather than guessing at gear he may or may not have actually packed.
| Item | Brand / model | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|
| Ax | Not recorded | Shelter building and firewood in mountain terrain |
| Saw | Not recorded | Processing bigger timber faster than an ax alone |
| Multitool | Not recorded | General repair and small fixes |
| Paracord | Not recorded | Shelter lashing and camp utility |
| Snare wire | Not recorded | Passive small game hunting |
| Fishing line and hooks | Not recorded | Backup protein from nearby water |
| Sleeping bag | Not recorded | Survival at Arctic Circle temperatures |
| Cooking pot | Not recorded | Boiling water and cooking whatever he caught |
| Ferro rod | Not recorded | Fire starting |
| Bow and arrows | Not recorded | Primary hunting tool for bigger game |
You can compare these categories against other seasons on the bow and arrows, ferro rod, and trapping snare wire pages, which break down what past contestants actually carried in each slot.
A generalist's list for a specialist's location
Price's list reads like a standard, balanced ten: one cutting tool for big wood, one for small tasks, two ways to catch fish, one way to trap small game, and one way to hunt large game. Nothing here signals a narrow specialty the way a hand-built bow does for a career bowyer. That fits his background as a broad-based bushcraft educator rather than a single-discipline hunter or fisherman.
Notably, his list matches Poldi Waldmann-Moloney's, the season's youngest contestant, category for category, just in a different order. Whether that reflects convergent thinking about what an Arctic Circle winter demands, or simply the standard toolkit most experienced contestants gravitate toward, is not something the data can answer on its own.
What to watch for
With eight of the ten Season 13 castaways still active as of the most recent aired episode, Price's list only starts to matter in outcome terms once eliminations catch up with him. For now, his loadout is a case study in the cover-every-category approach rather than a single-tool specialty. Whether that balance holds up in near-Arctic terrain is exactly the question Season 13 is still answering. The official rules cap every contestant, Price included, at the same ten items, so structurally there is no advantage to be had beyond how each person actually uses that allowance.
More in the Field Journal or start with the season guides.