How To Make A Teepee: 15 Steps (with Pictures) - WikiHow

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Terms of Use wikiHow is where trusted research and expert knowledge come together. Learn why people trust wikiHow How to Make a Teepee PDF download Download Article Reviewed by Ky Furneaux

Last Updated: August 28, 2025 Fact Checked

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  • Gathering Necessary Materials
  • |
  • Erecting the Frame
  • |
  • Putting on the Cover
  • |
  • Video
  • |
  • Q&A
  • |
  • Things You'll Need
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This article was reviewed by Ky Furneaux. Ky Furneaux is a survival expert, outdoor guide, and professional stuntwoman based in Australia. She’s been featured in over 100 films and TV productions, and has hosted, produced, and participated in some of the most extreme TV survival shows including MTV’s Made and Discovery’s Naked and Afraid. She has authored 5 survival books, including "The Superwoman’s Survival Guide" and "Survive: The All-In-One Guide to Staying Alive in Extreme Conditions", with the goal of sharing her knowledge of survival techniques with others. As an accomplished stuntwoman, she won a Taurus Award in 2012 for Best Female Stunt Performer and has doubled stars like Jennifer Garner, Anne Hathaway, Jaime Alexander, and Sharon Stone. This article has been fact-checked, ensuring the accuracy of any cited facts and confirming the authority of its sources. This article has been viewed 1,042,109 times.

A traditional plains teepee (also spelled tipi) is a roomy and durable structure that is big enough to house a fire and several people comfortably.[1] It's livable in hot or cold weather and, when you've assembled the necessary materials to build it, it is relatively easy to set up, take down, and move elsewhere, making the teepee ideal for a nomadic lifestyle. If you want to build a teepee for recreation, novelty, or because you want to live in an alternative structure, read on to find out where to start.

Building a Teepee

  1. Arrange 3 large poles in a tripod shape and tie them with rope.
  2. Add more poles around the tripod and tie them together with rope.
  3. Lay your support pole on top of a piece of canvas and roll it up.
  4. Insert the support pole at the back of the teepee and unroll the canvas.
  5. Secure the canvas together and stake it to the ground.

Steps

Part 1 Part 1 of 3:

Gathering Necessary Materials

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  1. Step 1 Get some canvas. 1 Get some canvas. Traditionally, teepees were made from tanned buffalo or deer hides, which were water resistant and pliable. Since buffalo skin is relatively difficult to acquire nowadays, most modern teepees are made using canvas. Smaller teepees are difficult to manage fires in, so if you're going to build one, you might as well build one of significant size.
    • For a comfortably-sized teepee, you'll want a piece of canvas roughly 15 x 30 feet.
  2. Step 2 Prepare some lodge poles. 2 Prepare some lodge poles. The two basic requirements for the teepee are some kind of covering (the canvas) and poles, about three feet longer than the width of the covering canvas. You'll need about twelve of them for a really solid teepee. The smoother the better, they're ideally several inches thick and made from lodge pole pine.
    • The easiest way to acquire these poles is to buy them commercially. Felling wood is also an option, but you need to make sure that you're harvesting legal wood, which can be a tricky proposition. To be safe, buy them from a dealer to ensure that they're sturdy and legal.
    • To prepare the poles for use, smooth out any rough patches with a pocketknife and sandpaper, and treat it with a coat of a 50/50 mixture of linseed oil and turpentine. This will ensure that your poles will be protected against the elements and will last for many years.
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  3. Step 3 Cut the teepee pattern from the canvas. 3 Cut the teepee pattern from the canvas. If you don't have a pre-cut canvas made for a teepee, you'll need to cut your own from the canvas. Tracing a pattern onto the canvas first is the best idea, but the basic cut is a semi-circle half as wide as it is long, with notches cut toward each end on the flat side of the semi-circle, and with flaps cut from the middle of the flat side, for use as "smoke flaps," and a hole for the door.[2] You'll also need to save enough canvas for covering up the door hole when you're inside.
  4. Step 4 Get 45 feet (13.7 m) of manila or straw rope. 4 Get 45 feet (13.7 m) of manila or straw rope. Synthetic rope is not a good idea for building teepees, because it has trouble gripping the poles like natural ropes, causing slippage.
    • It's also good to have about 12-15 stakes for staking the bottom of the canvas to the ground, as well as the materials to make a fire. If you want an authentic teepee, get some porcupine quills or other long pins to fix the open part of the canvas covering when you assemble it.
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Part 2 Part 2 of 3:

Erecting the Frame

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  1. Step 1 Lay out the tripod. 1 Lay out the tripod. The teepee starts by fashioning a simple tripod with three of your poles. Lay two both flat on the ground, right next to each other and lay another across them, creating an acute angle at the top of about 30 degrees. The two poles next to each other will be your corner poles, while the crossing pole will act as the "door pole."
    • For an accurate measurement, lay out the canvas and assemble the poles on top. With the tops of the two base poles in the center of the canvas, pointing toward the center of the flat side, lay the other pole on top of it so the end on the curved side of the semicircle is about a 1/3 of the way down from the edge. That should be roughly a 30 degree angle.
  2. Step 2 Tie the tripod... 2 Tie the tripod poles with a clove hitch. Use about six feet of your rope to tie the poles together using a clove hitch knot. You should have about five feet left on the short side and 40 feet (12.2 m) or so on the long side. Do not cut the rope. With the short end, wrap around the poles several times and then tie another clove hitch with the remaining rope. The rest of the rope will come in handy later. Keep it coiled and out of the way.
  3. Step 3 Raise the teepee. 3 Raise the teepee. In the location you'd like to set up your teepee, raise the poles from the jointed end by pulling the rope. Have helpers stand with their feet on the bottom end of the poles to keep them from dragging the tripod.[3]
    • At this point, it should look more like a bipod. When it reaches its apex, separate the two base poles that were next to each other roughly 9 feet (2.7 m) from one another. They will be the "back" corners of the teepee, while the crossing pole will be the "door pole." It should not be, strictly speaking, symmetrical, but more of an isosceles triangle. The back corner poles should act as a cradle for the door pole, with about a foot more space from each corner pole to the door pole than between each corner pole.
    • Make sure all the corners of the tripod are sturdy by pulling down on the rope while standing in the center of the tripod, directly under the joining point.
  4. Step 4 Lay in the poles. 4 Lay in the poles. Set aside your sturdiest pole to act as your "lift" pole. You'll add poles by moving in a counterclockwise circle around the tripod, starting directly to the right of the door pole. The sides of the tripod between the door pole and each corner pole should have five poles each. The "back" side, between the two corner poles, should have four poles, plus your lift pole.
    • Leave space for the lift pole in the center of the back side of the teepee. There should be four poles on that side, with a gap in the middle for the lift pole. This will be used later to put the cover on the teepee.
    • Steadying each pole at the base with your foot in an arcing line with the corner poles and door pole, gently let the top of the pole come to rest in the V created by both of the corner poles.
    • The distance between all the poles, evenly spaced, should be about 3 feet (0.9 m).
  5. Step 5 Wrap the poles. 5 Wrap the poles. Using the long end of the rope, walk the rope around the crossing joint of all the poles about 4 times. Let the remainder of the rope hang at one of the corner poles.
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Part 3 Part 3 of 3:

Putting on the Cover

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  1. Step 1 Lay the lift pole down the center of the cover. 1 Lay the lift pole down the center of the cover. With the canvas on the ground, lay the pole down the center of the covering, with the tip pointed toward the center of the flat side of the semicircle. If you've bought your canvas pre-cut, there should be a small "life pole flap" in the center of the canvas with which you'll affix the canvas to the pole.
    • It's important to tie the canvas very tightly to the lift pole. If the life pole flap slips even a couple of inches, the canvas will wrinkle and cause the teepee to be uneven and loose, losing some of its valuable heat benefits. To be sure it doesn't slip, hammer an inch-long tack through the knot and the lift pole flap.
  2. Step 2 Roll up the canvas. 2 Roll up the canvas. While the canvas is still on the ground and now that your lift pole is affixed, roll up the edges toward the pole. Roll up a little at a time, as if you were folding a flag, so that the canvas will be able to unroll easily and evenly when you raise the lift pole.
    • Raise the entire bundle in the air and place it into the gap you've left on the back wall of the teepee for the lift pole.
  3. Step 3 Unroll the canvas. 3 Unroll the canvas. When the pole is placed, unroll the canvas around the frame of poles from the back wall to the initial door pole. Make sure the smoke flaps on the canvas are unrolled outward, as well, and bind them together. The teepee should look mostly completed at this point.[4]
  4. Step 4 Pin the flaps together. 4 Pin the flaps together. Most commercial teepees will have holes built into the opening flaps, but if you've cut your canvas yourself you'll need to use the pins you've gathered to auger holes into the cover and pin the open side of the canvas together.
    • Porcupine quills can work, and were used traditionally, but small wooden pins are a more durable and available choice. They're available anywhere that also retails lodge pole pine poles. You don't need to use quills if you prefer not to.
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  1. Step 1 Stake the canvas. 1 Stake the canvas. It's smart to secure the canvas to the ground using traditional metal tent stakes, so strong winds won't turn your teepee into a parachute. When you're ready to go inside, fix the door to the outside and you're ready to camp plains-style.
    • If you want to have a fire in your teepee, you'll need to open the smoke flaps or you'll hotbox the teepee and risk a fire. Plant stakes on the door-side of the teepee to fix the ropes to when you've opened them, to keep them from flapping back closed while your fire is lit.
    • Be very careful if you want to start a fire during cold weather. It'll be a great source of heat, and your tent will be toasty in no time, but make sure it's centrally placed, under the smoke flaps, and keep active watch on it at all times.
  2. Step 2 Finished. 2 Finished. Nice job!
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Community Q&A

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  • Question How long should the lodge poles be? Community Answer Community Answer From what I have read, the lodge poles should be three feet longer than the height of the canvas. For example, if the canvas is 12 feet tall, then the poles should be 15 feet long. Thanks! We're glad this was helpful. Thank you for your feedback. If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission. Support wikiHow Yes No Not Helpful 39 Helpful 81
  • Question What's with the using porcupine quills to fix the tipi in front? That's ridiculous. I live on a reservation where tipis are an ancient traditional dwelling and I am writing a book on tipis. Community Answer Community Answer The tipi design varies from tribe to tribe. It's possible that porcupine quills were used by another tribe than the one you're from. Any generalization suffers from not being applicable to individual circumstances, so perhaps you could do deeper research into the tipi variants and inform this article some more; everyone is free to edit this site, to enhance the knowledge. Thanks! We're glad this was helpful. Thank you for your feedback. If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission. Support wikiHow Yes No Not Helpful 80 Helpful 195
  • Question How much will the materials cost? Community Answer Community Answer It depends on the type of materials you want to use and where you purchase them, but I would expect to spend at least a few hundred dollars for a large, high-quality teepee. You could likely make a cheaper version for under $100 if you shopped smart. Thanks! We're glad this was helpful. Thank you for your feedback. If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission. Support wikiHow Yes No Not Helpful 33 Helpful 63
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Things You'll Need

  • 12-15 lodge pole pine poles
  • 15 x 13 sheet of canvas, or pre-cut teepee pattern covering
  • Wooden or other pins to keep the canvas fixed
  • 45 feet (13.7 m) of natural manila or straw rope
  • Sharp knife or hatchet
  • Tape measure

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References

  1. https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/tipi
  2. http://www.inquiry.net/outdoor/native/skills/teepee.htm
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6CU5uHltIw
  4. https://www.motherearthnews.com/diy/make-a-tipi-zmaz70jfzglo

About This Article

Ky Furneaux Reviewed by: Ky Furneaux Survival and Outdoors Expert This article was reviewed by Ky Furneaux. Ky Furneaux is a survival expert, outdoor guide, and professional stuntwoman based in Australia. She’s been featured in over 100 films and TV productions, and has hosted, produced, and participated in some of the most extreme TV survival shows including MTV’s Made and Discovery’s Naked and Afraid. She has authored 5 survival books, including "The Superwoman’s Survival Guide" and "Survive: The All-In-One Guide to Staying Alive in Extreme Conditions", with the goal of sharing her knowledge of survival techniques with others. As an accomplished stuntwoman, she won a Taurus Award in 2012 for Best Female Stunt Performer and has doubled stars like Jennifer Garner, Anne Hathaway, Jaime Alexander, and Sharon Stone. This article has been viewed 1,042,109 times. 274 votes - 86% Co-authors: 39 Updated: August 28, 2025 Views: 1,042,109 Categories: Tents Article SummaryX

If you want to make a teepee, gather a piece of canvas that's about 15 x 30 feet and 12 lodge poles that are at least 3 feet longer than the width of the canvas. Make sure you have at least 45 feet of natural-fiber rope on hand for securing the poles, and cut the canvas into a teepee pattern. To make the frame, lay three poles on the ground in the shape of a tripod, with 2 poles next to each other and one crossing them. Tie the poles together with a clove hitch, and raise the teepee so you can add more poles. Once all of your poles are in place, wrap the rope around the top and put the cover on the structure. For tips on fitting the cover and securing it in place, read on! Did this summary help you?YesNo

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Reader Success Stories

  • Dean Zimmer

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    Sep 5, 2017

    "This center pole tent was made with a 10 x 20' tarp. I sewed in a 5' zipper for the door. Gorilla Taped..." more
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Yes No Did this article help you? Say thanks with a small tip. icon $1 $3 $5 Leave a Tip Support our mission to help everyone in the world learn how to do anything. Advertisement Cookies make wikiHow better. By continuing to use our site, you agree to our cookie policy. Ky Furneaux Reviewed by: Ky Furneaux Survival and Outdoors Expert Co-authors: 39 Updated: August 28, 2025 Views: 1,042,109 86% of readers found this article helpful. 274 votes - 86% Click a star to add your vote Dean Zimmer

Dean Zimmer

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"This center pole tent was made with a 10 x 20' tarp. I sewed in a 5' zipper for the door. Gorilla Taped..." more Shirley L.

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"Was just gathering materials to build a teepee not knowing what I was doing. After viewing your video, I now know..." more Theresa C. A.

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"By reading and follow each step it make it easy to build your own teepee. Thank you so much providing your..." more Indira

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"Thanks to this wiki page, I was able to build a teepee style blanket fort in my living room with very little..." more Dave Janos

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