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Travel Styles for RV Families: Find Your Perfect Fit!

Imagine packing up your family, hopping into your RV, and embarking on an adventure to make memories and collect experiences. While many families dream of making this trip a reality in one capacity or another, each trip can look vastly different depending on your family’s desires.

And just like each family, there’s no single “right” way to travel by RV.

Some families crave frequent escapes, while others yearn for continuous exploration. Some prioritize comfort and established communities, while others seek adventure off the beaten path with fully emersed adventures in boondocking off the grid.

This is where RV travel styles come in!

They’re different approaches families can take to hitting the road that allows each family to find that perfect fit adventure. Finding your “sweet spot” means finding what works for you and understanding that there will always be different strokes for different folks.

In this post, we’ll cover 5 popular RV travel styles, each with its own unique set of pros and cons. By the end, you’ll be well on your way to planning the perfect RV adventure for your family!

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    Planning the Perfect RV Adventure

    There will always be different strokes for different folks, and you’ll know exactly what I mean once you take a look at the diverse group of families, young couples, retirees, and other adventurous people who have taken to the open roads and now call it home!

    Some people travel in large Class A Motorhomes with more luxuries than one can count. Others travel in less than picture-perfect setups where bonds are made and family time is never in short supply. You choose what works for you, and if you’re anything like us, you’ll have several RVs throughout your adventure and each one will work better than the last.

    Choosing the style of travel that suits your crew is probably the most important thing. Trying to fit your family into the shoes of another will likely prove to be far too uncomfortable to continue the journey. So here’s my advice… Just do you!

    5 Popular Travel Styles

    Depending on what your ultimate goal is, you might find that one fo these popular travel styles fits the bill for your RV family adventure. If not, mix and match them together until you create what feels good to you, and then test it out until you find that sweet spot!

    The Weekender Warriors:

    Weekend warriors are families who use their RV usually from Friday to Sunday for short trips. They might pack up the RV every other weekend and head to a local campground or state park or take a long holiday weekend and journey a bit farther from home.

    • Ideal for: Families who crave an adventure, but have location-dependent jobs and school commitments during the week.
    • Pros: Frequent getaways keep things fresh and allow you to explore, get outdoors, and create memories with your kids, while still allowing you to stay connected to your home base.
    • Cons: Constant packing and unpacking of your RV for each trip. Less time to explore and you’ll be contained to how far you can reasonably travel to and from your home within the weekend trips.

    The Seasonal Snowbirds:

    Seasonal snowbirds are usually referencing people who follow weather patterns to plan their adventures. For families, this could mean spending the summer in the RV and returning home for the school year. Or it could be a full-time family who spends the summer in northern states, Alaska, or Canada and heads below the sunbelt for the winter- when the weather is more favorable.

    • Ideal for: Families who enjoy predictability and a somewhat set schedule to plan their adventures around. Also great for families who want to create a schedule to circle back to certain family members during specific times of the year.
    • Pros: Enjoy pleasant weather year-round and make the most of each destination during their ‘best season’. Avoid unpleasant weather or crowded locations during peak seasons. Leaves the perfect amount of flexibility to still have a sense of adventure and unplanned exploration.
    • Cons: It may get repetitive depending on the length of time and openness to explore uncovered territories. It can also put you in the middle of peak seasons, depending on what seasons and destinations you choose to explore and when.

    The Full-Timers: Forever on the Move

    Full-time families are year-round travelers who adventure when, where, and how they please. Without the constraints of stick-n-bricks homes, traditional schools for the kids, or location-dependent jobs, they have the freedom to go where they want and stay as long as they want.

    • Ideal for: Families who crave constant adventure and new experiences. Perfect for families ready to pack up and hit the road in search of daily adventures without ties to a permanent location.
    • Pros: Provides maximum travel flexibility. Encourages exploration and education regardless of the locations you choose to explore.
    • Cons: It can be challenging to maintain routines depending on how fast and often you travel. Homeschooling can be an adjustment. Requires the adaptation of a new normal in every aspect of your life.

    The Boondockers: Off the Grid Adventurers

    Boondockers are RVer who love to be untethered! They use their RVs as a way to escape the crowded RV parks and campgrounds and get close to nature off the grid in a variety of remote and extremely beautiful locations. While not a travel style for every RVer, boondocking does require some upfront investments and overall comfort in self-sufficiency.

    • Ideal for: Families who love nature and self-reliance, enjoy peace and quiet.
    • Pros: Deep connection with nature, a chance to unplug and reconnect with each other.
    • Cons: Requires strong self-sufficiency skills, limited amenities may not suit everyone.

    The Workampers: Combining Work and Travel

    A personal favorite for families looking for a way to work on the go without a remote career or retirement fund. Workamping can be a young family’s ticket to travel or a perfect escape for retirees in search of adventure. Workamping can include short-term seasonal jobs or shorter stinks at jobs like Christmas tree stands that are here one day and seemingly gone the next.

    • Ideal for: Families who want to extend their travel time or earn income on the road.
    • Pros: Affordable way to travel long-term, opportunity to learn new skills and trades.
    • Cons: Work schedules can limit travel flexibility, some positions may be physically demanding.

    Finding Your Rhythm

    However, you chose to take to the road- know that you are not alone. Many families have done it, will do it and are doing it right now! 

    Traveling as a family has many perks that we did not intend or maybe we just didn’t take a moment to really think about all the greatness that was in store for us- either way the pros have far outweighed the cons and from what the scales are saying why would we choose anything else?

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