RV Road Trip Budgeting: How Much Does It Really Cost?
Road Trips

RV Road Trip Budgeting: How Much Does It Really Cost?

How much does an RV trip cost? For a family of 4 on a 7-day, 800-mile loop, plan on $1,300 to $2,400 if you own your rig and $2,400 to $4,300 if you're renting.

Joshua H
Joshua H Jul 1, 2026 · 5 min read

How much does an RV trip cost? For a family of 4 on a 7-day, 800-mile loop, plan on $1,300 to $2,400 if you own your rig and $2,400 to $4,300 if you’re renting. That’s the honest range, and where you land inside it comes down to 6 line items: the RV, fuel, campsites, food, activities, and a handful of small charges that add up quietly.

This guide breaks down each line item with real numbers, walks through a full 7-day sample budget, and closes with 7 ways to pull the total down without making the trip feel cheap.

RV sites at RJourney Lake Conroe RV Campground in Willis, Texas

The Quick Answer: 3 Sample RV Trip Budgets

Trip lengthYou own the RVYou’re renting
Weekend, 250 miles$260 to $520$700 to $1,300
1 week, 800 miles$1,300 to $2,400$2,400 to $4,300
2 weeks, 2,000 miles$2,700 to $4,900$5,000 to $8,600

Those ranges assume 2 adults and 2 kids, full-hookup campsites most nights, and cooking most of your own meals. Every number is broken out below.

What Makes Up an RV Trip Budget

Every RV trip budget, whether it’s a weekend at the lake or a month on the road, splits into the same 6 buckets. Here’s what each one actually costs in 2026.

How Much Does It Cost to Rent an RV?

If you don’t own a rig, the rental is your biggest line item. Typical nightly rates:

RV typeNightly rateSleeps
Class A motorhome$200 to $3506 to 8
Class C motorhome$125 to $2504 to 7
Class B camper van$150 to $2502 to 4
Travel trailer$60 to $1504 to 8

The nightly rate is the ad. The invoice includes more: mileage fees (often $0.25 to $0.45 per mile past 100 free miles a day), generator hours, a prep or cleaning fee of $75 to $150, and rental insurance at $15 to $40 a day. A 7-night Class C rental usually lands between $1,200 and $2,000 once the fees settle.

2 ways to soften it: longer rentals almost always carry lower nightly rates, and a travel trailer costs roughly half a motorhome if you already drive something that can tow it.

Fuel: The Formula That Never Lies

Fuel cost = (miles ÷ mpg) × price per gallon. That’s the whole calculation. The variable that stings is mpg:

  • Class A motorhome: 6 to 8 mpg
  • Class C motorhome: 8 to 12 mpg
  • Truck towing a travel trailer: 9 to 13 mpg (expect roughly 30% below your truck’s normal)
  • Class B camper van: 16 to 22 mpg

Worked example: 800 miles in a Class C at 10 mpg and $3.50 a gallon comes to about $280. Gas prices move, so run the formula with the current price on your route the week you leave.

Campsite Costs

Full-hookup sites at private RV parks and resorts run $40 to $90 a night, with the high end buying pools, bathhouses, camp stores, and waterfront. State parks run $25 to $45, usually with partial hookups and fewer amenities. Boondocking is free, and our Boondocking 101 guide covers how to do it without regretting it.

2 numbers worth knowing: weekly rates typically shave 10 to 15% off the nightly price, and shoulder-season rates (May, September) drop below peak summer at most parks. Every RJourney park lists current rates on its park page, so you can price your exact dates before you commit.

Waterfront RV sites at The Point at Lake Hartwell in Townville, South Carolina

Food

Camp cooking for a family of 4 runs $150 to $250 a week in groceries. A single family sit-down at a restaurant runs $60 to $100. The math writes its own advice: cook 2 of every 3 meals and you’ll spend around $350 a week including a couple of meals out. Your campsite has a better view than the restaurant anyway.

Activities and Entrance Fees

National park entrance fees run $20 to $35 per vehicle. The America the Beautiful annual pass costs $80 and pays for itself by the 3rd park, which matters on a route like our 14-day Utah Mighty 5 itinerary. Add museums, kayak rentals, and guided trips and a realistic activities budget is $100 to $300 a week for a family.

The Quiet Line Items

These are the charges that show up small and often: propane ($20 to $40 a trip), dump station fees ($10 to $25 when you’re between full-hookup stays), tolls, pet fees at some parks, and firewood at $6 to $10 a bundle (buy it near where you burn it; hauling firewood across state lines spreads invasive pests). If you own your rig, set aside something for wear too. Our RV maintenance checklist is the cheapest insurance you’ll ever print.

A 10% buffer on top of your total covers all of this without any line-item bookkeeping.

A Worked 7-Day Budget: Family of 4, 800 Miles, Rented Class C

Line itemCost
Rental, 7 nights at $160 average$1,120
Mileage, prep, and insurance fees$320
Fuel, 800 miles at 10 mpg, $3.50/gal$280
Campsites, 6 nights full hookup at $55$330
Food, groceries plus 2 meals out$380
Activities and entrance fees$150
Propane, firewood, buffer$80
Total$2,660

Own the rig? Drop the first 2 lines, add a $150 maintenance set-aside, and the same week costs about $1,370. That’s the whole case for ownership in 2 numbers.

7 Ways to Lower Your RV Trip Cost

  1. Travel shoulder season. May and September buy you lower campsite rates, easier availability, and thinner crowds at the exact same places.
  2. Book weekly, stay put. Weekly rates cut 10 to 15% off nightly pricing, and a basecamp means day trips in a car (or on foot) instead of moving a 12,000-pound rig.
  3. Drive less, camp more. Fuel is priced per mile. A 400-mile loop with 2 basecamps costs half the fuel of an 800-mile dash and feels like twice the vacation.
  4. Cook 2 of every 3 meals. The single biggest controllable line after the rig itself.
  5. Rent longer, not fancier. A 10-night Class C rental often carries a lower nightly rate than a 4-night one. Trip math rewards patience.
  6. Buy the $80 annual parks pass if your route touches 3 or more federal fee areas.
  7. Borrow gear for trip 1. Chairs, griddles, leveling blocks, and kayaks are all borrowable. Buy after you know what you’ll actually use.
Campsites under the pines at RJourney Pearl Lake RV Campground in Redgranite, Wisconsin

Common Questions About RV Trip Costs

Is an RV trip cheaper than a hotel road trip?

For a family of 4 who cooks most meals, usually yes. A hotel road trip means 2 rooms or a suite plus every meal at a restaurant, which pushes past $400 a day fast. An owned RV beats that comfortably; a rented one gets close to even on short trips and wins on longer ones.

How much should I budget per day for an RV trip?

If you own the RV, $120 to $250 a day covers a family of 4 all-in. Renting, plan on $300 to $500 a day. Solo travelers and couples in smaller rigs can run well under both ranges.

What’s the single biggest RV trip cost?

The rig itself if you’re renting, at roughly half the total budget. If you own, fuel and campsites trade the top spot depending on how far you drive and where you park.

Where the Budget Meets the Map

A budget is just a route you haven’t picked yet. Run the formula for your rig, price your dates on the park pages, and the number stops being scary and starts being a plan. If it’s your first time out, our beginner’s guide to planning your first RV road trip walks the route-picking side.

Check availability at any RJourney park. Summer weekends move fast, and shoulder season is the budget traveler’s open secret.


Joshua H
Joshua H

Josh Harmening is the editor behind RJournal, the travel and outdoor content arm of RJourney. He writes about campgrounds, wildlife safety, road trips, and the small details that change a trip from fine to worth repeating. His reporting draws on direct input from the general managers who run RJourney's 40+ parks across 19 states, covering everything from bear safety in Utah's Bear Valley to crabbing seasons on Oregon's Tillamook Bay. He's based in Wenatchee, Washington, where the Cascades meet the Columbia River and the camping options start about 10 minutes from his front door.

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