RV Rentals by State

State-level rental guides for the major RV travel states. Where to rent, how rates and availability differ regionally, and which trips each state actually makes sense for.

Arizona

$135–$215/night

Arizona is a year-round RV state with different seasonal optimums than most of the country. Rates run $135-$215/night. Here's the state-level breakdown for Grand Canyon, Sedona, and desert trips.

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California

$135–$285/night

California has the highest RV rental volume and the widest selection of any state. Rates run $135-$285/night depending on class and metro. Here's the state-level breakdown.

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Colorado

$145–$245/night

Colorado has the most challenging RV rental terrain in the US. Rates run $145-$245/night. Here's what to know about altitude, mountain passes, and the season that actually matters.

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Florida

$125–$225/night

Florida runs the longest RV camping season in the US — November-April is peak. Rates run $125-$225/night. Here's the state-level rental breakdown plus the seasonal pricing dynamic.

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Georgia

$115–$195/night

Georgia has strong rental inventory in metro Atlanta, the Blue Ridge mountains, and the coast. Rates run $115-$195/night. Here's the breakdown by region and trip type.

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Idaho

$135–$215/night

Idaho is one of the least-crowded Western RV states with dramatic mountain landscapes. Rates run $135-$215/night. Boise is the launch point for most trips.

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Maine

$155–$225/night

Maine has Acadia NP plus 3,500 miles of coastline. Rates run $155-$225/night. Portland is the primary rental hub; Bangor is closer to Acadia.

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Massachusetts

$165–$245/night

Massachusetts has thin RV rental selection in-state but Boston is the New England rental hub. Rates run $165-$245/night. Cape Cod and the Berkshires are the destinations.

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Montana

$165–$255/night

Montana has Glacier NP plus north-Yellowstone access via Gardiner. Rates run $165-$255/night. Bozeman is the primary rental hub.

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Nevada

$135–$235/night

Nevada RV rentals concentrate in Las Vegas and run $135-$235/night. The state has unique advantages for renters: airport-proximate pickup, vast public-land dispersed camping, and access to Utah's national parks.

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New Mexico

$125–$195/night

New Mexico has 13 national park units, low crowds, and the cheapest fuel of any Western state. Rates run $125-$195/night. Here's the rental landscape.

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North Carolina

$115–$185/night

North Carolina has the best Blue Ridge Parkway access of any state plus coastal Outer Banks rental options. Rates run $115-$185/night. Here's the regional breakdown.

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Oregon

$145–$235/night

Oregon has rental hubs in Portland and Eugene plus the best Pacific Coast camping in the country. Rates run $145-$235/night. Full-service gas is a quirk you'll notice.

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South Dakota

$135–$205/night

South Dakota has Mt. Rushmore, Badlands NP, Custer State Park, and the Black Hills. Rates run $135-$205/night. Rapid City is the primary rental launch.

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Tennessee

$115–$185/night

Tennessee has the highest national park visitation in the country (Great Smoky Mountains) plus rental access from Nashville, Knoxville, and Chattanooga. Rates run $115-$185/night.

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Texas

$125–$215/night

Texas has the second-largest RV rental market in the US after California, plus the lowest fuel costs and the most permissive boondocking rules of the big states. Rates run $125-$215/night.

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Utah

$145–$245/night

Utah is the most national-park-dense state in the country. The Mighty 5 (Zion, Bryce, Capitol Reef, Arches, Canyonlands) all live here. Rates run $145-$245/night.

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Virginia

$135–$205/night

Virginia has Shenandoah NP plus the Blue Ridge Parkway start. Rates run $135-$205/night. Richmond and Charlottesville are the rental hubs.

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Washington

$145–$245/night

Washington RV rentals concentrate around Seattle and Spokane. Rates run $145-$245/night. Best base for Olympic, Mt. Rainier, and North Cascades national park trips.

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Wyoming

$165–$275/night

Wyoming has Yellowstone + Grand Teton + Devils Tower + Bighorn Canyon. Rates run $165-$275/night. Jackson and Cody are the rental launch points.

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