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Owned by Mary

Full-Time RV Roadmap

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🚐 Planning full-time RV life? Join aspiring RVers getting clear guidance on RV choices, budgeting, downsizing, and travel planning.

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53 contributions to Full-Time RV Roadmap
Full-Time RVing After 50 - What you need to Know
Some of the happiest full-time RVers I've met hit the road after 50. Empty nest. Early retirement. Downsizing at the right time. Here's what makes RV life especially compelling, and what to plan for, in the 50+ chapter: WHY IT WORKS SO WELL AFTER 50 — Kids are grown and less logistically dependent — Many people have built equity in a home to fund the transition — Retirement income (pension, 401k, Social Security) can support the lifestyle — Freedom of schedule is finally real — Health and energy are still strong for the adventure version of this life HEALTH INSURANCE BEFORE MEDICARE This is the biggest planning item for 50-64 year olds. ACA marketplace plans are your primary path. Your domicile state choice matters a lot here. Budget $500-800/month for a couple in your early-to-mid 50s. MEDICARE AT 65 Once you hit Medicare age, the health insurance question largely solves itself. A supplement plan (Medigap) travels with you everywhere. Many retired full-timers say Medicare eligibility was what finally made them commit to going full-time. MAKING THE MONEY WORK Social Security, pension income, investment withdrawals, or part-time remote work can all support this lifestyle. Many 50+ full-timers find RV life is cheaper than their mortgage plus property taxes were. THE PHYSICAL SIDE Choose a rig that's manageable for two people — or one if solo. Avoid setups that require heavy physical labor regularly. Accessible campgrounds and routes exist and are worth researching. 🚐 If you're in the 50+ chapter, what feels like the biggest motivator for making this leap, and what's still holding you back?
Full-Time RVing After 50 - What you need to Know
0 likes • 1d
The 50+ transition is one of the most natural fits for this lifestyle, and some of the most free, joyful people I've met on the road are living proof. If you're in or near this chapter, what feels most true? 👇 1️⃣ I'm ready, just finishing up the logistics 2️⃣ Health insurance is my main remaining question 3️⃣ I'm waiting for retirement income to kick in 4️⃣ My partner and I aren't fully aligned yet 5️⃣ I'm younger but want to hear this for future reference Reply with the number that fits you best. 🚐
RV Storage: Where to Put Everything in a Smaller Space
One of the practical realities of RV life is learning to live with less storage, and to use the storage you have better. Here's how experienced full-timers handle it: THE GOLDEN RULE If it doesn't earn its space, it doesn't come in the rig. Everything you bring should either be used regularly or serve a critical function. OUTSIDE STORAGE BAYS Most RVs have exterior storage compartments. Use these for: — Outdoor gear (chairs, table, grill, mat) — Hoses and utilities (sewer hose, water hose, electric cord) — Tools and maintenance supplies — Pet gear and food bags INSIDE STORAGE STRATEGIES — Cabinet risers: Double the vertical capacity of kitchen cabinets — Over-door organizers: Bathroom, pantry, closet doors — Vacuum seal bags: For off-season clothing and bedding — Magnetic strips: For knives and metal items in the kitchen — Collapsible everything: Bowls, colanders, pots where possible WHAT FULL-TIMERS STOP BRINGING — Duplicate kitchen gadgets — Books (Kindle replaces hundreds of paperbacks) — Just-in-case clothing — Decorative items with no function — Full-size appliances when compact versions exist THE ADJUSTMENT PERIOD The first few months, most full-timers still have too much stuff. After 6 months, they've naturally sorted out what they actually use. After a year, the rig feels exactly right. 📦 When you imagine packing for full-time RV life, is there a category of items you're already worried about fitting?
RV Storage:  Where to Put Everything in a Smaller Space
0 likes • 3d
Mine is definitely number 1. I have been in the restaurant for 30 years. I have many kitchen items that are hard to part with. Even after 9 years, I'm still working on that.
1 like • 2d
@Eric Garland we had a sxs a few years ago. We didn’t use it at all in Florida so we ended up selling it. When we go out west, they are everywhere but since we’re Florida registered, triple towing isn’t an option and if we got an enclosed trailer, it would have to be like a 30 footer making us 75 ft. We want it all lol.
How to Stay Connected with Family While Living Full-Time
One of the genuine emotional challenges of full-time RV life is navigating the distance from family. Here's how full-timers stay close from the road: MAKE VISITING PART OF THE PLAN One of the best surprises of full-time RV life: family comes to visit you. Grandkids want to see the RV. Siblings plan weekend meetups. Parents suddenly have a reason to go somewhere new. Build family visit weeks into your travel calendar. THE DIGITAL TOOLBOX — Video calls: FaceTime, Zoom, and Google Meet work great on the road — Group texts and family group chats keep daily connection alive — Shared photo albums (Google Photos, iCloud) let family see your travels in real time — Marco Polo (video messaging app) is popular with full-timers for staying close with family COME BACK FOR THE THINGS THAT MATTER Birthdays. Holidays. Illness. Weddings. Graduations. Full-timing doesn't mean disappearing. You're mobile — use that mobility to show up for what matters. THE GUILT PIECE Many full-timers feel guilt about being far away from aging parents. Honest take: proximity doesn't equal presence. Many people live 30 minutes from family and see them twice a year. Being intentional about connection matters more than the distance. THE SURPRISE Most full-timers say their family relationships improved after going on the road. Less routine obligation, more intentional visits. More genuine connection. 💛 Is staying connected with family one of the bigger concerns on your list — or do you feel like that part is solvable?
How to Stay Connected with Family While Living Full-Time
1 like • 2d
Family connection is real and it's one of the things people think about most before making this leap. What I've seen over the years is that intentional connection beats proximity a lot of the time. How concerned are you about staying connected with family? 👇 1️⃣ It's one of my top concerns 2️⃣ Somewhat concerned but I think it's manageable 3️⃣ Not really worried, we stay in touch regardless of distance 4️⃣ Family is actually one reason I want to hit the road 5️⃣ My family is excited and supportive of the idea Reply with the number that fits you best. 💛🚐
It’s Time To Celebrate
What’s one small thing you did this week that helped you move forward towards full time RV life? No matter how small it counts. Share in the comments so we can celebrate with you.
It’s Time To Celebrate
Solo Full-Time RVing — What It's Really Like
A lot of people assume full-time RV life is a couples thing. It's not. Some of the most experienced and adventurous full-timers out there are doing it solo. THE TRUTH ABOUT SOLO RVing THE FREEDOM IS AMPLIFIED When you're solo, you go where you want, stay as long as you want, and change plans whenever you feel like it. No compromises. No negotiations. That's a powerful thing. THE SAFETY QUESTION Solo RVers, especially women, get asked about safety constantly. The honest answer: RV parks and campgrounds are generally very safe communities. Full-timers look out for each other. Basic awareness, good campground choices, and a security system go a long way. THE SOCIAL SIDE Solo doesn't mean lonely. Many solo full-timers are actually more social on the road than they were at home — because they're actively seeking community rather than defaulting to isolation. Campground neighbors. Rallies. Online groups. The RV community is remarkably welcoming to solos. THE PRACTICAL STUFF — Choose an RV you can manage alone (setup, leveling, hookups) — Know how to do basic maintenance solo — Have a check-in system with someone you trust — Consider roadside assistance as non-negotiable SIZE MATTERS DIFFERENTLY Solo RVers often choose smaller, more maneuverable rigs. A Class B or smaller Class C is easier to handle and park alone than a 40-foot Class A. THE BOTTOM LINE Solo full-time RV life is absolutely doable — and for the right person, it's spectacular. 🚐 If you were going to RV full-time, would you be doing it solo, with a partner, or with family?
Solo Full-Time RVing — What It's Really Like
1 like • 15d
@Dawn Mentel perfect
2 likes • 7d
@Rich Life You said this so well. “Freedom is amplified, but so is the need for solid systems” might be one of the best descriptions of solo RV life I’ve heard. You’re absolutely right, when it’s all on one set of shoulders, good systems stop being optional and become the secret sauce. From setup to breakdown to maintenance, those routines create freedom instead of limiting it. I also love what you said about solo RVers often being the most connected. That makes so much sense. Community becomes something you intentionally build, and that can lead to some of the strongest campfire friendships out there. And that last line… learning exactly what you’re capable of when there’s nobody else to lean on. Powerful. Thank you for sharing your perspective from both sides of the lifestyle. Branson is lucky to have you there.
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Mary Walker
5
313points to level up
@mary-walker-5176
Mary is your RVer Next Door & Independent RV Lifestyle Consultant, helping you turn ‘someday’ into ‘we did it’ with the RV Readiness SMART Framework™.

Active 5h ago
Joined Mar 3, 2026
Clermont, Florida