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?