Best RV insurance 2026 — dealer insider guide to coverage, pricing, and claims
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Best RV Insurance 2026: Dealer Insider Guide

The RV industry doesn’t talk openly about insurance because it doesn’t want you to know the truth — some policies leave you exposed to tens of thousands in liability, while others are quietly designed to deny claims. Here’s what actually matters.

By Manny Ruiz · Real Talk Media Group | Buying Guide | 12 Min Read

Last updated: April 2026

Written from the sales floor and the manager’s desk. No sponsors. No filter.


Introduction

I work inside an RV dealership. I’ve watched buyers get completely screwed by insurance policies they thought protected them. I’ve seen families lose everything because they didn’t understand coverage. And I’ve seen dealers push expensive policies that benefited the dealership more than the customer.

This isn’t an article written by an insurance agent trying to sell you a policy. This is written by someone who sits across from RV owners every single day and hears their real problems. I’ve spent the last two years diving deep into the RV insurance market — talking to agents, comparing policies, understanding what’s actually covered — and I’m laying it all out here.

The RV insurance market is fragmented. You’ve got national carriers, specialty RV insurers, and everything in between. Some are fantastic. Some are traps. This guide cuts through the BS and tells you which companies actually deserve your money.


Why RV Insurance Is Completely Different From Car Insurance

Here’s the mistake 80% of new RV owners make: they think RV insurance is just “upgraded car insurance.” It’s not. It’s a completely different animal, and slapping your RV onto your auto policy is asking for financial devastation.

Specialty Coverage Requirements

An RV isn’t just a vehicle you drive. It’s a mobile home. It’s an investment property. It holds your personal belongings. It has systems that fail. Your car insurance doesn’t cover any of this.

RV policies need to address: – Attached and detached accessories — awnings, satellite dishes, generators, hitch systems, bike racks, solar panels – Full-timer liability — if you’re living in the RV, you need different liability coverage than part-time use – Personal belongings coverage — clothes, electronics, furniture inside the RV (your auto policy won’t touch this) – Mechanical breakdown — the cost to repair RV-specific systems like slide-outs, leveling jacks, appliances, plumbing, electrical systems – Roadside assistance built for RVs — towing a 45-foot diesel pusher isn’t the same as towing a car

Full-Timer Policies

If you live in your RV year-round, standard RV policies won’t work. Full-timers need policies that understand you don’t have a permanent residence, and that your RV is both your home and your vehicle. The liability exposures are completely different, and the coverage needs shift dramatically.

The Attached Accessories Problem

This is where people get burned. Your standard auto policy covers your car’s built-in equipment. But that $3,000 awning? That $8,000 slide-out system? The diesel generator on the back? Most car insurance companies don’t cover this. RV insurers specifically underwrite for it.

Mexican Coverage Complexity

Drive your car into Mexico and your auto policy generally follows you. Drive an RV? It gets messy. You need a separate policy for Mexican liability. Most standard RV policies don’t include it. Most people don’t realize this until they’re already in Baja and get stopped by police.


The 7 Best RV Insurance Companies of 2026

1. Good Sam Insurance

What it’s best for: Part-time RV owners who want straightforward, affordable coverage with no surprises.

Good Sam Insurance is the specialist here. Good Sam Club was founded in 1966. The Good Sam Insurance Agency began offering RV insurance in the 1970s. They understand RVs better than anyone because that’s literally all they do. They offer coverage specifically designed for Class A, Class B, Class C, travel trailers, and fifth wheels.

Pros: – RV-specialist pricing — they’ve priced their products for RV use, not retrofitted auto policies – Personal belongings coverage included in base policies – Attached accessories coverage (awnings, generators, solar panels) as standard – Good Sam club members get rate discounts – Roadside assistance specifically for RVs (including airstop for air brakes, hydraulic systems expertise) – Flexible coverage options for part-time and full-time use – Claims process is straightforward with RV-specialist adjusters

Cons: – Doesn’t offer Mexican liability coverage – Can be slightly pricier than national carriers on basic coverage – Availability: available in most states through its carrier network (underwriter National General operates nationwide)

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Airstop roadside service (specialized for air brake systems) – Emergency expense coverage for lodging if your RV breaks down – Full-timer options with occupancy limits

Pricing Context: Expect $800-1,400 annually for basic Class A coverage depending on your RV’s age and value. Discounts available for Good Sam membership, multiple vehicles, and claims-free history.


2. National General Holdings

What it’s best for: Buyers who want nationwide availability and RV-specific underwriting with competitive pricing.

National General (now an Allstate company since January 2021) underwrites RV insurance through individual carriers within the National General Group. They’re massive in the RV space, and they’ve invested heavily in understanding RV risks.

Pros: – Excellent geographic availability (all 50 states) – Strong expertise in full-timer policies and unique RV situations – Roadside assistance with RV expertise built in – Customizable coverage including personal belongings and attached accessories – Good claim response times – Multiple brand options allows for policy customization

Cons: – Can be hard to navigate the different carrier options within the National General Group – Some customer service consistency issues across different brands – Mexican coverage requires separate policy

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Actual cash value options for older RVs – Specialized full-timer underwriting – Slide-out failure coverage available – Campground liability if you operate an RV as a business

Pricing Context: $900-1,600 annually for Class A coverage. National General is generally competitive with Good Sam. Full-timer policies run slightly higher due to increased liability exposure.

Important Note: National General was acquired by Allstate for approximately $4 billion in January 2021, making it a subsidiary of Allstate.


3. Progressive

What it’s best for: Buyers who want a massive national carrier with competitive rates and existing auto/home bundling.

Progressive entered the RV market heavily about five years ago. They’re trying to position themselves as the “all-in-one” insurer. If you already have auto or home insurance with Progressive, RV bundling can save you serious money.

Pros: – Massive bundling discounts (can save 20%+ if you bundle auto, home, and RV) – Easy online quote and purchase process – Excellent mobile app for managing policies – Good name-brand stability – Nationwide availability – Flexible coverage limits and deductibles

Cons: – RV policies are newer and less specialized than dedicated RV insurers – Can be expensive if you’re not bundling other policies – Claims adjusters may not have deep RV experience – Limited personal belongings coverage compared to specialists – Roadside assistance is minimal for RVs

Unique RV-Specific Features: – SmartRide program (usage-based discounts) available for some RV policies – Online claims reporting – Good discounts for going paperless

Pricing Context: $700-1,300 annually depending on bundling. This can be the cheapest option if you already have auto insurance with them. Standalone RV policies are less competitive.


4. Roamly

What it’s best for: Tech-savvy RV owners who want modern service and fair pricing. Digital-first platform.

Roamly is the new kid on the block, launched in 2021 (as Outdoorsy’s insurtech division). They’re built on a philosophy that RV insurance should be easy, transparent, and available entirely online. If you hate dealing with agents, this is your company.

Pros: – 100% digital — entire process online – Transparent pricing (no hidden costs) – Mobile-first design that actually works – Fast claim processing (can file claims entirely through app) – Great for younger RV owners and tech-comfortable buyers – Reasonable pricing without dealers/agent markup

Cons: – Young company — limited track record – Limited customer service for complex situations (chat/email only) – Personal belongings coverage is limited – Roadside assistance quality varies – Smaller company means less financial stability certainty

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Trip-delay coverage (reimbursement if breakdown delays you 12+ hours) – Accessory coverage specifically outlined – Transparent quote system without agent involvement

Pricing Context: $600-1,200 annually depending on RV type and age. Roamly’s pricing is competitive and they’re available in all 50 states.


5. USAA

What it’s best for: Military members and military families who want premium service and excellent claims handling.

USAA is exclusively for active duty, veterans, and their families. If you’re eligible, you already know this. USAA is legendary for member service.

Pros: – Exceptional claims handling (industry-best reputation) – Member service is outstanding (24/7 by phone, email, or app) – Bundling discounts are substantial – No agent pushy sales — just help – Online portal is intuitive and helpful – Financial stability is unquestionable

Cons: – Only available to military/veterans and eligible family members – Not specifically specialized in RVs (good coverage, but not RV-focused) – Coverage options are more limited than specialists – Personal belongings coverage is separate add-on – Mexican coverage requires separate policy

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Military member discounts (additional 5-10%) – Deployment discounts available – Survivor benefit options – Financial planning advice for members

Pricing Context: $800-1,500 annually depending on RV type. USAA’s premiums are competitive, but the real value is in service and claims experience.


6. State Farm

What it’s best for: Buyers who want to work with a local agent and already have State Farm auto/home insurance.

State Farm is everywhere. If you have a State Farm agent, they can likely quote your RV. You probably already know the brand.

Pros: – Local agent support (important if you have complex situations) – Strong bundling discounts – Excellent claims infrastructure nationwide – Very competitive for full-timers – Good rates for multiple vehicles – Financial stability beyond question

Cons: – RV insurance isn’t specialized (it’s just a vehicle to them) – Underwriting can be tight for older RVs or unusual configurations – Personal belongings coverage is minimal without add-ons – Attached accessories may not be covered unless specifically added – Roadside assistance is basic (not RV-specialized) – Agent variable — quality depends entirely on your local agent

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Available discount for full-time RV policies – Good options for RV business use coverage – Can add RV-specific riders to policies

Pricing Context: $750-1,400 annually depending on bundling. State Farm can be very competitive for bundled policies, especially full-timers.


7. Foremost / Farmers Group

What it’s best for: Buyers with older RVs, unique RV types, or non-standard situations where other insurers won’t take them.

Foremost Insurance (owned by Farmers Group) specializes in hard-to-place risks. If you have an older RV, an unusual configuration, or have been turned down elsewhere, Foremost will likely work with you.

Pros: – Willing to write policies others won’t (older RVs, unique setups) – Specialized underwriting for edge cases – Good personal belongings coverage – Attached accessories coverage as standard – Full-timer coverage available – Willing to work with non-standard situations

Cons: – Premiums can be higher than mainstream carriers – Customer service is adequate but not exceptional – Claims can be slower than major carriers – Limited discount opportunities – Roadside assistance is basic – Less digital service options

Unique RV-Specific Features: – Will insure RVs other companies reject – Mechanical breakdown coverage available – Campground host liability coverage – Good coverage for seasonal use

Pricing Context: $1,000-1,800 annually depending on RV type and your situation. Foremost is typically more expensive but essential if you can’t get covered elsewhere.


Quick Comparison Table

Note on Mexican coverage: None of the seven providers above currently offer coverage for RV travel in Mexico. For cross-border trips, contact a specialty broker or ask your primary insurer about a short-term Mexican auto/RV rider.

ProviderBest ForAnnual Cost RangeRV SpecialtyFull-TimerAvailability
Good SamPart-timers, specialists$800–1,400ExcellentYesMost states
National GeneralFull-timers, nationwide$900–1,600ExcellentExcellentAll 50 states
ProgressiveBundlers$700–1,300GoodYesAll 50 states
RoamlyTech-first buyers$600–1,200GoodYesAll 50 states
USAAMilitary members$800–1,500GoodYesAll eligible
State FarmLocal agent support$750–1,400AdequateExcellentAll 50 states
ForemostHard-to-place, older RVs$1,000–1,800ExcellentYesAll 50 states

RV Insurance vs Auto Insurance — Why You Can’t Just Add Your RV to Your Car Policy

Let me be direct: if you add your RV to your car insurance policy as a rider, you’re rolling the dice with your financial future.

Most insurance companies require a dedicated RV insurance policy — you typically cannot add a motorhome to a standard auto policy. Here’s why:

Coverage Gaps

Your auto insurer will interpret your RV coverage through an auto lens. Personal belongings? Not covered (cars don’t have belongings; they have safety deposit box valuables). Attached awnings and generators? Not covered under the vehicle coverage. Living in the RV? Many policies specifically exclude this or reduce coverage significantly.

Claims Denial Risk

Auto adjusters evaluate damage through auto assumptions. When they see $15,000 in damage to the interior of your RV from a water leak, they might classify it as maintenance (not covered). When your slide-out fails and causes structural damage, they might say it’s a mechanical failure (not a collision).

RV-specialized adjusters understand these scenarios. They know what’s covered and what isn’t from day one.

Liability Problems

If you’re living full-time in an RV covered under an auto policy, your liability limits may be completely inadequate. The policy was written assuming occasional recreational use. If someone gets seriously injured in or around your RV, and you’re living there full-time, the insurer might argue the coverage was misrepresented.

Towing and Roadside

Your auto insurer’s roadside assistance is built for cars. When you break down with a 40-foot RV with a diesel engine, hydraulic leveling systems, and slide-outs, you need someone who knows what they’re doing. Car-focused assistance may leave you stranded or charge you thousands out of pocket.

The Bottom Line

Most insurance companies require a dedicated RV insurance policy. The alternative is hoping nothing happens, and gambling with everything you own.


Full-Timer vs Part-Timer Coverage — Different Needs for Different RV Lifestyles

The way you use your RV changes everything about what coverage you actually need.

Part-Timer Coverage

You’re a part-timer if: – You store your RV at your primary residence most of the year – You take seasonal trips (summer travel, winter snow-birding) – You have a permanent home address – Your RV is a recreational vehicle, not a primary residence

Part-timers can use standard RV policies with lower liability limits (usually $300K/$500K). You need personal belongings coverage and attached accessories coverage, but your basic liability exposure is lower. You’re covered for the 2-4 months per year you’re actually using the RV.

Cost: $800-1,200 annually for solid coverage.

Full-Timer Coverage

You’re a full-timer if: – Your RV is your primary residence – You live in it year-round – You’ve abandoned your permanent home address – Your mail goes to your RV or a mail service

Full-timers need higher liability limits ($500K/$1M minimum, $1M/$2M recommended). Why? Because you’re living there. Your RV is your home. If someone gets injured on your property, the liability exposure is massive. Additionally, your personal belongings coverage should be substantial because you own more stuff (furniture, appliances, etc.).

Full-timer policies also address extended occupancy concerns. Standard policies sometimes limit the number of consecutive days the RV can be occupied. Full-timer policies remove this restriction.

Cost: $1,200-1,800 annually for comprehensive coverage.

The Practical Reality

Many people misrepresent their usage to save money. They claim “part-time” but live in the RV full-time. This is insurance fraud. When you file a claim, the insurer will investigate. They’ll find your mail address is a mail service. They’ll see you haven’t had a permanent residence in three years. They’ll deny your claim and potentially cancel your policy.

Don’t do this. It’s not worth it.


What Your Dealer Pushes vs What You Actually Need

I work inside the industry. I see which insurance carriers dealerships point buyers to, which ones actually pay claims when it matters, and which ones don’t. That’s the split I want you to see before you sign.

What Dealers Often Push

Many RV dealers have preferred insurance carriers. Why? Because those carriers pay higher commissions. A dealer might earn 5-8% commission on an insurance policy, which translates to $100-400 on a typical RV insurance policy. Dealers don’t make a ton on RV sales anymore (margins are tight), so insurance commissions matter.

You’ll often hear dealers say things like: “We have a relationship with [Insurance Company]. They’re the best.” What they mean is: “They pay us the most.” That insurance company might not be the best for you.

What You Actually Need

Here’s what matters: 1. Actual RV specialty — not just “we write RVs” 2. Claims expertise — they’ve adjusted RV claims before 3. Personal belongings coverage — adequate for your stuff 4. Attached accessories coverage — awnings, generators, etc. 5. Appropriate liability limits — your actual usage (full-timer vs part-timer) 6. Reasonable pricing — not marked up through dealer commission

My Honest Take

I talk to buyers about insurance on the day they buy. I explain what they need. If my preferred carrier is the right fit, great. But I’ll say directly: “Here’s who I’m affiliated with. Here’s what they offer. Here’s also who else you should call and get quotes from.”

The best RV insurance company for you is the one that covers your actual needs at a reasonable price. Not the one that benefits your dealer’s commission.


6 Insider Tips About RV Insurance You Need to Know

1. Multi-Policy Bundling Is Real Savings

If you bundle auto, home, and RV insurance with the same carrier, you can save $200-400+ annually. It’s not just marketing hype. Call Progressive, State Farm, or National General and ask for full bundling quotes. The discount is substantial. For example, bundling with Progressive saved one of my customers $280 per year.

2. Don’t Over-Insure Older RVs

If you own a 2005 RV worth $8,000, don’t buy $25,000 in personal belongings coverage. You’ll pay for coverage you’ll never use. Match your coverage to your actual belongings. Adjust your coverage down as your RV ages and depreciates.

3. Roadside Assistance Is Not All the Same

Some RV policies include roadside assistance. Some don’t. When they do, quality varies wildly. Good Sam’s roadside assistance is specialized for RVs. Progressive’s is basic. If you do a lot of remote camping, paying extra for quality roadside assistance ($50-100 annually) is cheaper than being stranded 200 miles from a service center.

4. Mexican Insurance Is Separate, Not Optional

If you drive your RV to Mexico — and you should, Mexico is incredible — you need separate Mexican liability insurance. For standard cars, this is typically $15-$40 per day; for RVs and motorhomes, rates are higher — full coverage for a newer motorhome can cost over $1,000 for a two-week trip. But if you don’t have it and get in an accident, you’re liable for everything. Mexican police don’t care about your U.S. insurance. Get it before you cross the border.

5. Full-Timer Coverage Requires Honesty

If you’re living full-time in your RV, you cannot claim otherwise on your policy. Insurers will find out. They investigate claims. If they discover you’re a full-timer on a part-timer policy, they’ll deny your claim and potentially cancel coverage. Full-timer policies cost more, but they’re the right way to do it.

6. Check Accessory Coverage Limits Carefully

If you have a $5,000 awning, $8,000 solar system, and $3,000 generator, you have $16,000 in accessories. Many standard RV policies cap accessories at $2,500. You need to specifically add comprehensive accessory coverage or buy it as a rider. This is cheap — usually $50-150 annually — but it’s critical if you’ve invested in add-ons.


FAQ: RV Insurance Questions Dealers Don’t Answer

Q: What liability limits should I actually buy?

A: Minimum $300K/$500K for part-timers. Seriously consider $500K/$1M. Full-timers should buy $500K/$1M minimum, with $1M/$2M being smart if you have assets to protect. Liability coverage is cheap compared to what someone can sue you for. A serious injury can cost $500K-$2M+ in medical bills and damages. Don’t cheap out here.

Q: Will my RV’s contents actually be covered if they’re damaged?

A: Only if you buy personal belongings coverage. Standard collision and comprehensive coverage (which covers weather, theft, vandalism) doesn’t cover your belongings inside the RV. You need “personal property coverage” or “contents coverage.” This is typically $15-30 per $1,000 of coverage. If you have $10,000 in belongings, expect $150-300 annually.

Q: Is roadside assistance really necessary?

A: For part-timers who camp nearby and have AAA, maybe not. For full-timers or anyone camping in remote areas, absolutely yes. RV towing can cost $2,000-5,000+. Roadside assistance typically includes it for $25-100 annually. Cheap insurance against a massive bill.

Q: What if I want to drive to Mexico? Will I be covered?

A: Not with a standard RV policy. You need separate Mexican liability insurance purchased before you cross the border. U.S. insurance is completely invalid in Mexico. For standard cars, costs are $15-40 per day. For RVs and motorhomes, rates are higher — full coverage for a newer motorhome can cost over $1,000 for a two-week trip. This is a separate policy you can buy from specialized insurers (often brokers near the border). Get it before you leave.

Q: Are there discounts for storing my RV off-season?

A: Yes. Most insurers will reduce your premium if your RV is stored and not in use for several months. Some companies offer “lay-up coverage” which is dramatically cheaper during off-season storage. If you store your RV October-April, ask your insurer about reducing coverage during those months. Can save $200-400 annually.

Q: Can I bundle my RV insurance with my auto policy from a different company?

A: Not directly. Insurance bundling only works if all your policies are with the same company. However, you can still save through other discounts. Ask about claims-free discounts, multi-vehicle discounts, low-mileage discounts, etc. Also ask specifically: “What’s your best price if I’m willing to get auto or home insurance with you too?” Sometimes the savings are worth switching.


The Bottom Line: Which Company Should You Actually Choose?

Here’s my honest ranking, based on what I see actually working for RV owners I talk to:

Best Overall: Good Sam Insurance They understand RVs better than anyone. Their pricing is competitive. Their customer service is solid. If you’re a part-timer, this is my top pick. The only downside is limited state availability, but if they’re available where you live, get a quote.

Best for Full-Timers: National General Holdings Full-timer coverage is the most complex. National General has spent years perfecting it. Get quotes from their various brands (Rodgers, Heatherwood). Their full-timer expertise is unmatched.

Best for Bundlers: Progressive If you already have auto or home insurance with them, bundle everything. The discounts are real and substantial. Standalone, they’re not the best. But bundled, they’re hard to beat on price.

Best for Military: USAA The service quality is exceptional. If you’re eligible, get quotes here. The premiums are competitive, and the claims experience is industry-leading.

Best for Hard-to-Place Situations: Foremost If other companies have turned you down, Foremost will work with you. They specialize in edge cases.

Action Steps:

  1. Determine your RV usage: Part-timer or full-timer?
  2. Get quotes from at least three companies (use Good Sam, National General, and one bundler)
  3. Compare not just price, but coverage details: personal belongings limits, accessories coverage, liability limits
  4. Ask specific questions about claims handling and roadside assistance quality
  5. Check reviews on independent sites (not just their website reviews)
  6. Lock in your decision and review again in 12 months

One final thing: RV insurance is the one place in RV ownership where you should not cheap out. A breakdown costs $2,000-5,000. A liability claim costs $100,000+. A water damage claim costs $15,000-30,000. Your insurance is the only thing between a bad day and financial ruin. Get the right coverage.


More Common Questions

How much does RV insurance cost?

How much does RV insurance cost depends on the class, usage, and coverage type. Travel trailer insurance runs $250–$500 annually because there’s no engine risk. Motorhome insurance costs $800–$1,600 for Class B and C rigs, and Class A diesel pushers can hit $2,000–$4,500. Full-timer RV insurance — which treats the RV as your primary residence — adds $200–$800 on top of standard rates because the liability profile is closer to homeowners than auto.

Is RV insurance required, and does my auto insurance cover my RV?

Is RV insurance required? For motorhomes: yes, every state requires at least liability coverage because they’re classified as motor vehicles. For travel trailers: not always — some states only require coverage when the trailer is being towed (the tow vehicle’s policy extends to basic liability). Does auto insurance cover an RV? Only partially — your auto liability may extend to a trailer in tow, but it won’t cover the RV’s contents, full-timer living use, or slide-out damage. That’s why dedicated RV insurance reviews matter: the differences show up at claim time, not on the quote.

What’s the best RV insurance for full-timers?

The best RV insurance for full-timers treats your RV as your primary residence, which expands the coverage map to personal belongings, full-timer liability (slip-and-falls at your rig), and emergency expense coverage if the RV becomes uninhabitable. Good Sam and National General both rank well on objective full-timer RV insurance comparisons. USAA serves military full-timers. Progressive and Roamly cover short-timers better than full-timers. Travel trailer insurance costs less than full motorhome insurance for the same coverage level because there’s no engine risk.

Related Reading

Learn more about protecting your RV investment: Best RV Extended Warranties in 2026

Protect Your RV Beyond Insurance: Gear That Pays for Itself

Insurance covers you after something goes wrong. These tools help prevent problems in the first place — and make the claims process smoother when you do need your policy.

📹 Dash Cam — Your Best Witness on the Road

RVs are magnets for road incidents — lane drifters, parking lot scrapes, debris hits. Having front and rear video footage makes insurance claims straightforward instead of a he-said-she-said nightmare.

REDTIGER 4K Dash Cam (Front & Rear) — 4K recording, GPS tracking, WiFi downloads, 24-hour parking mode. Best seller with 23,000+ reviews. Around $130 on Amazon.

🛞 Tire Pressure Monitor — Prevent Blowout Disasters

An RV tire blowout can cause $10,000+ in body and undercarriage damage. A TPMS catches slow leaks and pressure drops before they become catastrophic — potentially saving you from filing a massive claim (or having one denied for “lack of maintenance”).

Tymate RV TPMS Tire Pressure Monitoring System — Solar-powered, monitors up to 10 tires, color LCD, 6 alarm modes. 4.4 stars, 1,500+ reviews. Around $64 on Amazon.

⚡ RV Surge Protector — Save Your Electronics

Campground power surges can destroy your AC, fridge, and electronics instantly. Most insurance policies consider this “electrical damage” and may limit coverage. A surge protector is your first line of defense.

MILLIONHOME RV Surge Protector 50 Amp — Waterproof with built-in circuit analyzer. Shows pedestal voltage before you plug in. 4.8 stars, 875+ reviews. Around $70 on Amazon.

🔧 OBD2 Scanner — Know What Happened

After any mechanical incident, an OBD2 scanner gives you the diagnostic codes your insurer and repair shop need. It puts you in control of the conversation instead of taking someone else’s word for it.

BlueDriver Bluetooth Pro OBDII Scan Tool — Phone-connected, reads and clears codes, verified fix reports. Works on motorhomes and tow vehicles 1996+. 4.5 stars, 62,000+ reviews. Around $90 on Amazon.

Disclosure: Some links above are affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend products we genuinely believe in.

Have questions about your specific situation? Get in touch — I’m happy to answer.


Military veteran. Years in car and RV sales and sales management inside Georgia dealerships. Writes about RV buying and dealer strategy from the inside.


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