28 Tips for RV Newbies (Part Two): How to Make Your First Trips Easier, Safer, and More Fun
The RV Atlas Podcast
RVFTA Podcast Network
4.6 • 584 Ratings
🗓️ 18 January 2026
⏱️ 56 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
We’re going to pick up right where we left off, and we’re going to stay true to the spirit of these episodes: no gatekeeping, no judgment, and no pretending that anyone is “born” knowing how to operate an RV.
Tip 14: Camp your way and ignore the noise
This is a cornerstone tip—and it applies to everything from meals to screen time to where you camp. Social media has created a very loud, very opinionated culture around what camping is “supposed” to look like. But the reality is that every family has different needs, comfort levels, budgets, and energy.
If ordering pizza to the campground on Friday night keeps everyone happy, do it. If you want to keep limited screen time as part of your routine—especially with young kids—do it. If you want to cook on a Blackstone instead of mastering campfire cooking right away, do it. If you can only camp 20 minutes from home, do it. You will build memories whether you’re at Yellowstone or a county park that’s practically in your backyard—and you don’t need anyone’s permission to enjoy camping in the way that works for your family.
Tip 15: Expect things to break, and don’t let repairs steal your weekend
This one is blunt: things will break. Sometimes it’s your fault. Sometimes it isn’t. But either way, you don’t want to spend your precious campground time spiraling over a broken stereo, a cabinet latch, or a loose piece of trim.
We’ve been there—especially early on, when buying an RV felt like this huge, exciting “we made it to middle class life” purchase and we wanted everything to be perfect. But the campground is the point. The RV is the delivery vessel. If something breaks and it doesn’t prevent you from safely camping, put it on a list, handle it later, and get back outside.
Tip 16: Batch your warranty items so you don’t lose camping time to the dealer
New RV owners often make the same mistake: they run back to the dealer for every little issue. The problem is that dealerships can keep your RV longer than expected—sometimes waiting weeks for parts—and you can lose a big chunk of your camping season.
Instead, keep a list on your phone and batch the items. Unless it’s a safety issue or prevents the RV from rolling, wait until you have a real punch list. If possible, limit dealer visits to once a year. Your camping time matters, and “prime season” is not when you want your RV sitting behind a service bay waiting for a part you didn’t even know was backordered.
Tip 17: Join the right Facebook groups and avoid the mean ones
There are amazing RV Facebook groups… and there are “rage-baity” groups where people smell newbie blood and circle like sharks.
Our recommendation: join manufacturer-specific groups and make/model subgroups. Those communities can be incredibly helpful when you have a problem and want a fast fix from people who own the same rig. Also look for smaller, niche regional groups where people actually share campground intel and want to help.
If a group makes you feel stressed, embarrassed, or angry after you read it, leave. Protect your peace. RVing is supposed to be fun.
And of course--join the RV Atlas group on facebook! We keep things friendly there!
Tip 18: Make spare keys and consider an electronic RV lock
At some point, most people lock themselves out of their RV. Don’t wait for that moment to realize you should have planned ahead.
Get spare keys made and stash them in a smart place.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | So they would wake up at 4 a.m. and I'd play a movie for them. And one time I played them |
| 0:05.5 | Finding Nemo, 4 a.m. sitting there, I'm half asleep. They're watching Finding Nemo. Everyone's |
| 0:10.8 | relaxed. Everybody's cozy, finding Nemo's on. And after the movie ended at, say, 6 or 6.30, |
| 0:18.3 | I went outside of the RV. I stepped outside and I realized that the outdoor speakers |
| 0:23.4 | were on and that finding Nemo had been blasting throughout the campground at 4 a.m. And nobody said |
| 0:30.0 | anything to me. I got a few looks later in the day. Hi, everyone. I'm Stephanie. And I'm Jeremy. And we are the authors of the best-selling |
| 0:41.1 | where should we camp next series of guidebooks and camping journals. And of the brand new children's books, |
| 0:46.2 | my first book of hiking and my first book of camping. This year we are celebrating the 12th anniversary |
| 0:51.3 | of the RV Atlas podcast. Join us now as we cover the best campgrounds, the best RVs, the best food, and the best gear and gadgets to bring with you when you go. |
| 1:01.0 | So pull up a chair and join us around the digital campfire. |
| 1:04.0 | This is season 12 of the RV Atlas. |
| 1:13.9 | Hello everybody. RV Atlas. Hello, everybody, and welcome to this week's episode of the RV Atlas. |
| 1:18.3 | We are back with part two of our 28 tips for RV newbies. |
| 1:24.0 | And thank you to everyone that listened last week. |
| 1:26.0 | We've got a lot of nice feedback on the episode, a lot of commentary in the RV Atlas group on Facebook. And it certainly brought Stephanie and I back down for a walk on Memory Lane. So that we were like feeling like I was feeling like a newbie again last week, Stephanie. Were you getting that newbie vibe too? |
| 1:43.8 | Look, some people say that, you know, you forget what it was like when you didn't know what you were doing or when you were first starting out. I don't know what it is about me. I don't forget that stuff. Like, I, like, it's the same as people say, oh, you forget how hard it was when they were baby, you know, little kids are babies and you forget. I don't forget. I remember. And I'm always like, I don't know. I feel like that's, like, I connect with people that are having that experience and being like, this is stressful or this is, you know, a lot to learn. And somebody like, oh, it's easy. No, I'm like, no, it's a lot. It's a lot. We're both not like. |
| 2:18.4 | It's exciting and it's a lot. |
| 2:20.0 | Yeah, it's exciting. |
| 2:21.1 | It's a lot. |
| 2:21.4 | It's a great way to put it. |
| 2:22.1 | And neither of us are the gatekeeping territorial types of people. We talked last week, almost our beers are not that way. but in so many things in life, you know, the people that have the experience gate keep the knowledge from the |
| 2:34.4 | new person because they want to protect their turf or not have all the campgrounds book up. |
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