RV Vacations Vs. Cruise Vacations for Spring Break (Which One Wins and Why!)
The RV Atlas Podcast
RVFTA Podcast Network
4.6 • 584 Ratings
🗓️ 29 January 2026
⏱️ 56 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
For 12 years, we’ve made an RV podcast for RV people. We’ve driven all over North America with kids and dogs, chasing beach days, national parks, great food, and campfire nights. So when we tell you we did something wildly out of character last spring… we mean it.
After a decade of spring break RV trips—Myrtle Beach, Charleston, and even one memorable spring break camping trip in Texas—we booked our first-ever cruise. We had never cruised as kids. We’d never cruised as adults. But the boys were cruise-curious (because how could they not be, with the commercials and the stories from friends?), and our spring break landed early in the calendar—right in that “South Carolina might still be brisk and the pools might not even be open” zone.
So we tried it. And for an entire week, we couldn’t stop comparing it to RV travel.
This isn’t a cruise review. We’re not cruise experts. This is simply what we learned when an RV family tried a classic spring break cruise—and why, even after a fun trip, we’re still firmly in the “RV vacation” camp as our family’s go-to for spring break each year!
1) RV vacations can be far more affordable
Cruises can be expensive, especially with five people—and we’re not talking about luxury suites. Between the rooms (we booked two rooms so we’d have two bathrooms), add-ons, and general travel costs, the total number adds up fast.
What really struck us is what that same amount of money can buy in the RV world. Depending on how you shop, one cruise vacation can equal a significant down payment on an RV—or even the full cost of a used pop-up or used travel trailer. And once you have the RV, you have a travel style that lets you control costs in a way cruising simply doesn’t.
2) Our RV setup is more comfortable than cruise ship rooms
Cruise rooms were comfortable, but they’re small. RV travel has spoiled us: our own pillows, our own towels, more space to spread out, a kitchen, and a bathroom that actually feels more functional for a family than a cruise ship bathroom.
The funny part is that RVing might be what made the cruise room feel manageable—because we’re used to small-space living. But if we’re choosing the most comfortable option for our family, RV travel wins.
3) We prefer the RV food situation
On an RV trip, we get the best of both worlds: we can cook (Blackstone griddle, Weber grill—whatever fits the vibe) and still go out for great meals when we want to.
On a cruise, you’re eating out for everything. That can be relaxing in one way—no meal planning—but it also means constant eating, constant temptation, and fewer opportunities to reset with simple, familiar food. For us, the quality also felt like a consistent “B+.” Totally fine. Totally edible. But not the same as picking our favorite restaurants in a place like Charleston and building the vacation around truly great meals--and making our own great meals whenever we want.
4) RV vacations are naturally more active
On our spring break RV trips, we’re moving: walking, hiking, swimming, surfing, exploring towns, biking around campgrounds, and generally living outside.
A cruise can be active if you make it active, but for our family it didn’t land that way. The rhythm felt more sedentary, and that’s not what we love most about vacation. RV vacations keep us naturally in motion.
5) Cruise pool culture is intense
We’ve been to crowded resort campgrounds during spring break. We know what pool crowds look like.
But cruise pool crowds were next-level. Chair saving, early morning competition for seats, and a vibe that felt more stressful than relaxing. On an RV trip, the pool is part of a bigger day. On a cruise ship day, it can feel like the center of the universe—becau...
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | RV vacations are 1,000 times better and cruises are awful. |
| 0:04.0 | I don't want to do that. |
| 0:04.9 | I just want to explain why we like the RV vacations better over the years. |
| 0:13.0 | Hi, everyone. |
| 0:14.1 | I'm Stephanie. |
| 0:15.1 | And I'm Jeremy. |
| 0:16.3 | And we are the authors of the bestselling Where Should We Camp Next series of guidebooks and camping journals. |
| 0:21.5 | And of the brand new children's books, my first book of hiking and my first book of camping. |
| 0:26.0 | This year we are celebrating the 12th anniversary of the RV Atlas podcast. |
| 0:30.4 | 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. |
| 0:37.8 | So pull up a chair and join us around the digital campfire. |
| 0:41.5 | This is season 12 of the RV Atlas. |
| 0:47.6 | Hello everybody and welcome to this week's episode of the RV Atlas. |
| 0:53.2 | And on this week's episode, we are going to cover something that we did |
| 0:59.1 | about a year ago that we've never talked about because we are an RV podcast. Yeah. Right. And we have |
| 1:07.7 | been an RV podcast for 12 years. And we have traveled all over North America in our RV in our RVs. But last spring, after 10 years of either going to Myrtle Beach or Charleston, basically. Texas. In Texas. We had a spring break in Texas. |
| 1:27.7 | Got a camping trip in Texas. |
| 1:29.5 | After 10 years of campground spring breaks, of RV spring breaks, all of us kind of at once, and Stephanie was probably the ringleader, all of us at once were like, you know, let's try a cruise. |
| 1:42.1 | And my whole life, I've kind of, I've been cruise curious. I've never been opposed to the idea of a cruise. But how did this all come about that, that we just, we went on this cruise instead of our typical RV vacation? There was a couple of factors. Like, first of all, to be clear, me and you, both of us never in our entire lives, |
| 2:01.5 | have been on a cruise before, not when we were kids or anything. And then over the years, |
| 2:06.5 | as our kids, like, were like middle school, high school age, they were talking about a cruise |
| 2:12.0 | and wanting to go on that because it's just like, it's just that fundamental thing, right? |
... |
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