Renting RVs

/ Renting RVs #1  

Haoleguy

Platinum Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2005
Messages
802
Location
SE Connecticut
Tractor
JD 5325; Landini Mistral 50
My spouse and I are planning a camping trip to the intermountain west and would like to locate an RV company to rent from that has reasonable pricing. RV America is very very pricey and makes it cheaper to stay in a hotel. Does anyone know of an RV rental company that serves the west with good quality smaller RVs at a decent price? Would love to find a Sprinter or MB van RV if possible. Starting points are Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, Carson City, and any cities/towns in Montana, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming, and Idaho. Thank you.....Gary
 
/ Renting RVs #3  
I think you'll find that it's always cheaper to stay in a hotel... but that's a very different experience. Call your local RV dealer and ask them if they rent - of if they know who does...

Enjoy the trip!
Mike
 
/ Renting RVs #4  
I think you'll find that it's always cheaper to stay in a hotel... but that's a very different experience. Call your local RV dealer and ask them if they rent - of if they know who does...

Enjoy the trip!
Mike

I think you're exactly right.
 
/ Renting RVs #5  
I'm kind of in the same boat, we are planing on renting an RV for family to stay in during a gettogether this summer. The closest hotel is 20miles, plus we'd like to keep folks close. I believe I came up with something like 600+ for a week, not very cheap.
 
/ Renting RVs #6  
The larger the family size, the more economical it becomes to compare RV rental to hotel rooms. With an RV you also paying for the convenience of having your accommodation travel with you and probably allowing you to stay at locations that don't have hotels.

A converted Sprinter van or Class C motor home can easily be in the $60K - $100K price range to purchase new. The OP has not defined "reasonable price", however, a company is not going to purchase something like that and then rent it out for the price of a Dodge Neon.
 
/ Renting RVs #7  
I've checked into this as well. I've come to realize that...Fun+convienence=$$:eek::D:D

Once I got the bright idea to buy a 30 yr old class lll motorhome- 1973 Midas Dodge chassis......Got a good deal on it.:rolleyes:...everytime I used it I worked on it! Spent more time under the counter, on the top or under the hood that anything else! One good thing about working on the roof I had a great view of the family having fun!!:D:D

Jay
 
/ Renting RVs
  • Thread Starter
#8  
You may want to ask this question on RV.net

Hi Ron - Thank you for the rv.net suggestion. I was able to get some very good info there that had recently been posted.

Reasonable price would be in the neighborhood of $125-$150/day depending on mileage allowance. One then needs to add camping and waste disposal fees and the xtra fuel for the hog. I have not seen many of the Sprinter/MB class C conversions for rent. These have a fuel advantage over "conventional" built RVs.
 
/ Renting RVs #9  
I went a little farther west, Washington. I was glad I rented a motorhome. The hotels were few and far between. They were all prebooked. There was a road washout and if we had not been in the MH, we would have had to drive all day to get a bed. Also my experience out west is, the hotels are mostly Mom & Pop and pretty Spartan.
 
/ Renting RVs #10  
I've checked into this as well. I've come to realize that...Fun+convienence=$$:eek::D:D

Once I got the bright idea to buy a 30 yr old class lll motorhome- 1973 Midas Dodge chassis......Got a good deal on it.:rolleyes:...everytime I used it I worked on it! Spent more time under the counter, on the top or under the hood that anything else! One good thing about working on the roof I had a great view of the family having fun!!:D:D

Jay

When we had our houseboat it was the same way..anytime we used it ..I was working on it while the family was having fun...after 3 yrs. of that ..we stayed in hotels on the lake or ocean and then we all had fun. The only time I rented a large Winnebago we camped by a Lake and ended up stuck ..I hiked for 5+ miles to get a tow truck..Hotels are really nice..LOL
 
/ Renting RVs #11  
Bill Engvall claims to have rented one and said RV stands for "Ruins Vacation".:D I've never rented one, but I've owned a slide-in pickup camper, two conventional travel trailers, one fifth-wheel travel trailer, and two motorhomes.:D We were full timers for about 6 years. Both my brothers are still full timers, both have been, and one still is, in the business of RV service and repair. Maintaining one is almost a full time job. It's a great way to travel and there are a lot of beautiful and interesting places to stay, but it's definitely not a cheap way to vacation.
 
/ Renting RVs #12  
I rented a Class C RV once long ago. From peoples comments, things haven't changed much. They suck gas, ours sucked at getting over high passes too. It hadn't been maintained or tuned up. You don't realize that until you are climbing a 8000' pass. The frig in our unit broke, so you can choose between killing time and missing vacation trying to get it fixed, or buy a cooler and hit the ice machines.

Sometimes there are things you see and would like to stop, but there are no parking spaces/areas big enough. The Sprinter would be better in that regard. There used to be lots of nice National Forest tent camping areas with limited facilities but very natural and peaceful and low cost. Depends on what you are focused on. Most RV's wouldn't be able get to the more remote camping areas, just too big for the access roads.

One nice thing about an RV is you can fix your own meals usually and save a bit of time and money there.

If you are amenable to more rustic camping, a pickup with cap or a van is a good compromise. You can carry all you need, have shelter for all weather. Can hit a motel every couple days if you want, and go about anywhere at half or less the fuel price of an RV.

Dave.
 
/ Renting RVs #13  
We rented one of the larger motorhomes a few years ago. Me, the wife and 6 grandkids made the round trip from Houston to Orlando to see the mouse. The kids were aged 5 to 13. It turned out to be one of the best vacations ever. No single vehicle would of held that many plus would of needed 2 rooms every night. Base price then was about $2,500 for 7 days plus excess milage over 100 miles a day. Gas was a little cheaper then but was still over $100 to top off the tank, we tried to keep from getting to low on fuel as be did not want to get stranded someplace. Mileage was about 7-8 mpg for a estimated 2000 mile round trip.

It was like driving a bus, very scary at first but this unit was new and handled well. We used the rest area's on I-10 for a couple of nightly stops and a KOA in Orlando with pull through site.

It worked out well with the kids as they could spread out and play their games. Wife could fix lunch without stopping. No frequent potty stops. Even had a TV that you could play DVD's.

Would I want to buy one, don't think so. Would I rent one again, sure if it met my needs for the trip. Because of some of the excess milage fees what we had considered doing is driving to someplace like Denver then picking up the RV for a trip into the mountains.
 
/ Renting RVs #14  
Cruise America is the most common rental I see out west.
My Dad and I looked at a larger rental a few years ago as I had just sold my old Chalet pop-up. The prices were as much if not more for a motel. We ended up finding a place that would rent a pop-up similar to what I had just sold.
 
/ Renting RVs #15  
There are a number of RV rental places that work on commission; i.e., if you own an RV, you leave it with them, they might do some advertising, and they handle all the paperwork to rent it out. They clean it up after each rental, service it when needed (but the owner pays for the service). I'm not sure of the details now, but years ago, they kept half the rent money, the RV owner got the other half. I checked into it when we had our first little motorhome, but decided it was just too much risk to suit me. And of course, the owner has to plan ahead and reserve the motorhome for his/her own use. Otherwise, when you get ready to use your own RV, it might be out on a rental, or it might have been reserved for the time you wanted to use it.
 
/ Renting RVs #16  
About 12 years ago, me and the ex spent a week and a half camping from Palm Springs to San Fran and back to LA on both sides of the mountains.

We stayed in several KOA's and hit some camping cabins, and 2 hotels...
of course I was a somewhat younger and bolder Marine.. and we used a tent...
It was a great experience.. Now if we would have had kids, that would have been difficult...

But I would not have traded it for anything!

Tent camping is not bad in the right conditions...


J
 
/ Renting RVs #17  
We have rented several times over the years from a outfit called El Monte Rents and their coaches besides coming in all sizes have always been first class. We have taken them to Baja several times, one time for a month and have never had any problems. If you rent in the off season and for a longer period of time you can usually work out a great deal and we have always been able to get enough free miles have never had to pay extra. If we are going to stay put someplace we have also had good luck renting a used RV from a dealer that has it for sale. Those can be really cheap per day but stiff on the miles so they are good if your stayin put. For us it was a pretty economical way for a family of 6 to travel for a bit and no restaurants is a big savings.
 
/ Renting RVs #18  
A few years ago I was going to rent a 45' class A diesel pusher for a 2 week trip out west. By the time I added the rental charges, mileage charges and fuel, it was going to cost me well over $6k. :eek:

So, I waited a couple of years and kept looking for a "great deal" on a really low mileage unit that was less than 5 years old. I finally found a deal, thanks to our deep recession, and bought one early last year. It takes a while to get used to, especially that big and towing a vehicle behind you. Once I got comfortable with that, it's been great. If I run the speed limits, I get just under 10 mpg. It has 3 different TV's in it so some kids can play video games while others watch movies during the trip.

My wife won't even consider driving it, so we do have to stop and 'camp' at rest areas when I'm tired. Still, that takes about 5 minutes from the time we pull in until all the slide outs are out, blinds pulled, levelers down and we're in bed. With all the diesel trucks running, nobody even hears my 10k diesel generator running. If it's winter, I can get by on just the house batteries for at least 10 hours since the furnace runs off propane. I like it. To me, it's sort of like taking a little bit of "home" with you on your trip.
 

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