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RV and Motorhome Insurance: Full-Time vs. Recreational Use Differences

By the PolicyZen Team · Updated March 2026 · 8 min read

An RV is simultaneously a motor vehicle and a dwelling. Standard auto insurance policies are designed for cars and trucks — they typically exclude or severely limit coverage for the "home" aspects of an RV: personal belongings, attached equipment, and liability while parked as a residence. Dedicated RV insurance covers both dimensions.

RV insurance covers motorhomes (self-propelled: Class A, B, C) differently from towable RVs (travel trailers, fifth wheels). Motorhomes require their own auto-style liability and comprehensive/collision coverage. Towable RVs are towed by a vehicle — the towing vehicle's liability insurance covers accidents while moving, but the RV itself needs a separate policy for physical damage, personal property, and stationary liability.

What RV Insurance Covers (Beyond Auto)

Full-Time RV Living — A Different Insurance Category

If you live in your RV more than 150 days per year, standard recreational RV policies may not cover you — or will exclude coverage for the periods when the RV is your primary residence. Full-time RV insurance is a specialized product that treats the RV as your primary home, providing:

Don't use your standard auto policy as your sole RV coverage. Auto policies provide liability while driving but typically exclude: personal property inside the RV, liability while parked, coverage for attached accessories, and total loss replacement value. The gap between auto-only coverage and what you actually need can be substantial, especially on a $100,000+ motorhome.

Towable RVs: The Coverage Gap

Travel trailers and fifth wheels are towed — meaning the towing vehicle's liability insurance covers accidents while moving. But the trailer itself has no liability coverage while stationary, and no physical damage coverage at all unless you add a separate RV policy. A tree falling on your parked trailer in a campground is not covered by your truck's auto insurance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between RV insurance and auto insurance?
Auto insurance doesn't cover many RV-specific exposures. RV insurance adds coverage for personal belongings inside the RV, vacation liability (liability while the RV is parked and used as a residence), roadside assistance suited for large vehicles, full replacement cost for newer RVs, and campsite/vacation coverage. Auto policies typically cover the RV only while it's being driven.
How is full-time RV insurance different from recreational use coverage?
Full-time RV insurance treats the RV as a primary residence and includes coverage similar to homeowners insurance: personal liability at the campsite, contents coverage (as a home, not just auto), and sometimes medical payments for visitors. Recreational policies are designed for part-time use and may exclude or limit coverage when the RV is your primary dwelling. Declaring full-time use to your insurer is important — failing to do so can void claims.
Does my auto policy cover my towable RV trailer?
Not fully. Your auto policy typically covers liability for damage caused by your tow vehicle — but the trailer itself (travel trailers, fifth wheels, toy haulers) has no physical damage coverage under a standard auto policy. Separate coverage for the trailer is needed to protect it from collision, fire, theft, and storm damage.
What is vacation liability coverage in RV insurance?
Vacation liability covers your personal liability while the RV is parked and being used as a temporary residence — for example, if a visitor trips and is injured at your campsite. This coverage fills a gap between auto liability (which applies while driving) and a standard homeowners policy (which doesn't extend to your RV).
Do I need special insurance if I rent out my RV?
Yes. Standard RV policies typically exclude commercial use — renting your RV to others without notifying your insurer can void coverage. Rental-specific RV endorsements or standalone policies are available and required if you participate in peer-to-peer RV rental platforms. Always disclose rental use to your insurer before listing your RV for rent.

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