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5th Wheel vs. Travel Trailer: Which One's Right for You?

  • Writer: Joe Stanford
    Joe Stanford
  • Jun 9
  • 7 min read
Joe "Squatch" Stanford in an A&L RV Sales hoodie standing with a Bigfoot mascot between a fifth wheel and a travel trailer at golden hour

So you've started shopping for an RV, and you've already run smack into the question that stumps just about everybody: the classic 5th wheel vs travel trailer showdown. Do I get a 5th wheel or a travel trailer? Don't feel bad if your eyes glazed over the first time somebody explained the difference — mine did too, and I sell these things for a living.

Here's the deal. I'm Joe, but most folks around here call me Squatch, and I'm the guy you'll find wandering the lot at A&L RV Sales. The whole point of Camping with Squatch is to help you camp smarter — which mostly means me telling you the stuff I wish somebody had told me before I knew a lick about any of this. No fancy sales talk, just straight answers. So let's break this down in plain English, starting with what each one actually is.


First, What Is a 5th Wheel?

A 5th wheel is a towable RV that hooks up to a special hitch mounted right in the bed of a pickup truck — not to a ball hitch on your back bumper. That hitch sits over the truck's rear axle, and the front of the trailer climbs up and over the truck bed. That raised front section hanging over your tailgate? That's usually where you'll find the master bedroom or a big ol' living area.

That over-the-bed design is the whole reason 5th wheels feel so roomy inside. You're basically getting a second story, which is why they've got the most living space and the most "wait, this is nicer than my actual house" feel of any towable. (I say that with love. My house is fine. Mostly.)


And a Travel Trailer?

A travel trailer is the shape most people picture when they hear "camper." It's a single-level trailer that hooks to a ball mount on the back of your tow vehicle. Because it doesn't need a truck bed to connect to, you've got way more flexibility in what can pull it — plenty of SUVs and smaller trucks can handle the lighter models just fine.

Travel trailers come in every size under the sun, from itty-bitty teardrops you could practically tow with a riding lawnmower (please don't) all the way up to 35-footers with slide-outs galore. That range is a big part of why they're so popular.


The Head-to-Head Comparison

Here's where the two really part ways, factor by factor.


Tow vehicle. This is usually the dealbreaker right out of the gate. A 5th wheel requires a pickup truck with a bed to mount that hitch — there's no getting around it, no matter how much you want to. A travel trailer is a lot more forgiving; depending on the weight, you might be able to pull it with the SUV or half-ton already sitting in your driveway. If you don't own a pickup and have zero interest in buying one, congratulations, the universe just made part of this decision for you.

Towing feel and stability. Because a 5th wheel's weight sits over the truck's rear axle instead of dangling off the back bumper, it tends to feel more planted and stable on the highway — especially in wind, or when a semi blows past you and tries to suck you into the next county. Travel trailers can tow beautifully too, but they're more prone to sway and usually want a weight-distribution hitch and sway control to keep everything calm and boring, which is exactly how you want highway driving to feel.

Living space. Point goes to the 5th wheel here, and it's not real close. That raised front section and the taller ceilings give you a more open, home-like interior, and they usually come with nicer kitchens, bigger bathrooms, and more storage than you'll know what to do with. If you're planning to live in it full-time or take long trips, that extra elbow room makes a real difference around day three when everybody's tired of bumping into each other.

Maneuvering and parking. Travel trailers are generally easier to back into a site and easier to store at home, since they sit lower and don't need a truck-bed hitch. 5th wheels are longer and taller, so they take a little more practice to park — I won't lie to you, your first few backing attempts might draw a small crowd. But here's the good news: a lot of folks find the over-the-axle design actually turns more predictably once you get the hang of it. Give it a weekend and you'll look like a pro. Give it a day and you'll look like me on day one.

Price. As a rule, travel trailers start cheaper and cover a wider budget range, which is a big reason they're so popular with first-time buyers. 5th wheels usually cost more, but you're also getting more trailer and more livability for the money. Which one's the "better deal" depends entirely on your budget and how much you're actually going to use the thing.

Driving footprint. Here's an underrated 5th wheel perk nobody talks about: because part of its length overlaps your truck bed, your total length going down the road can actually be shorter than a travel trailer with the same amount of room inside. Worth keeping in mind if your favorite campground has length limits on the sites.


The One Number That Trips Everyone Up: Weight

If there's one thing I wish every single buyer understood before they fall head over heels for a floor plan, it's this: the trailer has to match your tow vehicle, not just your taste. Every truck and SUV has a tow rating and a payload rating, and a 5th wheel hitch dumps a big chunk of weight straight into your truck bed — which eats into that payload number faster than you'd think.

And here's the part that gets folks: a trailer's "dry weight" on the brochure is what it weighs empty, at the factory, before you've added a single thing. Once you load it up with water, propane, camp chairs, the griddle, a week of groceries, and all the stuff your spouse swears you "might need," you can easily tack on a thousand pounds or more. Always shop against the loaded weight with a safety cushion, never the pretty little dry number on the sticker. Towing right at your limit is how a fun trip turns into a white-knuckle, both-hands-on-the-wheel, "why did we do this" kind of drive.

This is exactly the kind of thing worth checking before you buy, not after. Bring me your truck's year, make, and model, and I'll tell you what it'll safely pull in about five minutes — no math homework required on your end.


5th Wheel vs. Travel Trailer: So Which One Should You Buy?

It really comes down to how you camp and what you're already driving.

A travel trailer tends to be the sweet spot if you're new to all this, want to keep costs down, or want to tow with an SUV or smaller truck you already own. For a lot of first-time families easing into camping, it's the most natural place to start — lower cost, lower commitment, and plenty of room to grow into it.

A 5th wheel tends to win if you've already got a pickup, you value that rock-solid feel on long highway hauls, and you want all the living space you can get your hands on. That makes it a favorite with retirees and full-timers who are spending serious time in their rig, plus weekend warriors who want their setup to feel like an actual home away from home.

There's no trophy for "objectively best camper" here — there's only the one that fits your truck, your budget, and the kind of trips you're daydreaming about while you're supposed to be working. It's a conversation I have with folks all the time, and the honest answer's a little different for everybody.


Squatch Tips: What I Tell Every First-Time Shopper

I've walked a whole lot of people through this exact decision, and here's the stuff I find myself saying over and over — the advice that'll save you a headache (and probably a few bucks) down the road:

  • Rent before you buy if you can. One weekend in a travel trailer or a 5th wheel will teach you more than a month of late-night YouTube rabbit holes. You'll figure out real quick whether you love the single-level layout or you're a stairs-to-the-bedroom kind of person.

  • Measure your real life, not your highlight reel. Everybody shops for the two-week national park epic. Almost everybody actually camps a weekend at a time, an hour or two from the house. Buy for the trips you'll really take, not the brochure fantasy.

  • Walk it like you live in it. Stand at the sink. Sit on the toilet with the door shut (yes, really, do it). Lie down on the bed. A floor plan that looks like a palace in photos can feel like a phone booth the second you actually move around in it.

  • Figure out where it's gonna sleep at home. Before you fall in love, make sure you've got somewhere to park and store the thing — and that you can get it in and out of your driveway without three reverse attempts and a word your grandkids shouldn't hear.

  • Don't shop on price alone. The cheapest rig that doesn't fit your truck or your trips isn't a deal — it's a future regret with wheels. Match the trailer to your setup first, then we talk numbers.

That's the same advice I'd give my own family standing in my own driveway, and that's really the whole heart of Camping with Squatch: helping you get it right the first time so you spend your weekends camping instead of second-guessing.


Still Not Sure? Come Find Me

Real talk — the easiest way to settle the great 5th-wheel-versus-travel-trailer debate is to walk through a few of each and see how they hit you. Two floor plans can look identical on paper and feel like totally different planets the moment you step inside. You don't really know until you're standing in it going "huh, this is bigger than my first apartment."

If you're anywhere around Murfreesboro, Smyrna, or the greater Middle Tennessee area, come track me down at A&L RV Sales in Christiana and we'll walk through some rigs together. I'll help you figure out what your truck can safely tow, what fits your budget, and what suits the way you actually like to camp — no pressure, no hard sell, no weird salesman handshake. Honestly, half the folks I talk to come in leaning one way and leave realizing the other one fits their life better, and those are some of my favorite conversations to have.

Come see me when you're ready, give me a call or text at 615-653-7561, or just follow along with Camping with Squatch for more straight talk on getting out there. Either way, I'll help you find the rig that's right for you — not the one that's right for my commission.

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