By: Chuck Price

Last Updated: May 23, 2026

Article Scope and Verification

This review covers RV Overnights pricing, host coverage, app ratings, complaints, and traveler fit for 2026.

Data Verification: Host counts, pricing, app ratings, refund language, member rules, and road-resource counts were checked on May 23, 2026. RV Overnights is still growing, and pricing or app ratings may change. Confirm current terms directly at RVOvernights.com before joining.

I’m Chuck Price, an RVer with more than 35 years of experience. I’ve personally tested RV membership clubs, including Harvest Hosts and Boondockers Welcome, and I’m evaluating RV Overnights the same way I evaluate every overnight-parking option: price, route fit, reliability, rules, and real-world usefulness.

How I Evaluated RV Overnights

This review uses official RV Overnights pages, app-store listings, public membership details, and RVer discussions from travel communities. I focused on claims that affect buying decisions: cost, refund terms, self-contained RV rules, host support expectations, app ratings, and how the platform compares with Harvest Hosts and Boondockers Welcome.

TL;DR: Quick RV Overnights Review

RV Overnights is a low-cost overnight parking membership with real value, but only for the right travel style.

  • Host Network: RV Overnights lists over 1,500 hosting locations as of May 23, 2026.[1]
  • Pricing: RV Overnights shows $39.99 for the first year and renewal at $49.99 for life, as long as the subscription stays active.[2]
  • Guarantee: RV Overnights publishes a 90-day money-back guarantee, with refund conditions listed on its guarantee page.[3]
  • App Ratings: Google Play shows 3.0 from 59 reviews. Apple App Store shows 3.8 from 44 ratings, as checked May 23, 2026.[4][5]
  • Breakeven: About 2 to 3 avoided campground nights, assuming a $50 campground alternative and about $30 in host purchases per stay.
  • Best For: Budget-conscious RVers with self-contained rigs who can plan around the map instead of expecting drive-up availability everywhere.

Deal-Breakers: Who Should Not Join RV Overnights?

Do not join RV Overnights if your rig, route, or booking style does not fit the platform’s rules.

Red warning graphic highlighting RV Overnights deal breakers for self-contained campers
  • You do not have a self-contained RV. RV Overnights requires an interior bathroom, kitchen or cooking facilities, and sleeping area. Tents, rooftop tents, cars, SUVs, minivans, and pop-up campers are not allowed under the published member guidelines.[6]
  • You want no-notice overnight stops. RV Overnights requires an approved stay request before arrival. Showing up unannounced can get a member removed from the program.[6]
  • You travel with a very large rig and do not pre-check access. RV Overnights has length filters, but every large-rig stop should be checked against the host profile and access notes before booking.
  • You expect a free night with no host spend. RV Overnights states that members should expect to spend a minimum of $30 at each host location to support the business.[6]
  • You need a mature, highly rated app. The current app-store ratings are mixed, and Android reviews include both praise and serious complaints.[4][5]

Bottom Line: If you want a drive-up parking lot, a free public overnight stop, or a campground-style site with predictable hookups, RV Overnights is probably not the right fit. Start with our guide to free RV parking locations instead.

Considering Harvest Hosts instead? Harvest Hosts was showing discounted first-year pricing on its plans page when checked on May 23, 2026. Promotion windows change, so verify the final checkout price before buying. Check the current Harvest Hosts offer here.

What Is RV Overnights?

RV Overnights connects self-contained RVers with businesses that allow overnight parking through an app and website.

RV Overnights host location example with camper parked near a rural business

RV Overnights is an overnight RV parking membership. The host network includes farms, wineries, breweries, distilleries, attractions, restaurants, animal rescues, churches, nonprofits, golf courses, and other small businesses. It sits between free overnight parking and more expensive RV membership networks.

The basic idea is simple: pay for the membership, search the map, request a stay, support the host business, and leave no trace. It is not a campground substitute for every trip. It is better viewed as a route-planning tool for self-contained RVers who like small-business stops and can plan ahead.

Core Features

  • Network Size: Over 1,500 hosting locations listed by RV Overnights as of May 23, 2026.[1]
  • Membership Cost: $39.99 first year, then $49.99 renewal for life if the subscription remains active.[2]
  • Requirements: Self-contained RV or camper with interior bathroom, cooking, and sleeping facilities.[6]
  • Booking: Approved stay request required before arrival.[6]
  • Cancellation: RV Overnights says members can cancel a stay request 24 hours before arrival. Inside that window, members are told to communicate with the host.[6]

Is RV Overnights Worth It? Cost-Per-Stay Math

RV Overnights can recover its membership fee quickly, but the math depends on what you compare it against.

Illustration comparing RV Overnights membership costs against campground alternatives in 2026

The corrected breakeven: RV Overnights breaks even in about 2 to 3 avoided campground nights when you compare it against a $50 campground night and assume about $30 in host purchases per stay.

At the $39.99 first-year rate, the full-cost breakeven is about 2 stays. At the $49.99 renewal rate, it is about 3 stays. That is different from saying the membership fee alone is recovered in 2 to 3 stays.

Scenario 1: Minimal Use, 3 Stays Per Year

  • Membership: $49.99 renewal-rate example
  • Expected host purchases: 3 stays x $30 = $90
  • Total annual cost: $139.99
  • Cost per night: About $46.66
  • Compared with $50 campground nights: About $10 saved across 3 stays

Scenario 2: Moderate Use, 10 Stays Per Year

  • Membership: $49.99 renewal-rate example
  • Expected host purchases: 10 stays x $30 = $300
  • Total annual cost: $349.99
  • Cost per night: About $35
  • Compared with $50 campground nights: About $150 saved across 10 stays

Scenario 3: Frequent Use, 20 Stays Per Year

  • Membership: $49.99 renewal-rate example
  • Expected host purchases: 20 stays x $30 = $600
  • Total annual cost: $649.99
  • Cost per night: About $32.50
  • Compared with $50 campground nights: About $350 saved across 20 stays

Important constraint: These are illustrative calculations. They assume you would otherwise pay around $50 per night for a campground and that you spend about $30 at each RV Overnights host. If you would otherwise stay free at a rest area, public land, Walmart, Cracker Barrel, or another no-fee stop, your savings math changes.

Key Features and Platform Capabilities

The strongest RV Overnights features are route planning, host filters, map layers, and road resource pins.

Search and Discovery Tools

RV Overnights mobile app map showing host search and route planning tools
  • Interactive Map: Search hosts through the app and web platform.
  • Google Street View: Preview parking access and approach before you commit to a stay.[2]
  • Filters: Search by hookups, services, generator policy, pets, length, parking surface, and other host details.[6]
  • Route Planning: Use map view, list view, and host profiles to decide whether a stop fits your route.

Road Resource Tools

RV Overnights mobile app filters for propane, dump stations, and road resources
  • Dump Stations: RV Overnights lists 2,248 dump stations on its membership page as of May 23, 2026.[2]
  • Propane Fill Locations: RV Overnights lists 2,011 propane fill locations on its membership page as of May 23, 2026.[2]
  • Repair and Towing Pins: The platform also lists RV repair, towing, storage, dealer, trailer repair, and rental resource categories.[2]
  • User Reviews: The app description promotes mutual reviews and host response information as part of the stay-planning process.[5]

Real RV Overnights Reviews: What RVers Say

RVer feedback is mixed: the low price gets attention, but route fit and host response issues drive complaints.

RVers discussing RV Overnights reviews and complaints in online travel communities

The most useful comments came from RVers comparing RV Overnights with Harvest Hosts and other overnight-parking options. The pattern is consistent: RV Overnights wins on membership price, but the smaller network and booking friction can matter on real trips.

Why RVers Choose RV Overnights

  • Lower annual cost: Multiple RVers described RV Overnights as a cheaper alternative to Harvest Hosts.
  • Some host overlap: RVers noted that RV Overnights does not have as many locations as Harvest Hosts, but some host types and categories overlap.
  • Growth potential: Several comments framed RV Overnights as a newer, expanding platform rather than a fully mature network.
  • Useful for planners: The service makes more sense when travelers check the map before buying and build stops into a planned route.

Common Complaints

  • Host response issues: Some RVers reported that hosts were unavailable, did not accept their rig, or did not respond.
  • Route mismatch: Some users said the available locations were too far from their normal travel routes.
  • Host purchase expectations: RVers who expected a truly free stay were frustrated by the expected host spend.
  • Reservations required: Travelers who prefer spontaneous parking may not like the approved-request model.
  • Smaller network: Compared with Harvest Hosts, RV Overnights still has fewer total host locations.

Reader takeaway: RV Overnights is not automatically better or worse than Harvest Hosts. It is cheaper, smaller, and more dependent on route fit. Check the public map and the refund terms before you treat it as a full replacement.

App Performance and User Interface

The app ratings show a young platform with useful tools and clear user frustration.

Mobile app review graphic showing mixed RV Overnights user rating feedback

Current App Ratings

  • Google Play: 3.0 from 59 reviews, checked May 23, 2026.[4]
  • Apple App Store: 3.8 from 44 ratings, checked May 23, 2026.[5]

I would not roll those into one “combined average” because Google uses reviews, Apple uses ratings, and the platforms do not measure the same thing in the same way. The safer conclusion is that the app is usable, but not yet universally trusted.

What the Ratings Mean

A 3.0 Android rating is a warning sign. It does not mean every user will have a bad experience, but it does mean you should not buy RV Overnights expecting a polished, complaint-free app. The Apple score is better, but the review volume is still modest.

What Users Like

  • Map-based host discovery
  • Filters for rig fit, services, pets, hookups, and parking conditions
  • Google Street View previews
  • Propane and dump station tools
  • Lower price than larger membership networks

What Users Complain About

  • App reliability and access issues
  • Host response or availability problems
  • Limited usefulness when hosts are far from a planned route
  • Confusion when app-store copy, official pricing pages, and promotions do not appear fully aligned

Geographic Coverage Analysis

Coverage looks strongest where RV tourism, wineries, farms, breweries, and small-town attractions are common.

RV Overnights coverage map showing host density across the United States
  • Total Hosts: Over 1,500 hosting locations listed by RV Overnights as of May 23, 2026.[1]
  • Coverage: RV Overnights describes host coverage across the U.S. and Canada on its comparison page.[7]
  • Host Categories: The platform lists 14+ categories, including farms, wineries, breweries, distilleries, restaurants, attractions, animal rescues, churches, nonprofits, and golf courses.[7]

The map matters more than the national host count. A network can look large on paper and still miss your route by 30 miles. Before joining, check your real travel corridors, including your usual overnight gaps between home, rallies, campgrounds, public lands, family stops, and seasonal trips.

Planning Tip: Do not judge RV Overnights by total host count alone. Open the map, enter your real destinations, and check whether hosts sit near the roads you actually drive.

RV Overnights vs Harvest Hosts vs Boondockers Welcome

RV Overnights is cheaper than Harvest Hosts and Boondockers Welcome, but it has a smaller host network.

For a deeper comparison, see our full RV Overnights vs Harvest Hosts analysis and our broader Good Sam vs Harvest Hosts vs RV Overnights guide.

Feature RV Overnights Harvest Hosts Boondockers Welcome
Annual Cost $39.99 first year, $49.99 renewal if subscription stays active[2] $99 to $179 standard plan range, with sale pricing shown on May 23, 2026[8] $79 standalone plan[9]
Host Network 1,500+ hosting locations[1] Plan dependent. Harvest Hosts All Access showed 9,399+ locations on May 23, 2026.[8] 3,675+ community host locations[9]
Best Fit Lowest-cost testing among the three services compared here Larger network and broader route flexibility Private-property stays and community-style hosting
Refund Language 90-day money-back guarantee with conditions[3] Happy Camper Guarantee shown in plan details[8] 100% money-back guarantee shown on plans page[9]

Methodology note: I removed the old payback row because it made the comparison look more precise than the available data supports. Payback depends on your campground alternative, host purchases, fuel detours, and whether you would otherwise use free overnight parking.

When RV Overnights Makes Sense

  • You want one of the lowest-cost options among these three memberships.
  • You travel through areas with enough RV Overnights hosts on your actual routes.
  • You are comfortable supporting host businesses with purchases.
  • You can request stays in advance instead of arriving unannounced.
  • You value the 90-day refund window while testing the platform.

When Another Option May Be Better

  • Choose Harvest Hosts if you want the larger business-host network.
  • Choose Boondockers Welcome if private-property community hosting better matches your travel style.
  • Use free overnight parking guides if you do not want membership costs or host purchase expectations.
  • Use campgrounds when you need reliable hookups, dump access, showers, laundry, or longer stays.

Alternative Free Overnight Parking Options

Free overnight parking is still useful, but it is less predictable than a structured membership platform.

RV parked outside Cracker Barrel as an overnight parking alternative

If you are evaluating RV Overnights mainly because you want cheaper travel nights, also compare it with free overnight options. Retail parking policies are changing, and permission varies by location, manager, city, and current enforcement.

  • Cracker Barrel: Often mentioned by RVers, but availability depends on the specific location.
  • Walmart: Some stores still allow overnight RV parking, but many have stopped due to local rules, misuse, or property policies.
  • Home Depot, Bass Pro, and Cabela’s: These can work in some areas, but permission is never automatic.
  • Rest Areas: State rules vary. Start with our guide to sleeping in your RV at rest stops.
  • Public Lands: Better for boondockers who can handle off-grid conditions and confirm current local rules.

For current free-parking strategy, use our directory of free RV parking locations and our separate report on why free RV parking policies are changing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many hosts does RV Overnights have?

RV Overnights lists over 1,500 hosting locations as of May 23, 2026.[1] Always check the live map because route fit matters more than the national total.

What does RV Overnights cost?

RV Overnights shows $39.99 for the first year and renewal at $49.99 for life if the subscription remains active.[2] Verify the final checkout price before buying.

Does RV Overnights offer a refund?

Yes. RV Overnights publishes a 90-day money-back guarantee. The guarantee page says members can request a refund within the first 90 days if the program is not working for them, subject to listed conditions.[3]

Are RV Overnights locations really free?

There is no fixed campground-style site fee in the member guidelines, but RV Overnights says members should expect to spend a minimum of $30 at each host location to support the host business.[6]

Do I need a self-contained RV?

Yes. RV Overnights says members must have an interior bathroom, cooking facilities, and sleeping area. Tents, rooftop tents, cars, SUVs, minivans, and pop-up campers are not allowed under the published guidelines.[6]

Do I need reservations in advance?

Yes. RV Overnights requires an approved stay request from the host before arrival. The member guidelines say arriving unannounced can result in ejection from the program.[6]

How does RV Overnights compare to Harvest Hosts?

RV Overnights costs less and has a smaller host network. Harvest Hosts costs more but offers broader host coverage and more plan options. See our full RV Overnights vs Harvest Hosts comparison.

Who should skip RV Overnights?

Skip RV Overnights if you are not self-contained, need hookups, expect drive-up stops, dislike host purchase expectations, or travel mostly where the map has few hosts.

Final Verdict: Is RV Overnights Worth It in 2026?

RV Overnights is worth testing when the map fits your routes and you understand the purchase expectation.

Final verdict graphic summarizing RV Overnights value and buyer fit

RV Overnights Is a Good Fit If You:

  • Want a lower-cost overnight RV parking membership.
  • Have a fully self-contained RV or camper.
  • Can verify host locations before joining.
  • Are comfortable requesting stays in advance.
  • Expect to support host businesses with purchases.
  • Use membership stops a few times per year, not as your only overnight strategy.

Skip RV Overnights If You:

  • Travel spontaneously and need true no-notice stops.
  • Need campground-style hookups, bathrooms, showers, or dump access at your overnight site.
  • Travel mostly through sparse regions where the map does not match your route.
  • Do not want to spend money at host businesses.
  • Expect the app to perform like a mature, high-rated travel platform.

My Bottom Line

RV Overnights is not a slam-dunk replacement for Harvest Hosts, Boondockers Welcome, campgrounds, or free overnight parking. It is a lower-cost tool with a smaller network and a clear fit requirement. If the public map lines up with your routes, the price and refund window make it reasonable to test.

  1. Check the map first. Search your real travel corridors before buying.
  2. Read the member rules. Make sure your rig qualifies and you understand the host spend expectation.
  3. Plan ahead. Success depends on approved stay requests, not showing up cold.
  4. Use the refund window if needed. If the network does not fit your travel style, act within the posted guarantee period.

Data Verification and Methodology

This review uses official platform pages, app-store snapshots, and RVer discussion threads as supporting evidence.

Official platform data: RV Overnights host counts, membership pricing, refund language, member guidelines, cancellation guidance, and resource counts were checked against RV Overnights pages on May 23, 2026.

App ratings: Google Play and Apple App Store ratings were checked on May 23, 2026. Ratings can change quickly, especially for apps with lower review volume.

Comparison data: Harvest Hosts and Boondockers Welcome pricing and location counts were checked against their official plan pages on May 23, 2026.

Limitations: Regional density observations depend on visible map review and user feedback, not private internal platform data. Your route fit may be better or worse than the national host count suggests.

Related RV Overnights Guides

Use these companion guides to compare overnight parking options before you buy.


Sources and Citations

[1] RV Overnights. “RV Membership.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://rvovernights.com/pages/rv-membership

[2] RV Overnights. “RV Membership.” Pricing, resource counts, and membership features. Accessed May 23, 2026. https://rvovernights.com/pages/rv-membership

[3] RV Overnights. “Money-Back Guarantee.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://rvovernights.com/pages/money-back-guarantee

[4] Google Play. “RV Overnights – Camping Sites.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.rvovernights.rvovernights

[5] Apple App Store. “RV Overnights – Camping Sites.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://apps.apple.com/us/app/rv-overnights-camping-sites/id6477047355

[6] RV Overnights. “Membership Resources.” Member guidelines, cancellation guidance, self-contained RV requirements, and host-spend expectations. Accessed May 23, 2026. https://rvovernights.com/pages/membership-resources

[7] RV Overnights. “Compare Us.” Pricing, categories, coverage, and feature comparisons. Accessed May 23, 2026. https://rvovernights.com/pages/compare-us

[8] Harvest Hosts. “Membership Plans.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://www.harvesthosts.com/plans

[9] Boondockers Welcome. “Plans.” Accessed May 23, 2026. https://www.boondockerswelcome.com/plans/

[10] Facebook RV Park Reviews Group discussion. “Do any of you use RV overnights or Harvest Host?” April 2025. Access may require group membership. https://www.facebook.com/groups/rvparkreviews/posts/9885030461565382/

[11] Facebook RV Lifestyle Group discussion. “Can someone share what is better Harvest Host or RV overnight?” October 2025. Access may require group membership. https://www.facebook.com/groups/roadtreking/posts/3283463775145912/


Disclosure: This review is based on publicly available information, official platform pages, app-store listings, and RV community feedback. Some links may be affiliate links, which means I may earn a commission if you buy through them, at no additional cost to you. Affiliate relationships do not control the recommendation.

About the Author: Chuck Price has more than 35 years of RV experience and has personally tested multiple RV membership platforms. He focuses on practical RV travel decisions, cost control, boondocking, and overnight parking strategies for real-world road trips.