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28 Tips for RV Newbies (Part One): How to Make Your First Trips Easier, Safer, and More Fun
Description
On this week’s episode of The RV Atlas Podcast, we kicked off Season 12 (and celebrated the podcast’s 12th anniversary!) by talking directly to the newest members of the RV community—the RV Newbies. who just bought their first rig, are staring at it in the driveway with equal parts joy and trepidation, and are realizing that RVing has a real learning curve.
We love the excitement of the newbie stage. We remember being RV Newbies quite vividly. That enthusiasm is part of the magic. It’s also the thing that can lead to some stressful decisions if you are not prepared.
So we put together 28 Tips for RV Newbies, spread across two episodes. This week we’re sharing the first 13 tips—and we want you to think of these as your “calm, practical, take-a-deep-breath” checklist for getting through your first season with more confidence and less chaos.
Tip 1: Start with only what you need (and add items with intention)

This first tip for RV newbies came straight from Janet Piedmont in the RV Atlas Facebook Group, and it’s so perfectly stated that we’re adopting it as official policy: follow the “Stephanie School of Thought” and begin with only the essentials. Too much stuff makes loading and unloading stressful, and the “buy everything at once” approach is a guaranteed way to waste money—because, as an RV. newbie, you don’t actually know what you’ll use until you’ve camped a few times.
There are true non-negotiables—things like a sewer hose, chocks, drinking water hose, and water pressure regulator. But beyond that, it’s easy to get sucked into a shopping spiral because every video and post makes it seem like you need a dedicated camping version of everything you already own. In reality, most RVers eventually build a hybrid setup that includes a few camping-specific pieces and a whole lot of “our favorite stuff from home.” Give yourself time to learn what your camping style really is before you buy the “nice-to-haves.”
Tip 2: Camp close to home on your first trip (and treat it like a systems test)
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