RV Depreciation Calculator

Estimate how much your RV depreciates each year. Enter purchase price, age, and class to project resale value and total value lost over time.

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RV Depreciation Calculator

Project your RV's resale value year by year with class-specific curves for motorhomes, travel trailers, and fifth wheels.

What you actually paid — not MSRP

Enter 0 for a brand-new RV

How to Use

  1. Enter the Purchase Price — the real transaction price, not the sticker MSRP.
  2. Pick your RV Class; each class follows its own multi-stage depreciation curve.
  3. Set RV Age at Purchase to 0 for new — a used RV starts mid-curve and skips the first-year drop.
  4. Choose Years You'll Own It, plus Storage and Usage — outdoor parking and full-timing both speed up value loss.
  5. Hit Project Resale Value to see value by RV age, total loss, and loss per month.
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Marko Šinko
Marko ŠinkoCo-Founder & Lead Developer
Other Vehicles
RV depreciation calculator illustration showing a Class A motorhome beside a declining value curve and dollar symbols

The Myth: You Lose a Third of It on the Drive Home

Type a price into any RV depreciation calculatorand you'll collide with the internet's favorite scare stat: a new motorhome sheds 30% of its value the moment its tires touch the highway. Half true. The stat is usually measured from MSRP — and almost nobody pays MSRP for an RV. Motorhomes routinely transact 20–30% below sticker, especially at RV shows and during model-year clearances.

Run the honest version. A Class A with a $150,000 sticker actually sells for around $120,000. A year later it's worth about $96,000. Measured from MSRP, that's a 36% "loss" — terrifying. Measured from the $120,000 you actually handed over, it's 20%. Same coach, same year, wildly different story. That's why our calculator asks for your real transaction price: depreciation you didn't pay for isn't depreciation at all.

The Reality: 7 RV Classes, 7 Different Curves

The second problem with the one-number myth is that there is no single RV curve. A camper van and a gas Class A bought the same day part ways almost immediately. Here's what each class typically retains from its real purchase price, assuming covered storage and weekend use:

RV ClassYear-1 DropRetained at 5 YearsRetained at 10 Years
Class B camper van~12%72%57%
Class C motorhome~16%66%51%
Travel trailer~15%65%50%
Fifth wheel~17%63%48%
Class A diesel pusher~18%63%48%
Pop-up / folding camper~18%59%43%
Class A motorhome (gas)~20%59%44%

That top-to-bottom spread is worth real money: put $120,000 into a Class B van and you're holding roughly $86,000 at year five; put it into a gas Class A and you're holding about $70,300 — a $15,700 gap on identical spending. Class B vans win because they double as daily drivers and the used market fights over them. Gas Class A coaches fall hardest: enormous stickers, 6–8 mpg running costs, and a thin pool of second owners willing to take one on. Diesel pushers do better than their gas siblings because the chassis is rated for 300,000+ miles, so age scares buyers less. And towables sit in the calm middle — no engine, no odometer, nothing to wear out but the box itself.

How to Calculate RV Depreciation Correctly

A flat annual percentage gets RVs wrong, because the curve has stages. Our calculator runs four of them: a first-year cliff, a steep slide through age 5, a moderate stretch from age 6–10, and a long flat tail after that. For the default $120,000 gas Class A, the stages look like this: 20% in year one, then 7.5% a year through age five, 5.5% through age ten, and about 4% after. Walk it forward — $120,000 → $96,000 → $88,800 → $82,140 → $75,980 → $70,281. Total damage: $49,719, or an invisible $829 a month stacked on top of whatever you're paying the lender.

Buying used changes the math in your favor, and the calculator handles it automatically. A used RV starts mid-curve: the first owner already paid for the cliff, so a 3-year-old coach only depreciates at the age-appropriate rate from the day you buy it. Two toggles push the other way. Outdoor storage adds about a point a year — UV cooks the roof membrane and seals — which costs roughly $3,800 extra on the default coach over five years. Full-time living adds another point and a half; run both and you give up about $9,300 more than the weekend camper who parks under cover. If the accounting concept behind all this is new to you, Investopedia's residual value guide explains how projected end-of-term values are built.

4 Mistakes That Cost RV Owners Five Figures

  • Financing 15 years against a 5-year curve. Put 10% down on that $120,000 Class A at 8.5% over 180 months and our RV loan calculatorshows you still owe about $85,800 after five years — while this tool values the coach at $70,281. You're $15,500 underwater the day you list it. The CFPB's vehicle loan key terms guide explains why that negative-equity position is so hard to exit.
  • Paying sticker.MSRP on an RV is an opening bid, not a price. Pay the full $150,000 sticker on a coach that transacts at $120,000 and you've donated $30,000 of instant, self-inflicted depreciation before your first trip.
  • Ignoring the roof.Water intrusion is the single biggest value killer unique to RVs — a soft spot or delaminated wall knocks $10,000–$20,000 off a motorhome at resale. A $300 DIY reseal every year or two is the cheapest depreciation insurance you can buy.
  • Buying new for the wrong reasons. A 3-year-old version of the default coach costs about $82,000. Own it for the same five years and you lose roughly $22,800 — versus $49,700 for the new buyer. Skipping the cliff keeps about $26,900 in your pocket, and the rig still has decades of chassis life left.

RVs vs. Cars and Boats: Same Formula, Different Cliffs

Staged declining-balance math shows up across every vehicle we cover, but the shape shifts. A typical new car holds around 50–55% at five years — worse than every RV class in our table; run your daily driver through the car depreciation calculator to compare curves directly. Boats land anywhere from 51–73% at five years depending on hull, and our boat depreciation calculator models those the same way. What makes RVs unusual is the flat tail: a well-kept 12-year-old travel trailer might lose just 4% a year, which is why clean older units feel "cheap to own" in a way a 12-year-old car never does.

Frequently Asked Questions

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