RV Shipping Cost Calculator — 2026 Motorhome Transport Quote
Price a 2026 RV or motorhome transport by route, class, and transport mode — then compare drive-away vs flatbed quotes from licensed oversize carriers.
Route
RV Details
Transport Method
Notes
Oversize RV transport frequently requires state permits and pilot cars on routes exceeding 13 ft 6 in height or 102 in width. Our estimate reflects typical market rates including these surcharges where applicable.
Fill in the details and click Calculate
Fill in the details and click Calculate
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does it cost to ship an RV in 2026?
Drive-away transport (a pro driver delivers the RV) runs $1–$2 per mile, so a cross-country 2,500-mile haul costs $2,500–$5,000. Flatbed or tow transport for non-driveable RVs costs $2–$4 per mile, pushing cross-country runs to $5,000–$10,000. Oversize permits and pilot cars add $500–$2,500 for Class A motorhomes and fifth wheels.
Drive-away: $1–$2 per mile typical
Flatbed / tow: $2–$4 per mile typical
Short local hop (under 500 mi): $500–$2,000
Cross-country drive-away: $2,500–$5,000
Cross-country flatbed: $5,000–$10,000
Transport Mode
Per-Mile Rate
Cross-Country (2,500 mi)
Best For
Drive-Away
$1–$2
$2,500–$5,000
Operable RVs, fastest delivery
Flatbed / Tow
$2–$4
$5,000–$10,000
Non-running, high-value, classics
Self-Tow Behind Car
$0.75–$1.50
$1,875–$3,750
Small travel trailers only
Q
What is drive-away vs flatbed RV transport?
Drive-away means a professional CDL driver picks up your RV and physically drives it to the destination. Flatbed or tow transport loads the RV onto an oversize carrier. Drive-away is cheaper (half the cost) and faster, but only works if the RV is operable. Flatbed is required for non-running, classic, or high-value RVs where owners want zero road miles added.
Drive-away: CDL driver pilots the RV to destination
Drive-away adds 2,000–4,000 miles to your odometer
Flatbed: RV rides on an oversize carrier, zero miles added
Flatbed costs 2–3x more but protects resale value
Non-running RVs require flatbed (winch or crane load)
Q
Do oversize permits really add $500–$2,500 to RV transport?
Yes, especially for Class A motorhomes and fifth wheels over 13 ft 6 in tall or 102 in wide. Every state the carrier crosses requires its own oversize permit, and some states mandate pilot cars on interstates for loads over 12 ft 4 in wide. A cross-country Class A transport can cross 8–12 state permit jurisdictions, each $30–$150 per permit.
Height trigger: over 13 ft 6 in
Width trigger: over 102 in (8 ft 6 in)
Length trigger: over 75 ft combined vehicle + load
Per-state permits: $30–$150 each
Pilot car: $1.50–$2.50 per mile when required
Q
How long does it take to ship an RV?
Drive-away averages 400–500 miles per day with mandatory DOT rest breaks, so cross-country takes 5–7 days. Flatbed transport is slower (300–400 miles per day) because oversize loads avoid night driving and certain routes, pushing cross-country to 7–10 days. Pickup scheduling adds 3–10 days depending on carrier availability and your route popularity.
Drive-away: 400–500 mi/day, 5–7 days coast-to-coast
Flatbed tow: 300–400 mi/day, 7–10 days coast-to-coast
Pickup scheduling: 3–10 days before transit begins
Oversize routing: permits only valid sunrise–sunset in many states
Weather delays: common Nov–Feb on northern routes
Q
Is it cheaper to drive my RV myself or pay a transporter?
For cross-country moves of 2,000+ miles, a drive-away transport often costs less than driving yourself once you factor fuel, hotels, meals, and your own time. A Class A motorhome burns $1,200–$1,800 in diesel over 2,500 miles at 7–9 mpg, plus $600–$1,000 in lodging and food. Drive-away transport at $1.50 per mile totals $3,750 including the driver — often within $500 of the DIY cost but without seven days of your labor.
Break-even factoring your time: drive-away wins above 1,800 mi
Example Calculations
1Class C Motorhome, Phoenix to Orlando (Drive-Away)
Inputs
RoutePhoenix AZ → Orlando FL (2,100 mi)
RV ClassClass C Mid-Size (28 ft)
Transport ModeDrive-Away
OperableYes
Result
Estimated Cost$2,100 – $4,200
Transit Time5–7 days
Per-Mile Rate$1.00–$2.00
A Class C at 11 ft tall does not trigger oversize permits, so cost is pure per-mile drive-away pricing with no pilot car fees.
2Class A Motorhome, Seattle to Miami (Flatbed)
Inputs
RouteSeattle WA → Miami FL (3,300 mi)
RV ClassClass A Motorhome (40 ft)
Transport ModeFlatbed / Tow
OperableNo – Broken Down
Result
Estimated Cost$9,900 – $16,500
Transit Time8–12 days
Oversize Permits+$800–$2,200
Non-Running Surcharge+$500–$800
A 40 ft Class A on flatbed at 13 ft 8 in requires permits in every state crossed plus a pilot car in 3–4 states. The non-running winch loading adds another ~$650 to the base quote.
3Travel Trailer, Dallas to Denver (Self-Tow)
Inputs
RouteDallas TX → Denver CO (800 mi)
RV ClassTravel Trailer (24 ft)
Transport ModeSelf-Tow Behind Car
OperableYes
Result
Estimated Cost$600 – $1,200
Transit Time2–3 days DIY
Fuel (tow vehicle, 11 mpg)~$310
Self-tow only works for travel trailers under 7,000 lbs behind a capable tow vehicle. Cost reflects fuel, lodging, and wear — no driver fee.
Formulas Used
RV Shipping Cost Estimate
Cost = (Distance × Mode Rate) + Class Surcharge + Non-Running Fee + Permit + Pilot Car
Total RV transport cost combines distance-based pricing with surcharges for RV class (oversize triggers), operable condition, and per-state permit plus pilot-car fees on routes where the load exceeds 13 ft 6 in height or 102 in width.
Class Surcharge= Class A: +15–25% for oversize. Fifth wheel: +10%. Class B/C / travel trailer: 0%.
Non-Running Fee= +$300–$800 winch or crane loading (flatbed only).
Permit= $30–$150 per state crossed when RV exceeds 13 ft 6 in / 102 in / 75 ft.
Pilot Car= $1.50–$2.50/mi when required (widths over 12 ft 4 in in most states).
RV Shipping Costs in 2026: Drive-Away, Flatbed, and Permit Reality
1
Summary: 2026 RV Transport Cost at a Glance
RV shipping in 2026 splits cleanly into two price tiers based on transport mode. Drive-away transport — a professional CDL driver picks up your operable RV and physically drives it to the destination — runs $1–$2 per mile, putting a typical cross-country 2,500-mile haul at $2,500–$5,000. Flatbed or tow transport, where the RV rides on an oversize carrier with zero miles added to the odometer, runs $2–$4 per mile and pushes the same cross-country route to $5,000–$10,000. The 2x price premium for flatbed is the single biggest cost decision in the whole quote.
RV class matters almost as much as transport mode. Class A motorhomes at 13 ft 8 in tall and fifth wheels at 13 ft 6 in tall routinely trigger oversize permits, which add $500–$2,500 for a coast-to-coast haul (8–12 state permits at $30–$150 each, plus pilot-car fees where state law mandates escort on interstates). Class B camper vans and travel trailers under 11 ft tall avoid the oversize tier entirely and ship at standard drive-away rates. Non-running RVs add a $300–$800 winch-loading surcharge and force flatbed transport since drive-away requires an operable vehicle.
Pricing in this guide reflects 2026 rates aggregated from national transport brokers and specialty RV carriers, then cross-checked against the car shipping cost calculator for standard-size vehicle benchmarks. Use the estimator above to price your specific route and class, then read on for the drive-away vs flatbed decision tree, the permit and pilot-car math by RV class, and the break-even analysis versus driving it yourself — which is much closer than most owners assume once you factor diesel, lodging, and your own time.
2
What RV Transport Actually Costs in 2026
Per-mile drive-away pricing ranges from $1.00 to $2.00 for most routes, with the lower end reflecting popular corridors (I-95, I-10, I-40) where carriers run consistent back-haul lanes, and the higher end reflecting lightly-traveled routes or sparsely-populated rural pickups. A 500-mile regional hop typically costs $500–$1,500 drive-away; a 1,500-mile mid-distance run costs $1,500–$3,000; and coast-to-coast transport at 2,500–2,800 miles falls in the $2,500–$5,500 band. Fifth wheels tow behind a truck on drive-away service at similar per-mile rates, but the combined length often triggers length-based oversize permits even at standard RV height.
Flatbed transport pricing runs $2–$4 per mile because oversize carriers can only haul 1–2 RVs per load versus a regular auto transporter carrying 7–10 cars — the per-rig overhead is simply much higher. The 500-mile flatbed rate starts at $1,500–$2,500; mid-distance 1,500 miles runs $3,500–$6,000; and coast-to-coast flatbed transport routinely hits $5,000–$10,000 or more for a Class A motorhome. Non-running RVs force flatbed even for short distances, since no drive-away broker will route a disabled vehicle. Expect a $300–$800 winch or crane loading surcharge on top of base flatbed pricing.
Pricing has climbed 18–25% since 2023 driven by diesel fuel costs, commercial driver insurance premiums, and the CDL driver shortage that has pushed drive-away pilot wages up 30%. The 2026 season also reflects tightened oversize permit enforcement in several states following 2024 bridge-strike incidents, which has lengthened permit processing to 3–7 business days and pushed smaller carriers to specialist permit services that charge $50–$100 per state beyond the permit fee itself. For budgeting purposes, compare your RV transport estimate against a DIY drive using the gas mileage calculator — break-even is usually between 1,500 and 2,000 miles depending on your RV class.
RV shipping pricing by distance and transport mode, 2026. Source: national transport broker rate averages.
Distance
Drive-Away Rate
Flatbed Rate
Typical Transit
Short hop (under 500 mi)
$500–$1,500
$1,500–$2,500
2–4 days
Regional (500–1,500 mi)
$1,500–$3,000
$3,500–$6,000
4–7 days
Long haul (1,500–2,500 mi)
$2,500–$5,000
$5,000–$8,000
7–10 days
Cross-country (2,500+ mi)
$2,500–$5,500
$5,000–$10,000+
8–12 days
The $2,500–$5,000 cross-country drive-away band is for an operable Class C motorhome with no oversize triggers. Add 15–25% for a Class A at 13 ft 8 in tall, and another $500–$2,500 for per-state permits and pilot cars on routes that mandate escorts.
3
Drive-Away vs Flatbed: The $5,000 Decision
Drive-away transport works exactly like it sounds: a licensed CDL driver meets you at pickup, you hand over the keys, and the driver physically pilots your RV to the destination at normal highway speeds. The driver sleeps in the RV (saving hotel costs for the carrier and keeping the rig secure) and delivers typically in 5–7 days cross-country. The RV accumulates 2,000–4,000 miles on the odometer during the trip, which matters for resale value on high-mileage rigs or classic motorhomes where every mile subtracts from collector value.
Flatbed or tow transport loads your RV onto a specialized oversize carrier with zero driving miles added. Flatbed is mandatory for non-running RVs (engine, transmission, or chassis failure), it is strongly preferred for classic motorhomes under restoration, and it is the right choice for any RV where the resale value premium of preserved miles exceeds the 2x transport cost. A $150,000 Class A with 8,000 original miles is worth keeping miles off; a $25,00010-year-old Class C is usually not worth paying $5,000 extra for flatbed over drive-away.
Condition of the RV is the deciding factor for many owners. Any vehicle that cannot roll, steer, and brake under its own power requires flatbed by default — drive-away brokers will not accept a disabled unit. Even operable RVs with known mechanical issues (transmission slipping, brake lines weak, tires aged past 7 years) are safer on flatbed because a drive-away driver has no incentive to stop for gradual symptoms that may cascade into a breakdown mid-route. If you are financing the RV purchase, use the RV loan calculator to pencil transport costs into your total acquisition budget — a $7,000 flatbed transport on a $60,000 RV purchase adds 11.7% to your effective cost.
Drive-away vs flatbed decision matrix, 2026.
Decision Factor
Drive-Away
Flatbed / Tow
Cost per mile
$1–$2
$2–$4
Miles added to RV
2,000–4,000 cross-country
0
Transit time
Faster (5–7 days)
Slower (7–10 days)
Works for non-running RV
No
Yes (mandatory)
Works for classic / rare RV
Acceptable if low-value
Strongly preferred
Oversize permit exposure
Same
Same
4
Oversize Permits and Pilot Cars: The Hidden RV Tax
Any RV taller than 13 ft 6 in, wider than 102 in (8 ft 6 in), or combined-length over 75 ft crosses into oversize territory, which means each state the carrier drives through requires its own trip permit. Class A motorhomes at 12–13.8 ft tall, fifth wheels at 13.5 ft tall with the hitch, and Class A toy haulers with slide-out garages all trigger oversize status on nearly every transport. Class B camper vans at 9–10 ft tall, Class C mid-size rigs at 10–11 ft, and travel trailers under 13 ft avoid permits entirely at standard interstate clearance.
Permit costs range from $30 to $150 per state depending on axle count and load weight. A cross-country 2,500-mile Class A transport crosses 8–12 state permit jurisdictions, producing $240–$1,800 in raw permit fees. On top of that, pilot cars are required in many states when load width exceeds 12 ft 4 in or height exceeds 14 ft 6 in — common on Class A motorhomes with full slide-outs extended or on fifth wheels stacked with accessories. Pilot-car rates run $1.50–$2.50 per mile, meaning a 1,000-mile stretch of pilot-car-required interstate adds $1,500–$2,500 to your quote.
Time-of-day and weather restrictions apply nearly universally on oversize permits. Most states permit oversize movement only sunrise to sunset, ban movement on holidays and weekends in some jurisdictions, and suspend permits entirely during winter storms or high-wind advisories. This is why flatbed Class A transport routinely stretches to 10–12 days cross-country even though the raw distance would be 5 days for a standard vehicle. Before pricing your RV transport, verify your class, height, and width against permit thresholds — and if you are self-towing a travel trailer behind a pickup, use the towing capacity calculator to confirm your tow vehicle is rated for the loaded trailer weight, which is the first thing a DOT inspector will check at any weigh station.
Height trigger: over 13 ft 6 in requires permits (Class A, fifth wheels)
Width trigger: over 102 in requires permits (Class A with slides extended)
Length trigger: over 75 ft combined tow vehicle + trailer
Per-state permit: $30–$150 each, 8–12 states cross-country
Pilot car: $1.50–$2.50 per mile when width exceeds 12 ft 4 in
Daylight-only movement in most states (slows transit 20–30%)
Weekend and holiday bans in several states (VA, NY, PA, IL)
5
Self-Tow vs Pro Transport: Break-Even by Distance
Self-tow only applies to travel trailers under 7,000 lbs behind a capable tow vehicle — the category excludes motorhomes entirely, since you cannot tow a motorhome with a regular pickup. For travel-trailer owners, the self-tow calculation comes down to fuel cost, lodging, driver-of-record labor, and vehicle wear. A 2,500-mile DIY tow with a full-size pickup averaging 11 mpg at $3.80 per gallon burns $864 in fuel, plus $500–$800 in lodging and food over 4–5 days, plus $0.15–$0.25 per mile in tow-vehicle wear ($375–$625). Total out-of-pocket: $1,740–$2,290 before counting your own time.
Compared to a professional drive-away or tow transport at $1.25–$1.75 per mile for a travel trailer ($3,125–$4,375 for 2,500 miles), self-tow saves $800–$2,600 on paper. But self-tow also requires five days of your labor, exposes you to breakdown risk on your own vehicle and trailer, and voids some trailer warranties if the tow exceeds manufacturer guidelines. Break-even tilts toward professional transport above 1,800 miles once you value your time at $25–$50 per hour — and strongly favors pro transport for any trip where you would otherwise fly one-way to pick up the trailer.
For motorhomes specifically, the comparison is drive-away transport vs you driving it yourself (you cannot self-tow a motorhome on its own chassis behind another vehicle). A Class A motorhome at 7–9 mpg cross-country burns $1,200–$1,800 in diesel plus $600–$1,000 in lodging and food, totaling $1,800–$2,800 out of pocket versus $3,000–$5,500 for drive-away transport. DIY saves $1,000–$2,500 on cash but costs you 7 days of driving time. For busy owners, drive-away wins on total cost including time; for retirees with flexible schedules, DIY wins on cash. Use the auto loan calculator to understand the financing cost of keeping the RV longer in transit, and the car shipping cost calculator to price any second vehicle you need shipped alongside the RV (many cross-country moves require moving a daily driver too).
Class A motorhome cross-country: DIY drive vs drive-away transport, 2026.
Cost Component
DIY (Class A, 2,500 mi)
Drive-Away (Class A, 2,500 mi)
Fuel (diesel, 8 mpg, $4/gal)
$1,250
Included in quote
Lodging + food (7 days)
$800
Included
Vehicle wear / depreciation
$625–$1,000
None added
Driver fee / your time
7 days @ your rate
$1,250–$1,500 included
Total cash out-of-pocket
$2,675–$3,050
$3,000–$5,500
DIY almost always wins on cash alone. Drive-away wins on total cost once you value your own week of labor at $150–$300 per day — which is roughly the difference between the two columns above.
6
Getting Three Quotes: What to Ask Every RV Transporter
Always collect three quotes from different transporters before booking, and always verify each quote is comparing the same scope. The number-one quote-mismatch source is the permit and pilot-car line — some carriers include permits in their base quote, others list permits as "pass-through costs" that can surprise-bill you on delivery. Get every quote in writing with permits itemized separately so you can apples-to-apples the comparison. Also verify each carrier quote includes the same pickup date window; a $500 cheaper quote with a 3-week pickup delay is not actually cheaper if you have a hard delivery deadline.
Insurance coverage is the second gotcha. Drive-away transport typically includes $100,000–$250,000 in transit coverage; flatbed carriers usually carry $1M cargo coverage but with high deductibles ($2,500–$5,000) that apply per-incident. Verify the coverage limit matches your RV value — a $150,000 Class A is underinsured under standard $100,000 drive-away coverage, and you want a rider or a carrier with higher base coverage. Ask every carrier for proof of current insurance before signing, and ask specifically about act-of-God events (hail, tornadoes, flooding) which are commonly excluded.
Five mandatory contract items to lock in writing: pickup date window (7-day window is standard, 14-day is broker-routed), delivery date window, permit and pilot-car handling (included or pass-through), insurance coverage limit and deductible, and non-running surcharge treatment if your RV is on the edge of drivable. Finally, confirm payment terms — industry standard is 20–30% deposit at booking and balance COD on delivery. Avoid any carrier requesting full pre-payment or payment exceeding 50% upfront; that is a strong scam indicator on FMCSA complaint data.
The #1 cost surprise on RV transport is pilot-car fees added at final invoice. Always ask upfront: "Are pilot cars required on my route? At what width threshold? Who pays the pilot-car bill?" — and get the answer in writing before signing.
Get 3 written quotes with permits itemized separately
Verify pickup date windows match across quotes (7-day standard)
Confirm insurance limit matches RV value ($100k–$1M range)
Ask about deductibles per incident ($2,500–$5,000 typical flatbed)
Itemize pilot-car fees — often buried in final invoice
Avoid carriers demanding more than 30% deposit upfront
Check FMCSA safety ratings and complaint history at fmcsa.dot.gov
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.