Picking an RV camper company comes down to four things: build quality, warranty terms, resale value, and whether the company will still be around in 10 years. We ranked the top 10 RV camper companies in 2025 against those criteria. Oliver Travel Trailers takes the top spot for double-hull fiberglass construction, four-season build, and a resale market where 10-year-old units still sell for 80% of new.
Top 10 RV Camper Companies for 2025
1. Oliver Travel Trailers
Hand-built in Hohenwald, Tennessee since 2008. Two models: the Legacy Elite at 18’5″ and the Legacy Elite II at 23’6″. Both use a double-hull molded fiberglass shell with insulation between the two layers, no wood in the walls, and no seams that can leak. The construction is the reason a 2008 hull still looks the way it did off the line and still sells for 80% of new on the resale market.
- Build: double-hull fiberglass, 2″x5″ box-tube aluminum frame, four-season insulated
- Models: Legacy Elite (18’5″), Legacy Elite II (23’6″)
- Price range: $69,000 to $100,000+
- Warranty: 5-year structural, industry-leading
- Best for: couples and small families who want a trailer that lasts decades
- Production: small batch, hand-built, currently booked through 2026
See the Oliver lineup or read why owners stay loyal for decades.
2. Airstream
Riveted aluminum body, recognizable silver shape, in production since 1931. Strong brand and good resale, though aluminum construction means more maintenance over time and lower thermal performance than fiberglass.
- Build: riveted aluminum monocoque
- Price range: $40,000 to $180,000
- Best for: buyers prioritizing brand recognition and aesthetics
3. Grand Design
Indiana-built travel trailers and fifth wheels with a reputation for solid warranty support. Wood-framed stick-and-tin construction, which keeps the price down but doesn’t hold up like fiberglass over a 20-year window.
- Build: wood-framed, aluminum-clad
- Price range: $25,000 to $100,000
- Best for: families who want spacious floor plans at a mid-range price
4. Winnebago
One of the oldest and most recognized RV brands in North America. Wide product range from compact Class B vans to motorhomes and travel trailers. Quality varies by model line.
- Build: varies by line, mostly wood-framed
- Price range: $30,000 to $200,000
- Best for: first-time buyers and motorhome shoppers
5. Jayco
Family-owned since 1968, now part of Thor Industries. Wide model range covering travel trailers, fifth wheels, and motorhomes. Two-year warranty on most lines.
- Build: wood-framed, aluminum or fiberglass siding depending on line
- Price range: $20,000 to $120,000
- Best for: buyers who want a wide model selection
6. Tiffin Motorhomes
Class A motorhome specialist based in Alabama, acquired by Thor in 2020. Strong owner community and good factory support.
- Build: Class A motorhome chassis
- Price range: $150,000 to $500,000
- Best for: motorhome buyers in the $200K+ tier
7. Newmar
Class A motorhome maker based in Indiana, also part of Winnebago Industries. Known for finish quality at the upper end of the motorhome market.
- Build: Class A motorhome chassis
- Price range: $200,000 to $600,000
- Best for: full-time motorhome buyers
8. Entegra Coach
Class A motorhome line owned by Jayco/Thor. Mid-to-upper tier finishes and a wide range of floor plans.
- Build: Class A motorhome chassis
- Price range: $100,000 to $400,000
- Best for: motorhome buyers in the mid-luxury tier
9. Keystone RV
Owned by Thor Industries, Keystone makes affordable travel trailers and fifth wheels in volume. Lower price point with the build quality that goes with it.
- Build: wood-framed, mass-produced
- Price range: $20,000 to $80,000
- Best for: budget-conscious family camping
10. Forest River
One of the largest RV manufacturers in North America with dozens of brand sub-divisions including Coachmen, Palomino, and Cherokee. Volume-focused, with quality varying significantly across the portfolio.
- Build: varies by sub-brand, mostly wood-framed
- Price range: $15,000 to $150,000
- Best for: buyers shopping primarily on price
What Oliver does differently
Most RV manufacturers in this list use wood-framed walls clad in aluminum or single-skin fiberglass. The construction is fast, cheap, and shows it within 10 years: water finds the seams, the wood frame rots, and resale drops to 30-40% of new.
Oliver builds with a different method. Two molded fiberglass shells with insulation poured between them, sealed at the perimeter, no wood in the walls anywhere. There’s nothing inside the wall structure that can rot, delaminate, or leak. The shell is also what makes the trailer four-season ready: insulation between the layers means an 11,000 BTU AC actually keeps up in summer and a 19K BTU furnace holds heat through winter. The same construction is why Oliver owners still pull 2008 hulls today.
The trade-off is volume. Oliver builds roughly 100 trailers a year by hand. The mass-market manufacturers in this list build that many before lunch. The price reflects the build, and so does the resale value.
How to choose the right RV camper company
Four questions to answer before signing anything:
- How long do you plan to keep it? Wood-framed trailers are fine for 5-10 years. Beyond that, fiberglass holds up.
- What climates are you camping in? Single-skin construction won’t hold heat or AC outside of mild weather.
- What’s your tow vehicle? A 3,700-pound trailer tows easily with a half-ton. A 9,000-pound trailer needs a heavy-duty truck.
- What does the resale market actually look like for the brand 10 years out? Check listings on RV Trader before you commit.
See Oliver Travel Trailers
Legacy Elite (18’5″)
Single-axle, 3,700 lbs dry, full bathroom and kitchen, four-season ready, tow-able with a half-ton.
Legacy Elite II (23’6″)
Tandem axle, 4,900 lbs dry, more interior space, sleeps 3, same double-hull build.
Sources
- RV Atlas Podcast (2024) — describes Oliver as “the best made travel trailers in America” per industry experts and owners.
- iRV2 Forums user review — calls Oliver “arguably the best engineered and manufactured TT in their market of sub 25′.”
- B&B RV Inc. (2024) — highlights Oliver’s resale value and customer service.
- RV Travel review (2021) — praises attention to detail and quality of workmanship.
- RV LIFE (2024) — notes one of the best warranty packages in the industry.
Oliver leads the list because of double-hull fiberglass construction with no wood in the walls, four-season insulation, a 5-year structural warranty, and resale values that hold at 70 to 80 percent of original price after 10 years. Models like the Legacy Elite ($70,000+) and Legacy Elite II ($80,000+) are hand-built in Hohenwald, Tennessee.
For longevity and weather sealing, yes. Double-hull fiberglass has no wood that can rot and no seams that can leak. Aluminum-clad wood-framed trailers (most of the mass-market brands on this list) typically show wall delamination and water intrusion within 10 to 15 years. Aluminum-skinned trailers like Airstream avoid the rot problem but require more maintenance and offer lower thermal performance than fiberglass.
Oliver Travel Trailers offers a 5-year structural warranty, which is the longest on this list. Most mass-market brands offer 1 to 2 years on the structure. Grand Design and Winnebago have above-average warranty programs in the 2 to 3 year range.
Oliver and Airstream both retain resale value better than mass-market RV brands. A 10-year-old Oliver typically sells for 70 to 80 percent of its original price, partly because production volume is low (about 100 units a year) and demand stays high. Airstream resale also holds well due to brand recognition. Most wood-framed trailers depreciate to 30 to 40 percent within the same window.
Travel trailers like the Oliver Legacy Elite and Legacy Elite II ($69,000 to $100,000+) require a tow vehicle but cost less and are easier to park separately at a campsite. Motorhomes like Newmar, Tiffin, and Entegra ($150,000 to $600,000) drive themselves but commit you to a much larger upfront cost and a vehicle you’ll have to maintain on a chassis schedule. The decision usually comes down to whether you already own a capable tow vehicle and how often you plan to camp.
Forest River and Keystone RV offer travel trailers starting around $15,000 to $30,000 and are the most accessible price-wise. The trade-off is build quality and resale, which both drop quickly. For buyers who can stretch the budget, Oliver’s Legacy Elite at $69,000+ delivers a trailer that lasts decades and holds resale value, which often makes the total cost of ownership lower than buying two or three cheaper trailers over the same time period.
