
RV and Boondocking Power
Quiet RV power to enjoy the wilderness and a cup of hot coffee!
Solar, lithium, inverter/charging, and monitoring solutions sized around how you travel.
Built around how you actually camp
Boondocking is not one fixed load profile. Some trips are lights, fans, a pump, and a fridge. Others include Starlink, laptops, office work and air conditioning.
We start with the nights you want off-grid, your daily watt-hour use, roof area, battery bay space, and charging options before recommending a complete system.

Let us help you design your system.
- How many nights you want to stay off-grid.
- Fridge type, lights, water pump, fans, Starlink, laptops, and devices.
- Microwave, induction, or air conditioning expectations.
- Roof space, weight limits, and battery bay space.
System options
Every rig is different, but most RV power upgrades fall into one of these planning ranges.
Essential Boondocking
Weekend campers and moderate dry camping with lights, fans, pumps, devices, and fridge loads.
Extended Stay
Longer boondocking trips, remote work, Starlink, larger fridge loads, and more daily AC power use.
High-Capacity Comfort
Full-time RVers and owners planning around microwave, induction, selected A/C use, and generator backup. Off-Grid in style!
Generator vs. RV solar
| Need | Generator-first camping | Solar + lithium camping |
|---|---|---|
| Noise | Engine noise during run time. | Silent charging from the roof. |
| Fuel | Requires fuel storage and refills. | Sunlight charges the battery bank. |
| Campground rules | Limited by generator-hour restrictions. | Works quietly throughout the day. |
| Daily routine | Manage run time and fuel. | Monitor battery state and keep camping. |
Frequently asked questions
Can solar run my RV air conditioner?
Yes, but air conditioning is one of the largest RV loads. It usually requires a larger solar array, a substantial lithium battery bank, and a properly sized inverter. We will help decide whether full A/C support is practical for your rig or whether solar should cover everyday loads while the generator remains backup for cooling.
How much solar does an RV need for boondocking?
It depends on your loads, battery capacity, roof space, and camping style. A light-use weekend setup is very different from a full-time rig with Starlink, a residential fridge, and AC loads.
Do I still need a generator?
Some owners keep a generator for backup or high-draw comfort loads. Solar and lithium can handle the quiet everyday work, so the generator is no longer the center of the camping routine.
Ready to make your RV feel self-contained?
Tell us how you camp, what you want to run, and how long you want to stay off-grid. We will help size the system around the real use case.