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| Above, at camp at the Moab, Utah KOA Kampground. Photo by Armand Vaquer. |
Inflation has touched many things in our lives.
A lot of products and services are more expensive, for varying reasons. This also includes campground rates.
RV Travel has posted an article why campground rates are going up.
They begin with:
Campground rates keep rising—even for RVers who don’t use the extras. From campground Wi-Fi upgrades to glamping units and luxury amenities, parks are spending more to attract new campers, and longtime RVers are increasingly picking up the tab.
If that sounds blunt, think about the last few years. You roll into a park you’ve used before and the price is up again. The sites are the same size. The hookups work… mostly. But now there’s a shiny new check-in system, a promise of “high-speed Wi-Fi,” and some kind of new “premium” lodging on the edge of the property that looks like it came out of a boutique hotel brochure.
Meanwhile, you’re sitting there thinking: We’re in an RV. We already brought our house.
To be clear, this isn’t an argument against reliable Wi-Fi. Many RVers want it, use it, and depend on it—especially those who work on the road or stay longer than a weekend. Solid infrastructure is part of modern camping. The question isn’t whether Wi-Fi belongs in campgrounds. It’s whether Wi-Fi—and other upgrades—are being used to solve the right problem.
To read more, go here.

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