Home » This New $10,000 Camper Is Half The Price Of The Cheapest New Car In America

This New $10,000 Camper Is Half The Price Of The Cheapest New Car In America

Cheaper Than A Car Camper Ts
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One of the loudest complaints I frequently hear about the RV industry is that manufacturers often demand house-level money for a camper that might not even last a decade. There are companies out there marketing camper vans that cost half a million dollars, and the companies are totally serious about it – but it doesn’t have to be that way, because some manufacturers have realized that affordability is a sizable concern with RV buyers today. There’s a new king of cheap in January 2026, and it’s the Coachmen Clipper 12RD. This pint-size camper costs just $9,999, and it doesn’t just have hard walls, but every single feature you’ll need for a fun and affordable weekend away from home. Somehow, it’s half the price of the cheapest new car in America.

Now, you might be wondering why I’m even bothering to compare the cost of a travel trailer with the cost of a car. These are very different kinds of transportation devices built to vastly different standards for different uses. However, this is nominally a car site, and I find it interesting to compare the cheapest versions of different vehicles. It’s fascinating to visualize how cheap a new Hyundai is, and think about how you can get something that you can sleep in and use the bathroom in for a whole lot less money.

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What I also find rather enthralling is that, as the price of the cheapest new car keeps creeping up seemingly every year, the RV industry keeps figuring out ways to keep the cheapest traditional travel trailer hanging near the $10,000 mark. I’ve been writing about the cheapest camper of the year for a while now. It used to be that these campers cost far less than the $16,695 Mitsubishi Mirage. Then, they were a fraction of the $17,190 Nissan Versa. Now, the cheapest highway-legal new car has surpassed the $20,000 mark. The Hyundai Venue is now the cheapest car in America at $20,550 before a $1,395 destination charge.

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Mercedes Streeter

The RV industry is not immune to escalating prices. I give fair play to both expensive and cheap units in my reporting. I just wrote about running hot laps in a Wingamm Oasi 540.1, a Ram ProMaster-based motorhome that runs $192,500. If you thought that was expensive, you haven’t seen anything yet. Living Vehicle will sell you a 39-foot travel trailer that weighs 16,500 pounds and costs $495,295 to start. Redtail Overland sells what it calls the Skyloft Van (below), which is sort of like a Westfalia on steroids. Its price? $565,000.

If you haven’t fainted yet, brace yourself, because things get even more expensive. 27North will sell you a Ford F-550 with a camping box on its back for between $750,000 and $1.2 million. I haven’t even gotten into the price of bus-based motorhomes yet, which do tick over $2 million if you’re loaded enough.

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This Redtail Overland Skyloft costs $565,000. Credit: Redtail Overland

Over the past few years, however, I have noticed that many mainstream brands are beginning to focus more on affordability. Absurdly expensive flagships are great at grabbing headlines at Robb Report and travel blogs, but relatively few people can actually buy them. There are a lot of buyers who just want a plain and functional camper with some basic safety and amenities to tow behind their crossover. They just want to have some weekend fun with their kids, not buy something as expensive as a house.

The RV industry still has a race to the bottom, which has resulted in a slew of fully-featured travel trailers for well under $15,000. In 2024, one of the cheapest hard-sided campers was the Dutchmen Coleman Lantern LT, which was only $13,000. Last year, the champion of cheap was the Keystone Coleman 13B, which was sold by Camping World for $9,999. This year, the 13B costs $400 more and lands at a still cheap $10,399.

But it loses the crown to the 2026 Coachmen Clipper 12RD. At only $9,999, it’s half the price of America’s cheapest new car. The thought of that is sad. But you’re also probably wondering how the RV industry has been able to keep the price hovering that low for at least a few years.

The New King Of Cheap

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Mercedes Streeter

The story of Coachmen is not unlike many old RV brands that have survived into the modern day. In 1964, brothers Claude Corson, Keith Corson, and Tom Corson opened Coachmen Industries in a 5,000-square-foot factory in Middlebury, Indiana. The facility built 80 truck caps, 12 travel trailers, and one truck camper that year. The business grew in production and scale, adding pre-fabricated houses as well as modular houses to its roster of products.

Coachmen was one of the victims of the Great Recession, and in 2008, it sold its RV division to Forest River. The remainder of Coachmen changed its name to All American Group and managed to soldier on until 2016 before going out of business. The RV side of Coachmen is still alive and under Forest River control. In recent times, I have featured affordable Coachmen trailers in my reporting, as well as the Coachmen Euro motorhome.

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Mercedes Streeter

I’ve also written about Coachmen’s Clipper series, a value-oriented trailer line that Coachmen says is one of the best-selling single-axle trailer brands in America. The 2026 Clipper 12RD comes from Coachmen’s 3K Series.

Coachmen says that means it has a BAL NXG frame with a powder coating and huck bolt assembly, a TPO rubberized roof, and an easy-lube axle. In other words, it’s a very typical travel trailer. This is your standard wood-framed camper with lauan tropical plywood, aluminum exterior siding, and an interior filled with the cheapest of everything. It doesn’t have Azdel composites, slides, or anything even remotely fascinating. Here’s the underside:

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So cheap the dump valve doesn’t even have a cap. Credit: Mercedes Streeter

In a way, I adore this camper’s simplicity. The lack of fancy features means that there isn’t a whole lot to break. There’s just a simple frame, a single axle, one propane tank that’s not even covered, only two manual leveling jacks, and an old-school crank for the tongue jack.

Yet, to Coachmen’s credit, there are a few clever features, like a diamond plate up front to protect the trailer from rocks kicked from the tow vehicle and an aerodynamic front cap. It also has a set of those really sturdy entry stairs. I’m also a fan of the aluminum siding. It’s a classic look, and I think it tends to age better than fiberglass siding, which sometimes gets bubbly or severely faded. The exterior of this trailer even manages to have a power awning with a built-in LED strip for that $9,999, which is pretty cool.

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Mercedes Streeter

The simplicity gets aggressive once you pop open the one and only door. The Clipper 12RD has a body length of 12 feet, and the trailer makes sure to use every inch of that space. Everything fore of the entry door is the open bedroom, which features a 54-inch by 74-inch camper queen mattress (a residential queen mattress is 60 inches by 80 inches). There’s also some minimal storage here, and most of it is open. After all, adding doors would cost money.

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Something that I was pleasantly surprised by was that, despite the rock-bottom price, Coachmen gave this trailer a cohesive kitchen.

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Mercedes Streeter

It’s common for super cheap travel trailers to have mismatched appliances, sinks, and faucets. Sometimes you’ll get a stainless steel stove, but a plastic sink and a black microwave. The Clipper 12RD sports a black and silver two-burner stove, a black and silver single basin sink, and a black and silver microwave. Even the 3.2 cubic foot refrigerator matches the rest of the appliances.

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Mercedes Streeter

Being excited over matching appliances may seem silly, but honestly, mismatched stuff in a cheap trailer is so common that it was a genuine surprise. The only equipment that did not match was the 13.5k BTU air-conditioner on the back wall, which is one of those white units that you might place in an apartment’s window.

The rest of the camper is fairly simple, featuring a dry bath with a flushing toilet and a dinette that turns into a bed.

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Mercedes Streeter

This camper is so bare-bones that you have to wash your hands in the kitchen sink when you’re done using the toilet. But that’s fine, this trailer has everything that up to three people will need for a weekend away from home. You even get a 20k BTU furnace, a 38-gallon fresh water tank, a 37-gallon gray water tank, and a 27-gallon waste tank.

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What You See Is What You Get

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Mercedes Streeter

As for quality? Well, it isn’t great. The GE appliances seem decent enough, but everything else is as cheap as it can be. The dinette table feels like it can be demolished by a stiff wind, and the walls around the bathroom give the impression of being constructed from one-ply toilet paper. Slam the cupboards, and you might break the doors. Okay, I am exaggerating a bit, but it’s absurdly cheap in here. You don’t even get a proper backsplash for when your cooking goes wild.

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Mercedes Streeter

Other notes about this interior include a thin bed, thin cushions, and a generally rough look to the boards that make up the furniture. Quite a few of the boards in the interior don’t even have decorative trim on their edges, and bare their ugliness for everyone to see.

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Mercedes Streeter

I also would not expect much in the way of insulation. While I applaud window-style air-conditioners for repairability, the way this one was installed was amusing. I could very easily see light coming through all sides of the camper. These gaps were small, but not tiny.

As to my question of how the RV producers still have a $9,999 camper? Well, that seems to come down to downsizing while keeping to about the same cheap quality. Last year’s $9,999 camper had a 13-foot cabin. This one is a foot shorter.

Cheap, Light, And Usable

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Mercedes Streeter

The 2026 Coachmen Clipper 12RD is 16 feet long overall, weighs 2,544 pounds empty, and has a 325-pound hitch weight. When loaded, it’s all of 3,968 pounds. That means a wide variety of crossovers could haul this without breaking a sweat. If you keep the weight down and don’t load it up with cargo, you can even tow it with a properly-equipped Ford Maverick!

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I’m told that your best bet to buy one of these for $9,999 is to find one being sold by General RV dealers. You may also have to negotiate that price if the dealer isn’t actively advertising some sort of automatic discount. Otherwise, you might pay closer to $11,000. Which, hey, that’s still pretty darn cheap. This was the same sort of catch that came with the Coleman 13B last year. Camping World was the dealer chain advertising the $9,999 price back then.

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Mercedes Streeter

Normally, I would say that buying a trailer like this is like rolling the dice. However, given the trailer’s rock-bottom price, I have no complaints. It’s only $9,999. You know you’re buying one of the cheapest new campers on the market, and you will be under no illusion that you’re getting something built like a Scamp or an Airstream. This is a trailer that’s cheap to buy, could be reasonably serviced by a single person, and in the worst case, you don’t lose that much money.

Honestly, I see this little trailer as a neat little rig for a family to just get out there and enjoy travel trailer camping without a huge investment. I have no doubt this thing will last at least a handful of years, or at least long enough to create some great memories. Then, when it does fall apart, you buy another cheap camper and keep building memories.

Top graphic image: Mercedes Streeter

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Space
Space
8 minutes ago

I love that these exist. I still can’t afford one but maybe in 7 years I can dream of a used one.

Phil
Phil
38 minutes ago

“Somehow, it’s half the price of the cheapest new car in America”

Well, it has no engine, no transmission, no steering system, no airbags, no complicated welded unibody, and it’s made of fiberboard, staples, and hope.

Somehow, it costs half the price of the cheapest new car when it feels like it should cost a quarter the price.

I know, economies of scale. And that said, it’s not a bad little floorplan for the size.

The Mark
Member
The Mark
44 minutes ago

I see this as one step up from a pop-up. You are sleeping in a nice dry bed (maybe get yourself one of those memory foam mattress toppers) and you’ve got climate control. You’ll do your cooking outside, and probably camp somewhere that has public restrooms. And that’s just fine! This is all you need.

Phil
Phil
34 minutes ago
Reply to  The Mark

I love the vastly larger floor and bed space of a popup, and the 360-degree view out the windows. Until it gets cold. And windy. Then the top goes skrunka! skrunka! skrunka! all night in the gusts and feels like it will rip off or permanently bend and then refuse to telescope back down again.

The Mark
Member
The Mark
17 minutes ago
Reply to  Phil

I am familiar with the noise you are describing. And pop-ups aren’t great if it’s too hot or too cold. But they are a step up from a tent, I suppose!

FormerTXJeepGuy
Member
FormerTXJeepGuy
1 hour ago

They keep the price low by cutting the quality more every year

JTilla
JTilla
1 hour ago

Thank you for putting the mattress size in this. The main problem with any of these are they are not made for tall people at all. Like you have to be under 6 ft to fit in any of the beds.

Gubbin
Member
Gubbin
1 hour ago

That’s pretty dang nice for the money. We paid $6k for a clean 25-year-old truck camper with a new roof. And then discovered the dry rot.

Note: anymore, it’s actually pretty hard to find truck campers for 8′ beds that fit flush with the back so you can tow, so I’m not too peeved about overpaying.

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