Last updated: June 15, 2026
Quick Answer: Most standard RV insurance policies void coverage the moment a paying renter takes the wheel. To be fully protected, RV owners need two layers of coverage: a personal policy that explicitly permits rental use, plus the platform’s insurance during the active rental period. This RV rental insurance guide breaks down exactly what each layer covers, which policies allow renting, and where the gaps are.
Key Takeaways
- Your current RV insurance almost certainly excludes commercial rental use — check for the “commercial exclusion clause” before listing anywhere.
- Two insurance layers are required: platform coverage during rentals + a personal policy that allows rental use between bookings.
- RV rental insurance costs roughly $15–$60 per day through rental companies or platforms, depending on coverage level. [4]
- Most personal auto insurance policies do not extend to rented RVs — verify before assuming you’re covered. [2]
- Credit cards typically exclude RVs from their rental vehicle protection benefits — don’t rely on them. [3]
- Peer-to-peer platforms (RVshare, Outdoorsy, RVezy) each have different liability limits, deductibles, and exclusions.
- Policies like Roamly and National General specifically permit rental use — standard carriers like State Farm usually don’t.
- Interior damage, mold, mechanical breakdown, and off-road use are commonly excluded from platform insurance.
- International renters face additional complexity; U.S. insurance practices differ significantly from most other countries. [8]
- Full-time RVers who rent out their rigs face a unique coverage gap that requires specialty policies.
Why Your Current RV Insurance Probably Won’t Cover Rentals
The short answer: most personal RV policies contain a commercial exclusion clause that immediately voids coverage once a renter pays you. This isn’t buried in fine print to trick you — it’s a standard underwriting rule. Personal policies are priced for personal use. The moment money changes hands, the risk profile changes entirely.
Here’s how to find it in your own policy. Pull out your declarations page and look for language like:
- “This policy does not apply to any vehicle used for commercial purposes.”
- “Coverage excludes any period during which the vehicle is rented or leased to others.”
- “No coverage applies when the insured receives compensation for use of the vehicle.”
If you see any of those phrases — or close variations — you’re not covered during a rental. Period.
What to ask your insurer before listing anywhere:
- Does my policy cover the vehicle during a paid rental period?
- Does it cover liability if a renter causes an accident?
- Does it cover the vehicle between rentals (while it sits at a peer-to-peer platform listing)?
- Will adding rental use change my premium or require a new policy?
Most major carriers — Geico, State Farm, Allstate — will answer “no” to questions one through three. A few specialty carriers will say yes, and those are the ones worth knowing about (covered in the personal policy section below).
Common mistake: Owners assume that because their RV is insured, it’s insured during rentals. That assumption can leave you paying out of pocket for a $50,000+ vehicle repair.
The Two Layers of Insurance Every RV Rental Owner Needs
Every RV owner who rents out their vehicle needs exactly two layers of insurance — not one, not three. Think of it like renting out a home on Airbnb. Airbnb provides host protection during a guest’s stay, but your homeowner’s policy still needs to permit short-term rental use for the periods between guests. The same logic applies to RVs.
Layer 1 — Platform coverage during the active rental period
When a renter books through RVshare, Outdoorsy, or RVezy, the platform’s insurance activates for the duration of that trip. This covers liability, collision, and sometimes interior damage — but only while the renter has the keys. The moment the rental ends, that coverage stops.
Layer 2 — A personal policy that permits renting between rentals
Your personal RV insurance needs to cover the vehicle when it’s not on an active rental: sitting in your driveway, being driven to a meetup point, or parked at a campground between bookings. This policy must explicitly allow rental use, or you’re in the same uninsured gap as before.
The Airbnb analogy holds up well here. Airbnb’s AirCover kicks in during a guest stay, but a landlord still needs a proper landlord policy — not a standard homeowner’s policy — to cover the property between guests. Same principle, different vehicle.
For a broader look at how RV rental economics work before diving deeper into insurance, our first-time RV rental guide is a solid starting point.
What Platform Insurance Actually Covers — And What It Doesn’t
Platform insurance covers the basics well — liability and collision during an active rental — but it has meaningful gaps that every owner should understand before accepting a booking.
Here’s a direct comparison of the three major peer-to-peer platforms as of 2026:
| Coverage Category | RVshare | Outdoorsy | RVezy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liability limit | $1M | $1M | $2M (US/Canada) |
| Collision/comprehensive | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Deductible (renter pays) | $1,500–$2,500 | $1,500–$3,000 | Varies by plan |
| Interior damage | Add-on only | Limited | Limited |
| Older RVs (15+ years) | Restrictions apply | Covered (some limits) | Covered |
| Delivery/handoff coverage | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| Mechanical breakdown | No | No | No |
| Mold/water intrusion | No | No | No |
| Off-road use | No | No | No |
| Between-rental coverage | No | No | No |
Key takeaways from this table:
- Mechanical breakdown is universally excluded. If the engine fails mid-trip, that’s on the owner’s personal policy or a separate warranty.
- Mold and water intrusion claims are almost always denied. These are considered maintenance issues, not accident damage.
- Off-road use voids coverage on all three platforms — if a renter takes your rig down a forest service road and gets stuck, you’re likely paying for the tow.
- Interior damage is the biggest gap. A renter who burns a hole in the couch or breaks a cabinet door may not be covered under standard platform insurance. RVshare offers an interior damage add-on; the others have limited interior provisions.
For owners considering which platform to list on, our guide to best RV rental platforms for owners covers the full comparison beyond just insurance.
Personal Insurance Policies That Allow RV Renting
Three insurers specifically offer policies that permit RV rental use: Roamly, National General, and Progressive (with a rental-use endorsement). Standard carriers like Geico and State Farm do not offer rental-use endorsements for RVs — if you’re currently with them, you’ll need to switch or add a specialty policy.
Roamly is the most renter-friendly option on the market right now. Built specifically for RV owners who list on peer-to-peer platforms, it covers the vehicle during rentals, between rentals, and while in transit. Cost range: roughly $800–$1,200/year depending on RV value and location. You can learn more about RV rental insurance through Roamly in our dedicated breakdown.
National General offers an RV policy with a rental-use endorsement. It’s not as seamlessly integrated with platforms as Roamly, but it’s a solid option for owners who already have a relationship with the carrier. Cost range: $600–$1,000/year.
Progressive offers a rental-use endorsement on some RV policies, but it’s not universally available and requires a specific conversation with an agent. Cost range: $700–$1,100/year. [2]
What to avoid:
- Standard State Farm or Geico RV policies — both explicitly exclude commercial rental use.
- Assuming your existing policy covers rentals without written confirmation from your insurer.
- Letting your policy lapse between rentals while relying solely on platform coverage.
How to switch without losing premium:
- Get a quote from Roamly or National General before canceling your current policy.
- Set the new policy start date to the same day as your current policy cancellation.
- Request a pro-rata refund from your current insurer for unused premium.
- Notify the platform you list on about your new policy — some require proof of insurance.
Platform Insurance Deep Dive — RVshare
RVshare provides up to $1 million in liability coverage for renters during an active booking, backed by a third-party insurer. For most rental scenarios, this is sufficient — but the details matter.
What RVshare covers:
- Third-party liability up to $1M per occurrence
- Collision and comprehensive damage to the RV during the rental period
- 24/7 roadside assistance including towing, tire changes, and lockout service [6]
- Optional interior damage protection (add-on, roughly $9–$15/day)
What RVshare excludes:
- Mechanical or electrical breakdown
- Mold, mildew, or water damage from improper use
- Off-road driving or use on unpaved roads not reasonably accessible
- Damage during delivery if not booked through the platform’s delivery feature
- Any period outside the confirmed rental window
Deductible: Renters typically pay $1,500–$2,500 per incident. Owners are not responsible for the deductible — it comes from the renter.
Best for: Owners with newer RVs (under 10 years), Class A or Class C motorhomes, and those who want a well-known platform with a large renter base.
Payout speed: RVshare’s claims team typically takes 2–6 weeks to process and authorize repairs. Document everything immediately — photos, videos, written renter acknowledgment.
Platform Insurance Deep Dive — Outdoorsy
Outdoorsy’s insurance is underwritten by Liberty Mutual and Lloyd’s of London, giving it strong financial backing and slightly more flexible coverage terms than some competitors. [6]
What Outdoorsy covers:
- Third-party liability up to $1M per occurrence
- Collision and comprehensive damage during the rental period
- Delivery handoff coverage — if you deliver the RV and it’s damaged during that process, coverage applies
- Coverage for older vehicles (some restrictions apply for RVs over 20 years old)
- 24/7 roadside assistance
What Outdoorsy excludes:
- Mechanical breakdown or engine failure
- Mold, water intrusion, or damage from lack of maintenance
- Off-road use or driving on non-public roads
- Personal belongings left in the RV by the owner
- Awning damage in wind events (often classified as improper use)
Deductible: $1,500–$3,000 per incident, paid by the renter.
Best for: Owners with older RVs who want delivery coverage, or those with higher-value rigs who want the security of Lloyd’s backing. Outdoorsy also tends to attract experienced renters, which can mean fewer claims.
Edge case: If you have a vintage or specialty RV (Airstream, converted bus), verify with Outdoorsy directly — some specialty vehicles require additional underwriting approval.
Platform Insurance Deep Dive — RVezy
RVezy offers the highest liability ceiling of the three major platforms at $2 million, and its coverage extends across both the U.S. and Canada — making it the strongest option for cross-border rentals. [8]
What RVezy covers:
- Third-party liability up to $2M per occurrence (US and Canada)
- Collision and comprehensive damage during the rental
- Delivery coverage for owner-delivered rentals
- Roadside assistance
What RVezy excludes:
- Mechanical or electrical failure
- Damage from improper use, including off-road driving
- Interior damage beyond basic accident-related incidents
- Personal property of the owner
Best for: Owners near the Canadian border, snowbirds who rent in multiple regions, or anyone who wants the highest liability ceiling available through a platform.
Note on deductibles: RVezy’s deductible structure varies by plan and vehicle type. Always review the specific terms for your RV before accepting bookings.
What Happens When a Renter Damages Your RV
When a renter damages your RV, the claims process follows a specific sequence — and how quickly you act in the first 24 hours determines how smoothly the rest goes. Here’s the step-by-step process:
Step 1 — Discovery (within 24 hours of return)
Inspect the RV immediately upon return. Walk around the exterior, check the interior, test all systems. Document everything with timestamped photos and video. Compare against your pre-rental condition report.
Step 2 — File within the platform’s window
Each platform has a claims filing deadline — typically 24–72 hours after the rental ends. Missing this window can void your claim entirely. File even if you’re still assessing the damage.
Step 3 — Documentation package
Submit: pre-rental photos, post-rental photos, repair estimates from a licensed RV repair shop, and any written communication with the renter acknowledging the damage.
Step 4 — Platform claims team review
The platform assigns a claims adjuster. They’ll review your documentation, contact the renter for their account, and determine fault. This stage takes 1–3 weeks on average.
Step 5 — Repair authorization
Once the claim is approved, the platform authorizes repairs up to the coverage limit. Use a platform-approved repair shop where possible — using an unapproved shop can complicate reimbursement.
Realistic timeline: From filing to payment, expect 3–8 weeks. For complex claims (structural damage, water intrusion disputes), it can stretch to 12 weeks.
Common mistake: Owners accept a verbal apology from the renter and skip the formal claims process, then discover the damage is worse than expected. Always file — you can withdraw a claim if it turns out to be minor.
Understanding hidden fees in RV rentals is also worth reviewing, since some damage-related costs can overlap with fees renters may dispute.
Special Situations — Full-Time RVers Who Also Want to Rent
Full-time RVers face a unique insurance challenge: their RV is both their home and a potential rental income source, and most policies don’t accommodate both uses simultaneously.
The “snowbird insurance challenge” is real. If you live in your RV six months of the year and rent it out the other six, you need a policy that covers:
- Full-time habitation (which requires a full-timer endorsement)
- Rental use (which requires a rental-use endorsement)
- The vehicle between rentals
Standard policies cover one of these. Specialty policies cover two. Very few cover all three — but they exist.
Policies that cover both full-time living and rental use:
- Roamly — explicitly designed for this scenario. Covers full-time living and rental use in a single policy.
- National General — offers full-timer endorsements and can add rental use with proper disclosure.
- Progressive — possible with both endorsements, but requires agent-level approval and isn’t guaranteed.
Why disclosure matters: If you tell your insurer you live in the RV full-time but don’t disclose rental use, and a renter has an accident, your claim can be denied for material misrepresentation. That’s not a technicality — it’s a policy void.
For those exploring the full-time lifestyle alongside rental income, our guide on full-time RV living covers the broader picture.
Digital nomads and extended travelers who rent their RV while working remotely face the same disclosure requirement. If you’re renting out your rig for 30+ days at a stretch, some platforms classify this as a long-term rental, which may trigger different insurance terms. Check platform-specific long-term rental policies before accepting bookings over 30 days.
International RV Rental Insurance — What Travelers Need to Know
International travelers renting RVs in the U.S. face a coverage gap that most guides don’t address: their home country’s auto insurance almost never extends to U.S. rental vehicles, and U.S. credit card protections often don’t apply to their foreign-issued cards. [8]
Here’s what international renters need to understand:
- U.S. minimum liability requirements vary by state. Some states require as little as $15,000/$30,000 in liability coverage — far below what a serious accident could cost. Supplemental Liability Insurance (SLI) through the rental company can raise this to $1 million. [5]
- Foreign driver’s licenses are generally accepted in the U.S. for tourists, but some rental companies require an International Driving Permit alongside the foreign license.
- Travel insurance from home may include some rental vehicle coverage, but RVs are frequently excluded. Check the policy wording specifically for “motorhomes” or “recreational vehicles.”
- Platform insurance (RVshare, Outdoorsy) does apply to international renters booking through those platforms — the renter’s nationality doesn’t affect platform coverage, but the renter must have a valid license.
For Canadian renters specifically: RVezy’s US/Canada coverage is the cleanest option, as it’s designed for cross-border travel. [8]
Practical recommendation for international renters: Purchase the rental company’s or platform’s maximum liability package, and separately verify whether your travel insurance policy covers RV-specific incidents. Don’t assume either covers the other.
What Types of Damage Aren’t Covered by Standard RV Rental Insurance
Standard RV rental insurance — whether from a rental company or a peer-to-peer platform — consistently excludes several damage categories that renters and owners are often surprised to discover. [4]
The most common exclusions:
- Mechanical and electrical breakdown — engine failure, transmission issues, generator problems. These are considered maintenance, not accidents.
- Mold and water intrusion — almost universally excluded. If a renter leaves a window open in rain and mold develops, that’s typically a maintenance claim.
- Awning damage from wind — many policies classify this as improper use if the awning was left extended in wind.
- Tire blowouts — roadside assistance may cover the tire change, but the tire replacement cost often isn’t covered.
- Interior wear and tear — scuffs, minor stains, and normal use damage are excluded. Only sudden, accidental interior damage may qualify (and only with an add-on).
- Off-road damage — any damage occurring on unpaved, non-public roads.
- Personal belongings — neither the owner’s nor the renter’s personal property is covered under standard platform insurance.
- Slide-out damage from improper operation — if a renter extends or retracts a slide-out incorrectly, resulting damage is often disputed.
Edge case: Awning damage is one of the most commonly disputed claims. If you’re an owner, consider adding a note in your rental agreement that the awning must be retracted when unattended. This creates a paper trail that supports a claim if the renter ignores the instruction.
Can I Buy RV Rental Insurance After I’ve Already Started My Rental?
No — in most cases, you cannot purchase RV rental insurance after the rental period has already begun. Insurance must be in place before the risk event occurs. Attempting to add coverage after an incident has happened is considered fraud.
However, there are two nuances worth knowing:
- If you’re mid-trip and haven’t had an incident yet, some standalone travel insurance providers allow you to add a policy mid-trip for future incidents — but this is rare and RV-specific coverage is even rarer.
- Rental company upgrades: If you’re at a traditional RV rental company (not a peer-to-peer platform), you may be able to upgrade your insurance package at the rental counter before you drive away — but not after you’ve left the lot.
The practical takeaway: Sort your insurance before you pick up the keys. If you’re unsure what coverage you have, call your insurer and the rental company the day before your rental starts — not the day after something goes wrong.
Do Rental Companies Require Their Own Insurance When You Rent an RV?
Yes — most traditional RV rental companies require renters to carry some form of insurance, and they typically offer their own packages if you don’t have qualifying personal coverage. [1]
Traditional rental companies (think Cruise America, El Monte RV, or regional dealers) handle insurance differently from peer-to-peer platforms:
- Basic liability is mandatory. You must show proof of at least state-minimum liability coverage to drive off the lot. [1]
- The rental company’s package is the easiest path. Most renters simply purchase the company’s insurance package, which ranges from $15–$60/day depending on coverage level. [4]
- Personal auto insurance rarely qualifies. Most personal auto policies don’t extend to RV rentals, so even if you have excellent car insurance, the rental company may not accept it as qualifying coverage. [2]
- Credit cards almost never qualify. Rental companies are aware that credit card coverage excludes RVs, and they won’t accept a credit card as your sole insurance. [3]
Supplemental Liability Insurance (SLI) is worth considering if you’re renting from a traditional company. For roughly $10–$15/day extra, SLI raises your liability coverage to $1 million — a meaningful upgrade from state minimums in low-coverage states. [5]
Medical Expenses and RV Rental Insurance Guide — What’s Actually Included
Medical expense coverage in RV rental insurance is limited and often misunderstood. Most platform and rental company policies are primarily liability and property damage focused — they’re not health insurance.
Here’s what’s typically included and excluded:
Included (in most packages):
- Medical payments (MedPay) coverage for injuries to passengers in the rental RV, typically $1,000–$5,000 per person
- Liability coverage that pays for injuries to third parties (people outside the RV) if you cause an accident
Not included:
- Your own medical bills beyond a small MedPay limit
- Long-term disability or rehabilitation costs
- Injuries to renters or passengers above the MedPay cap
Practical recommendation: If you’re renting an RV and don’t have strong personal health insurance, consider a short-term travel insurance policy that includes emergency medical coverage. This fills the gap that RV rental insurance leaves open.
How Do I Know If I’m Fully Protected When Renting an RV?
You’re fully protected when you can answer “yes” to four specific questions. Run through this checklist before every rental:
- ✅ Is liability coverage active? Minimum state liability must be in place. Platform insurance or rental company package covers this during the rental period.
- ✅ Is collision/comprehensive coverage in place? Covers physical damage to the RV itself. Platform insurance typically covers this; confirm the deductible amount.
- ✅ Is there coverage between rentals? If you’re an owner, your personal policy must cover the vehicle when it’s not on an active rental.
- ✅ Are the gaps addressed? Interior damage add-on purchased? Mechanical breakdown covered by a warranty or separate plan? Personal health insurance adequate for medical expenses?
If you can check all four boxes, you’re in solid shape. Most renters and owners can check two or three — the gaps are usually interior damage and between-rental coverage.
For a complete look at what renting an RV actually costs beyond insurance, see our breakdown of how much it costs to rent an RV for a week.
RV Rental Insurance Checklist — Before Your First Rental
Use this checklist before accepting your first booking or picking up your first rental RV.
For RV owners listing on platforms:
- [ ] Review your current RV insurance policy for commercial exclusion language
- [ ] Contact your insurer to confirm whether rental use is permitted
- [ ] If not permitted, get quotes from Roamly, National General, or Progressive
- [ ] Switch to a rental-permitted policy before accepting any bookings
- [ ] Enroll in the platform’s insurance program (RVshare, Outdoorsy, or RVezy)
- [ ] Consider adding the interior damage protection add-on
- [ ] Create a detailed pre-rental condition report with photos and video
- [ ] Add specific use restrictions to your rental agreement (no off-road, awning rules, etc.)
- [ ] Know the platform’s claims filing deadline (usually 24–72 hours post-rental)
- [ ] Verify roadside assistance is included and save the contact number
For renters:
- [ ] Call your personal auto insurer to confirm whether your policy extends to RV rentals
- [ ] Check your credit card benefits — confirm RVs are not excluded
- [ ] Review the rental company’s or platform’s insurance package options
- [ ] Purchase at least the basic liability package if your personal coverage doesn’t apply
- [ ] Consider SLI if renting in a state with low minimum liability requirements
- [ ] Add interior damage protection if available
- [ ] Photograph the RV thoroughly before driving away
- [ ] Save the roadside assistance number before you leave
- [ ] Read the rental agreement’s use restrictions (off-road, pets, additional drivers)
- [ ] Confirm your personal health insurance is adequate for medical expenses
Interactive Insurance Cost Estimator
FAQ — RV Rental Insurance
Does my car insurance cover an RV rental?
Almost certainly not. Most personal auto insurance policies explicitly exclude rented RVs. A standard auto policy may cover a rented car, but RVs are a different vehicle class entirely. Call your insurer before assuming you’re covered. [2]
Will a platform insurance claim affect my personal driving record?
No — platform insurance claims (RVshare, Outdoorsy, RVezy) are filed against the platform’s commercial policy, not your personal auto policy. Your personal driving record and insurance rates are not affected by platform claims.
Do I need insurance if I only offer delivery rentals?
Yes. Delivery rentals still involve your vehicle being used by a renter, which triggers the same commercial exclusion in standard personal policies. Both Outdoorsy and RVezy offer delivery handoff coverage, but you still need a personal policy that permits rental use for the periods outside the active booking.
Can I require renters to buy additional insurance?
Yes, as an owner you can require renters to purchase a specific coverage tier through the platform. Most platforms allow owners to set minimum insurance requirements in their listing settings. This is a smart practice for high-value RVs.
What is the difference between liability and collision for RV rentals?
Liability covers damage you cause to other people and their property. Collision covers damage to the rental RV itself. You need both — liability protects others, collision protects the vehicle. Renting with only liability means you’re personally responsible for repairs to the RV if you cause an accident.
What if a renter has an accident in another state?
Platform insurance (RVshare, Outdoorsy, RVezy) covers rentals across all U.S. states. The platform’s liability limits apply regardless of which state the accident occurs in. However, if the state’s minimum liability requirements exceed the platform’s coverage, the renter may be personally liable for the gap — which is why SLI is worth considering for states with unusual requirements.
Is RV rental insurance different for motorhomes vs. travel trailers?
Yes, in meaningful ways. Motorhomes are self-propelled and require their own liability coverage. Travel trailers are towed, and liability while towing is typically covered by the tow vehicle’s insurance — not a separate trailer policy. However, physical damage coverage for the trailer itself still needs to be addressed separately. [4]
Are there RV rental insurance options for international travelers visiting the U.S.?
Yes. International travelers can purchase the rental company’s or platform’s insurance package regardless of their home country. Platform insurance (RVshare, Outdoorsy) applies to international renters. SLI is strongly recommended for international visitors unfamiliar with U.S. liability standards. [8]
What happens if I’m in an accident with a rental RV?
Stop safely, call emergency services if needed, document the scene with photos, exchange information with any other parties, and contact the rental company or platform’s claims line immediately. Do not admit fault. File your claim within the platform’s required window (usually 24–72 hours). [6]
Can my credit card cover an RV rental?
Rarely. Most credit card rental vehicle protection programs explicitly exclude RVs, motorhomes, and vehicles over a certain size or value. Don’t rely on credit card coverage for an RV rental without reading the specific card’s benefit terms. [3]
Conclusion
RV rental insurance isn’t complicated once you understand the two-layer system. As an owner, you need a personal policy that permits rental use (Roamly is the strongest option right now) plus the platform’s coverage during active rentals. As a renter, you need to verify that your personal auto insurance actually extends to RVs — it probably doesn’t — and purchase at least the standard liability and collision package from the rental company or platform.
The gaps that catch people off guard are consistent: interior damage, mechanical breakdown, mold, and off-road use. Address those proactively with add-ons, rental agreement restrictions, and thorough pre-rental documentation.
Your next steps:
- Pull out your current RV or auto insurance policy and look for commercial exclusion language today.
- If you’re an owner planning to list, get a quote from Roamly before your first booking.
- If you’re a renter, call your insurer and ask directly: “Does my policy cover a rented motorhome or travel trailer?”
- Review the platform comparison table above and choose the platform whose insurance terms best match your RV type and rental style.
- Complete the checklist in this guide before your first rental — it takes 30 minutes and can save you tens of thousands of dollars.
For more on the full cost picture of renting an RV, our RV rental vs. buying guide breaks down the financial comparison in detail. And if you’re still exploring whether renting out your RV makes financial sense, is renting your RV worth it walks through the numbers honestly.
References
[1] RV Rental Insurance – https://www.insureonthespot.com/rv-rental-insurance/?utm_source=openai
[2] RV Rental Insurance – https://www.progressive.com/answers/rv-rental-insurance/?utm_source=openai
[3] The Beginners Guide To Renting An RV – https://www.nerdwallet.com/travel/learn/the-beginners-guide-to-renting-an-rv?utm_source=openai
[4] RV Rental Insurance – https://www.blacksford.com/rv-trips/rv-rental-insurance?utm_source=openai
[5] Insurance – https://www.beckleysrvs.com/rv-rentals/insurance?utm_source=openai
[6] The Ultimate RV Insurance Guide – https://rvshare.com/blog/the-ultimate-rv-insurance-guide/?utm_source=openai
[7] What Insurance Should I Have To Rent My RV – https://support.rvngo.com/portal/en/kb/articles/what-insurance-should-i-have-to-rent-my-rv?utm_source=openai
[8] RV Rental Insurance Guide – https://usarvrentals.com/how-it-works/insurance-and-licensing/rv-rental-insurance-guide?utm_source=openai
[9] RV Insurance Rental – https://www.insure.com/car-insurance/rv-insurance-rental.html/?utm_source=openai