๐Ÿš RV & BOAT TOWING

Camper Towing Capacity: What Truck Do You Need?

Published Mar 2, 2026 ยท Updated Mar 2, 2026 ยท 11 min read
MarkUpdated Mar 2, 2026Ford Motor Company

Published: 2026-03-02 ยท Updated: 2026-03-02

Camper Towing Capacity: What Truck Do You Need?

Key Takeaways
  • Always use your camper's loaded weight โ€” not dry weight โ€” when matching it to a truck. Water, gear, and supplies add 1,000โ€“2,500 lbs.
  • Payload capacity is often the binding constraint before tow rating. Tongue weight alone can eat 600โ€“1,000 lbs of your truck's payload.
  • Half-tons handle most travel trailers up to 8,000 lbs; fifth wheels and large rigs demand a 3/4-ton or one-ton platform.
  • Never exceed any single rating โ€” tow rating, payload, or GCWR. Overloading one while staying under the others still creates unsafe conditions.
  • A factory trailer tow package is required for published max ratings to apply โ€” aftermarket add-ons don't substitute.

What Size Truck Do I Need to Pull a Camper?

The size truck you need to pull a camper depends entirely on the camper's loaded GVWR, not its dry weight. Lightweight pop-up campers under 3,500 lbs can be managed by a midsize truck like a Toyota Tacoma or Chevy Colorado. Travel trailers from 4,000โ€“8,000 lbs need a properly equipped half-ton. Anything above 10,000 lbs loaded demands a 3/4-ton or one-ton.

Here's a practical way to think about it. A 26-foot travel trailer might list a dry weight of 5,800 lbs โ€” but once you've filled the fresh water tank (40 gallons = 334 lbs), loaded camping gear, clothes, food, and a full propane tank, you're easily at 7,200โ€“7,500 lbs. That's the number that matters for matching your truck.

A midsize truck like the Toyota Tacoma tops out around 6,800 lbs tow capacity (per Toyota's official towing guide) โ€” fine for a small travel trailer, but tight on margin at 7,200 lbs loaded. You'd want a half-ton minimum for that rig, and ideally one with a max-tow package and the right axle ratio.

Our full camper towing capacity guide breaks down specific models and configurations if you want to get deeper into the numbers.


3D isometric cutaway of Camper showing engine, frame, and tow hitch components

How Do I Calculate Camper Towing Capacity for My Truck?

Calculate your effective tow capacity by subtracting your truck's curb weight, passenger and cargo weight, and tongue weight from its Gross Combined Weight Rating (GCWR). The result is the maximum trailer weight you can safely pull. Your door-jamb sticker and the Trailer Towing Supplement โ€” published separately by manufacturers like Ford and RAM โ€” list all three ratings.

Here's a worked example with real numbers:

Say you have a 2024 Ford F-150 with a 3.5L PowerBoost hybrid engine. Its GCWR is 22,000 lbs. Curb weight is roughly 5,200 lbs. Add:

  • Driver + passenger: 370 lbs
  • Gear in the cab and bed: 150 lbs
  • Tongue weight from a 7,000-lb trailer at 13%: 910 lbs

That puts your truck-side load at 6,630 lbs. Subtract from 22,000 lbs GCWR and you have 15,370 lbs of trailer capacity โ€” well above the 7,000-lb trailer. But now check payload: the F-150's payload rating on the door-jamb sticker might be 1,800 lbs. Your tongue weight (910 lbs) plus passengers and gear (520 lbs) totals 1,430 lbs โ€” you're at 79% of payload before you even load anything extra in the bed. That's the binding constraint, not the tow rating.

Check the door-jamb sticker on your driver's side B-pillar. It lists GVWR, GAWR (axle ratings), and payload. Then pull the Trailer Towing Supplement for your exact engine/axle combination โ€” Ford, GM, and RAM all publish these as separate PDFs from the owner's manual. Use our payload calculator to run your specific numbers.


Can a Half-Ton Truck Tow a Travel Trailer?

A half-ton truck can absolutely tow most travel trailers between 4,000 and 8,000 lbs โ€” but only when properly configured with the factory trailer tow package. The 2024 Ford F-150 tops out at 13,500 lbs, the Silverado 1500 at 13,300 lbs, and the Ram 1500 at 12,750 lbs (per manufacturer towing guides). Payload capacity, not tow rating, is usually the first limit you'll hit.

One honest caveat: those headline tow ratings require very specific configurations โ€” usually the max-tow package (option code 53B on Ford, Z82 on GM), the heavy-duty payload package, a specific rear axle ratio (typically 3.73 or 4.10), and the right cab/bed combination. A base-trim F-150 with a 3.31 axle ratio and crew cab long bed isn't towing 13,500 lbs safely โ€” you might be limited to 9,000 lbs in that configuration. Verify your exact build's rating in the Trailer Towing Supplement, not just the max advertised number.

For a travel trailer around 6,500 lbs loaded, a properly equipped half-ton works well on flat to rolling terrain. At altitude โ€” say, heading into Colorado above 7,000 feet โ€” naturally aspirated engines lose roughly 3% power per 1,000 feet of elevation gain. That same F-150 EcoBoost loses some boost efficiency in thin air. You'll feel it on steep grades. See our towing in mountains guide for strategies that help.

Weight distribution hitches are recommended by hitch manufacturers when your trailer exceeds roughly 50% of your truck's weight. For a 6,500-lb trailer behind a 5,200-lb F-150, that threshold is crossed โ€” a Reese Pro Weight Distribution Hitch or Equal-i-zer 4-Point system will improve handling and reduce rear-end squat significantly.


3D data visualization comparing Camper engine options and towing capacities

What Is the Difference Between GVWR, GCWR, and Payload for Towing?

GVWR is the maximum the truck itself can weigh when fully loaded with people, cargo, and fuel. GCWR is the combined maximum weight of the truck plus trailer. Payload is the weight the truck can carry in its cab and bed, including tongue weight from the hitch. Camper towing requirements mean you must stay inside all three limits simultaneously โ€” not just one.

Here's why they all matter independently: A truck might have a 12,000-lb tow rating and a 15,000-lb GCWR โ€” looks fine on paper. But its payload is only 1,400 lbs. A 10,000-lb trailer with 13% tongue weight puts 1,300 lbs on the hitch. Add two passengers (350 lbs) and some gear (150 lbs) and you're at 1,800 lbs โ€” 400 lbs over payload. The truck is technically overloaded even though the tow rating appears sufficient. Per NHTSA guidance, overloading payload creates stopping distance issues and increases rollover risk.

Our towing capacity guide has a full breakdown of all weight ratings and how they interact.


What Truck Do You Need to Tow a Fifth Wheel Camper?

Fifth wheel campers typically weigh 12,000โ€“18,000 lbs loaded, and the minimum platform is a 3/4-ton truck โ€” Ram 2500, Ford F-250, or Chevy Silverado 2500HD. Pin weight runs 15โ€“25% of trailer weight, meaning 1,800โ€“4,500 lbs lands directly on the truck's bed. That's why payload capacity, not just tow rating, is the critical spec for fifth wheel matching.

To use our RV and boat tow estimator, enter your truck and fifth wheel specs below โ€” it'll flag whether you're within all three ratings.

A Ram 2500 with the 6.7L Cummins diesel and a 4.10 rear axle is rated for 20,000 lbs conventional towing (per RAM's towing guide). A Ford F-250 with the 6.7L Power Stroke diesel hits 22,000 lbs in the right configuration. Those numbers are real โ€” but they require the Heavy-Duty Trailer Tow Package, integrated trailer brake controller, and gooseneck/fifth wheel prep package on the F-250. Without those, ratings drop substantially.

Half-ton trucks cannot safely tow most fifth wheels. The F-150 tops out at 9,900 lbs conventional โ€” impressive for a half-ton, but a 14,000-lb fifth wheel puts you 4,000 lbs over that ceiling. Don't try to stretch a half-ton here. You need a 3/4-ton minimum, full stop.

For more detail on this specific use case, our fifth wheel towing guide covers axle ratios, pin box setup, and brake controller calibration.


3D diagram showing proper tow setup for Camper with hitch components and safety equipment

Is a Diesel Truck Better for Towing a Camper?

Diesel trucks produce peak torque at much lower RPMs โ€” the Ram 2500 Cummins makes 850 lb-ft at just 1,700 RPM versus a gas engine straining near redline for much less. This makes diesel trucks meaningfully better for sustained highway towing, grades, and heavy loads above 10,000 lbs. For trailers under 8,000 lbs on flat terrain, a gas half-ton is usually sufficient and costs less to buy and fuel.

The practical calculus: a 2024 RAM 2500 diesel adds roughly $9,000โ€“$11,000 over the base gas version. If you're towing 30 days a year with a 7,500-lb travel trailer in the Midwest, the gas engine does the job fine and the diesel payback period is extremely long. If you're running a 16,000-lb fifth wheel from Texas to Montana twice a year through mountain passes, the diesel isn't a luxury โ€” it's the right tool. The torque advantage translates directly to less transmission heat, better fuel economy under load (per DOE fuel economy data), and longer drivetrain life.

Fuel economy takes a hit regardless of engine type. Expect 30โ€“50% worse MPG when towing versus unloaded driving. A truck getting 20 MPG empty might see 11โ€“13 MPG towing a heavy camper. Our RV towing MPG guide has real-world data across popular truck/trailer combos.


Truck Engine Max Tow Rating Payload (est. range) Best For
Ford F-150 (2024) 3.5L EcoBoost V6 13,500 lbs 1,400โ€“2,300 lbs Travel trailers up to ~8,500 lbs
Ram 1500 (2024) 5.7L HEMI V8 12,750 lbs 1,300โ€“2,050 lbs Travel trailers up to ~8,000 lbs
Chevy Silverado 1500 (2024) 5.3L V8 13,300 lbs 1,400โ€“2,200 lbs Travel trailers up to ~8,500 lbs
Ford F-250 (2024) 6.7L Power Stroke Diesel 22,000 lbs 2,800โ€“4,200 lbs Fifth wheels, large RVs
Ram 2500 (2024) 6.7L Cummins Diesel 20,000 lbs 2,500โ€“4,000 lbs Fifth wheels, heavy campers

Sources: Ford, Chevrolet, and RAM manufacturer towing guides (2024). Payload ranges reflect configuration variation โ€” always verify via your door-jamb sticker.


3D payload capacity visualization for Camper showing weight distribution and remaining capacity

What Happens If You Exceed Your Truck's Towing Capacity?

Exceeding your truck's towing capacity triggers a chain reaction of mechanical and safety failures. Braking distance increases โ€” NHTSA data shows stopping distances grow roughly 25% when operating near or above maximum rated capacity. Transmission fluid overheats, accelerating wear in units like the GM 6L80 and Ford 6R80. Suspension components fatigue faster, and tire blowouts become significantly more likely under the added load.

Beyond mechanical damage, there's a legal and insurance dimension. If you're in an accident while towing over your rated capacity, your auto insurance carrier may deny the claim on the grounds of negligent overloading. The towing capacity ratings published by manufacturers already include a safety buffer โ€” exceeding the rating eliminates that margin entirely.

If you're not sure whether your setup is within limits, our can-I-tow-this checker walks you through the math in under two minutes. And if you're planning a trip through variable terrain, check towing laws by state for any weight restrictions on your route โ€” some states enforce trailer weight limits on specific road classes. You might also want to review AAA's towing and safety guidance before a long haul, especially if you're a first-time camper tower.

For a complete look at how to set up your rig safely before the first trip, see our travel trailer towing tips and the broader RV towing guide.

Try Our Free RV/Boat Tow Weight Estimator

Sources & Methodology

---

  1. 1.
    Ford Motor Company โ€” 2024 F-150 and F-250 Trailer Towing Supplement, accessed via ford.com. Used for tow ratings, payload ranges, and tow package specifications.
  2. 2.
    RAM Trucks โ€” 2024 Ram 1500 and 2500 Towing Guide, accessed via ramtrucks.com. Used for diesel tow ratings and payload data.
  3. 3.
    Chevrolet โ€” 2024 Silverado Towing Guide, accessed via chevrolet.com. Used for half-ton tow and payload comparisons.
  4. 4.
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) โ€” Vehicle safety and stopping distance research, nhtsa.gov. Referenced for overloading safety data.
  5. 5.
    U.S. Department of Transportation / DOE โ€” Fuel economy and towing efficiency data, transportation.gov. Referenced for fuel economy reduction estimates under tow load.

Mark

Founder & Automotive Writer

Mark Benson is a lifelong car enthusiast with roots in a family-run auto repair shop. With years of hands-on experience in the automotive industry, Mark founded RevFrenzy to help drivers make informed decisions about towing, truck capacity, and roadside assistance.

Read full bio โ†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes โ€” a properly equipped half-ton like the 2024 F-150

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