1. The Dream vs. The Reality
The Instagram version of working from a van: laptop open on a beach, coconut in hand, sunset behind you.
The reality: you're in a Walmart parking lot at 2 AM because all the campsites are full, your laptop battery is at 8%, the cellular signal is "one bar of 3G," and you have a client presentation in 9 hours.
Working remotely while traveling full-time is one of the most liberating things you can do — but only if you plan for the infrastructure that makes it possible. The dream without infrastructure is just expensive camping.
This guide covers the four critical systems you need to successfully work from a van, RV, or any traveling setup.
2. Internet Connectivity — Your Most Critical System
Without reliable internet, you don't have a remote work setup. You have a very expensive camping trip.
The Ideal Setup: Multi-Carrier Redundancy
No single carrier works everywhere. The best setup uses multiple carriers with automatic failover:
| Carrier | Best Coverage | Best Speed | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starlink Roam | Rural & remote areas | 50-220 Mbps | Boondocking, national parks |
| Verizon | Urban & suburban, some rural | 20-100 Mbps (5G) | General travel, cities |
| T-Mobile | Urban areas, expanding rural | 50-200 Mbps (5G) | Cities, highway corridors |
| AT&T | Broad coverage, good in South | 15-80 Mbps | Southern US, rural highways |
Recommended Hardware
Router: Peplink MAX BR1 Pro 5G ($800-1,200)
- Multi-WAN: Connects to 2+ cellular modems + Starlink
- Automatic failover: Switches carriers when signal drops
- Speed fusion bonding: Combines multiple connections for reliability
- Remote management: Monitor and control from your phone
Cellular Modems:
- Pepwave 5G Modem — Best for Peplink integration
- Netgear Nighthawk M6 Pro — Excellent standalone 5G hotspot
- GL.iNet GL-X300B (Spitz) — Budget-friendly cellular router
Antenna:
- External roof-mounted MIMO antenna (WeBoost or Poynting)
- Boosts signal by 5-15 dB — the difference between "no service" and "stable video call"
Starlink Roam Setup
Starlink has changed the game for remote work on the road.
- Cost: $599 one-time + $150-250/month
- Mobility: Works while stationary, "Roam" plan allows nationwide use
- Speed: 50-220 Mbps depending on congestion
- Power draw: 45-75W (significant for battery systems)
- Obstructions: Trees, buildings, and mountains block signal
Pro tip: Mount Starlink permanently on your roof with a roof rail or custom mount. The portable kickstand gets old fast.
Internet Budget Guide
| Setup | Cost | Reliability | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget ($300) | Single 5G hotspot + phone hotspot | 60% uptime | Weekend warriors, light work |
| Mid-Range ($1,200) | Peplink router + dual cellular + external antenna | 85% uptime | Full-time workers |
| Premium ($2,500) | Starlink + Peplink + dual cellular + MIMO antenna | 98% uptime | Mission-critical remote work |
3. Power System — Keeping Your Office Running
You can't work when your laptop dies.
The Essential Power Components
Batteries:
| Type | Lifespan | Cost | Weight | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LiFePO4 | 3,000-5,000 cycles | $$$ | Light | Full-time, heavy use |
| AGM/Lead Acid | 300-500 cycles | $ | Heavy | Budget, occasional use |
| Lithium-ion (NMC) | 500-1,000 cycles | $$ | Medium | Space-constrained builds |
Recommended: 200-300Ah of LiFePO4 battery capacity for full-time remote work.
Solar:
- Minimum: 300W of solar panels
- Recommended: 400-600W
- Type: Flexible panels (stick to roof curve) vs rigid panels (more efficient)
Inverter:
- Pure sine wave required (modified sine wave can damage electronics)
- Minimum: 2,000W continuous (laptop + monitor + router + Starlink + charging)
- Recommended: 3,000W continuous
Alternator Charging:
- Second alternator or DC-to-DC charger
- Charges your house batteries while driving
- Essential for cloudy days
Power Budget for Remote Work
| Device | Power Draw | Daily Usage | Daily Draw |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laptop (charging) | 60W | 8 hours | 480Wh |
| External monitor | 30W | 6 hours | 180Wh |
| Starlink | 60W | 8 hours | 480Wh |
| Router + Modems | 25W | 24 hours | 600Wh |
| Phone charging | 10W | 2 hours | 20Wh |
| Lights + misc | 20W | 4 hours | 80Wh |
| Total | 1,840Wh/day |
A 200Ah LiFePO4 battery (2,560Wh) with 400W of solar on a good day (1,600Wh) runs about even. On cloudy days, you'll need alternator charging or generator backup.
4. Workspace Setup — Ergonomics on the Road
Bending over a laptop in bed will destroy your back within a month.
The Full-Time Work Setup
Seating:
- Swivel seat base: Rotate your passenger seat to face backward
- Ergonomic cushion: Add lumbar support to the factory seat
- Alternative: A foldable ergonomic camp chair for outdoor workspace
Desk:
- Lagun table mount: The gold standard for van desks. Swivels, folds, adjusts height
- Adjustable laptop stand: Raises screen to eye level (prevents neck strain)
- External keyboard: A low-profile mechanical or ergonomic keyboard
- External mouse: Trackpad or vertical mouse
Monitor:
- A 15-17" portable USB-C monitor doubles your screen real estate
- Mount on a RAM mount arm for adjustable positioning
Workspace Configurations
| Setup | Space Required | Productivity | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laptop only | 2 sq ft | 3/10 | Quick email, light work |
| Laptop + stand + keyboard | 3 sq ft | 6/10 | Most full-time workers |
| Dual monitor + ergo setup | 5 sq ft | 9/10 | Developers, designers, analysts |
5. Practical Tips from Experienced Remote Travelers
Finding Good Work Spots
Best resources:
- iOOverlander — Free campsites, cell signal reports, work-friendly spots
- Campendium — Detailed campground reviews with cell signal ratings
- Starlink Obstruction Check — App checks tree cover before you set up
- Coffee shops with RV parking — Small towns often have cafes with lot parking
Time zone management:
- Stay in one time zone for at least 2 weeks to maintain consistency
- If crossing zones, schedule buffer days before important meetings
- Communicate your time zone clearly in your calendar
Mail and Package Management
- General Delivery: USPS holds mail at local post offices for 30 days
- Mail forwarding service: Escapees, St. Brendan's Isle ($8-15/month)
- Amazon Locker: Use the app to find lockers along your route
- UPS/FedEx hold: Request hold at local distribution center
Health and Wellness
- Telehealth subscription (Hims/Hers, PlushCare, or Ro) for prescriptions
- Walk-in clinics (CVS/Walgreens minute clinics) for basic care
- Gym membership (Planet Fitness $25/month) for showers + exercise
- Stretch every 2 hours — van life compresses your spine
6. Internet Speed by Location Type
| Location | Typical Speed (Mid-Range Setup) | Reliability | Works For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Major city | 50-200 Mbps | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Everything |
| Suburb | 30-100 Mbps | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | Video calls, streaming |
| Small town | 10-50 Mbps | ⭐⭐⭐ | Video calls (may buffer) |
| Highway rest stop | 5-30 Mbps | ⭐⭐ | Async work, email |
| National park | 1-20 Mbps (Starlink primary) | ⭐⭐ | Async work (with Starlink) |
| Remote boondocking | 20-100 Mbps (Starlink only) | ⭐⭐⭐ | Everything with Starlink |
7. The Monthly Cost Reality
Don't underestimate the costs:
| Expense | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|
| Starlink Roam | $150-250 |
| Cellular plan (1-2 lines) | $70-150 |
| Campgrounds (50% of nights) | $300-600 |
| Fuel | $200-500 |
| Food (no kitchen economy) | $400-700 |
| Mail forwarding | $10-20 |
| Gym membership | $25-50 |
| Total monthly | $1,200-2,270 |
This doesn't include vehicle maintenance, repairs, insurance, or upgrades. Budget an additional $200-400/month for vehicle costs.
8. Your 90-Day Launch Plan
Days 1-30: Prepare your vehicle
- Install electrical system (battery, solar, inverter)
- Mount Starlink (if using)
- Build or install your desk and seating
- Test all systems while parked at home
Days 31-60: Shakedown trip
- Take a 1-2 week trip within 200 miles of home
- Test internet connectivity at 5+ different location types
- Identify power issues, ergonomic problems, workflow friction
Days 61-90: Transition to full-time
- Set up mail forwarding
- Give notice to your landlord (if applicable)
- Plan your first 30-day route
- Join remote traveler communities (Facebook groups, Nomad List)
Conclusion
Working remotely while traveling full-time is not a vacation. It's a lifestyle with its own set of challenges, infrastructure requirements, and daily disciplines.
But for those who set it up correctly — who invest in reliable internet, a robust power system, and an ergonomic workspace — the payoff is extraordinary. The ability to wake up anywhere and do your best work is the freedom that remote work promised.
Plan your systems first. Then chase the views.
Related reading on Remote Work Hub: Digital Nomad Visa Countries | Essential Remote Work Tools 2026 | Best Coworking Spaces World
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