Remote Work Hub

Remote Work While Traveling Full-Time: The Complete Van Life and RV Guide

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:

CarrierBest CoverageBest SpeedBest For
Starlink RoamRural & remote areas50-220 MbpsBoondocking, national parks
VerizonUrban & suburban, some rural20-100 Mbps (5G)General travel, cities
T-MobileUrban areas, expanding rural50-200 Mbps (5G)Cities, highway corridors
AT&TBroad coverage, good in South15-80 MbpsSouthern US, rural highways

Recommended Hardware

Router: Peplink MAX BR1 Pro 5G ($800-1,200)

Cellular Modems:

Antenna:

Starlink Roam Setup

Starlink has changed the game for remote work on the road.

Pro tip: Mount Starlink permanently on your roof with a roof rail or custom mount. The portable kickstand gets old fast.

Internet Budget Guide

SetupCostReliabilityBest For
Budget ($300)Single 5G hotspot + phone hotspot60% uptimeWeekend warriors, light work
Mid-Range ($1,200)Peplink router + dual cellular + external antenna85% uptimeFull-time workers
Premium ($2,500)Starlink + Peplink + dual cellular + MIMO antenna98% uptimeMission-critical remote work

3. Power System — Keeping Your Office Running

You can't work when your laptop dies.

The Essential Power Components

Batteries:

TypeLifespanCostWeightBest For
LiFePO43,000-5,000 cycles$$$LightFull-time, heavy use
AGM/Lead Acid300-500 cycles$HeavyBudget, occasional use
Lithium-ion (NMC)500-1,000 cycles$$MediumSpace-constrained builds

Recommended: 200-300Ah of LiFePO4 battery capacity for full-time remote work.

Solar:

Inverter:

Alternator Charging:

Power Budget for Remote Work

DevicePower DrawDaily UsageDaily Draw
Laptop (charging)60W8 hours480Wh
External monitor30W6 hours180Wh
Starlink60W8 hours480Wh
Router + Modems25W24 hours600Wh
Phone charging10W2 hours20Wh
Lights + misc20W4 hours80Wh
Total1,840Wh/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:

Desk:

Monitor:

Workspace Configurations

SetupSpace RequiredProductivityBest For
Laptop only2 sq ft3/10Quick email, light work
Laptop + stand + keyboard3 sq ft6/10Most full-time workers
Dual monitor + ergo setup5 sq ft9/10Developers, designers, analysts

5. Practical Tips from Experienced Remote Travelers

Finding Good Work Spots

Best resources:

Time zone management:

Mail and Package Management

Health and Wellness

6. Internet Speed by Location Type

LocationTypical Speed (Mid-Range Setup)ReliabilityWorks For
Major city50-200 Mbps⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Everything
Suburb30-100 Mbps⭐⭐⭐⭐Video calls, streaming
Small town10-50 Mbps⭐⭐⭐Video calls (may buffer)
Highway rest stop5-30 Mbps⭐⭐Async work, email
National park1-20 Mbps (Starlink primary)⭐⭐Async work (with Starlink)
Remote boondocking20-100 Mbps (Starlink only)⭐⭐⭐Everything with Starlink

7. The Monthly Cost Reality

Don't underestimate the costs:

ExpenseMonthly 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

Days 31-60: Shakedown trip

Days 61-90: Transition to full-time

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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