Self-made millionaire built wealth living in an RV, found it ‘freeing’

In 2016, when I was 35, and my wife Courtney was 32, we sold our house, a 4 bed, 2 bath 1,600-square-foot Arizona home, moved into a 200-square-foot Airstream RV with our two dogs, and set up our new home in a KOA campground in Tucson. 

It was the first of many big changes for us. 

By that point, I had saved about $900,000, enough to give myself some breathing room, and quit a job that I hated in software development. Courtney, a rocket scientist, joined me in throwing off the bonds of a 9-to-5 in 2017, and we hit the road.

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Over the course of the next three years, we traveled across the country full-time, filming videos for YouTube and writing about our experience. 

At 42, I’m a self-made millionaire. Looking back, that decision to downsize was one of the key reasons why I was able to build wealth.

The ‘freeing’ reality of living small

One of the biggest challenges was getting rid of most of our stuff before moving into the Airstream. We were amazed at how much junk we accumulated. 

We unloaded some things on friends and family members. We donated a lot to Goodwill, probably enough to fill an entire store. We held garage sales over several weekends and digitized thousands of photos onto CDs instead of keeping physical photographs. That helped a ton.

Our Dodge Ram 2500 and Airstream outside of Bryce National Park in Utah

Photo: Steve Adcock

Me reading my Kindle on the couch in the Airstream with our two dogs, Patti and Penny.

Photo: Steve Adcock

The joys and challenges of RVing 

We were able to keep our travel expenses low by staying as much as we could on Bureau of Land Management land. RVers can camp for 14 days on most Bureau land free of charge. It was beautiful.

The only catch was that there were no electricity, water and sewer hookups. Instead, we used roof-mounted solar panels to charge our batteries. 

Courtney using a hammock and catching some sun in a campground near Truckee, CA in 2017.

Photo: Steve Adcock

Taking a walk in one of the few snowstorms that we couldn’t avoid in Montana, in 2017.

Photo: Steve Adcock

I vividly remember staying at a campsite in Leavenworth, Washington, in the summer of 2018. It was so hot that the electrical breakers kept malfunctioning because of all the ACs blasting. 

Every week or two, we had to pack everything up and move. This routine included securing items inside the Airstream like toiletries on our small bathroom counter and virtually anything lying out that could move or break while driving. We used a bungee cord to bind my external computer monitor to my small desk so it wouldn’t fall. 

Me working at my computer inside the Airstream. We removed the dining room table and installed a desk to make blogging/computer work easier on the road.

Photo: Steve Adcock

Our expenses on the road 

Steve relaxing around a campfire outside of Bend, Oregon in 2017.

Photo: Steve Adcock

We typically spent about $3,500 per month, which included:

  • Propane: $40 
  • Pet care: $75
  • Health insurance: $350
  • Auto maintenance: $400
  • Fun money: $1,000
  • Groceries: $600
  • Camping fees: $500
  • Fuel: $500

Better equipped campgrounds in prime locations charged upwards of $100 per night. These pristine sites were level and well-maintained, and offered hookups to power, water and sewer.

Two weeks on Bureau land cost us nothing in camping fees. A $40/night camp spot with amenities would have cost us $560 for those 14 days. That difference adds up quickly!

The RV was one the best decisions I’ve ever made 

Over that three year period, living cheaply in our Airstream allowed our net worth to climb while we drove, even though we no longer worked full-time jobs. 

We made a few hundred bucks a month on YouTube as we filmed our lifestyle. I maintained a blog about early retirement that I’ve since sold, which brought in about $1,000 a month. 

A night shot of our Airstream in a small campground just west of Tucson, AZ in 2016.

Photo: Steve Adcock

We lived primarily on what we made from these smaller sources of income. We hardly touched our stocks. Instead, we let our capital gains continue to grow for those three years of full-time travel. 

We started with about $900,000, and our net worth increased by about $150,000 by the end of our travels. That foundation set me on a path to become a millionaire today. Not bad for never setting foot in an office! 

Steve Adcock is a financial expert who blogs about how to achieve financial independence. A former software developer, Steve retired early at the age of 35. He occasionally writes about money for MarketWatch, Forbes and Business Insider.

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