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    Rivian R1T Camping Setup Guide: Bed, Rooftop & Gear (2025)
    Ownership & Costs·11 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Rivian R1T Camping Setup Guide: Bed, Rooftop & Gear (2025)

    rivian-r1tcampingev-road-tripev-chargingcamp-modeoverlandingrooftop-tentbed-tentused-evsrecharged-score

    Table of Contents

    • Why the Rivian R1T Makes Sense for Camping
    • Know Your R1T Cargo Space and Dimensions
    • Choosing Your Main Sleeping Setup
    • Power Management and Camp Mode
    • Kitchens, Coolers, and Food Storage
    • Organizing Gear: Bed, Gear Tunnel, Frunk
    • Weather, Noise, and Comfort Upgrades
    • Range Planning and Charging on Camping Trips
    • Step-by-Step R1T Camping Setup Checklist
    • FAQ: Rivian R1T Camping Setups
    • Bringing It All Together

    You don’t buy a Rivian R1T just to sit in traffic. This truck was built around the idea of campfires, trailheads, and waking up somewhere with no cell signal. But turning an R1T into a comfortable, efficient camping rig takes more than tossing a sleeping bag in the bed. This Rivian R1T camping setup guide walks you through tents, power, storage, kitchens, and real‑world range so your next trip feels intentional, not improvised.

    About this guide

    This article focuses on practical, repeatable setups you can build with current Rivian accessories and common third‑party gear, whether your R1T is brand‑new or a used truck you found through a marketplace like Recharged.

    Why the Rivian R1T Makes Sense for Camping

    What the R1T Does Better Than a Gas Truck at Camp

    Four built‑in advantages you should design your setup around

    Silent overnight power

    Run lights, a fridge, induction cooktop, and fans without a generator rumbling in the background.

    Self‑leveling suspension

    Use Camp Mode to automatically level the truck so you’re not sleeping on a slope.

    Hidden storage

    The gear tunnel and frunk swallow chairs, recovery gear, and kitchen kits, keeping the bed free for bigger items.

    Cleaner footprint

    No idling, no fumes, and precise climate control make low‑impact camping much easier.

    The trick is to build your camping setup around these strengths instead of fighting the truck’s quirks, like a shorter bed than full‑size pickups and the realities of EV range on remote roads.

    Know Your R1T Cargo Space and Dimensions

    Key R1T Cargo Numbers for Camping

    54.1 in
    Bed length (up)
    Tailgate closed, measured at the rails, tight for sleeping adults entirely in the bed.
    ~83.6 in
    Bed length (down)
    Tailgate down gives you nearly 7 ft of flat load floor, enough for most people to sleep stretched out.
    50.3 in
    Width btwn wells
    A standard 4×8 sheet of plywood fits between the wheel wells with some overhang off the tailgate.
    ~62 cu ft
    Total storage
    Frunk, gear tunnel, under‑bed bin and bed combined give you serious room for camping gear.

    Think of the R1T as three big storage zones: the bed for bulky items and sleeping setups, the gear tunnel for dense heavy gear and long items (tables, stoves, awning poles), and the frunk for soft goods you want clean and dry.

    R1T Storage Zones and Best Uses for Camping

    Quick reference for what belongs where when you pack for a trip.

    ZoneApprox. Volume / SizeBest ForAvoid Putting
    Bed (under tonneau)54.1" L × 51.1" WTents, duffels, firewood, bulky coolers, bikes (with rack)Loose small items that can roll around
    Under‑bed binDeep well under rear of bedDirty gear, recovery kit, leveling blocks, wet strapsAnything you need access to every stop
    Gear tunnel~11.7 cu ft, full‑widthCamp kitchen, tables, long cases, compact fridgeLoose groceries or fragile items
    Frunk~11.1 cu ftBedding, clothing, food totes, camera gearFuel, dirty tools, anything that smells
    CabinSeats, footwells, under‑seatDay packs, valuables, pets, kids’ stuffWet or muddy gear that will mold

    Dial this in once and packing for future trips becomes much faster.

    Pro tip: pre‑pack by zone

    Keep storage totes sized for each zone. When you buy new gear, ask yourself, “Is this a frunk item, a gear‑tunnel item, or a bed item?” It keeps the R1T amazingly uncluttered on longer trips.
    Rivian R1T at campsite with tailgate down, showing organized camping gear in bed and access to gear tunnel
    Use the bed for bulky items and reserve the gear tunnel for dense, organized camp essentials.

    Choosing Your Main Sleeping Setup

    Most R1T camping builds fall into three camps: bed sleeping, rooftop / bed‑rack tents, or ground tents that use the truck as a base camp. Each has trade‑offs in cost, setup time, and range impact.

    R1T Sleeping Options Compared

    Pick the style that matches how often and how far you camp.

    1. Bed platform setup

    Build a low deck in the bed (tailgate down) with storage underneath and a foam mattress on top. Lowest cost and keeps everything contained to the truck.

    2. Rooftop or bed‑rack tent

    Rivian’s Yakima‑based tent for the R1T, or options from iKamper and GFC, pop open in seconds. Great for frequent trips and wet climates.

    3. Ground tent base camp

    Use a high‑quality freestanding tent near the truck. Best for families needing space and when you want to leave camp set up while you drive.

    Bed platform pros and cons

    • Pros: Lowest cost, no extra wind drag, easy to heat or cool the cabin and bed area with the tailgate window open and Camp Mode.
    • Cons: You lose cargo space while the bed is your bedroom, and crawling in and out gets old if you camp often.
    • Build tip: Aim for a platform height just above the under‑bed bin so you keep that storage and still have enough headroom with the tonneau closed.

    Rooftop / bed‑rack tent pros and cons

    • Pros: Fast setup, better views, stays cleaner in mud, frees bed for bikes and cargo.
    • Cons: Higher price, added weight, and some range penalty from extra drag, especially at highway speeds.
    • Fit tip: Rivian’s branded tents are tuned to its crossbars and bed racks. If you go third‑party, make sure weight and mounting points are within spec.

    Watch your payload

    An R1T can carry a lot, but a bed‑rack tent, full kitchen, water, bikes, and four adults add up fast. Before a long trip, total your gear weight and compare it to Rivian’s published payload rating so you’re not unknowingly overloaded.

    Power Management and Camp Mode

    One of the R1T’s superpowers is behaving like a silent generator. Used wisely, you can run lights, fans, an electric cooler, and even an induction cooktop all weekend without worrying about a dead truck on Monday.

    • Use Camp Mode from the center screen to level the suspension and keep the climate and outlets behaving predictably overnight.
    • The 120V AC outlets in the bed are ideal for a fridge, induction cooktop, or charging camera gear. Bring a weather‑resistant power strip if you need more sockets.
    • Heavy 120V use is most efficient when you’re already at a high state of charge at camp, not limping in at 8–10%.
    • If you mostly power a fridge and lights, plug into the bed AC outlet and enable the setting to keep outlets active while parked.
    • Configure “Camp Courtesy” in Camp Mode to shut off exterior lights and lock beeps so you’re not that person in a quiet campground.

    Save your battery (and your sanity)

    If you regularly camp with a powered cooler or lots of gadgets, consider a small portable power station as a buffer. Charge it from the R1T while driving, then run low‑draw items from that at camp so you’re not constantly dipping into the main pack overnight.

    Kitchens, Coolers, and Food Storage

    Rivian famously previewed a built‑in Gear Tunnel Camp Kitchen, then paused that product. Today, most R1T owners rely on a mix of portable induction cooktops, slide‑out kitchen boxes, or simple camp‑stove setups that live in the gear tunnel or bed.

    Three Popular R1T Camp Kitchen Styles

    From minimalist to “glamping chef.”

    Compact tailgate kitchen

    A folding table, single‑ or dual‑burner stove, and one tote for cookware. Lives in the gear tunnel, sets up in 3–4 minutes on the tailgate or next to the truck.

    Slide‑out tunnel kitchen

    Aftermarket systems or DIY drawers that live in the gear tunnel and slide out as a full kitchen with stove, sink basin, and storage.

    Induction + electric cooler

    Use a 120V induction cooktop and 12V/120V powered cooler. No propane to store, easy temperature control, and great in areas with fire restrictions.

    If you lean heavily on electric cooking, design around the R1T’s 120V outlets and pack cookware that’s induction‑compatible. If you prefer propane, make sure your stove and fuel can travel safely in the bed or under‑bed bin and aren’t rattling around the gear tunnel.

    Camp Kitchen Essentials That Work Well in an R1T

    Compact nesting cook set

    Look for pots, pans, and bowls that nest into a single bundle. It fits perfectly in the gear tunnel and keeps rattles down.

    Dedicated kitchen tote

    Keep utensils, spices, oil, trash bags, and cleaning gear in one labeled bin. When you grab that bin and a stove, you’re ready to cook.

    Cooler or powered fridge

    Hard‑sided coolers ride well in the bed; powered fridges work great in the gear tunnel or rear seat area if they can vent heat.

    Gray‑water and trash plan

    Bring collapsible basins and sealable trash bags so you’re not tempted to dump food waste in the woods.

    Safety note: Gear tunnel and fuel

    Avoid storing propane canisters or gasoline containers in the gear tunnel for long, hot drives. Use the open bed or under‑bed bin instead, secured so they can’t puncture or leak in a collision.

    Organizing Gear: Bed, Gear Tunnel, Frunk

    Most R1T camping horror stories aren’t about range, they’re about chaos. People throw everything in the bed, can’t find their headlamp at midnight, and swear they’ll never do it again. A simple system fixes that.

    Bed: big, dirty, daily‑access gear

    • Big cooler or fridge slide
    • Firewood, water jugs, recovery boards
    • Bikes or cargo boxes on bed rack

    Gear tunnel: dense, organized gear

    • Kitchen system and food totes
    • Folding table and camp chairs
    • Tool roll, air hoses, jack pads

    Frunk & cabin: clean, soft goods

    • Sleeping bags, pillows, extra layers
    • Cameras, laptops, personal items
    • Kid stuff, pet gear, snacks

    Borrow from van‑life packing

    Color‑code or label your totes: green for kitchen, blue for sleep, black for tools, etc. When everything has a home, setting up and breaking down camp becomes a 15‑minute job instead of an hour‑long scavenger hunt.

    Weather, Noise, and Comfort Upgrades

    EVs make amazing base camps because climate control is so precise. But canvas, condensation, and campground noise don’t care what powers your truck. A few smart upgrades make the R1T feel more like a rolling cabin than a fancy tent stake.

    • Mattress and bedding: The foam that ships with many rooftop tents is mediocre. Add a 2–3" topper or upgrade to a higher‑density pad, and use real sheets and a duvet instead of only sleeping bags for shoulder‑season trips.
    • Ventilation and condensation: Crack windows slightly or use the tent’s vents, especially if you’re running heat at night. Battery‑powered fans are cheap and keep canvas from getting clammy.
    • Bug and light control: Headlamp with red mode, small lanterns, and magnetic bug screens for the cab windows make a big difference in summer.
    • Noise control: A small white‑noise fan or app masks campground and wind noise so you actually sleep.

    Cold‑weather camping caution

    Running heat all night in sub‑freezing temps is one of the biggest draws on your battery. It’s doable, especially if you arrive at camp with plenty of charge, but pair the R1T’s heat with proper winter‑rated bags and insulated pads so you’re not leaning on HVAC alone.

    Range Planning and Charging on Camping Trips

    The thing that makes electric‑truck camping different is not how you sleep, it’s how you get there and back. Your camping setup changes drag and weight, which change your real‑world range.

    How Your Camping Setup Affects R1T Range

    Design your build with aerodynamics and weight in mind.

    Aerodynamics (drag)

    Rooftop and bed‑rack tents, high cargo boxes, and large awnings all punch a bigger hole in the air. That matters on long highway runs more than forest‑road crawling.

    Vehicle weight

    Water jugs, recovery gear, racks, and kitchen systems add hundreds of pounds. Extra weight hurts efficiency everywhere, not just at 75 mph.

    Simple Range Planning Rules of Thumb

    Not hard numbers, just conservative habits that keep trips relaxing instead of math‑heavy.

    ScenarioPlanning TargetCharging StrategyNotes
    No tent, light gearArrive at camp with 30–40%Charge to 80–90% at last fast chargerPlenty of buffer for overnight power use.
    Bed‑rack / rooftop tentPlan on ~10–20% less highway rangeStop one Supercharger/DCFC earlier than usualWind and speed make a big difference here.
    Cold‑weather mountain tripArrive with 50% if possibleTop off whenever it’s convenientSnow, heat, and climbs all stack together.

    Always base your plan on recent owner reports and your own past trips with a similar setup.

    Build a charging “spine” first

    When planning a new camping area, map your DC fast‑charging options first, then pick campgrounds and trailheads that branch off those routes. That way you’re never improvising with 8% battery in an unfamiliar town.

    Step-by-Step R1T Camping Setup Checklist

    Your First R1T Camping Setup in 10 Steps

    1. Define your camping style

    Do you go out three weekends a year, or live for multi‑week overlanding trips? Your answer decides whether a simple bed setup or a full rack‑and‑tent system makes sense.

    2. Choose bed, rooftop, or ground tent

    Pick ONE primary sleeping system first and live with it for a few trips before layering on complex add‑ons.

    3. Measure and mock up

    Measure the bed (length, width between wheel wells, height under the tonneau) and tape those dimensions on your garage floor. Mock up your platform or tent footprint there.

    4. Build or buy the sleeping platform

    For bed setups, build a low, sturdy deck with at least two cross braces and leave access to the under‑bed bin. Test with your actual mattress before painting or finishing.

    5. Dial in your kitchen system

    Start with a simple tote‑plus‑table setup. If you hate setting it up every time, that’s your sign to invest in a slide‑out or more permanent solution.

    6. Assign every item a home

    Decide what lives in the gear tunnel, bed, frunk, and cabin. Label totes so you can tell what’s what in the dark.

    7. Test Camp Mode at home

    In your driveway, practice enabling Camp Mode, adjusting leveling, turning outlets on, and using Camp Courtesy. Better to fumble at home than at a trailhead.

    8. Do a shakedown night close to home

    Spend a night in the truck within an hour of your house. Take notes on what you forgot, overpacked, or want to change.

    9. Refine for weather and season

    Add or remove insulation, bug screens, heaters, and fans based on the typical conditions where you actually camp.

    10. Document your loadout

    Keep a simple packing list on your phone. Before each trip, run down the list instead of rebuilding your brain from scratch.

    FAQ: Rivian R1T Camping Setups

    Frequently Asked Questions About R1T Camping

    Bringing It All Together

    A great Rivian R1T camping setup isn’t about bolting on every accessory in the catalog. It’s about knowing how you actually travel, then using the truck’s strengths, silent power, clever storage, self‑leveling suspension, to make that kind of trip easier and more comfortable.

    If you’re still in the dreaming stage, you don’t need a brand‑new truck to build this out. A well‑chosen used R1T with strong battery health can be the perfect foundation for years of road trips and trailhead overnights. Marketplaces like Recharged simplify that search with transparent battery diagnostics, fair pricing, and EV‑specialist support so you can focus on planning campsites, not deciphering spec sheets.

    Start simple, refine after each trip, and let your kit evolve with the places you actually visit. The goal isn’t Instagram‑perfect camp porn; it’s a setup that lets you roll out of the city on a Friday, plug in a few times along the way, and wake up somewhere quiet with your favorite people, your favorite truck, and just enough gear to make it feel like home.

    Rivian R1T on Recharged

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