For Roadschooling Households

Roadschooling trades a traditional classroom for the country. The community you park in shapes the day: a safe place for bike rides, a playground that's actually used, and other households your kids can meet after lessons end.

The best long-term RV communities for roadschoolers are near national parks, historical corridors, or outdoor-focused regions that turn every month into a field trip.

What to look for

  • Family-friendly amenities: playground, pool, biking paths
  • Safety-first layout (fenced, gated, quiet streets)
  • Reliable WiFi for remote learning
  • Proximity to nature, historical sites, or kid-friendly cities
  • Community events that let residents meet each other

Practical tips

  • ·Look for other roadschooling households already on-site. A single family is lonely; three is a co-op.
  • ·Ask about noise and quiet-hour enforcement. Lessons happen during the day.
  • ·Rotate through states that align with curriculum. Gettysburg for history week, Yellowstone for earth science.

A note on housing.

RV Annual welcomes all renters and households. Community pages describe lifestyles, occupations, and use cases. Nothing here signals a preference or limitation based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, or disability. Communities marked 55+ are self-designated by the operator under the Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA) and are subject to that law. See our Fair Housing statement.