For Snowbirds
Snowbirding means the same site, same community, same neighbors, every winter. The good ones book up months in advance.
Florida, Arizona, Texas, and coastal California take most of the snowbird traffic. The difference between a good winter and a rough one usually comes down to picking a community that has an actual social calendar, a heated pool, and a manager who runs the place like a neighborhood instead of a campground.
What to look for
- Seasonal leases of 4 to 6 months
- Resort amenities: pool, pickleball, clubhouse, planned activities
- Tenure-friendly rates (seasonal returners often get priority)
- Proximity to airports and reliable medical care
- A welcoming, active atmosphere that matches your lifestyle
Practical tips
- ·Book your next winter before you leave the current one. Returners typically get first right of refusal, and popular sites don't hit a public availability list.
- ·Ask about the social calendar. A good snowbird community has 3-4 planned activities a week, not just a posted rules sheet.
- ·Factor in storage. Many snowbirds leave trailers on-site year-round for a reduced off-season rate.
Communities that fit
A starting point. Open any listing for full amenities, ratings, and contact info.
Blueberry Hill RV Community
Bushnell, Florida
Indian Wells RV Community
Indio, California
55+
Baker Acres RV Community
Zephyrhills, Florida
55+
Central Park RV Community
Haines City, Florida
Flamingo Lake RV Community
Jacksonville, Florida
55+
Citrus Hill RV Community
Dade City, Florida
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.