How Veteran Boondockers Get Unlimited Internet by Breaking the “One Carrier” Rule

Smart boondockers use multiple carrier SIM cards to get 500+ GB monthly internet while paying less than traditional RV plans

Most RVers buy expensive “unlimited” plans from one carrier and wonder why they get throttled to unusable speeds after 50GB. Meanwhile, experienced boondockers are pulling 500+ GB monthly with faster speeds and paying less using a strategy that sounds complicated but takes 30 minutes to set up.

The secret? Carrier aggregation with multiple SIM cards. Each major carrier (Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile) uses different tower frequencies and has different throttling policies. Instead of buying one “RV plan” for $150/month, savvy users buy three basic phone plans ($25-35 each) and rotate connections automatically using a $300 router that manages all three.

Here’s what shocked me most: this isn’t just about more data—it’s about reliability. When Verizon fails in rural Utah, AT&T might have strong signal. When all traditional carriers fail, some veterans tap into lesser-known networks like FirstNet (emergency services) or business-only carriers that have different tower priorities.

The setup veteran boondockers swear by:

  • MOFI or Pepwave router with 3-4 SIM slots ($300-500)
  • Three basic unlimited phone plans instead of one RV plan (saves $50-80/month)
  • External MIMO antennas that boost weak signals 300-400%
  • Automatic failover between carriers when one gets throttled

The result? True unlimited internet at 25-50 Mbps speeds even 50+ miles from cities, while others struggle with 2-3 Mbps throttled connections. The initial setup costs more, but monthly savings pay it off within 6-8 months while delivering superior performance.