The $15,000 Boondocking Secret That Sounds Completely Illegal

Major corporations actually want RVers camping on their private land for free, but most people never learn how to access these millions of acres.

Veteran boondockers have been using this strategy for decades, but newcomers think it sounds too good to be true: you can legally camp for free on millions of acres of private industrial land across America. I’m talking about active logging sites, mining areas, and agricultural operations where companies actually welcome overnight RVersโ€”and some even provide amenities.

Here’s the mind-blowing part: many timber companies and mining operations prefer having RVers on their property because it deters vandalism and illegal dumping. Weyerhaeuser, one of America’s largest landowners, has an official overnight camping program with over 2,000 designated sites. Georgia-Pacific offers similar programs. Some locations even provide picnic tables, fire rings, and vault toiletsโ€”all completely free.

The access methods that most people never discover:

  • Contact company land management offices directly (not posted online)
  • Use apps like iOverlander and Campendium’s “stealth camping” filters
  • Join private Facebook groups like “Free Range Camping” (60,000+ members sharing locations)
  • Network with local forestry offices who know which companies allow camping

One full-timer I met saved over $15,000 annually by camping primarily on these industrial lands instead of paying $35-$75 nightly for RV parks. The locations are often more scenic and private than traditional campgrounds, with zero crowds. The catch? You need liability insurance and must follow strict “leave no trace” principles, but companies provide detailed guidelines when you request permission.