Most RVers replace their tires based on tread depth, just like car tires. This logic costs them $2,400 every 3-4 years unnecessarily. RV tires fail from age and UV damage, not wearโwhich is why you’ll see “barely used” motorhomes with blowouts and perfectly treaded tires with dangerous sidewall cracks.
Here’s the insider truth: RV tires should be replaced every 5-7 years regardless of mileage or tread depth. The rubber compounds break down from ozone, UV rays, and constant weight loading, even when parked. That’s why tire manufacturers put date codes on sidewallsโthey expect age-based replacement, not wear-based.
But here’s where it gets expensive: most people buy tires in crisis mode after a blowout, paying $400-$600 per tire at emergency roadside services. The smart money move? Buy a full set online during off-season sales for 40-50% less, then have them installed at Costco or Discount Tire for $50 each.
Even crazier: storing your RV with tire covers and jack stands to reduce weight loading can extend tire life by 2-3 years. A $200 investment in covers and stands saves $2,400 in premature tire replacement. Yet walk through any RV park and you’ll see $300,000 coaches sitting on bare tires, slowly cooking in the sun while their owners replace $500 tires every three years instead of every six.
