Travel Trailer Rentals in Arkansas

Browse travel trailers in Little Rock and Fayetteville — the Ozarks, Hot Springs National Park, and the Buffalo National River.

Also browse nearby rentals in Dallas, TXTyler, TXNashville, TNFranklin, TN, and Tulsa, OK.

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Arkansas Travel Trailer Rental: Your Base Camp for the Natural State

Aerial view of the Ouachita Mountains in Arkansas, with forested ridgelines and a winding road cutting through the trees, perfect travel trailer rental country in the Natural State.

Renting a travel trailer in Arkansas is one of the best ways to experience a state that genuinely earns its nickname. The Natural State packs an unlikely amount of scenery into its borders, from the weathered ridges of the Ozark Mountains to the cypress swamps of the Delta, and having your own rolling camp means you can follow the terrain wherever it leads. Rent a towable RV here and you're not just visiting Arkansas, you're actually living in it.

What Makes Arkansas Such a Strong Fit for Travel Trailer Camping

Arkansas is a state that rewards slow travel. The Ozark Plateau covers the northern third of the state with forested hills, spring-fed rivers, and hollows that rarely see tourist crowds. Drive south and the terrain softens into the Ouachita Mountains, a quieter range that most road-trippers overlook entirely but consistently delivers great camping and hiking. Add the Buffalo National River, the first national river designated in the U.S., and you've got a destination with serious geographic variety, all of it well-suited to trailer camping. The state's road network is manageable, campgrounds are well distributed, and pull-through sites with hookups are easier to find here than in more congested states. If you're still narrowing down whether Arkansas belongs on your list, this breakdown of the 5 best RV road trip states in the U.S. puts the Natural State's appeal in good company.

Where to Take Your Arkansas Travel Trailer Rental

Arkansas delivers on campgrounds. Lake Ouachita State Park, near the town of Mount Ida, sits on the shoreline of one of the cleanest lakes in the country and offers full-hookup sites with easy boat ramp access, making it a natural anchor for a longer trip. Petit Jean State Park, often called the crown jewel of Arkansas state parks, features dramatic canyon views, waterfalls, and electric hookup sites that book well in advance during peak season, so plan accordingly. Devil's Den State Park in the Boston Mountains offers a remote feeling without sacrificing utilities, with wooded sites that fill fast on summer weekends. For something more river-focused, Tyler Bend Campground along the Buffalo National River gives you direct access to one of the country's most scenic float corridors, though hookups are limited here and it runs more primitive. Spreading your trip across two or three of these spots is the best way to sample the full range of what Arkansas has to offer from the seat of a rental trailer.

The Best Time of Year for Arkansas Travel Trailer Camping

Spring and fall are the peak windows for a reason. April through early June brings mild temperatures in the 60s and 70s, wildflowers along the Ozark trails, and rivers running high enough for float trips but not flooding. September through November offers arguably the best conditions of all: thinner crowds, cool nights that make sleeping in a vacation trailer genuinely comfortable, and fall color that typically peaks across the Ozarks in mid-to-late October. Summer is workable but comes with heat, humidity, and fully booked campgrounds on holiday weekends. If you're set on July or August, book at least six to eight weeks out and look for sites with full hookups so you can run the air conditioning. Winter camping is possible in the southern part of the state around Lake Ouachita and Crater of Diamonds, where temperatures stay more moderate, but the Ozarks can see ice storms from December through February that complicate road travel with a towed RV.

What to Know Before You Book an Arkansas Travel Trailer Rental

You'll need a vehicle capable of towing before anything else. Most hosts list the trailer's gross weight and recommended tow rating in their listing details, and matching those numbers to your truck or SUV matters for both safety and legality. A standard driver's license covers towing in Arkansas regardless of trailer weight, but if you're new to it, brushing up on the basics before your trip goes a long way. What's included with your rental varies by host, and Arkansas listings are no different. Many hosts provide bedding, kitchen basics, and a propane starter, but confirming the specifics before booking saves surprises on arrival. Campsite delivery is an option with some hosts, meaning they'll drop off and set up the trailer at your site so you don't have to tow at all, which is worth asking about if you don't have a capable tow vehicle. Also check whether your host offers stationary insurance options if you plan to keep the trailer parked in one place for the duration. Restrictions on pets, generator hours, and additional drivers differ by listing, so read each host's terms before you commit. For a complete rundown on what to bring and what to expect, the Ultimate RV Packing Checklist covers everything worth double-checking before you leave the driveway.

Day Trips and Extensions Worth Making from an Arkansas Home Base

Arkansas connects to some compelling neighbors that are worth building into your itinerary. Hot Springs is less than an hour from Lake Ouachita and earns a half-day stop for the historic Bathhouse Row, thermal pools, and good food on Central Avenue. Fayetteville and Bentonville in the northwest corner of the state punch well above their size, with the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville drawing visitors who weren't expecting world-class art in the Ozarks. Tulsa sits roughly three hours west and pairs a vibrant food and music scene with easy access to the rolling countryside of northeastern Oklahoma. And if you're based in the southern half of the state, a short drive into Louisiana opens up bayou country and a genuinely different cultural experience worth an overnight stay. If you end up catching the road trip bug and want to keep moving after Arkansas, the 5 best RV road trip states and this guide to what every first-timer should know about fifth wheel rentals are both worth a read before you map your next leg.

Ready to find your rig? Browse Arkansas travel trailer rental listings on BookRVs.com and filter by location, dates, and trailer type to see what's available near your first stop. Hosts across the state list everything from lightweight single-axle trailers to spacious towable RVs, so there's a solid match no matter your tow setup or group size.