I've noticed the same with inventory and prices up here too. I suspect there will be a TON of new 2022's next year on the lots. Nobody seems interested in paying 15 g's more than last year for an identical trailer here. I think higher fuel prices, restrictions loosening, travel reopening and rising interest rates have all impacted their sales in a negative way. But the dealers still seem to think they can charge these crazy 15 grand inflated prices. Watch, next summer those new 2022's will be 20 grand cheaper to clear them out to make way for the 2023 and incoming 2024's....
If rates stay high and RE prices continue to slip the free money piggy bank options line of credit on sticks and brick property definitely crashes the RV market. There will be 22’s and 23’s sitting on the lots for a long time. Lots of people are back in the office now also. Which greatly impacts the ZOOM from the road dream. Employers who are seeing drop in income are going to take the opportunity to thin the “not working in the office people” and that’s coming from a home office guy that moved home in 2007.. In my case all my work was with a team in India so it didn’t matter where I was. But lots of roles will be called back especially JR roles.
Add fuel cost, storage cost (its up 200% in many regions), insurance, learning that RVs need constant tinkering to be 100%, camp site cost. I just rented a really nice 3bd, 2ba 7 days with hot tub in a top vacation location for less than storage and insurance would run me for a yr on a 22ft RV. We ran 19.5mpg 780 mile round trip with no trailer. Did a ton of Mountain Biking, hiking and rafting.
The RV thing only works if you store at home, do your own maintenance and do more than 5 trips a yr. Which is probably about.05% of the RV owners.