OpenVan.campβ World of motorhomes — here

Report a problem

What is the problem?

Could not attach a screenshot — send without it

DeSantis' New Law in Florida Changes Fees for RV Parks

02.05.2026 19:11 1 min 1 source
LA NACION SPA

Governor Ron DeSantis signed SB 118, which alters the fee calculation for RV parks. Starting in 2026, these parks will be treated as commercial entities rather than residential areas, limiting the size of charges.

Aggregated by OpenVan.camp from the public sources listed below, with AI-assisted translation and summary. We always link to the original source. Machine translation may differ from the original -- check the source for important details. Images and content remain the property of their respective owners. Copyright information

Story sources

DeSantis' New Law in Florida Changes Fees for RV Parks

02.05.2026 LA NACION SPA Original source

🇺🇸 United States — fuel prices

Updated: 20.06.2026

Diesel

$1.39 /l

€1.22 · £1.05/l

54 of 132

cheaper than 60% of countries

Petrol

$1.07 /l

€0.93 · £0.81/l

31 of 134

cheaper than 78% of countries

Popular route

Distance

Fuel cost

~

Est. time

~

Quiz: test yourself
Guess the vanlife lingo — 3 quick questions
1 / 3
Q1 Why are "wild camping" and "boondocking" not always identical?
VanSky - weather index · United States

Best regions in the coming days

California +20°·28 km/h
96
Michigan +22°·42 km/h
96
Wisconsin +21°·39 km/h
96
Minnesota +22°·31 km/h
94
Idaho +24°·50 km/h
93
Avoid now
Louisiana +32°·24 km/h
65
Mississippi +29°·21 km/h
67

You May Be Interested

All News

DeSantis changes how Florida charges fees to RV parks: who benefits from the new law

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed SB 118, altering the calculation of non-ad valorem assessments for RV parks. Parks must now be evaluated under commercial criteria, similar to hotels or motels, rather than as permanent housing. The law caps the area used for fee calculations and requires local governments to consider actual occupancy rates, preventing charges based on full-year full occupancy.

Florida SB-118 law changes fee structure for RV parks this summer

Governor Ron DeSantis signed SB-118 in April 2025, effective this summer, requiring local governments to change how non-ad valorem assessments are calculated for RV parks. Parks must now be treated as commercial properties like hotels, not permanent housing. Fees are based on actual occupancy and limited to standard RV lot size, preventing charges on oversized spaces.

News from United States

All News

Campers trapped by flash flooding at Gulfport RV resort as remnants of Arthur slam Coast

Remnants of Tropical Storm Arthur caused flash flooding at Gulfport Luxury RV Resort in Gulfport, Mississippi, trapping guests in their RVs and damaging vehicles. Water levels rose to four feet, waking visitors like Wesley Borne from Hammond, Louisiana, who was alerted by a neighbor banging on his camper door. Members of the Southern Elite RV Club went door-to-door to warn others and assist with evacuation.

Wingamm Oasi 540.1 2026: a motorhome with a global mindset

Italian manufacturer Wingamm has updated its compact Oasi 540.1 motorhome for the US market. Built on a RAM ProMaster chassis (the American Fiat Ducato), it accommodates 2–3 people. The body uses a single molded rear panel to prevent water and dust ingress. Standard features include underfloor heating, a Victron energy management system, up to 700 W alternator charging, and a fully electric interior. The base price is $192,500 (about €167,000), below the average for comparable US models.

Manuel Vega travels across North America in his Firpo Camper motorhome

Manuel Vega, a 66-year-old Ecuadorian businessman and former president of Deportivo Cuenca, is traveling across North America in a motorhome named Firpo Camper, built with his son. The journey started in Cuenca in February 2026 and includes attending World Cup matches in the US. The motorhome, based on a Peugeot Jumper, features a shower, toilet, kitchen, and solar panels. Plans include a trip to Alaska in 2027 and a return to South America in 2028.

10 RV rental mistakes that can ruin your road trip

Only In Your State has listed common mistakes when renting an RV. Recommendations include choosing the right class (A, B, or C) based on group size and trip length, inspecting cleanliness and mechanical condition before departure, and reviewing the rental agreement for hidden costs such as insurance, deposits, pet fees, and mileage limits. Additional tips emphasize learning to drive the large vehicle and bringing a generator for boondocking.

Install OpenVan.camp

Get quick access and offline reading.

Install on iOS

  1. 1 Tap Share in Safari.
  2. 2 Choose "Add to Home Screen".
  3. 3 Confirm by tapping Add.

Already installed

The app is already installed on this device.

Install from browser menu

Use your browser menu to install or add to home screen.

→ Glossary