Travco Inactive May 2026

That group, as of today, has 4,203 members. Most have never seen another Travco in person. They trade rumors: a 1976 220 spotted behind a barn in Oregon, a 270K rotting in a Florida swamp with a tree growing through the window. They know the weak spots (the roof seams, the rust-prone Dodge frame horns, the impossible-to-find tail light lenses). They know the triumphs (the original fiberglass that never delaminates, the ride quality that rivals a Cadillac, the way a Travco’s twin headlights look at dusk like a friendly animal watching you from the trees).

In the late summer of 1984, the Travco Corporation’s final motorhome rolled off the assembly line in Brown City, Michigan. It was a 320 model, draped in two-tone beige and burnt orange, its fiberglass shell gleaming under the fluorescent lights of a factory that had once hummed with ambition. The workers—many of whom had been there since the early ’60s—stood in silence as the engine coughed to life. No one clapped. The foreman, a grizzled man named Hank who’d welded chassis for the first Dodge-based Travco 270, simply turned off the overheads and walked out. travco inactive

But inactivity is not death. In the decades that followed, the Travco became a ghost that refused to vanish. That group, as of today, has 4,203 members

That was the last active day. After that, Travco went inactive—not bankrupt in a dramatic blaze, not absorbed by a larger conglomerate with a press release. Just… still. Like a watch winding down. The patents sat in a drawer. The molds for those iconic, boat-like bodies gathered dust in a warehouse that would later be sold for back taxes. The name “Travco” lingered on dealer lots for another year or two, scrawled in fading marker on windshields of unsold units, discounts climbing from 20% to 40% to “best offer.” They know the weak spots (the roof seams,