RV repairs are expensive. Parts sourcing doesn't have to be.

RV dealerships charge premium prices for parts, and their service queues run weeks out. Meanwhile your coach sits on a pad waiting. Finding parts through other channels saves real money, but the RV parts market is scattered.

Here's how to navigate it.

The RV parts problem

RVs are complex: they combine a vehicle chassis (often Ford, RAM, or Freightliner) with a coach built by a manufacturer (Winnebago, Jayco, Coachmen, Forest River, Airstream). Parts come from both sides: the chassis manufacturer and the coach builder.

Coach-specific parts (slides, awnings, leveling systems, interior components) are often proprietary. Finding them used requires connecting with sellers who specialize in your brand.

How AnyPartsHub helps

Post your parts request with your RV's year, manufacturer, model, and the part you need. Verified RV parts sellers respond with quotes. You specify whether you need shipping or local pickup.

For coach parts, including your chassis type (Class A gas/diesel, Class C, Class B, fifth wheel, travel trailer) helps sellers narrow down compatibility quickly.

Common RV part categories

Chassis parts (motorhomes): Engine, transmission, brakes, and suspension follow the underlying chassis. Ford E-450 powers most Class C coaches, Freightliner or Spartan for Class A diesel pushers. These parts source through standard commercial or automotive channels.

Slideout systems: Schwintek, HWH, and Power Gear slide mechanisms are common failure points. Used assemblies and motors are available from salvage RVs.

Awnings: Carefree and Dometic power awnings are the dominant brands. Motors, arms, and fabric are all available used or aftermarket.

Leveling systems: HWH and Lippert hydraulic systems, Equalizer and BAL manual systems. Rams, pumps, and control panels all fail eventually.

Appliances: Dometic and Norcold refrigerators, Atwood and Suburban water heaters and furnaces. Used working units pulled from salvage coaches are a cost-effective option.

Roofing: EPDM rubber, TPO, and fiberglass roofing materials. Patches and full replacement rolls are available. Skylights and vents (Fantastic Fan, MaxxAir) come up used frequently.

Interior: Furniture, dinettes, and cabinetry from the same coach year/model are the best source. RV salvage yards and dealers parting out coaches are the primary channels.

What to include in your request

  • RV type (Class A motorhome, Class B, Class C, fifth wheel, travel trailer, toy hauler)
  • Year, manufacturer, model (e.g., 2019 Winnebago Sightseer 33C)
  • Chassis if motorhome (Ford E-450, Freightliner XC, etc.)
  • Specific part with manufacturer name if known (e.g., "Lippert slideout motor" or "Dometic RM2820 refrigerator")

Find RV parts

Browse RV parts by category, or post a free request and let verified sellers come to you with quotes. No account required to start.

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