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Hiker Trailer
I thought about what the best adventure rigs out there are and wondered where the Extreme Off-Road Deluxe would fit into the ever growing list of available options. (Photo: Bryan Rogala)

This Teardrop Trailer Is More Capable than Your Truck

The Extreme Off-Road Deluxe Camper from Hiker Trailer packs a ton of features into a surprisingly wallet-friendly package

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Hiker Trailer
(Photo: Bryan Rogala)

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A few years ago, my wife and I demoed an affordable teardrop trailer from a company called Hiker Trailer. In my review, I wrote that it was one of the best options available for anyone who wants to camp in comfort without spending a fortune on a Sprinter or some other tricked-out rig. With a teardrop, you get an inside sleeping area, a separate rear galley, and a front storage area, and I really liked Hiker Trailer鈥檚 version.

I鈥檝e wanted to check out the company鈥檚 fully customizable model ever since. It promised considerably more capability than the regular version, while still remaining a great value, starting at just $7,995. As someone who hosts a video series for 国产吃瓜黑料 dedicated to adventure vehicles, I spend a lot of time thinking about what the best rigs out there are听and wondered where the Extreme Off-Road Deluxe would fit into the ever growing list of available options. Here鈥檚 what I found after four months of testing.

Off-Road Capability

For me, the means to get off the beaten path and away from crowded campgrounds is priority number one when considering adventure rigs. When I think about off-road capability, I鈥檓 really just concerned with my setup鈥檚 ability to make it down an unmaintained, rough dirt road in remote sections of national forest or BLM land. That听requires maneuverability, ground clearance, and good suspension.听

If you鈥檝e looked at any travel trailers or pop-ups at an RV dealer, you鈥檝e probably noticed that most don鈥檛 check those boxes: they have very little ground clearance, small pavement-oriented trailer tires, and suspension systems best suited for the highway. That鈥檚 great if you only plan to back into a paved spot with RV hookups, but you鈥檇 better think twice about dragging one of those down a rugged Forest Service road in the West.

Hiker Trailer鈥檚 Extreme Off-Road Deluxe model is small enough to maneuver on tight trails (there are three size options, from four听by eight feet to five by听nine feet), and it weighs under 2,000 pounds, so you can pull it with just about any vehicle. There are a good number of trailers that fit those specifications on the market, but the suspension is what really sets the Extreme Off-Road Deluxe apart. Instead of commonly used , or the听 used on some off-road models, Hiker uses leaf springs and shocks. It works similarly to a Jeep鈥檚 suspension听and handles bumps and serious off-road terrain incredibly well.

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There are pros and cons to every type of suspension, but leaf springs and shocks have some serious benefits. For one, since they aren鈥檛 trailer-specific parts, they鈥檙e easier and cheaper to repair, and you can find parts more readilythan听for most other trailers. You can also add more leaves to the spring pack, if you end up loading your trailer down with extra weight on a regular basis, which Hiker Trailer owner Rob Reeve tells me isn鈥檛 something you can do with axle-less suspension systems.听

The suspension also allows the trailer to fit 33-inch off-road tires, which are far larger than what comes听most trailers. They help navigate rocks and bumps smoothly. With tires this size, you get 14 inches of ground clearance under the axle (24 inches to the frame itself), so you won鈥檛 have to worry about it catching on anything. It also makes room for an in-floor storage pan. I was able to fit camp chairs, a table, a solar panel, and some other odds and ends in there easily, which freed up space in the separate rear galley and front storage platform.

The other standout off-road feature was a max coupler articulating hitch. Not only was it much quieter than a traditional ball hitch, but it eliminated binding in tricky spots听and was a total game changer off-road. Once during testing, I was driving too quickly down a seriously rutted road, and my truck and everything inside were听bouncing all over the place, but when I looked in the rearview mirror, the Hiker seemed to be floating along effortlessly, totally unphased by the bumps.听

The Extreme Off-Road Deluxe鈥檚 steel frame has some other features that I really enjoyed over the midrange I听tried several years ago. Two front jacks and two rear drop-down legs allow you to level the trailer on uneven ground and get it off the suspension to eliminate any movement while you鈥檙e sleeping. Its built-in rock sliders and fenders protect the trailer from damage and double as both a table and steps that make accessing the roof rack easier. I also found the front storage platform incredibly useful for hauling coolers and other bulky equipment that I took on an elk hunt last fall.听

Comfort and Livability

Hiker Trailer
(Bryan Rogala)

The inside of the Extreme Off-Road Deluxe is nearly identical to the midrange model I demoed before. This one had two doors, two sliding windows (plus a MaxxAir MaxxFan for ventilation), a few USB and 12-volt charging ports, some basic lighting and storage cabinets, and a small window at the front of the trailer. The five-inch memory-foam mattress was very comfortable听and folded up into a couch, so you can get out of the elements without lying in bed.听

The galley consists of a few shelves for storing all of your camp-kitchen items, plus some LED lights and additional听charging ports. It鈥檚 not as fancy as the kitchens you find in some more expensive trailers, but if you鈥檙e buying a camping trailer, you likely already have a camp stove and a cooler鈥攄o you really need a built-in stove and drawers for your silverware? If the answer is yes, you can add those to your build. We like that Hiker Trailer doesn鈥檛 make you pay for things you might not need.听

This particular trailer also came with a 21-gallon water tank and pump, with a hose that attached to the side of the trailer. It鈥檚 an upgrade ($890) that I鈥檇 highly recommend if you鈥檙e looking at a Hiker, because water goes quickly at camp, and always having enough for drinking, washing dishes, and cleaning makes life easier.听

I also can鈥檛 say enough about the Rhino Rack Batwing Awning ($794) that came on the test trailer. A 270-degree awning gives you a ton of protection from the weather听and makes a smaller, teardrop-style trailer feel immensely more livable. It鈥檚 a highly recommended upgrade.

Should You Buy One?听

Hiker Trailer
(Bryan Rogala)

Overall, Hiker Trailer鈥檚 Extreme Off-Road Deluxe model听is built like a tank. I haven鈥檛 had any issues with it, even after beating it thoroughly on some seriously rough roads. I didn鈥檛 take it rock crawling in Moab, Utah, but with an experienced driver, I鈥檇 bet this little trailer could handle that.

Aside from the beefiness of the steel frame and the other solid materials it鈥檚 built with, that durability stems from the fact that these are fairly simple trailers without much to break. There isn鈥檛 really a kitchen, and there aren鈥檛 any fancy pop-out walls or other items that might fail over time. You can trick one out with a fridge box, furnace, solar panels, and hot-water heater if you want to, or you can keep it simple.

The Extreme Off-Road Deluxe is the most expensive model that Hiker Trailer makes. Prices start at $7,995, and that鈥檚 an incredible value for any teardrop, let alone an . Once you add on accessories like the awning, in-floor storage, electrical package, or 21-gallon water tank and pump, Reeve says the average Extreme Off-Road Deluxe that he sells comes in at around $13,000 (the one I tested goes for $14,359). Even with all of that, it鈥檚 still far less than the $20,000 of most other . I鈥檝e done a lot of searching and haven鈥檛 been able to find anything that offers more for the price, especially when you factor in the backcountry performance of this trailer. My only gripes are that you can鈥檛 stand up inside, and it鈥檚 not insulated well enough to be a true winter camper, but those have more to do with a teardrop style than this particular model.听

Perhaps even more important than the specs of the trailer are what it allows you to do. I鈥檝e tried many different adventure-rig configurations over the years. I鈥檝e spent nights in massive car-camping tents, pop-up trailers, and rooftop tents, and even had a wedge-style pop-up camper on my truck for a while. As a mountain biker, skier, and hunter, these are the things that are important to me: the ability to get to remote locations, sleeping inside something with hard sides, always having听my camping gear packed, little to no setup time at camp, and something that won鈥檛 compromise the performance of my vehicle. Hiker Trailer鈥檚 Extreme Off-Road Deluxe allowed me to have听all of those, and it also let me leave a base camp set up while I drove to a trailhead鈥攕omething听the other options I鈥檝e tried have not.

There鈥檚 no perfect adventure rig, but if you鈥檙e in the market for a truly off-road-worthy听camper and don鈥檛 want to spend a fortune, I鈥檝e yet to find a better solution.

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