9 Reasons You Need a Roofnest

06 May.,2024

 

9 Reasons You Need a Roofnest

If you work a 9-5, the weekend is your cherished time to escape from behind your desk and get out and explore.

Want more information on roof tents for sale? Feel free to contact us.

We’re right there with you. Camping to us is all about getting away from it all, and spending as many nights as we can under the stars.

But when you’ve got a busy life, making time to plan a camping trip is harder than it sounds.

That’s exactly why we love roof top tents, and it’s why we started Roofnest. A roof top tent is a convenient bed-on-wheels that’s ready to roll whenever you get the urge to drive away from everyday life and get some R&R in nature.

Roofnest’s hard shell roof top tents take the convenience and comfort of car top tent camping to the next level. Our tents pop up in under a minute, are durable and waterproof, and come with a comfortable built-in mattress. So you can get the best of the outdoors without sacrificing a good night’s sleep.

But there’s even more reasons you need a Roofnest than just convenience, ease, and comfort. Here are the top 9 reasons you should buy a roof top tent.

1. You Can Live the #VanLife Without Actually Living in a Van

When you search #vanlife on Instagram, you’ll see thousands of beautiful photos of people living picturesque lives in super stylish vans. They’re parked on a beach. There’s a campfire, and a surfboard, and a cute dog. We’ve got to admit, it’s pretty tempting.

But let’s face it: Not all of us are lucky enough to get to drive around the world in a van, waking up to a new locale each day. The full-time van life just isn’t an option for everyone.

But let’s face it: Not all of us are lucky enough to get to drive around the world in a van, waking up to a new locale each day. The full-time van life just isn’t an option for everyone.

With a roof top tent, your car is automatically transformed into a bedroom on wheels, so you can live the #vanlife when you want, without actually living in a van.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Roofnest (@roofnest) on Apr 8, 2019 at 4:24pm PDT

2. Elevated Camping Keeps Pests Out

Being elevated is the name of the game when it comes to camping. Staying off the ground means there’s less of a chance of encountering a snake in your tent, waking up to a spider crawling on you, or other unwanted and sometimes even downright dangerous encounters with critters.

With a Roofnest roof top tent, you sleep at a safe and elevated height, removed from the pests that can make sleeping on the ground uncomfortable at best, and dangerous at worst.

3. Roof Top Tents are More Comfortable

No matter what sleeping pad you buy for your camping setup, it’s never going to be as comfortable as a real mattress. When it’s time to get some shuteye in your Roofnest, you’ll enjoy the comfort of a high-density foam mattress that’s built right into the tent. Zero setup necessary.

Combine that with your tent’s thick, weatherproof walls, and you’ll almost forget you’re camping. And when the temperatures drop at night, sleeping off the ground will keep you much warmer.

After a long day exploring the Great Outdoors, a Roofnest is your ticket to a good night’s sleep.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Roofnest (@roofnest) on Mar 30, 2020 at 3:25pm PDT

4. Roofnest Hard Shell Roof Top Tents Set Up in Under 60 Seconds

After a long day exploring the Great Outdoors, a Roofnest is your ticket to a good night’s sleep.

Tearing out of work on a Friday afternoon to get that perfect camp spot before the weekend rush?

With a regular tent, the scenario might look a lot like this: Pulling up to a campsite after dark, putting your head lamp on, finding a flat spot, rolling out your tent, setting up the poles, staking down your tent, attach the rain flap, unrolling your bedding, and hoping you didn’t just put your tent on top of a bunch of rocks.

A roof top tent presents a much more attractive alternative. Get to your campsite, pop up your Roofnest in one minute, and kick back by the campfire. We’ll let you decide which sounds better.

5. No Wasted Time Packing a Tent

With a Roofnest, you’re always ready to head out on your next adventure. You don’t have to dig out your tent and sleeping bags, only to realize you forgot the poles once you’re already 2 hours down the road.

During the camp season, your roof top tent can always be on top of your car, and most models let you keep your sleeping bags stowed neatly inside.

Leave the worry about where you’ll sleep behind — your basecamp is always with you. A Roofnest allows you to get out and explore more often and more easily.

6. Camp in Comfort During Cold Weather

If you’re in the mountains or other cooler areas, the camping season can be short and sweet. It can start late thanks to rain and hail in May, or be cut short by unexpected snowstorms in September.

That is, unless, you camp in a Roofnest.

With a Roofnest roof top tent’s fiberglass shell and insulated, weatherproof side walls, you can comfortably camp in the rain or snow. Throw in a Roofnest down blanket and our Ptarmigan insulation system, and you’ll stay extra warm no matter what Mother Nature throws down.

That means you can extend your camping season well beyond summer, and get a whole lot more use out of your Roofnest versus a traditional tent. More use equals more value.

View this post on Instagram

Snow has come and we’re not complaining. 📸: @masonprendergast

For more information, please visit roof top tent manufacturer.

A post shared by Roofnest (@roofnest) on Oct 10, 2019 at 3:55pm PDT

7. More Room for Your Gear

We know you can always use more room for your gear. Bikes, kayaks, crash pads, skis — the list goes on.

Sometimes your outdoor adventures can be limited by the amount of room (or lack thereof) in your car.

Sometimes your outdoor adventures can be limited by the amount of room (or lack thereof) in your car.

A roof top tent lives on top of your car, which means you don’t have a tent cluttering up your precious cargo space. And with most of our tent models, you can store all your bedding inside your Roofnest, which frees up even more space.

And if you opt for our Falcon roof top tent, you can put crossbars on top of the tent itself. Not only will you have more room inside your vehicle, but you can mount gear up top as well. It’s the best of both worlds.

Did we mention you can also put solar panels on top of your Roofnest? Check it out:

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Roofnest (@roofnest) on Dec 5, 2019 at 3:51pm PST

8. Roofnests are Aerodynamic and Fuel-Efficient

With the sleek and strong design of a Roofnest, you get better fuel-efficiency than with other roof top tents. And Roofnests are designed to be durable and weatherproof, so there’s no reason you can’t keep it on top of your car year-round.

You never know when an impromptu camping opportunity might present itself. Stay prepared.

If you’re not keen on winter camping, a Roofnest is easy to take off your vehicle. At the end of your camping season, unmount it from your ride and store for winter. When spring starts to spring, set it back up and you’re ready to roll.

9. Become Part of the Roofnest Flock

When you buy a Roofnest, you get so much more than a roof top tent. You become a part of the Roofnest Flock, our community of Roofnest owners.

You’ll have the opportunity to connect with like-minded outdoor enthusiasts who will answer questions, share amazing trail trips, and inspire you to keep exploring.

You might even run into a fellow member of the Flock on your next outing. New friends? We’ll never say no to that.

Take a Closer Look at Our Roof Top Tents

When you look at a roof top tent vs. a ground tent, there’s just no comparison.

Super fast set up. Durable hard shell design. Extremely comfortable built-in mattress. That’s just a few of the things that make a Roofnest the best roof top tent out there.

Every single one of our roof top tent models make for an evolved camping experience over traditional tents. And each of our unique models offers something special, from the super easy-to-use Sparrow EYE to the extra room inside the Condor XL.

If you need even more reasons to elevate your camping with a Roofnest, take a dive into each of our roof top tents and find the one that speaks to you.

Shop our collection of roof top tents >

A Car-Top Tent Changed The Way I Camp

Car-top tents are a relatively new genre of camping gear in North America. They are essentially tents that pop-up, or fold out, from on top of a vehicle.

After a month on the road in a model from Tepui, I’ve come to love the style of camping for some situations. Rooftop tents are a neat new tool for campers.

Call it a rooftop tent, car-top tent, or pop-up, these new-fangled camping rigs are making ripples in the media. If my experience over the last month is telling, you can expect to see them at a campground near you very soon.

A tent on your car or truck may seem a little counterintuitive. Why not just set it up on the ground? After driving from Colorado to Alaska with a Tepui Kukenam Ruggedized rooftop tent mounted on the camper top of my Ford Ranger, I’m a believer.

The rooftop tent has changed the way I camp and opened up new alternatives. It has plusses and minuses, but it is the greatest new product I’ve found in years to get a great night’s sleep in the outdoors.

This post is meant to explain rooftop tents, providing background on these contraptions and answering some of the questions my fellow campers have asked. We’ll update this article as needed to stay in front of the genre.

For a review, check out our post on the Tepui Kukenam Ruggedized rooftop tent.

And no, I won’t be giving up my backpacking tent. But if I’m car camping… there’s a pretty good chance I’ll be popping the top regularly for the foreseeable future.

Rooftop Tents: A Primer

Car-top tents are pretty new in North America. In Australia, and other places with more nasty bugs and critters on the ground, they caught on years ago. But here, they still are pretty novel, and you’ll get looks when setting this thing up.

But the curiosity is warranted; it looks nuts, and folks will wonder how it doesn’t fall off your truck. The answer is you need a darned good roof rack, and at least the Tepui model I tested is built like a tank. Read the full review for more, but so far it’s withstood winds in excess of 50 mph with no problem.

Setting up the Tepui (and most rooftop tents) is really easy, and one of the positive points. You can store bedding inside the tent if wanted, and it has a built-in memory foam mattress, which is more comfortable than any sleeping pad I’ve used.

Once set up, you access the tent from a ladder. It is pretty similar to a normal, heavy canvas camp tent in many ways, just sitting on a flat steel platform on top of your vehicle. On my truck, I’m set up about 7 feet off the ground on my topper. With windows open, this really gives a wild perspective at campsites.

Rooftop campers exist in a weird intersection of RVs and tents, and you’ll immediately find yourself asking if you need to pay an RV rate or a tent rate at campgrounds. Seeing as I do not use electricity or water, I’ve settled on the usually-cheaper tent rate.

But the setup has some of the advantages of RVs, notably the ability to camp in places you’d never want to pitch a tent.

A Night In The Walmart Parking Lot

Driving the ALCAN from Colorado to Alaska on one late night, my wife and I stopped in a Tim Hortons to grab some WiFi and a donut. A group of cops walked in (I’m not kidding here) and I asked one for suggestions for a good place to camp for the night. His reply?

“There’s a Walmart right down the road. Just set up by the other RVs.”

A pleasant quirk of Walmart, many allow you to sleep in the parking lot. I never considered it as a tent camper. The Walmart was an hour closer than the next campground, which would likely be closed anyway as it was early May and most facilities were still shuttered for the winter. Walmart it was.

A few minutes later we were set up and zonked out in the Walmart in Grand Prairie, Alberta. I got a great night sleep in a place I’d never consider camping in a tent.

This has played out several times since adopting the rooftop tent. It opens a world of camping in places that would downright suck in a traditional tent. The Tepui’s heavy material is dark and strong, providing privacy and at least a perception of more security than sleeping in a light tent on the ground.

This setup also lifts you above rocks, uneven ground, pine cones…it’s always the same flat surface, even if you’re on a paved parking lot.

Rooftop Tent Pros & Cons

Pro: The Tepui I tested is very comfortable, easy to set up, durable, and weather-proof. It creates a flat surface to sleep on, and I wake well rested. Compared with a ground-tent, I think I sleep better in general. I can’t speak to all roof-top tents, but the heavier materials allow for thick mattresses and great weather protection.

When compared with an RV, the rooftop tent system is dramatically cheaper. It’s also much easier to drive, given that you are driving your normal vehicle versus a land yacht. No, you don’t have a bathroom, shower and kitchen sink on board. But my wife and I do carry a large water cube, two-burner stove, and a YETI cooler. So really, our system is kind of the budget RV.

Compared with sleeping in a topper or car: An advantage of this system for us (compared with sleeping in the truck bed) is that the topper is now wide open to carry gear. Nobody needs to sleep there, so you can pack it full. For us, this was huge, as we were on a two-month trip to Alaska and needed a mix of professional clothing and toys like bikes and hiking equipment.

Similarly, and especially in bear country, you can secure your gear inside the topper when not in use and at night. This is also good for pricy things you don’t want to leave sitting out at camp. The topper is no longer a bedroom, but instead becomes your gear locker and kitchen, with the bedroom up top.

The negative compared with a topper (or sleeping in a car) is that you will stand out. People will notice this parked in a lot. It also is less fuel efficient and more expensive than just sleeping inside the vehicle.

Con: You can’t set up your tent and drive away. That is the biggest negative for the rooftop system. If you want to set up a week-long camp and then use your car to go on excursions, well, you have to pull down the tent each time. You may also need to leave something in your campsite to hold your spot.

It’s worth noting that you won’t be taking the tent off your truck to set up on the ground just for short times. Any of these will weigh well over 100 pounds, and are not meant to set up on the ground.

Another negative is that the tent does hurt fuel efficiency some and can affect the performance of your vehicle. I’ve not really noticed a big change in my Ford Ranger, but I suspect it costs me a half-mile a gallon or so.

The truck doesn’t seem to handle any differently, although I’m sure it would affect high-speed cornering, something I’d never even consider in a pickup truck with a topper anyway. For serious off-roaders, it does raise your center of gravity, but if you’re getting weird, rock crawling on sketchy trails, you already knew that, right?

Price is another factor. Rooftop tents aren’t cheap (ranging from around $1,000 to $2,000 or more, and a rack system can add several hundred dollars to the package). When compared with a high quality tent and sleeping pad package, the price difference shrinks, but the rooftop system is still considerably more pricey.

Car-Top Tent Types

There are three main types of roof-top tents, those similar to the Tepui, which open like a book and have a heavy canvas body and roof; literal “pop-ups” that have a hard top and canvas body; or those constructed completely into the vehicle as an after-market customization (think VW pop-tops).

The Tepui I tested is the fully-fabric version. These can be set up to fold to the side, or to the back, depending on the type of vehicle and configuration desired. A bonus to me using the full-canvas Tepui was that I can fold it open over my tailgate, which provides significant shelter for cooking or just hanging out in the rain.

Hard-top tents pop straight up, or tilt up from one side, they are regarded as super fast to set up. I’ve never spent the night in this style, but would be a little more concerned about high winds compared with a canvas tent like the Tepui.

Car-Top Camper Installation

Rooftop tents require a strong roof rack to carry them. They weigh well over 100 pounds, so be certain of the capacity of the rack you plan to use.

I used a Yakima system with Core Bars and Skyline Towers with my Tepui system, and it’s proven to be great, especially because the towers can be removed with just the flipping of a lever, allowing the whole rig to be lifted off relatively easily.

The initial installation of the Tepui on my truck was pretty easy, accomplished by three guys in about an hour. It will vary depending on the tent and vehicle used, but plan on an afternoon and be sure to have some helpers and tools on hand. I go into more detail about installation in the Tepui Kukenam review.

Rooftop, Or Ground?

A rooftop tent will really benefit those on extended trips that are largely on the move. It was perfect for the Alaska Highway, and would be perfect for campgrounds and nasty weather.

It’s also great if you plan to spend a lot of days in your vehicle. Those living weeks or months on end on the road and in campgrounds will really appreciate the added comfort of this setup.

Those on a budget or who only camp a few days a summer will be better served with a traditional tent. In addition, people who want to set up a tent for several days and move the car in the meantime will also find a standard tent easier to manage.

–Got questions about car-top camping? Leave them in the comments and we’ll answer them as best we can.

The company is the world’s best roof top tent supplier supplier. We are your one-stop shop for all needs. Our staff are highly-specialized and will help you find the product you need.