Heartland North Trail 240RK vs Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB
2026 Travel Trailer comparison · side-by-side specs, verdict, and who each is best for.
Quick verdict
Both rear-bath Travel Trailers target half-ton tow vehicles, but the length and weight gap creates different buyer profiles. The Heartland North Trail 240RK measures 28.58 ft at 5,790 lb dry on a 7,400 lb GVWR with 705 lb tongue, sleeps 4, includes 30-amp shore service, and ships at $41,993 with thin published specs (no tank gallons, slides, or bath layout documented).
The Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB runs 25.04 ft at 4,160 lb dry on the same 7,400 lb GVWR, sleeps 3 with documented full bath and queen bed, 37 gal fresh, 43/25 gal grey/black, 9.5 gal LP, no slides, solar prep, and 30-amp service. MSRP $40,952 vs $41,993, a $1,041 spread.
Directionally, the Heartland North Trail 240RK is the longer, heavier Ultra-Lite couples coach with thin spec disclosure, while the Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB is the shorter, lighter SUV-friendly trailer with documented tanks, queen bed, and full bath layout at a lower price.
Side-by-side specs
| Heartland North Trail 240RK | Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB | |
|---|---|---|
| MSRP | $41,993 | $40,952 |
| Length | 28'7" | 25' |
| Dry weight | 5,790 lbs | 4,160 lbs |
| GVWR | 7,400 lbs | 7,400 lbs |
| Sleeps | 4 | 3 |
| Slides | — | 0 |
| Fresh tank | — | 37 gal |
| Grey tank | — | 43 gal |
| Black tank | — | 25 gal |
| LP | — | 9.5 gal |
| Solar | — | — |
| Inverter | — | — |
| Generator | — | — |
| Bath | — | full |
| Bed | — | queen |
| 4-season | No | No |
| Off-road | No | No |
| Outdoor kitchen | No | No |
| Washer/dryer | none | none |
| Residential fridge | No | No |
Where Heartland North Trail 240RK wins
- 28.58 ft length adds roughly 3.5 ft of additional living space
- 5,790 lb dry on 7,400 lb GVWR provides 1,610 lb of cargo headroom
- 705 lb tongue weight remains within half-ton hitch ratings
- Sleeps 4 vs 3 in the Hike 100 H210RB
- Ultra-Lite construction targets weight efficiency
Where Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB wins
- 4,160 lb dry weight is 1,630 lb lighter for SUV towing
- Documented 37 gal fresh, 43 gal grey, 25 gal black tanks
- Queen bed and full bath layout published
- 25.04 ft length parks easier on tighter sites
- $40,952 MSRP saves $1,041 against the North Trail 240RK
Pick the Heartland North Trail 240RK if…
Pick the Heartland North Trail 240RK if you want the extra 3.5 ft of living space for a more spacious interior, sleep-4 capacity, and the higher dry weight that translates to more substantial build for extended-stay or seasonal camping. The 7,400 lb GVWR with 1,610 lb cargo headroom carries serious gear loads, and the 705 lb tongue still fits half-ton hitch ratings. Trade-off: thin published spec sheet (no tank gallons, bath layout, or slides documented), so confirm everything at the dealer.
Pick the Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB if…
Pick the Winnebago Hike 100 H210RB if you tow with a mid-size SUV or capable half-ton, want documented full bath and queen bed, and value the 25.04 ft length for tight state-park sites. The 4,160 lb dry weight tows easier across more vehicle classes, the documented 37 gal fresh and 43 gal grey support multi-day dry-camping, and the $1,041 savings vs the North Trail 240RK funds aftermarket additions. Best for buyers prioritizing maneuverability, weight, and spec clarity.
Frequently asked
Which sleeps more?
The North Trail 240RK sleeps 4, the Hike 100 H210RB sleeps 3.
Tow vehicle implication?
The Hike 100 H210RB at 4,160 lb dry fits a wider range of tow vehicles including capable mid-size SUVs. The North Trail 240RK at 5,790 lb dry needs a properly equipped half-ton truck.
Spec disclosure differences?
The Hike 100 H210RB documents 37 gal fresh, 43/25 gal grey/black, queen bed, and full bath. The North Trail 240RK leaves those details unpublished in the spec sheet, so verify at the dealer.