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Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS vs Jayco North Point 310RLTS

2026 Fifth Wheel comparison · side-by-side specs, verdict, and who each is best for.

Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS

Highland Ridge

Open Range 3X 287RLS

$108,000 · 34'7" · sleeps 4

Full Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS details →
Jayco North Point 310RLTS

Jayco

North Point 310RLTS

$117,600 · 36' · sleeps 4

Full Jayco North Point 310RLTS details →

Quick verdict

These rear-living luxury Fifth Wheels split $9,600 in MSRP ($108,000 vs $117,600). The Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS is 34'7" at 11,670 lbs dry, sleeps 4 with king bed, 75 gal fresh, 200W solar, 1,800W inverter, fireplace, four-season, off-road suspension, residential fridge, theater seating, and washer/dryer prep. The Jayco North Point 310RLTS stretches 36'0" at 13,375 lbs dry, sleeps 4 with king bed, includes 102" wide-body construction, 102" interior ceilings, 400W solar, 50 gal black tank, 120 gal LP, outdoor kitchen, GE Profile appliances, and JBL sound.

The Open Range 3X 287RLS undercuts the North Point by $9,600 and ships with a 1,800W inverter the Jayco lacks. The North Point 310RLTS counters with twice the solar (400W vs 200W), 6 inches more width (102" vs 97"), 102 gal more LP, 5 inches taller interior ceilings, and an outdoor kitchen.

For luxury Fifth Wheel buyers, the Highland Ridge Open Range 3X is the better-content value; the North Point 310RLTS is the wider, longer-stay rig.

Side-by-side specs

Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLSJayco North Point 310RLTS
MSRP$108,000$117,600
Length34'7"36'
Dry weight11,670 lbs13,375 lbs
GVWR13,900 lbs16,000 lbs
Sleeps44
Slides1
Fresh tank75 gal75 gal
Grey tank97 gal87 gal
Black tank40 gal50 gal
LP18.9 gal120 gal
Solar200W400W
Inverter1800W
Generator
Bathfull
Bedkingking
4-seasonYesYes
Off-roadYesNo
Outdoor kitchenNoYes
Washer/dryerprepprep
Residential fridgeYesYes

Where Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS wins

  • Lower MSRP by $9,600 ($108,000 vs $117,600)
  • 1,800W inverter standard (North Point has none)
  • 1,705 lbs lighter dry weight (11,670 vs 13,375 lbs)
  • Fireplace and off-road package included
  • 1'5" shorter for easier site fit

Where Jayco North Point 310RLTS wins

  • 400W solar vs 200W on Open Range 3X
  • 102" wide-body vs 97" on Open Range 3X
  • 102" interior ceiling vs 97"
  • 120 gal LP vs 18.9 gal
  • Outdoor kitchen with GE Profile appliances

Pick the Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS if…

Pick the Highland Ridge Open Range 3X 287RLS if you want serious boondock capability in a Fifth Wheel that fits more state-park sites under $110K. The 1,800W inverter, 200W solar, 75 gal fresh, and off-road suspension cover scenarios the Jayco North Point 310RLTS isn't ready for. Four-season insulation and fireplace handle shoulder-season camping. At $108,000 the Open Range 3X 287RLS saves $9,600 over the North Point while delivering inverter and off-road capability the Jayco skips.

Pick the Jayco North Point 310RLTS if…

Pick the Jayco North Point 310RLTS if you stay seasonally and want the wide-body luxury experience. The 102" width plus 102" interior ceiling create cathedral-class living space the 97" Open Range 3X can't match. 400W solar, 120 gal LP, outdoor kitchen, and GE Profile appliances support extended hosting. At $117,600 the North Point 310RLTS earns the $9,600 premium for buyers who care more about interior volume and content than boondock electronics.

Frequently asked

Which one needs more truck?

Both need a heavy 3/4-ton or one-ton. The North Point 310RLTS at 16,000 lb GVWR with 2,510 lb pin pushes harder than the Open Range 3X 287RLS at 13,900 lb GVWR with 2,375 lb pin. Plan on a single-rear-wheel one-ton for the Open Range 3X and a dually for the North Point if loading heavy.

How much off-grid LP capacity does the Jayco gain?

120 gal LP vs 18.9 gal on the Open Range 3X is over 6x the capacity. For winter or extended LP heating, the North Point 310RLTS runs days where the Open Range 3X needs a refill.

Does the wide-body North Point fit standard campsites?

102" width is 6 inches over the 96" Open Range 3X. Most modern campsites accommodate up to 102", but older sites with concrete pads or close-in trees may be tight.