Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS vs Jayco Eagle 360DBOK
2026 Fifth Wheel comparison · side-by-side specs, verdict, and who each is best for.
Quick verdict
Both 2026 Fifth Wheels target king-bed family camping with comparable equipment lists, but they sit in different size tiers. The Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS measures 36.58 ft at 11,050 lb dry on a 13,200 lb GVWR with 2,120 lb tongue. It sleeps 4 with king bed plus bunkhouse, 81/87/50 gal fresh/grey/black tanks, 200W solar with solar prep, 1,800W inverter, theater seating, fireplace, four-season insulation, and washer/dryer prep at $79,680.
The Jayco Eagle 360DBOK runs 43.08 ft at 12,800 lb dry on a 14,995 lb GVWR with 2,695 lb tongue, sleeps 6 with king plus bunkhouse, includes 81/87/87 gal tanks plus 60 gal LP, 200W solar with solar prep, outdoor kitchen, residential fridge, theater seating, four-season insulation, and washer/dryer prep. MSRP $84,306 vs $79,680, a $4,626 spread.
Directionally, the Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS is the shorter, lower-tongue, fireplace-equipped four-season king-bed coach, while the Jayco Eagle 360DBOK is the longer, higher-GVWR family coach with outdoor kitchen, 60 gal LP, and double the black tank capacity.
Side-by-side specs
| Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS | Jayco Eagle 360DBOK | |
|---|---|---|
| MSRP | $79,680 | $84,306 |
| Length | 36'7" | 43'1" |
| Dry weight | 11,050 lbs | 12,800 lbs |
| GVWR | 13,200 lbs | 14,995 lbs |
| Sleeps | 4 | 6 |
| Slides | — | — |
| Fresh tank | 81 gal | 81 gal |
| Grey tank | 87 gal | 87 gal |
| Black tank | 50 gal | 87 gal |
| LP | — | 60 gal |
| Solar | 200W | 200W |
| Inverter | 1800W | — |
| Generator | — | — |
| Bath | — | full |
| Bed | king | king |
| 4-season | Yes | Yes |
| Off-road | No | No |
| Outdoor kitchen | No | Yes |
| Washer/dryer | prep | prep |
| Residential fridge | No | Yes |
Where Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS wins
- 11,050 lb dry weight is 1,750 lb lighter than Eagle 360DBOK
- 2,120 lb tongue is 575 lb lighter for hitch loading
- 36.58 ft length is 6.5 ft shorter for tighter sites and roads
- $79,680 MSRP saves $4,626 against the Eagle 360DBOK
- Fireplace standard for cabin-style heat and ambiance
Where Jayco Eagle 360DBOK wins
- Sleeps 6 vs 4 with the king plus bunkhouse layout
- 87 gal black tank vs 50 gal nearly doubles dump intervals
- 60 gal LP capacity vs unlisted on the Roamer for extended heating
- Outdoor kitchen and residential refrigerator standard
- 14,995 lb GVWR adds 1,795 lb of loaded headroom over Roamer
Pick the Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS if…
Pick the Highland Ridge Roamer 32RLTS if you want a four-season king-plus-bunks Fifth Wheel that stays under 37 ft for easier campground access, runs lighter on the truck (11,050 lb dry, 2,120 lb tongue), and includes the fireplace plus 1,800W inverter for cabin-style ambiance and off-grid AC. The $4,626 savings against the Eagle 360DBOK funds plenty of upgrades, and the 200W solar plus washer/dryer prep cover the essentials.
Pick the Jayco Eagle 360DBOK if…
Pick the Jayco Eagle 360DBOK if you have a family of 6 and want the 87 gal black tank to support long stays, the outdoor kitchen for park camping, the residential refrigerator for full-size grocery loads, and the 60 gal LP for extended winter or shoulder-season heating. The 43.08 ft length is harder to maneuver and the 2,695 lb tongue requires serious 3/4-ton or 1-ton truck capability, but the family-camping infrastructure is substantially more capable than the Roamer's. Best for buyers prioritizing sleep count and tank capacity over length and tongue.
Frequently asked
Length difference matters how much?
The Roamer 32RLTS at 36.58 ft fits more campsites than the Eagle 360DBOK at 43.08 ft. The 6.5 ft difference excludes the Eagle from many state-park sites with 38-40 ft limits.
Sleeping comparison?
The Eagle 360DBOK sleeps 6 with king plus bunkhouse. The Roamer 32RLTS sleeps 4 with king plus bunks. The Eagle is the better large-family pick.
How does the LP capacity affect winter use?
The Eagle 360DBOK has 60 gal LP listed. The Roamer 32RLTS LP capacity is not documented. For winter or extended-stay heating, the 60 gal Eagle setup runs significantly longer between LP fills.