Holiday Rambler Incline 29H vs Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T
2026 Class C comparison · side-by-side specs, verdict, and who each is best for.
Quick verdict
Two 2026 Ford E-Series Class C gas motorhomes, same 14,500 lb GVWR, same 7.3L Triton V8 family, different builds. The Holiday Rambler Incline 29H is 32.5 ft, 102 in wide, 11.58 ft tall, 84 in interior height, 1 slide, bunkhouse with mixed beds, full bath, 50/36/36 gal tanks, 330 W solar, 4 kW genset, 50A shore power, theater seating, residential fridge, fireplace, sleeping 4, for $161,839. The Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T is 28.42 ft, 350 HP V8, 2 slides, full bath, queen bed, 44/41/35 gal tanks, 18 gal LP, 30A shore power, sleeping 6, for $166,340.
The Minnie Winnie 26T takes slide count (2 vs 1), sleep count (6 vs 4), and the slightly higher 350 HP V8 rating. The Holiday Rambler Incline 29H wins on length (32.5 vs 28.42 ft), 50A service vs 30A, 330 W solar standard, 4 kW onboard generator, theater seating, residential fridge, and bunkhouse for kids. MSRP is $161,839 vs $166,340, a $4,501 gap.
Directional verdict: pick the Incline 29H for 50A electrical and the bunkhouse; pick the Minnie Winnie 26T for two slides and the shorter footprint.
Side-by-side specs
| Holiday Rambler Incline 29H | Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T | |
|---|---|---|
| MSRP | $161,839 | $166,340 |
| Length | 32'6" | 28'5" |
| Dry weight | — | — |
| GVWR | 14,500 lbs | 14,500 lbs |
| Sleeps | 4 | 6 |
| Slides | 1 | 2 |
| Fresh tank | 50 gal | 44 gal |
| Grey tank | 36 gal | 41 gal |
| Black tank | 36 gal | 35 gal |
| LP | — | 18 gal |
| Solar | 330W | — |
| Inverter | — | — |
| Generator | 4000W | — |
| Bath | full | full |
| Bed | mixed | queen |
| 4-season | No | No |
| Off-road | No | No |
| Outdoor kitchen | No | No |
| Washer/dryer | none | none |
| Residential fridge | Yes | No |
Where Holiday Rambler Incline 29H wins
- 50A vs 30A shore power
- 330 W solar standard
- 4 kW onboard generator included
- Bunkhouse layout with mixed beds
- Residential fridge and fireplace standard
Where Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T wins
- 2 slides expand the living room and bedroom
- Sleeps 6 vs 4
- 350 HP V8 rating vs 335 HP
- Shorter 28.42 ft footprint for tighter campsites
- 18 gal LP capacity documented
Pick the Holiday Rambler Incline 29H if…
Pick the Holiday Rambler Incline 29H if you want a Class C with a bunkhouse for kids, the documented 330 W of solar, an onboard 4 kW generator, and 50A shore power that runs two ACs. The Ford 7.3L V8 at 335 HP / 468 lb-ft pulls the 32.5 ft body and 14,500 lb GVWR comfortably, the theater seating and residential fridge bring residential touches, and the $161,839 MSRP is $4,501 cheaper than the Minnie Winnie. Best for families of 4 who travel on hookups with kids in the bunks.
Pick the Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T if…
Pick the Winnebago Minnie Winnie 26T if you want the shorter 28.42 ft Class C with 2 slides for daytime living-room and bedroom width, a queen-rear-bedroom layout, and sleeping 6 around an L-shaped galley. The Ford 7.3L V8 at 350 HP delivers strong gas-engine performance, the 18 gal LP carries cooking and furnace runtime longer, and the $166,340 MSRP is the spend for a more compact dual-slide build. Couples plus 4 grandchildren on hookup trips will use the second slide every evening.
Frequently asked
Which is shorter?
The Minnie Winnie 26T is 28.42 ft. The Incline 29H is 32.5 ft, 4.08 ft longer.
Which has 50A service?
Only the Incline 29H has 50A shore power. The Minnie Winnie 26T runs 30A.
Does either include solar?
The Incline 29H ships with 330 W of solar from the factory. The Minnie Winnie 26T is solar-prepped but does not include panels.