Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK vs Winnebago Voyage V3033BH
2026 Travel Trailer comparison · side-by-side specs, verdict, and who each is best for.
Quick verdict
Both rigs sleep eight in a Travel Trailer bunkhouse, and the prices are within $1,010 of each other (Eagle HT 312BHOK at $64,125 vs Voyage V3033BH at $63,115). Past that, you're choosing between two very different family rigs. The Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK is 38.67 ft long with dual slides, weighs 10,015 lbs dry, and is built for residential comfort — outdoor kitchen, theater seating, residential 12V fridge, Climate Shield insulation, all standard. The Winnebago Voyage V3033BH is 34.08 ft long, runs a single slide, and comes in 2,415 lbs lighter at 7,600 lbs dry.
That weight gap is the real story for towing. The Voyage V3033BH is half-ton territory; the Eagle HT 312BHOK genuinely needs a 3/4-ton to be comfortable. Tank-wise, the Jayco carries 60 gal LP for cold weather and bigger furnace runtime; the Winnebago carries 14 gal. The Voyage flips back ahead on grey water with 100 gal vs 74 gal.
Eagle HT is the better-equipped luxury family Travel Trailer if you have the truck. Voyage V3033BH is the better-towing pick if you don't.
Side-by-side specs
| Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK | Winnebago Voyage V3033BH | |
|---|---|---|
| MSRP | $64,125 | $63,115 |
| Length | 38'8" | 34'1" |
| Dry weight | 10,015 lbs | 7,600 lbs |
| GVWR | 11,995 lbs | 10,400 lbs |
| Sleeps | 8 | 8 |
| Slides | 2 | 1 |
| Fresh tank | 52 gal | 50 gal |
| Grey tank | 74 gal | 100 gal |
| Black tank | 37 gal | 50 gal |
| LP | 60 gal | 14 gal |
| Solar | 200W | — |
| Inverter | — | — |
| Generator | — | — |
| Bath | full | full |
| Bed | bunks | mixed |
| 4-season | Yes | No |
| Off-road | No | No |
| Outdoor kitchen | Yes | No |
| Washer/dryer | none | none |
| Residential fridge | Yes | No |
Where Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK wins
- Two slides vs one on the Voyage — meaningfully more living-area floor space when parked
- Outdoor kitchen built into the curb side; the Voyage V3033BH skips this
- 60 gal LP propane vs 14 gal — 4.3x more, a real cold-weather and dry-camp advantage
- Climate Shield insulation and a residential 12V fridge included standard
- Theater seating standard, plus 200W of factory solar
Where Winnebago Voyage V3033BH wins
- 2,415 lbs lighter dry weight — 7,600 vs 10,015 lbs — opens the half-ton truck market
- 4.6 ft shorter overall (34.08 vs 38.67 ft), fits into more campsite pads
- 100 gal grey tank vs 74 gal — over a third more shower water before dumping
- 50-amp shore service standard, headroom for dual A/C and a microwave together
- $1,010 cheaper sticker, modest but real
Pick the Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK if…
Pick the Jayco Eagle HT 312BHOK if you own a 3/4-ton or larger truck and you want the most-equipped family bunkhouse on the lot. Outdoor kitchen, theater seats, residential fridge, Climate Shield, 60 gal LP, dual slides — this is a fully kitted Travel Trailer for a family of five or six that takes long shoulder-season trips. Best for a Western or Mountain-state family chasing ski-season basecamp and shoulder-month national parks. The weight is real, but so are the amenities.
Pick the Winnebago Voyage V3033BH if…
Pick the Winnebago Voyage V3033BH if you tow with a half-ton (F-150, Silverado 1500, Ram 1500) and you want a bunkhouse without the truck upgrade. At 7,600 lbs dry it's well inside half-ton territory. The 100-gal grey tank also matters for a family of four or five who shower daily. You give up the outdoor kitchen, Climate Shield insulation, and 4.5 ft of living space, but you keep the truck you already own. Best for a Midwestern family doing campground-based trips spring through fall.
Frequently asked
How many sleeping spots are in each?
Both sleep 8. The Eagle HT uses bunks plus a queen master; the Voyage V3033BH lists a mixed bed configuration including bunks.
Is the Voyage V3033BH truly half-ton towable?
At 7,600 lbs dry, yes — a properly equipped F-150 with the Max Tow package handles it. Loaded, you're around 9,000 lbs, still inside spec for most current half-tons.
Which is better for cold-weather trips?
The Jayco. Climate Shield insulation plus 60 gal of LP gives you real margin in the 20s; the Voyage isn't spec'd as four-season and only has 14 gal of propane.