Camco water heater reviews reflect the RV-specific challenges: vibration, temperature cycling, freeze vulnerability, and the constraints of small-tank operation. Camco is aftermarket RV/marine accessory specialist with a small line of replacement RV water heaters and water-heater accessories.
What owners praise
- Reasonable price-to-capacity for RV-rated equipment
- Compatible with Camco's broader RV-system lineup
- Available through standard RV parts channels (no specialty sourcing needed)
- Camco's broader product ecosystem provides cross-compatibility benefits
What owners complain about
- Shorter tank life than residential equivalents — typical 6–9 year lifespan vs 12+ years residential
- Freeze damage is a common failure mode — RV environment is unforgiving of winterization mistakes
- Anode consumption is faster than residential (variable water sources accelerate wear)
- Gas valves and proprietary controls are more expensive to replace than residential parts
- Smaller capacities (4–10 gallons) constrain heavy hot-water use
Camco vs major competitors
The two dominant RV water heater brands are Suburban and Atwood (now Dometic-owned). Camco compares as follows:
- vs Suburban: Suburban has the broadest dealer network and most universal parts availability. Camco matches build quality but may have shorter parts availability for older models.
- vs Atwood (Dometic): functionally similar in most categories. Dometic's larger RV-systems ecosystem is an advantage for full-RV branded installs.
Reliability ratings
| Metric | Camco typical |
|---|---|
| Tank life (typical use) | 6–9 years |
| Tank life (full-time RV) | 4–6 years |
| Anode replacement interval | 12–24 months |
| Warranty (tank) | 1–2 years |
| Service interval | Annual (winterizing + flush) |
Who should buy Camco
Right buyer: RV owner replacing factory-installed Camco unit, owner of Camco-branded RV ecosystem (matching aesthetics and parts compatibility), buyer who values brand consistency.
Wrong buyer: full-time RVers needing maximum capacity (look at residential heat pump or tankless adapted for RV), winter campers needing robust freeze protection (specialty insulated tanks), or anyone building from scratch with maximum design flexibility (consider tankless to save space and weight).
Honest verdict
Camco water heaters are competent RV equipment within the constraints of the RV market. They're not exceptional, but they're rarely a problem — the typical RV owner buys whatever the RV came with and replaces it when it fails. Camco units fall into that "reliable enough" category. For premium RV builds where the water heater is a key design element, consider higher-tier alternatives (tankless or hybrid systems).