Before Nomad Titan showed up, my job was 50% office work and 50% Wi-Fi complaints.
I’ve worked the front desk at an RV park in Colorado for nearly four years. Most days, I’m the first face travelers see when they check-in. I answer questions, give them a map of the grounds, and explain the rules. But more often than not, the first real question was:
“How’s the Wi-Fi here?”
I learned to brace myself. The conversation would always go the same way. I’d explain that we had free Wi-Fi, but it was strongest near the office. I’d point to the “dead zones” on the map. I’d mention that streaming might not work. Guests would nod politely — then return 30 minutes later frustrated, holding a phone or laptop, asking if we could reboot the router.
We had tried everything — range extenders, a mesh network, even a pricey satellite plan. But it never kept up with demand, especially during peak season.
That was life before Nomad Titan.
The Day Everything Changed
The Nomad Titan unit arrived in a simple box. Our park owner, Richard, was skeptical at first — like most of us — but the promise was too tempting: no contracts, no cost, and full-park Wi-Fi that actually worked.
We plugged it in before lunch. By dinner, we were connected — not just in the office, but across the park. Every cabin. Every RV. Even the picnic tables near the creek.
There was no installation crew, no trenching, and no setup manual thicker than a phone book. Just plug-and-play. It was the easiest infrastructure upgrade we’ve ever had.
What Is This Thing?
For anyone unfamiliar, the Nomad Titan is a rugged, solar-compatible wireless internet station built by Nomad Internet, a rural internet provider making serious waves in the RV community.
It taps into Nomad’s private rural wireless spectrum — more powerful than typical mobile signals — and rebroadcasts it across the park using high-gain antennas. It’s waterproof, self-monitoring, and requires zero upkeep on our end.
Our Titan sits unobtrusively behind the office, but its signal reaches every corner of our 40-acre park. And the best part? It’s completely free for our guests. No login screens, no passwords, and no upsells.
What Changed at Our Park
It wasn’t just the internet. It was everything.
- Guests stopped coming into the office frustrated.
- Families stuck around longer.
- Remote workers booked full weeks instead of weekends.
- Our reviews skyrocketed — especially on the phrase “fast Wi-Fi.”
Even our staff meetings got easier — we now use cloud-based tools, and the Titan made those possible from anywhere on the property.
I remember one guest, a retired couple from Arizona, who told me it was the first time they’d been able to video chat with their granddaughter from their RV instead of driving to a Starbucks. That same week, a full-time remote worker emailed us to say she’d extended her stay — because this was the first campground in months where she hadn’t needed her hotspot.
Scaling Up Across the Nation
We were the first park to install the Nomad Titan, but we’re far from the last.
Nomad Internet plans to deploy over 4,000 units across the country this year, creating a nationwide, free Wi-Fi grid for RV travelers. It’s a bold goal — covering a third of all RV parks in the U.S. — but if our experience is anything to go by, it’s very achievable.
Each Titan is monitored remotely and upgraded as needed. We haven’t touched ours since we installed it. It just… works.
“We’re not experimenting,” said Jaden Garza, Nomad Internet’s CEO, when we spoke by phone. “We’re building permanent infrastructure for the RV lifestyle.”
What Campgrounds Should Know
If you’re an RV park employee or owner reading this, here’s what I’d tell you:
- This is the easiest tech upgrade you’ll ever implement.
- It improves guest satisfaction instantly.
- It reduces your workload.
- And it’s free — forever.
Apply online at freenomad.com, and if you’re anything like us, you’ll wonder why you didn’t do it sooner.
Life After the Titan
Now, when guests ask about Wi-Fi, I smile. I tell them, “You’re already connected.”
They blink, check their phone, nod in surprise — and that’s it. No follow-up visits. No complaints. Just silence.
And for someone in my job, that’s the best sound in the world.