Truck Camping Setups — Tonneau + Rooftop Tent
The Cleanest Way to Camp Out of Your Truck
Most truck owners who want to overland face the same tension: they need the truck to work during the week and camp on weekends — and they don’t want a full bed rack or canopy permanently changing how the truck looks and functions. The tonneau cover setup solves that. A rack-compatible retractable or hard-folding tonneau gives you an enclosed, weatherproof bed for tools and everyday cargo, while the integrated side rails let you run cross bars on top for a rooftop tent, awning, or other gear.
The result is a low-profile build that looks stock from a distance, keeps your bed contents locked and dry, and turns into a capable camping rig in minutes. This guide covers four setup tiers — from a clean entry-level build to a full touring configuration — with realistic CAD price ranges, which trucks fit each setup best, and what to buy first.
Most truck owners who want to overland face the same tension: they need the truck to work during the week and camp on weekends — and they don’t want a full bed rack or canopy permanently changing how the truck looks and functions. The tonneau cover setup solves that. A rack-compatible retractable or hard-folding tonneau gives you an enclosed, weatherproof bed for tools and everyday cargo, while the integrated side rails let you run cross bars on top for a rooftop tent, awning, or other gear.
The result is a low-profile build that looks stock from a distance, keeps your bed contents locked and dry, and turns into a capable camping rig in minutes. This guide covers four setup tiers — from a clean entry-level build to a full touring configuration — with realistic CAD price ranges, which trucks fit each setup best, and what to buy first.
You Need a Rack-Compatible Tonneau Cover
- Toyota Tacoma
- Ford F-150
- Ram 1500
- Jeep Gladiator
- Ford Ranger
- Chevy Colorado
GMC Canyon
Nissan Frontier
Toyota Tundra
Ram 2500
Setup 1 — Entry Level
Low-Profile Tonneau + Tent
Estimated build cost: $2,500 – $4,500 CAD
Toyota Tacoma (5′ and 5’5″ beds), Ford Ranger (5′ bed), Chevy Colorado, GMC Canyon, Nissan Frontier. Compact and mid-size trucks are ideal for this setup — the lower tonneau profile and shorter bed keep the overall roofline height manageable. Confirm bed length and cab configuration before ordering.
What You Need
- Cross bars mounted to tonneau side rails
- Compact rooftop tent (hardshell recommended)
- Season-appropriate bedding
- Small weatherproof storage bag
- Rechargeable camp lantern
Why It Works
- Lowest-profile truck camping setup available
- Bed stays weatherproof and locked below
- Hardshell tent opens in under 60 seconds
- No permanent changes to the truck
- Looks clean on Monday morning
- Strong foundation — add gear as you go
Setup 2 — Daily Driver + Weekend
Commuter Truck Turned Weekend Escape
Estimated build cost: $4,500 – $7,000 CAD
Ford F-150 (5.5′ and 6.5′ beds), Ram 1500, Toyota Tacoma (all trims), Jeep Gladiator. Full-size trucks carry the additional weight of an awning and cooler well and offer more bed volume for daily cargo underneath. Gladiator owners: verify cross bar position relative to the sport bar before ordering.
- Rack-compatible tonneau cover
- Cross bars
- Rooftop tent (2-person)
- Side-mount awning (optional but recommended)
- Quality cooler or compact 12V fridge
- Basic recovery gear (traction boards minimum)
- Practical daily driver through the work week
- No rack to remove between trips
- Awning adds weather cover at camp
- Cold food extends weekend to Monday
- Traction boards cover you on BC and AB gravel
- Setup scales up over time without starting over
Setup 3 — Extended Touring
Tonneau + Tent + Awning Touring Build
Estimated build cost: $7,000 – $10,000 CAD
Ford F-150 (Tremor, XLT, Lariat), Ram 1500 (Rebel, Lone Star), Toyota Tacoma TRD Off-Road, Toyota Tundra. These trucks have the payload and interior space to accommodate a fridge, power setup, and organized bed storage while keeping the tonneau closed. Check your truck’s payload rating when adding a full camp kitchen and power station to the bed.
- Rack-compatible tonneau cover
- Cross bars
- Rooftop tent (2–3 person, 4-season preferred)
- Full awning (270° or side-mount)
- 12V compressor fridge (not a cooler)
- Portable power station or dual-battery setup
- Lighting and cargo organization in the bed
- 5–10 days of cold food storage
- Power for fridge, lights, and devices off-grid
- Full awning handles Coquihalla weather changes
- 4-season tent manages Kananaskis spring nights
- Locked tonneau protects gear between camp days
- Tonneau profile still cleaner than a full bed rack
Setup 4 — Security-First
Secure Storage + Adventure Build
Estimated build cost: $2,500 – $5,000 CAD
For truck owners who prioritize keeping tools, valuables, and everyday cargo safe — and want the adventure capability on top of that, literally. A locking hard tonneau keeps the bed contents out of sight and protected from weather and theft, while cross bars above support a rooftop tent and light accessories. This is the setup for the overlander who also needs their truck for work, hunting season, or carrying anything they can’t leave unsecured in an open bed.
Any full-size or mid-size pickup where bed security is a daily concern — tradespeople, outdoor workers, and anyone parking in urban areas between trips. The Toyota Tacoma, Ford F-150, Ram 1500, Nissan Frontier, and Chevy Colorado all have strong locking tonneau options with cross bar compatibility.
Locking hard tonneau cover (rack-compatible)
Cross bars
Rooftop tent
Weatherproof cargo boxes or soft luggage
Camp lighting (rechargeable)
Optional awning for weather cover
- Hard cover locks and protects bed contents
- Keeps tools and valuables out of sight
- Weatherproof — handles Canadian rain and snow
- Clean look for urban and suburban driving
- Tent and awning expand the setup when needed
- Easy to scale up with more gear over time
Which Truck Setup Is Right for You?
This is one of the most common questions from truck owners entering overlanding. Both approaches work — they just solve different problems. Here’s how they compare honestly, so you can pick the setup that fits how you actually use your truck.
- ✓ Enclosed, lockable bed storage
- ✓ Lower profile, cleaner daily look
- ✓ Weatherproof bed protection
- ✓ Better fuel economy than tall racks
- ✗ Lower load capacity than full racks
- ✗ Less mounting flexibility for accessories
- ✗ Limited bed access when tent is deployed
- ✓ Higher load capacity
- ✓ More mounting points for accessories
- ✓ Full or partial bed access at camp
- ✓ Easier to stand and organize gear
- ✗ Open bed — no weather or theft protection
- ✗ Taller profile, more wind drag
- ✗ Bigger visual impact on the truck
If bed security and a clean daily look matter most to you, the tonneau setup wins. If you want maximum gear capacity and camp-side bed access, the bed rack is the better call. We have a full Truck Bed Rack Setup Guide if you want to compare that route side by side.
Where These Setups Get Used
Tonneau-based truck camping setups are well-suited to Canada’s most popular overlanding destinations. Here’s what to expect in each region.
Kananaskis & Banff, AB
Unpredictable shoulder-season weather. A 4-season tent and locking tonneau for camp security is the right combo here.
Coquihalla & BC Forest Service Roads
Long runs with limited services. A touring setup (Setup 3) with a fridge and power station earns its weight on BC road trips.
Algonquin & Frontenac, ON
Maintained access, beautiful sites. The entry-level and daily-driver setups (1 or 2) handle everything Ontario throws at them.
Cabot Trail & Nova Scotia Coast
Coastal weather shifts fast — an awning and weather-sealed tonneau are worth it on Atlantic road trips.
Gatineau Park & Quebec Backcountry
Great for the dual-use driver — tonneau keeps the bed functional at home in the city, tent-ready for weekend escapes.
Saskatchewan & Prairie Backroads
Wind and dust are the factors. A locked hard tonneau keeps the bed clean and secure across open prairie driving.
Frequently Asked Questions
Build Your Tonneau Setup
Kermode Overland carries rack-compatible tonneau covers, cross bars, rooftop tents, awnings, portable fridges, storage gear, and lighting — everything for any of these builds, shipped across Canada.
→ Shop Tonneau Covers
→ Shop Rooftop Tents
→ Explore Awnings
→ Browse Cross Bars
→ Browse Cross Bars
→ View Storage
→ Lighting & Power
→ Portable Fridges
→ Recovery Gear
Also in This Series
Car, SUV & Crossover Setups
Build your daily driver for overlanding with a rooftop tent and rack.
Truck Bed Rack Setup Guide
Four modular bed rack builds for Tacoma, F-150, Ranger, and more.
Aluminum Truck Canopies
Transforms your truck into a secure, all-weather adventure platform — ready for everything from weekend camping to full remote expeditions.
