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A plain-English US buyer’s guide for RV, boat, camper and utility-trailer owners.
No sales pitch, just what actually matters when you’re choosing one. Updated June 2026.
An electric trailer dolly (or mover) does one beautifully simple thing: it maneuvers and parks your trailer or boat without a tow vehicle in sight. A narrow driveway with a sharp turn that makes reversing a nightmare? Tight swing room at your favorite spot? Or just tired of the push-and-shove? A good electric dolly solves all of it.
The hard part isn’t deciding whether to buy an electric dolly, it’s deciding which one. There are numerous options with wildly different price tags, and almost everyone claims to be “the best.”
Here’s the more useful truth: there’s no single electric dolly that’s best for every scenario. The best mover for a flat concrete driveway is rarely the best for a sloped, grassy block. The best mover for a 5,500 lb travel trailer is not the best for a 15,000 lb fifth-wheel. This guide walks you through what to assess about your own situation, and the feature trade-offs that quietly make or break the experience.
Every mover lists a maximum trailer weight. The number that matters, though, is your trailer’s real loaded weight, not its empty weight and not the dolly’s headline figure. Find your trailer’s GVWR (gross vehicle weight rating) on its data plate, and remember that water, gear, batteries and a full propane tank add up fast.
Don’t forget tongue weight either. That’s the downforce on the hitch, usually 10 to 15% of the trailer’s weight. Movers have a tongue-weight limit too, and an overloaded tongue is a common reason a dolly can’t lift and steer properly, especially on a soft pneumatic tire.
Think about where you’ll be using it most. If it’s mostly grass or gravel, an electric dolly with tracks will perform better. If it’s mostly hard surfaces, tracks can displace and wear when turning, and a solid rubber wheel gives both performance and durability. If you only have a small section of soft surface, you can always put down a board or plate to drive the wheel over.
The other element is slope. All of these products tend to max out around 10% / 6 degrees, and that’s a safety limit. Check your weight-and-incline combination to see whether the mover will work for you. Many claims assume ideal conditions, so it’s worth checking with the supplier to see whether they’ll guarantee performance for your situation.
There are two main ways a dolly connects to your trailer:
Whichever you pick, measure your tongue first, its height and width, and check the mover offers a bracket that fits.
The power source is a design decision most buyers overlook, and the one they regret most.
If you tow often, or store your rig for months at a time, the 12V approach saves you a lot of charging-and-replacing headaches.
“Remote-controlled” gets used loosely, so it pays to know the difference between two things:
If the whole point is doing this solo and parking precisely, a genuine wireless remote with decent range is worth holding out for.
You can’t see the drivetrain, but it decides how much the mover weighs, how much grunt it has, and what you’ll be servicing.
Drive mechanism
Tires and tracks
A trailer dolly is a multi-year purchase you’ll lean on at awkward moments, so the company behind it matters as much as the spec sheet. A rock-bottom marketplace unit can move a trailer on day one, but a thin warranty, no real support line, and unknown parts availability get expensive the first time something goes wrong. Look for a multi-year warranty, a real support team you can reach, a track record (how long they’ve been making these, and how many are out there), and easy access to spare parts and brackets.
Size to your loaded weight, measure your tongue, decide whether you want an onboard battery or something that runs off your 12V, and hold out for a real wireless remote. Look for a company that’ll still be there in five years and backs the product with a strong warranty. Get those right and an electric trailer mover is one of the best things you’ll add to your setup.
Want to see how the popular US models stack up on these points? Our Optimover vs Trailer Valet vs TRAX vs VEVOR comparison lays them side by side. And if you’re moving a rig up to 7,700 lb and want the lightest fully remote option that runs off your 12V with almost nothing to maintain, that’s exactly what we built the Optimover to do.
That’s the Optimover. It moves RVs, boats and trailers up to 7,700 lb by remote, weighs just 48.5 lb, runs off the 12V you already have, and has almost nothing to maintain. Engineered since 2008, 10,000+ sold, with a 3-year warranty, lifetime support, 30-day money-back and free US shipping. From $2,075.
Clamp Size Guide
Finding your perfect clamp:
Step 1. Locate the best position on your tongue to place the bracket; the Optimover is effective anywhere on the front tongue where space allows.
Step 2. Measure the tongue height.
Step 3. Measure the tongue width.
Step 4. Use the size guide below to select your bracket.
Contact us at [email protected] if you require a different sized clamp
To Fit | Clamp Dimensions | Additional Notes | |||||
Clamp | Name | Tongue Height (mm) | Tongue Width (mm) | Total Width | Front Plate height x width | Width between U-bolts (mm) | |
OW-15 | Large Compact Duel Clamp 150mm | 150 | 50 | 160 | 150 x 140 | 140 | Most common fit for RVs |
OW-14 | Small Compact Duel Clamp 100mm | 100 to 130 | 50 | 150 x 140 | 140 | Most Jayco RVs (not the all-terrain) | |
OW-6 | Large Duel Clamp 150mm | 150 | 50-150 | 237 x 200 | 195 | Alternative to OW15 where tongue width is larger than 50mm. U-bolts from the back fit better. | |
OW-7 | Small Duel Clamp 100mm | 100 | 50-100 | 235 x 170 | 195 | Ideal for boats (can go back-to-back with existing jockey wheel) | |
OW-8 | Medium Duel Clamp 130mm | 130 | 50-130 | 237 x 200 | 195 | Ideal for boats (can go back-to-back with existing jockey wheel) | |
OW21 | X Small Duel Clamp 75mm | 75 | 50-75 | 235 x 170 | 195 | Ideal for boats (can go back-to-back with existing jockey wheel) | |
OW-18 | Double Clamp Brack ALKO | NA | NA | 150 x 140 | NA | European & UK vans that use an Alko Chassis | |
OW-19 | Optitec Offset Double Clamp | 100 or 150 | 50-150 | 237 x 200 (150 mm plate) 235 x 170 (100 mm plate) | 195 | Used to get higher or lower (ie. in a carport) Raise or lower by 150mm Can be fitted to 150mm depth or 100mm depth | |
OW20 | Zone RV Dual clamp | TBC | |||||