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RV Surge Protector Guide: EMS vs Surge, Portable vs Hardwired

Short answer: Basic surge protectors stop voltage spikes only. Campground low voltage is common and damages compressors—you need an EMS (Electrical Management System) to monitor and cut power when unsafe. Portable units are plug-and-play; hardwired are theft-proof. The RVIA recommends surge protection for RV electrical systems. See RV electrical guide and EMS vs surge.

Campground power is unpredictable. Spikes, brownouts, open neutrals, and reverse polarity can damage AC units, converters, and electronics. This guide compares EMS vs basic surge, portable vs hardwired—with a comparison table. For voltage safety, see our campground voltage guide.

EMS vs Basic Surge Protector

Feature Basic Surge Protector EMS (Electrical Management System)
Voltage spike protection Yes Yes
Low voltage cutoff Some models Yes
High voltage cutoff Some Yes
Open neutral detection No Yes
Reverse polarity detection No Yes
Voltage display Rare Common
Typical price $30–80 $100–250

Recommendation: If you camp regularly, an EMS is worth it. Compressor replacement costs $1,200–$2,000; an EMS costs a fraction. See EMS vs basic surge protectors for full comparison.

Portable vs Hardwired

Portable Hardwired
Plug between pedestal and RV Installed at RV inlet
Easy to replace Theft-proof
Can be stolen Always on
No installation Requires wiring

Most owners start with portable. Full-timers often upgrade to hardwired for theft protection.

Monetize: What to Buy

People Also Ask

Do RV surge protectors prevent low voltage?

Basic surge protectors do not. You need an EMS. See EMS vs surge.

Portable vs hardwired?

Portable: easy, can be stolen. Hardwired: theft-proof, requires installation.

30A vs 50A—do I need to match my rig?

Yes. Use 30A for 30A rigs, 50A for 50A rigs.

Related: EMS, Surge Protectors.

Last updated: February 2026

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