Picking a 50 amp RV pad is not about bragging rights. It is about living normally without treating your power like a puzzle every day.
If you have ever tried to run heat, boil a kettle, and warm up water at the same time, you already know the problem. The breaker trips, the rig cools down fast, and everything feels harder than it should.
This guide explains 30 vs 50 vs 100 amp in plain English, with real examples you can use. It is written for longer stays on the Sunshine Coast in Canada, including people heading to Halfmoon Bay who want to understand what they are paying for and what they can actually run.
Think of your RV like a house with a smaller âpower gateâ.
Your total available power is roughly:
Watts = Volts Ă Amps
That is why a small change in amps can feel huge in daily life. If you only have 30 amp service, you have less room to run multiple big appliances at once. If you have a 50 amp RV pad, you usually get far more breathing space.
If you want a friendly, non-tech explanation of how electricity use is measured, BC Hydroâs âenergy explainedâ page is a solid reference, especially the part about watts and kilowatt-hours.
On the Sunshine Coast, winter is often damp and chilly rather than deep-snow cold. That makes people run:
So the difference between 30 and 50 amp RV pad service often shows up in winter first. It can mean the difference between:
If you are comparing pads and want to see how listings look on the site, here is one example you can open in a new tab while you read:Moose Jaw
And if your trip planning includes bringing an RV, trailer, or tiny home on wheels over by ferry, this guide helps you avoid last-minute stress: Langdale to Horseshoe Bay Ferry RV + Trailer Guide
When people talk about a 50 amp RV pad, theyâre really talking about how much total power you can safely use at once without tripping breakers.
Hereâs the simple maths you can keep in your head:
Watts = Volts Ă Amps
Most RV shore power in North America is 120 volts. So:
30 amp Ă 120V â 3,600 watts
Thatâs your âpower budgetâ at one time.
Real-life example of what fits in 3,600 watts:
Youâre already getting close. Add a kettle (often 1,500W) or a microwave and you can tip over the limit fast. Thatâs why 30 amp living often means: âturn one thing off before turning another onâ.
This is where it gets confusing online, so letâs keep it plain.
A 50 amp RV pad connection is typically 240V split-phase at the pedestal, which gives your RV two separate 120V âlegsâ to draw from. Many RVs use that to power more things at once.
A rough, practical way to think about it is:
50 amp service can give you up to about 12,000 watts total available
(Thatâs 50A on each of two 120V legs.)
That doesnât mean every RV uses every watt all the time. It means you have a lot more breathing space for normal life.
Real-life example of what becomes easier with a 50 amp RV pad:
That âI can live normallyâ feeling is what people are paying for.
Going from 30 amp (~3,600W) to 50 amp (up to ~12,000W available) is not a small upgrade. It can be the difference between:
Even on a 50 amp RV pad, you can still trip breakers if you pile several big loads onto the same circuit inside your RV. Your rig has its own breaker panel too. So 50 amp gives you more total power, but you still need basic âdonât stack everything on one outletâ habits.
If you want a deeper look at what you can run (and why some loads hit harder than others), BC Hydroâs plain-language explanation of energy use is a good background read.
https://www.bchydro.com/powersmart/residential/energy-explained.html
And if youâre comparing long-stay options in BC (rent vs buy style thinking), this post can help you frame the bigger decision before you pick a pad type:
https://halfmoonbayresort.ca/year-round-rv-lots-for-sale-bc-rent-vs-buy/
After you understand 30 and 50 amp RV pad service, the next question is usually: âDo I need 100 amp?â
Most people do not.
A lot of rigs live happily on 30 amps, and many full-timers feel a big quality-of-life jump on a 50 amp RV pad. 100 amp is more of a âspecial caseâ option. It can be brilliant for the right setup, but it is not automatically better for everyone.
You might genuinely benefit from 100 amp if you tick more than one of these boxes:
In other words: 100 amps can be great for people who want to run several high-draw things at the same time, especially during long, damp winter stretches near Halfmoon Bay.
For many long stays, a 50 amp RV pad is the sweet spot because it gives you room for normal life:
If your biggest issue right now is âI canât run the heater and microwave together,â a 50 amp RV pad often fixes that, as long as you still stagger the biggest loads.
If youâre not sure, do this quick test. List the big loads you regularly use in winter:
Now ask: do you often need three or more of those at the same time, most days?
When people chase âmore power,â they sometimes try to solve it with cheap adapters or sketchy setups. That is where problems start.
A safe rule for long stays:
If you want a solid public safety reference in British Columbia, Technical Safety BC has guidance and resources about electrical safety.
https://www.technicalsafetybc.ca/
When you pick a 50 amp RV pad, youâre buying breathing space. But the real win comes from knowing which appliances chew through power fast, and how to stagger them so your day runs smoothly.
Here are the six biggest âpower hogâ categories that cause most breaker trips in RV life.
Portable electric heaters are usually around 1,500 watts on high. That is a big slice of your power budget, especially on 30 amps.
What to do:
This matters most on rainy weeks near Halfmoon Bay, when youâre indoors more.
This one catches people out because it can switch on when you are already using other big loads.
What to do:
Cooking gear is high draw and often used at the same time as heat.
What to do:
On a 50 amp RV pad, you can get away with more, but habits still save you hassle.
Hair dryers pull a lot of watts. The problem is theyâre often used when heaters are already running and the bathroom fan is on too.
What to do:
A dehumidifier is usually smaller than a heater, but it can run for hours. In coastal winters it becomes a constant background load.
What to do:
Converters, chargers, and electronics feel small, but they build a base load that reduces how much headroom you have left.
What to do:
If youâre on a 50 amp RV pad, you can usually run:
If youâre on 30 amp, assume:
If youâre on 100 amps, you get more freedom, but your RVâs internal circuits still matter, so donât overload one outlet.
If youâre weighing long-stay choices in BC, this post helps you think through rent vs buy style decisions before you pick a power level:
Breaker trips feel random, but they almost never are. During a long stay, especially in winter, a breaker usually trips for one of three reasons:
If youâre choosing a 50 amp RV pad, youâre already reducing reason #1. But reasons #2 and #3 can still happen, so this section shows the fast fixes.
Do these steps in order. They solve most problems without guesswork.
Step 1: Recreate the trip (safely)
Think about what was running when the breaker tripped:
If you can name the combo, youâve already found the cause. Most trips come from two big loads overlapping.
Step 2: Check your water heater setting
This is the classic hidden load. If itâs set to electric (or both), it may switch on while youâre cooking or heating.
Simple fix:
Step 3: Reduce one big load for 10 minutes
If you must cook, turn the heater down briefly. If you need steady heat, cook with one big appliance at a time. This is the easiest way to keep life normal on a 30 amp and still useful on a 50 amp RV pad.
Step 4: Move the load to a different outlet
Some RV outlets share the same internal circuit. If one outlet keeps tripping, try another outlet on a different side of the rig for:
This spreads load across circuits.
Step 5: Check the pedestal breaker and your RV breaker panel
A trip can happen at the pedestal or inside your RV. If only one interior circuit trips, the problem is likely inside the rig, not the pad service.
If youâre unsure which one tripped, reset one at a time and note what comes back on.
Trips caused by overload are annoying but usually harmless if you fix your routine. Trips caused by bad connections can be dangerous.
Stop and get it checked if you notice:
For a public, non-sales reference on electrical safety in British Columbia, Technical Safety BC is the right place to read.
https://www.technicalsafetybc.ca/
Even with a 50 amp RV pad, your RVâs internal circuits still have limits. You can have plenty of power coming in, but overload a single circuit inside the rig by plugging too much into the same outlet chain.
Thatâs why this simple habit works:
These are small changes that prevent repeat trips:
If youâre coming to the Sunshine Coast with an RV or trailer and want fewer surprises on travel day, this guide helps with timing, loading, and what to expect:
https://halfmoonbayresort.ca/langdale-to-horseshoe-bay-ferry-rv-trailer-guide/
Winter on the Sunshine Coast is often a mix of damp days, chilly evenings, and short cold snaps. Thatâs exactly when power habits matter most, even if youâre on a 50 amp RV pad. The aim is simple: keep comfort steady and avoid the âeverything trips at dinner timeâ cycle.
The cheapest-feeling winter heat is usually the heat you donât have to keep restarting.
Steady warmth helps reduce condensation too, because the inside surfaces donât swing between warm and cold as much.
Your busy hour is when you cook, want hot water, and want the rig warm. If you plan that hour, winter gets easier.
A simple busy-hour routine:
This is where a 50 amp RV pad really helps, because you have more breathing space, but the habit still prevents annoying trips.
A dehumidifier is a steady background load. Itâs usually not the thing that trips you, but it can be the straw that tips the stack when you add cooking.
Easy rule:
RV comfort is about zones.
This is one of the fastest ways to feel warmer without using more power.
These are the loads that quietly switch on and steal headroom:
If youâre on a 50 amp RV pad, you may not notice these until you stack something else on top. If youâre on 30 amps, youâll notice quickly.
Once a week, do a quick check:
If anything seems off, stop using that setup and fix it. For electrical safety info in BC, Technical Safety BC is a reliable public source:
https://www.technicalsafetybc.ca/
Heavy weather days can change how you live:
So your power use spikes.
On stormy weeks, your simplest plan is:
If youâre deciding how to plan a longer stay in BC, this post helps you think through the bigger picture (costs and trade-offs) before you choose your exact pad setup:
https://halfmoonbayresort.ca/year-round-rv-lots-for-sale-bc-rent-vs-buy/
A 50 amp RV pad gives you more room to run things, but it does not remove the need for safe gear. Most scary RV electrical stories start with one of these:
This section is here to keep your rig (and your week) safe.
If youâre buying extension cords, power bars, or electrical accessories in Canada, choose products that are certified to Canadian safety standards and marked accordingly. Health Canada has a clear note that plug-in electrical products like extension cords and power bars must be certified and carry a recognised certification mark.
Thatâs not a ânice to haveâ. Itâs the difference between a cable that stays cool and one that quietly overheats.
Shore power can be messy. A surge protector (made for RV shore power) can help protect your electronics from spikes and wiring problems.
Two simple truths for long stays:
If you want a public safety-style reference that mentions surge protection as part of being prepared for power events, the Government of Canadaâs power outage preparedness page includes surge protector guidance.
Adapters are common in RV life. The safe version is: using the right adapter to match the pedestal to your RV plug without trying to pull more power than the smaller service can provide.
What adapters can do:
What adapters should never be used for:
Health Canada also warns that using incompatible adapters can create electrical hazards like overheating or damage.
If youâre on a 50 amp RV pad (or any pad), avoid these habits:
1) Daisy-chaining power bars or extension cords
Plugging one power bar into another is a common way to overload a connection.
2) Using light-duty cords for heavy loads
Heaters, kettles, air fryers, and hair dryers need heavy-duty cords if a cord is even used at all.
3) Running cords under rugs or where they get pinched
Pinched cords heat up faster and wear out.
4) Leaving connections on wet ground
Wet + power is a bad mix. Keep connections up and protected.
5) âTemporaryâ setups that become permanent
If you need a long extension cord every single day, it usually means the setup needs a safer plan.
During a long stay, do these once a week:
Health Canadaâs electrical product safety tips include basics like unrolling cords fully and keeping cords away from heat and water sources.
BCâs government electrical safety guidance also repeats the âdonât overloadâ and âcheck cordsâ message.Â
Before you commit to a stay, this checklist helps you pick the right service level for how you actually live. Itâs written to stop the most common mistake people make: choosing a pad, then realising they canât cook and stay warm at the same time.
For your normal day, which is true?
Tick what you use most days in cooler months:
Now check your result:
These habits push power use up fast near Halfmoon Bay:
If that sounds like you, a 50 amp RV pad can make daily life feel much simpler.
Even if you choose a 50 amp RV pad, you still want clear answers on:
Picture your busiest hour at home:
If that hour sounds like a constant power juggle on 30 amp, youâll probably be happier choosing a 50 amp RV pad (or planning a strict routine).
If youâre stuck between options, this is usually the safest comfort pick for long stays:
Choosing the right power level is one of the quickest ways to make RV life feel easy. A 50 amp RV pad can give you the breathing space to heat your rig, cook, and live normally, especially during damp Sunshine Coast winters.
If you want a public safety reference for electrical product safety (like extension cords and power bars) in Canada, Health Canada has guidance here:
https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/home-safety/electrical-products.html
If youâre thinking seriously about choosing the right service level near Halfmoon Bay, donât guess. Check what pads are available, read the rules that affect power use, then ask about the exact pedestal service for the option you want.
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