01 What Avenue is
Avenue is Alliance RV's mid-profile fifth wheel — the residential fifth-wheel idea from the luxury Paradigm in a lighter, lower, less expensive coach. Alliance is an independent, privately held towable maker in Elkhart, Indiana, founded by brothers Coley and Ryan Brady and known for designing to owner feedback rather than to a corporate parent; it is not part of Thor, Forest River or Winnebago. Avenue plays in mid-profile fifth-wheel territory, cross-shopping Grand Design's Reflection, Keystone's Cougar, Jayco's Eagle and Forest River's Sabre and Sandpiper — residential layouts for couples and families towing a properly rated three-quarter-ton or one-ton truck.
The build carries much of the Paradigm idea a tier down. Every Avenue is 101-inch wide-body construction with Azdel composite sidewalls inside and out, a PVC roof with a lifetime warranty and Alliance's industry-leading tank sizes, on the Performance Running Gear package with an OTG solar package (a 400-watt panel and a 40-amp MPPT charge controller) and dual-pane windows on the regular trim. The systems package is strong for the tier: a 16-cubic-foot 12-volt refrigerator (the lighter 28BH carries a 10-cubic-foot unit), a king bed and up to three 13,500-BTU air conditioners on the regular trim, with a black-tank flush and smart color-coded wiring. For buyers on a budget, a lighter Avenue All-Access value trim drops to a single air conditioner, a 200-watt solar package and a legless dinette without a standard king.
For 2026 the line runs to nine floorplans across two chassis tiers — a lighter tier from 10,495 to 11,950 pounds GVWR and a heavier tier from 13,995 to 15,995 — and the six broadest-appeal layouts are profiled in depth below, with the remaining three catalogued from published specifications. Trim boundaries (regular versus All-Access) are not asserted per plan beyond the published weights.
02 Floorplans profiled in depth
Six broad-appeal 2026 floorplans are profiled in full with RVUSA-verified specifications, spanning the line from the lightest entry bunkhouse to the four-slide mid-bedroom flagship: an entry bunkhouse, a rear-living great room, two rear-kitchen plans, a dual-entry double/bunk family plan and the mid-bedroom 39MBR.
| Floorplan | Dry wt | Length | Sleeps | Layout | MSRP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28BH | 8,518 lbs | 32' 11" | 6 | Bunkhouse, dual entry, front bedroom — lightest tier | $74,601 |
| 33RKS | 10,200 lbs | 34' 5" | 4 | Residential rear kitchen, mid living, front bedroom — biggest cargo of its pair | $99,490 |
| 32RLS | 10,500 lbs | 34' 11" | 4 | Rear living great room, mid kitchen, front bedroom — three slides | $93,005 |
| 35RKS | 11,300 lbs | 36' 10" | 6 | Residential rear kitchen, mid living — sleeps six | $105,210 |
| 38DBL | 12,400 lbs | 41' 11" | 5 | Double/bunk, dual entry, big tanks — sleeps five | $105,210 |
| 39MBR | 13,400 lbs | 41' 11" | 5 | Mid-bedroom suite, four slides — heaviest, most residential | $104,495 |
Body specifications (lengths, heights, width, payload, tanks, sleeping, slides and awnings) are verified against the RVUSA structured records for the 2026 Avenue roster. Dry weight (UVW), GVWR, payload (CCC) and pin (hitch) weight are published per plan, and for every plan the base dry weight plus payload equals the GVWR exactly — so all weight figures are shown unflagged with no derivation. Every Avenue is 101-inch wide-body construction with Azdel composite sidewalls inside and out. MSRP figures are starting MSRP; dealer (street) pricing runs well below placard. Sleeps figures are dealer-typical. Real loaded pin weights run higher — weigh the loaded coach and confirm against your truck's payload and rear-axle ratings.
03 Also in the 2026 line
Three further 2026 Avenue floorplans are catalogued here from published specifications but not yet profiled in depth. All three sit on Avenue's lighter chassis tier (11,950-pound GVWR or below at an 11-foot-9 height) and, like the profiled plans, publish GVWR per plan with dry weight plus CCC equal to GVWR exactly.
| Floorplan | Dry wt | GVWR | Payload | Pin | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 298RL | 8,990 lbs | 10,950 lbs | 1,960 lbs | 925 lbs | 34' 0" |
| 332RL | 10,178 lbs | 11,950 lbs | 1,772 lbs | 1,124 lbs | 37' 11" |
| 333BH | 10,506 lbs | 11,950 lbs | 1,444 lbs | 1,158 lbs | 38' 6" |
Catalogued weights are verified against the RVUSA structured records for the 2026 Avenue roster; dry weight plus payload equals GVWR exactly on each. The 298RL carries no published MSRP on the source record. These plans are documented for reference and their full floorplan profiles are planned but not yet published.
04 How to choose
The Avenue line sorts first by chassis tier and then by where the living space goes. The lighter tier keeps the coach short, low (an 11-foot-9 to 12-foot-2 height) and truck-friendly: the entry 28BH bunkhouse sleeps six with two doors on the line's lightest 1,450-pound pin and a 10,495-pound GVWR — the easiest Avenue to match to a three-quarter-ton truck — and the catalogued 298RL, 332RL and 333BH round out the lighter rear-living and bunkhouse plans.
The heavier tier adds the full 13-foot-4 height and far more cargo capacity. The 32RLS opens a three-slide rear-living great room for couples; the 33RKS runs a residential rear kitchen and carries the biggest cargo capacity in the profiled line at 3,795 pounds; the 35RKS stretches that rear kitchen to sleep six. At the top, the two 42-foot plans are the family and flagship options: the dual-entry 38DBL double/bunk plan with the biggest holding tanks, and the four-slide 39MBR mid-bedroom — the heaviest, most residential Avenue, on the line's highest 2,486-pound pin.
Across all of them the construction is identical: 101-inch wide-body with Azdel composite sidewalls inside and out, a PVC lifetime-warranty roof, the industry-leading tanks, the Performance Running Gear package and the OTG 400-watt solar. The decision is chassis tier, layout, length and pin — and, if budget matters, whether the lighter All-Access value trim fits. Above Avenue sits the luxury Paradigm; below it, Alliance's Delta travel trailers reach into half-ton-friendly territory.
05 What to weigh before buying
This is a mid-profile fifth wheel from an independent maker
Avenue competes with the mid-profile fifth wheels rather than the luxury tier — Grand Design's Reflection, Keystone's Cougar, Jayco's Eagle and Forest River's Sabre and Sandpiper. Its case is 101-inch wide-body construction with Azdel composite sidewalls inside and out, a PVC lifetime-warranty roof and a strong standard package, from the same owner-driven independent company that builds the luxury Paradigm. Because Alliance is independent — not part of Thor, Forest River or Winnebago — its lineup is smaller and its dealer network more concentrated than the majors; check dealer coverage and parts support in your region as part of the cross-shop. Within Alliance, Avenue sits below the luxury Paradigm fifth wheel and above the Delta travel-trailer line.
Regular trim versus Avenue All-Access
Alliance builds Avenue in a regular trim and a lighter, less expensive All-Access value trim. The regular trim carries a 16-cubic-foot 12-volt refrigerator, a king bed, dual-pane windows and up to three 13,500-BTU air conditioners; the All-Access trim drops to a single air conditioner, a 200-watt solar package (versus 400 watts), a legless dinette and no standard king. The published weights above are the source records for each floorplan; per-plan trim is not asserted here beyond those weights, so confirm on the build sheet whether a given unit is a regular Avenue or an All-Access when you compare on the lot.
Match the truck honestly — two chassis tiers, real pin weights
Avenue spans two chassis tiers. The profiled plans run from 8,518 to 13,400 pounds dry on GVWRs from 10,495 to 15,995 pounds, with dry pins from 1,450 pounds on the 28BH to 2,486 pounds on the 39MBR — and real loaded pins run higher. The lighter-tier plans suit a properly rated three-quarter-ton truck; the 13,995-to-15,995-pound plans are one-ton territory. The truck's payload and rear-axle rating, not just the hitch, are what matter. Treat brochure pin weights as a floor, weigh the loaded coach, and confirm against your truck's door-jamb ratings before buying.