01 What Solitude is
Solitude is Grand Design's flagship fifth wheel and one of the best-selling luxury extended-stay fifth wheels in North America. It sits at the top of Grand Design's towable ladder — above the Imagine travel trailers and the mid-market Reflection — in full-size, residential fifth-wheel territory aimed at full-timers and serious travelers with a three-quarter-ton or larger truck. It is the natural cross-shop against Keystone's Montana, the other big-luxury-fifth-wheel line.
The pitch is space and residential construction. Every Solitude is built on a drop-frame 101-inch widebody super-chassis — a full five inches wider than many coaches in its class, which buys deeper sliderooms, wider sofas and sliding pocket doors at a shorter towing length — with a 5-side aluminum cage, a fully walkable TPO roof under a limited-lifetime warranty, and a fully enclosed, heated underbelly with heated tanks. The MORryde pin box with its rubber shear spring, 8,000-pound axles, MORryde CRE3000 suspension and a Tow Assist ABS and sway-mitigation system are standard running gear. Inside, hardwood cabinet doors, solid-surface counters, an Ultraleather furniture package, a professional-grade stainless cooktop with a built-in oven, an on-demand water heater with whole-house filtration and an all-in-one enclosed, heated utility center come standard.
Every Solitude also ships with a meaningful standard 330-watt roof solar package — a 50-amp Bluetooth charge controller, inverter prep, USB ports and a 20-cubic-foot 12-volt refrigerator — so the coach is off-grid-ready out of the box. For 2026 the line spans ten floorplans from a 34-foot, sub-13,000-pound rear-kitchen entry to a 43-foot, triple-axle, 23,500-pound full-time flagship, and all ten are profiled in depth below.
02 Floorplans profiled in depth
All ten 2026 floorplans are profiled in full with RVUSA-verified specifications, covering the entire current line: the light rear-kitchen entry, a rear-living plan with a central island, two front-living plans (a bath-and-a-half entertainer and a separate-front-living-room plan), the signature five-slide rear-kitchen plan, a three-sofa rear-den plan, a rear-kitchen bath-and-a-half master plan, a two-full-bath family plan that sleeps eight, a middle-bunkroom family plan under a lower roof, and the triple-axle heavyweight flagship.
| Floorplan | Dry wt | Length | Sleeps | Layout | MSRP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 310GK | 12,100 lbs | 34' 4" | 4 | Light rear-kitchen entry, sub-13k dry | $141,620 |
| 370DV | 13,600 lbs | 37' 10" | 4 | Rear living, central island + prep bar | $146,275 |
| 380FL | 14,866 lbs | 41' 4" | 6 | Front living, bath-and-a-half, 5 slides | $163,610 |
| 382WB | 14,866 lbs | 41' 4" | 6 | Separate front living room, 5 slides | $164,523 |
| 376RD | 15,180 lbs | 42' 5" | 6 | Raised rear den, three sofas | $159,571 |
| 390RK | 14,562 lbs | 42' 5" | 6 | Rear kitchen, outdoor kitchen, 5 slides | $161,643 |
| 391DL | 15,300 lbs | 42' 5" | 8 | Two full baths, dual entry, sleeps 8 | $162,046 |
| 388MBS | 15,985 lbs | 42' 11" | 5 | Middle bunkroom, family, lower 12'9" profile | $163,220 |
| 417KB | 15,494 lbs | 41' 8" | 4 | Rear kitchen, bath-and-a-half, master | $149,194 |
| 414LJMJ | 19,000 lbs | 42' 10" | 6 | Triple-axle flagship, mid bunk + loft | $196,813* |
Body specifications (lengths, heights, payload, tanks, sleeping, slides and awnings) are RVUSA-verified against the 2026 structured spec records, each page fp-slug and title checked. Dry weight, GVWR, payload 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. Nine of the ten plans share a 19,000-pound GVWR on two 8,000-pound axles; the 414LJMJ flagship is a heavier triple-axle coach with a 23,500-pound GVWR. The 414LJMJ MSRP is from a dealer listing rather than an RVUSA structured record and is flagged (*). Real loaded pin weights run higher — weigh the loaded coach and confirm against your truck's payload and rear-axle ratings.
03 The complete 2026 lineup
For 2026 the Solitude line runs to ten floorplans, and every one is profiled above with RVUSA-verified specifications — the full current lineup, with no catalogued-only plans. Read end to end, the line sorts into a few clear groups. The light couples plans — the rear-kitchen 310GK and the rear-living 370DV — stay under the easy-towing end, with the 310GK's 6,900-pound payload the most of any plan. The two front-living plans share a weight and a stance: the 380FL adds a second half bath, while the 382WB spends that same space on a larger separate front living room.
The entertainer and full-timer plans fill the middle and upper line: the five-slide 390RK with its signature rear kitchen, the three-sofa rear-den 376RD, and the rear-kitchen, bath-and-a-half 417KB master plan. For families and guests there are two answers to the same question — the 391DL is the rare fifth wheel with two full baths and sleeps eight, while the 388MBS trades that second bath for a dedicated middle bunkroom under a lower 12-foot-9 roof. And the triple-axle 414LJMJ flagship steps up to a heavier 23,500-pound chassis with the largest holding tanks in the line. Nine of the ten ride the same 19,000-pound GVWR on two 8,000-pound axles; only the 414LJMJ runs three axles and a one-ton-dually tow rating.
04 How to choose
The Solitude line sorts cleanly by what you do in the coach. For the easiest tow and the most payload, the rear-kitchen 310GK is the entry: under 13,000 pounds dry with a 6,900-pound payload, it opens the line to the widest range of trucks. Stepping up in size, the 370DV adds a central-island galley and a bigger rear lounge while staying relatively light.
For a couple who entertains, the choice is about where the living room goes: the five-slide 390RK puts a signature rear kitchen and an outside kitchen at the back, the 376RD raises a three-sofa den above the galley to seat a crowd, and the two front-living plans move the lounge up front — the 380FL with a bath-and-a-half, the 382WB with a larger separate front living room instead. For full-timers and a couple living aboard, the 417KB pairs a rear kitchen with a private master suite and a second half bath. For families and guests, the 391DL is the rare fifth wheel with two full baths and sleeps eight, while the 388MBS offers a dedicated middle bunkroom under a lower roof instead. And for the most serious full-time living, the triple-axle 414LJMJ flagship steps up to a 23,500-pound chassis with the largest holding tanks in the line — needing a one-ton dually to tow.
Across all of them the build is the same: the 101-inch widebody chassis, the MORryde pin box, the heated underbelly and the standard 330-watt solar with a 20-cubic-foot 12-volt refrigerator. The decision is layout and weight, not equipment level.
05 What to weigh before buying
The widebody chassis is the headline
Solitude's 101-inch widebody drop-frame super-chassis is its central differentiator — five inches wider than many coaches in its class, which is what produces the deeper sliderooms, wider rear sofas and sliding pocket doors at a shorter towing length. Paired with the 5-side aluminum cage, the walk-on TPO roof and the heated, enclosed underbelly, it is the structural basis for the brand's extended-stay positioning. The construction figures on these pages follow Grand Design's published specifications.
Solar and a 12-volt fridge are standard, not optional
Unlike many luxury fifth wheels where solar is an upcharge, every 2026 Solitude ships with a 330-watt roof solar panel, a 50-amp Bluetooth charge controller, inverter prep and a 20-cubic-foot 12-volt residential refrigerator. The coach is genuinely off-grid-ready out of the box — a real cost-and-capability advantage worth factoring into any cross-shop against a comparably priced competitor.
Match the chassis to your truck honestly
Nine of the ten plans share a 19,000-pound GVWR on two 8,000-pound axles — full-size fifth-wheel territory needing a properly rated three-quarter-ton or one-ton truck. The 414LJMJ flagship is a different animal: a triple-axle coach at 19,000 pounds dry and a 23,500-pound GVWR that needs a one-ton dually to tow safely loaded. Treat brochure pin weights as a floor, weigh the loaded coach, and confirm against your truck's payload and rear-axle rating before buying.