The 2028 TPMS Mandate:
What RV Dealers and Distributors
Need to Do Before the Deadline
In 2026, the most significant structural shift in the North American RV accessories market is not a product launch — it is a regulatory deadline. The Recreation Vehicle Industry Association (RVIA) has approved a mandate requiring factory-fitted tire pressure monitoring systems on all towable RVs beginning in 2028. Every travel trailer, fifth wheel, and towable camper produced after that date must leave the factory with a certified TPMS system installed. For dealers and distributors who have been selling aftermarket RV tire pressure monitoring systems as an optional accessory, the implication is straightforward: the window to build dominant market position in the TPMS category closes the moment OEM fitment becomes standard. The dealers who move now are the ones who will own the aftermarket replacement and retrofit segment when that window shuts.
This article is written for RV parts distributors, dealership groups, and accessory wholesalers who are evaluating their TPMS product strategy ahead of the 2028 deadline. It covers the mandate’s scope, the market dynamics it creates, the preparation timeline that wholesale buyers need to work backward from, and the supplier criteria that matter when committing to a TPMS product line at scale. Grundig Motion supplies commercial-grade TPMS systems to the B2B wholesale and dealer channel — currently covering motorhomes, travel trailers, and 6-wheel truck configurations, with additional product lines being introduced ahead of the regulatory transition.
The 2028 mandate is not a distant event. For dealers building supplier relationships, negotiating wholesale terms, training sales staff, and building inventory positions, the preparation timeline starts now — not in 2027 when every competitor in the market is doing the same thing simultaneously and supplier capacity and pricing reflect it.
What the Mandate Actually Covers — and What It Doesn’t
Precision matters here, because the mandate’s scope directly determines the aftermarket opportunity size. The RVIA 2028 requirement applies to new towable RV production — travel trailers, fifth wheels, and similar towable configurations manufactured for the North American market. It does not retroactively require existing RV owners to retrofit their current units. It does not apply to motorhomes, which are self-propelled and fall under different regulatory frameworks. And it does not specify the exact system type, leaving room for both internal and external sensor configurations provided the system meets the functional monitoring requirements.
The retrofit and upgrade market is where the aftermarket dealer opportunity is largest and most durable. The approximately 10 million RVs currently in use in the United States represent a customer base with no factory TPMS fitment and a growing awareness — driven by the mandate’s publicity — that tire pressure monitoring is no longer an optional safety enhancement but an industry standard. That awareness shift drives aftermarket inquiry volume regardless of whether the customer’s specific unit is covered by the mandate.
The retrofit opportunity is not temporary: Even after 2028, every RV manufactured before that date remains in the field without factory TPMS. The average RV lifespan exceeds 15 years. The retrofit and replacement market will remain active well into the 2030s — giving dealers who establish their TPMS product position now a revenue base that compounds for a decade.
The Preparation Timeline Dealers Cannot Afford to Compress
Wholesale buyers who evaluate TPMS suppliers, negotiate terms, pilot the product, train staff, and build inventory in a compressed six-month window before a major market shift consistently pay more and get worse terms than those who run the same process over eighteen months. The 2028 mandate creates a visible preparation window. The dealers who use it well are the ones with established supplier relationships, proven inventory turns, and trained sales teams when the broader market pivots to TPMS as a standard conversation at the point of sale.
What Changes at the Point of Sale After the Mandate
The RVIA mandate does something that no marketing campaign achieves: it makes every RV owner aware that TPMS is an industry standard. Dealers who have historically had to explain why a customer should consider a tire pressure monitoring system will find that post-2028, many customers arrive at the dealership already expecting to discuss it. The sales conversation shifts from education to selection — which is a higher-value and lower-effort selling environment.
That shift has implications for how dealers should structure their TPMS product range. A single mid-market SKU that served as the default recommendation in a low-awareness environment is not the right range for a market where customers arrive informed and ready to compare. Dealers need a product line that covers entry-level travel trailer configurations, mid-range fifth wheel setups, and heavy-duty towing configurations — all with consistent documentation, sensor replacement availability, and a warranty story that supports the dealership’s own reputation.
Supplier Criteria for the Mandate Window
Not all TPMS suppliers are positioned to support a dealer through the regulatory transition. The criteria that matter in a pre-mandate evaluation are different from those that apply in a steady-state wholesale relationship.
| Criterion | Why It Matters Pre-Mandate | Risk if Absent |
|---|---|---|
| Batch consistency guarantee | You are building customer relationships on this product for a decade | Warranty exposure compounds across large retail volume |
| FCC / CE certification on complete system | Fleet and institutional buyers require compliance documentation | Blocked from commercial fleet and fleet insurance channels |
| Sensor replacement SKU availability | Sensors need annual battery replacement — creates 5-year revenue tail | Customer satisfaction failure at 12-month service point |
| Volume pricing tier documentation | You need cost visibility at scale before committing to the category | Cannot model the business case for buyer approval |
| Multi-wheel mode compatibility | Travel trailers, fifth wheels, and tow vehicles need different configurations | Multiple incompatible SKUs fragment inventory and training |
| Signal repeater availability | Extended trailer lengths require repeaters for reliable rear axle coverage | Customer complaints on larger units — product returns |
The Recurring Revenue Structure the Mandate Creates
The 2028 mandate does not just create a one-time installation market. It creates a recurring service market anchored in the sensor battery replacement cycle. External TPMS sensors operate on replaceable batteries rated to approximately 12 months under standard driving conditions — with a low-battery alert on the receiver display before any sensor drops out. Every RV owner who installs an aftermarket system before 2028, and every owner of a pre-2028 unit who retrofits after the mandate, becomes a 12-month replacement battery customer. For a dealer with 500 active TPMS customers, that is 500 service conversations per year that happen on a predictable calendar rather than requiring any outbound sales effort.
- Establish the wholesale account in 2026: Negotiate volume pricing tiers, certification documentation, and sensor replacement SKU availability before year-end when competitor demand for supplier capacity begins rising.
- Run a structured pilot in Q1 2027: Test 2–3 SKUs across your highest-volume locations. Identify the configurations that generate 80% of sales by unit type — travel trailer, fifth wheel, motorhome retrofit — and build inventory depth on those first.
- Train on the mandate context, not just the product: Sales teams who can explain the 2028 requirement in plain language close more TPMS conversations in 2026 and 2027 than teams positioned only on product features.
- Build the 12-month service appointment into the installation sale: Offer a sensor battery replacement reminder programme from the point of first sale. This converts every retail installation into a recurring service relationship without additional acquisition cost.
- Lock 2028 pricing before Q3 2027: Forward purchasing agreements with your TPMS supplier before the market’s demand surge materialises are the single most effective way to protect your margin through the transition.
Wholesale TPMS Supply — Mandate-Ready Range
Grundig Motion supplies CE and FCC certified TPMS systems for the RV dealer and wholesale channel. Current product coverage spans motorhomes, travel trailers, and 6-wheel truck configurations, with expanded trailer configurations being added ahead of the 2028 mandate cycle. IP67 sensors, signal repeater compatible, sensor replacement SKUs available, multi-wheel mode switchable. Volume pricing and forward supply agreements available for qualifying wholesale accounts. Contact the Grundig Motion trade team to discuss dealer account terms.
Summary: The Window Is Open — But It Won’t Stay That Way
The 2028 RVIA TPMS mandate creates the clearest forward-visibility wholesale opportunity in the RV accessories market in a decade. The demand curve is visible, the customer education cost is being absorbed by the mandate’s publicity, and the recurring revenue structure built into the sensor replacement cycle means every unit placed in 2026 or 2027 generates service revenue for years afterward.
The preparation window is 18 months. Dealers who use it to establish supplier relationships, build inventory knowledge, and train sales teams on the mandate context will be the ones converting the 2028 market shift into revenue from day one. Those who wait until 2027 or 2028 to address the category will be building the same capability under time pressure, at worse pricing, with less experienced sales teams. For Grundig Motion’s wholesale TPMS range and dealer account terms, contact the trade team directly at grundig-motion.com.
Ready for the 2028 Mandate?
Wholesale TPMS supply for RV dealers and distributors. CE and FCC certified. Volume pricing and forward supply agreements available.