The Most Luxurious Overland Vehicle: EarthRoamer LTx Complete Interior Tour

The Kitchen: Three Design Wins 

  1. The Hidden Induction Stovetop: The cooktop sits under the counter surface completely flush. You place an induction-compatible pan on it, it senses the cookware and heats up directly. When you're done, the counter is completely flat again. For anyone who works remote from their rig like we do, this is a game-changer: your cooking surface and your standing desk are the same piece of counter. 

  2. Three — Yes, Three — Fridge/Freezers: The LTx gives you three separate fridge/freezer units: a large drawer-style fridge/freezer combo. This means you can stock groceries for a week-plus off-grid without playing fridge Tetris. You can keep fresh food, frozen food, and drinks in separate temperature-controlled zones. 

  3. The Extended Countertop: The counter slides out and connects into one continuous surface, taking the kitchen from "big" to "spacious" in about three seconds. You can prep a meal on one side, have appliances set up on the other, and still have room for a cutting board. When you're done, it slides away and the kitchen compacts back down.

The Living Area: 

The LTX completely reorganizes living space through a dedicated coat closet by the entry door (with hooks, a fold-down shoe rack with a rubberized mat, and additional shelving), plus a second storage area above the entry closet, and then the clothes hanging closet and 3 deep drawers. 

You also get a side-mounted TV that pops up from the cabinetry (preferred to a ceiling-drop model for daily viewing) with charging outlets integrated into the seating area.

The real difference is the feel. The LTS is set up similarly to a Sprinter van conversion. The LTx feels like a small luxury apartment. The extra few feet of living space where the tire used to sit, combined with more windows and a proper dining/work table, transforms how the space functions for a couple working and living together.

The Bedroom: 5 of the best parts

  • Side outlets with a built-in shelf for your phone — no more dangling cords! 

  • Wireless charging pad + USB-C port

  • Deep storage cubbies on both sides with lighting

  • A mini c-zone to control lighting, lock and unlock the car, and so much more… 

  • A swiveling bedroom TV with soundbar that could also serve the kitchen area

The bed itself is massive, and the skylight provides enough headroom for someone to sit up comfortably.

The Bathroom

The LTx bathroom is still a wet bath (shower + toilet in one space), but the wood finishes on the floor and walls, the dedicated toilet paper storage nook, a proper sink, a medicine cabinet with mirror, and overhead storage make it feel like a residential half-bath — not an RV afterthought.

The Passthrough 

The feature that doesn't get enough attention: solid wood doors that close off the cab.

Older models use a leather curtain and passthrough blockers. The LTx gives you a beautiful, finished wood door that creates a real separation between "truck side" and "camper side." You can still open it and crawl through to the cab, but when it's closed, the living space feels sealed, private, and warm.

And no more hauling around the passthrough blockers! 

Next
Next

We Overlanded Hells Canyon: Highest Point to Lowest Point