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Browsing Jobs by State, Type & Combination

Browsing Jobs by State, Job Type, or Both

The WorkCampConnect job board has thousands of work-camping listings at any given time. Scrolling through all of them isn't always the fastest way to find what you're looking for. That's why WorkCampConnect has dedicated landing pages organized by state, by job type, and by both state and job type combined.

This article explains how those pages are organized, where to find them, and how to use them when you're researching where to work next or what kind of position you'd actually enjoy.

State Pages

Every state has its own dedicated work-camping page at /jobs/{state}/. For example:

Each state page contains:

  • All currently active jobs in that state, sorted by recency
  • The most popular job types for that state — for example, Alaska's page highlights summer-only seasonal positions while Florida's highlights winter snowbird positions
  • Best work-camping seasons for the state, so you can plan your travel
  • Region-specific tips — climate, terrain, what to know before showing up
  • Cross-links to related states and to the long-form Guides section

State pages are publicly browsable — you don't need to be signed in. They're also indexed by Google, which is how a lot of new work campers first find WorkCampConnect.

Job Type Pages

Every common work-camping job type has its own dedicated page at /jobs/{type}/. For example:

Each job type page contains:

  • What the job actually involves — day-to-day responsibilities, tasks, and skills
  • Typical pay and compensation — hourly rates, RV site offers, perks
  • What to expect — physical demands, hours, season length
  • Who it's a good fit for and who might want to look at other positions
  • All current openings for that job type, across every state

Job type pages are useful when you know what kind of work you want but you're flexible on where. Searching by job type is often the fastest way to find your next position if you're geographically open.

Combination Pages: State + Job Type

For members who know exactly what they want and where, combination pages exist at /jobs/{state}/{type}/. For example:

Combination pages show only listings that match both filters — campground host jobs in Colorado, for example. They're the most specific way to browse and they're great when you have a strong preference for a particular state and a particular type of work.

The Guides Section

Beyond job listings, WorkCampConnect has a Guides section at /guides/ with long-form articles on subjects like:

  • Beginner's Guide to Work Camping
  • Choosing Your First RV
  • Boondocking 101
  • Snowbird Routes & Seasonal Planning
  • Work Camping with Pets
  • Cost of Full-Time RV Living
  • Internet & Connectivity on the Road
  • Healthcare on the Road

Each guide is several thousand words with photos, a table of contents, and cross-links to related guides. Guides are written for work campers who are researching rather than applying — they're meant to help you make smart decisions before you commit to a job, a route, or an RV purchase.

How to Use These Pages Effectively

If You're New to Work Camping

Start with the Guides section. The Beginner's Guide to Work Camping and Choosing Your First RV are good entry points. Once you have a sense of what you're getting into, browse a few job type pages to see what kinds of positions are common.

If You Know What You Want But Not Where

Use the job type pages. If you know you want to be a campground host, the campground host page shows every campground host position currently available across all states. Filter from there based on what catches your eye.

If You Know Where But Not What

Use the state pages. If you've decided you want to be in Colorado this summer, the Colorado page shows everything happening in Colorado right now — across all job types and all employers.

If You Know Both

Use the combination pages. They give you the narrowest, most relevant set of listings.

If You're Researching for Next Year

Use a mix of state pages and the Guides section. Look at the seasonal patterns on state pages (when do positions open up, when do they fill, what does the season look like) and read the Snowbird Routes guide for cross-country planning.

Bookmarking and Returning

If you find a state, job type, or combination page that's useful to you, bookmark it in your browser. The pages stay at the same URL permanently and update with new listings automatically — so a bookmarked /jobs/colorado/ page will always show you the current Colorado openings.

You can also use Job Alerts to get email notifications when new listings matching your saved searches are posted, instead of having to check the page manually.

Why So Many Pages?

If you've ever wondered why WorkCampConnect has hundreds of these landing pages instead of just one big job board with filters, here's the short answer: Google sends a huge amount of new work-camping traffic to WorkCampConnect, and those visitors usually arrive searching for something specific — "campground host jobs in Colorado," "summer work camping in Alaska," "RV park maintenance jobs." Having dedicated pages for those specific queries means new work campers find the right listings on their first click instead of landing on a generic job board and bouncing.

For existing members, the same pages double as research tools — a faster way to slice the job board than the main filters.

Common Questions

Are these pages public or members-only?

Public. You don't need to be signed in to browse state, job type, combination, or guide pages. Applying to a listing requires an account, but browsing doesn't.

How fresh are the listings on these pages?

Listings are pulled live from the same job board database that powers the main /jobs/browse/ page. When a new listing is approved, it appears on every relevant landing page within minutes.

What if there's no page for the state I want?

Every U.S. state has a page. If a particular URL doesn't exist, double-check the spelling — most state URLs use the full name (north-carolina, new-mexico, etc.), not abbreviations.

Can I get listings for multiple states or types at once?

Use the main job board at /jobs/browse/ for multi-state or multi-type filtering — it has the most flexible filter options. The landing pages are designed for focused, single-criteria browsing.

How do these compare to Job Alerts?

Landing pages are for browsing on demand. Job Alerts are for being notified automatically when new listings match a saved search. Most members use both.

More Help

For the main job board and how to filter and apply, see Browsing & Applying for Jobs. To get notified of new listings automatically, see How to Use Job Alerts. To track jobs you've bookmarked, favorited, or applied to, see How to Save, Favorite & Track Job Applications.

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