Cab Kitchen
RoadPro 12V Portable Oven
Heats pre-cooked meals to 300 degrees using your truck's 12V outlet. No inverter, no truck stop microwave line. Plug it in at the start of your shift and lunch is hot by your 30-minute break.
Hotlogic Mini Portable Oven
Slow-cooks a full meal in your sleeper while you drive. Runs on 120V, so you need an inverter or shore power. Makes real food — casseroles, rice, even baked potatoes. A game-changer for eating healthy OTR.
Dometic CF 40 Portable Fridge
A real compressor fridge that runs on 12V DC. Keeps food cold — actually cold, not cooler-with-melted-ice cold. Holds a week of groceries. Pays for itself in a month when you stop buying truck stop food.
Alpicool C20 Portable Fridge
Budget-friendly 12V compressor fridge. 21-quart capacity fits between the seats or on the sleeper floor. Quiet enough to run overnight without waking you. Solid entry-level pick if Dometic is out of budget.
12V Electric Kettle
Boils water for coffee, oatmeal, or ramen straight from your cigarette lighter. No inverter needed. Takes about 15–20 minutes on 12V — start it during your pre-trip and it's ready when you are.
Crock-Pot Portable Slow Cooker
The locking lid is key — set it on the sleeper floor and it won't spill when you hit a rough patch. Needs an inverter, but lets you cook real stews, chili, and pulled pork right in your cab.
Sleep & Comfort
Memory Foam Mattress Topper (Truck Size)
Your factory mattress is garbage. A 3-inch memory foam topper turns your bunk into an actual bed. Cut to fit truck sleeper dimensions. The single best upgrade for getting real rest on your 10-hour break.
12V Heated Blanket
Saves you from running the APU or idling all night just to stay warm. Plugs into your 12V outlet, draws minimal power, and keeps your bunk comfortable down to freezing temps. Essential for winter OTR.
Sleeper Cab Blackout Curtains
Truck stop parking lots are lit up like stadiums. These curtains block it all out so you can sleep during the day or in a bright lot. Suction-cup mount, no drilling. Takes two minutes to install.
12V Clip-On Bunk Fan
Clips right to the bunk rail. Runs on 12V so you're not draining the batteries with an inverter. Moves enough air to keep you cool without being loud enough to wake you. Oscillating head covers the whole bunk.
Trucker Neck Pillow
Designed for sleeping in a semi bunk, not an airplane seat. Contoured memory foam supports your neck whether you sleep on your back or side. Keeps you from waking up stiff after a reset.
Tech & Connectivity
Garmin dēzl 780 Truck GPS
Built specifically for truckers. Enter your rig's height, weight, and length and it routes around low bridges, weight limits, and no-truck zones. Large 7-inch screen. HOS-compatible. Worth every penny after your first bridge scare.
Rand McNally TND 750 Truck GPS
The other big name in truck GPS. Strong routing with truck-specific restrictions, built-in dash cam option, and a solid truck stop directory. Some drivers swear by Rand McNally over Garmin. Try both if you can.
BlueParrott B650-XT Headset
Industry standard for truckers. 96% noise cancellation means dispatch and family hear your voice, not your engine. 24-hour battery. Comfortable enough for a full driving day. The headset OTR drivers actually use.
Dual-Lens Dash Cam
Front and rear cameras running 24/7. If someone cuts you off or you get in a wreck, the footage is your best defense. Loop recording, night vision, and G-sensor auto-save on impact. Protect your CDL.
2000W Power Inverter
Converts your truck's 12V DC to standard 120V AC so you can run a microwave, laptop charger, CPAP, or slow cooker. 2000W handles most cab appliances. Hardwire it to your batteries for the cleanest power.
Multi-Port USB Charger
Your truck has one or two 12V outlets and five devices that need charging. A good multi-port USB hub keeps your phone, tablet, GPS, headset, and dash cam all juiced without fighting over outlets.
Health & Fitness
Lumbar Support Cushion
Your back takes a beating sitting 11 hours a day. A quality lumbar cushion keeps your lower spine in the right position and reduces the ache that builds up mile after mile. Memory foam holds its shape for months.
Seat Cushion Wedge
Tilts your pelvis forward just enough to take pressure off your tailbone and sciatica nerve. Coccyx cut-out design. If you're dealing with numbness or pain after long drives, this is the first thing to try.
Resistance Bands Set
Full body workout in a bag that fits in your side compartment. Use them at rest stops or right next to your rig. No gym membership, no excuses. Keeps your muscles from atrophying on long OTR runs.
Under-Desk Pedal Exerciser
Sit on your bunk and pedal. Gets your blood moving and works your legs without leaving the cab. Small enough to stash under the bunk. Use it during your 10-hour reset to fight the stiffness.
Portable Blood Pressure Monitor
Hypertension is the silent killer in trucking. A wrist-mount BP monitor lets you check your numbers without a clinic visit. Keep a log — your DOT physical will go smoother and you'll catch problems early.
Compression Socks
Sitting all day kills your circulation. Compression socks keep blood flowing in your legs and reduce swelling on long hauls. Put them on before your shift starts. Your ankles will thank you at the end of the day.
Safety & Emergency
Digital Tire Pressure Gauge
A blown steer tire at highway speed can kill you. Check your pressures every pre-trip. A digital gauge is faster and more accurate than the stick type. Reads up to 150 PSI for semi tires. Takes 10 seconds per tire.
Reflective Safety Vest (Class 3)
You're invisible on a dark shoulder at 3 AM without one. Class 3 high-visibility vest with reflective strips. Meets ANSI/ISEA standards. Keep it behind your seat so you can grab it fast for any roadside situation.
Roadside Emergency Kit
Triangles, flares, jumper cables, first aid, flashlight, and basic tools in one bag. DOT requires triangles. Having everything else means you're not stranded waiting for roadside assistance at 2 AM in the middle of nowhere.
Fatigue Alert Device
Clips to your ear or mounts on the dash and sounds an alarm if your head drops or your eyes close. Not a replacement for rest, but a backup when you're pushing through that last hour to the truck stop. Could save your life.
Heavy-Duty Work Gloves
Tarping, chaining, hooking up trailer lines — your hands take abuse. A good pair of cut-resistant, grip-coated gloves protects against slices, blisters, and cold. Keep two pairs: one in the cab, one in the side box.
First Aid Kit (DOT Compliant)
Bandages, gauze, antiseptic, pain relievers, and trauma supplies. You're often hours from a hospital. A well-stocked first aid kit handles cuts, burns, and minor injuries until you can get proper medical help.
Organization & Storage
Seat-Back Organizer
Hangs behind your driver or passenger seat. Pockets for your phone, paperwork, snacks, flashlight, and gloves. Keeps everything within arm's reach instead of floating around on the floor. Simple and effective.
Under-Bunk Storage Box
That space under your bunk is prime real estate. A flat storage box slides right in and holds clothes, tools, or food. Keeps your sleeper organized and your gear out of the way. Measure your bunk clearance first.
Document & Log Holder
Registration, insurance, permits, BOL — you need them organized and accessible for inspections. A visor clip or door-pocket organizer keeps your paperwork from becoming a crumpled mess on the dash.
Dashboard Anti-Slip Mat
Keeps your phone, sunglasses, and wallet from sliding off the dash every time you brake or turn. Silicone grip pad that sticks without adhesive. Sounds simple because it is — and you'll wonder why you didn't get one sooner.
Cab Trash Can
A small, leak-proof trash container that hangs from your shifter or clips to the door. Keeps wrappers, receipts, and bottles contained instead of piling up on the floor. Empty it at every fuel stop and your cab stays clean.
Rig Setup Guides
In-depth guides written for drivers, not desk jockeys. Real advice for setting up your cab the right way.
12V Power in a Semi Truck
Understand what you can run on 12V, when you need an inverter, and how to manage power without draining your batteries overnight.
Read the guide →How to Set Up Your Sleeper Cab
Priority order for outfitting your sleeper, measuring before you buy, and organizing a small space for maximum function.
Read the guide →Cooking in Your Truck Cab
From no-cook snack setups to full slow-cooker meals. Power requirements, meal planning, and food safety for life on the road.
Read the guide →Staying Healthy on Long-Haul Routes
Ergonomic gear, staying active at rest stops, sleep hygiene in the cab, and monitoring your health between DOT physicals.
Read the guide →Truck GPS vs Regular GPS
Why a car GPS will get you into trouble, what truck-specific routing includes, and a breakdown of Garmin vs Rand McNally.
Read the guide →