Welcome to Off Grid Stories
Welcome to Off Grid Stories â Real Lives Off the Grid, In Their Own Words
If youâve ever wondered what it actually takes to live off the grid â not the polished YouTube version, but the real, frostbitten, generator-cranking, frozen-pipe-thawing, sunset-on-the-mountaintop version â youâre in the right place.
Off Grid Stories is exactly what it sounds like: a place for real off-gridders to tell their stories, in their own words, for anyone who wants to learn from them.
We built this site because off-grid life is hard, beautiful, often misunderstood, and almost never accurately portrayed. The best teachers arenât influencers â theyâre the people whoâve been doing it for two, five, twenty years. The ones who learned the hard way that solar panels need to be cleared of snow, that a chainsaw is worth its weight in gold, and that the most important system youâll ever install is a positive attitude.
This is for you ifâŚ
- Youâve been off-grid for years and want to share what youâve figured out â the wins, the failures, the things youâd do differently.
- Youâre six months in and questioning every choice. Someone here has been exactly where you are.
- Youâre sitting in a city apartment dreaming about it. Read everything. Ask questions. Decide if itâs actually for you.
- You tried it and went back. Thatâs a real story too â and one we genuinely need.
What youâll find here
- Real stories from real people â no sponsored posts, no perfect-life filters
- Honest accounts of what worked, what failed, and what theyâd do differently
- A community that votes, comments, and helps each other through hard seasons
- A map of off-grid homesteads â see whoâs doing it and where
- Stories you can listen to while doing chores, driving, or splitting wood
- A working Tip Jar on every story â if a storyteller helped you, you can send them a few bucks directly
Off-grid is more diverse than the stereotype
This isnât just for Alaska homesteaders with 40 acres. We want stories from:
- Van-lifers and skoolie converts
- Sailboat dwellers and water gypsies
- Tiny house builders on shoestring budgets
- Family homesteaders with kids and goats and chaos
- Solo women on mountaintops
- Communal projects, intentional communities, eco-villages
- People going off-grid in the city â the urban version of the dream
- Newcomers whoâve been at it six months and have ten things to say already
Why we want your story
Every off-grid story matters. The five-year veteran who finally figured out winter water storage. The first-year homesteader who lost a crop and learned everything from it. The couple who built a tiny house on $14,000. The person who quit their tech job and never looked back. The one who tried, struggled, and came home.
Your experience is the answer to someone elseâs question. We need them all.
How to share your story
Click the âSubmit Your Storyâ button at the top of the page. Youâll get:
- A simple form â name, story title, your story, an optional photo
- A short bio (so readers know who you are)
- Tags so people can find your story by topic â solar, cabin build, hurricane prep, skoolie, family, animals, water, anything
- An optional location pin on our community map (you can be vague â âNorthern Californiaâ works fine if you donât want exact coordinates)
- An optional tip jar URL â if you have a Buy Me a Coffee, Ko-fi, Venmo, or PayPal, drop it in. Readers can support you directly. 100% goes to you.
Your story goes live immediately. No editorial gatekeeping. No waiting room. The community votes, comments, and shares.
What we promise
- No judgment. Tried it for six weeks and quit? Tell us what broke. Living in a converted school bus on a friendâs lawn? That counts. Spent twenty grand on a setup that turned out to be the wrong choice? Especially want to hear that one.
- No minimum credentials. You donât need to be a homesteading legend. You just need to tell us whatâs true for you.
- You stay in control. Use a first name only if you prefer. Skip the location pin. Edit later. Take it down if you want.
- Photos help, but they donât have to be glamorous. Some of the best off-grid photos are the ugly ones â the broken thing, the muddy thing, the thing youâre proud of even though it doesnât look like much.
A community, not a content mill
This site is part of Off Grid Living & Survival⢠Magazine, alongside our survival skills site. Our goal isnât engagement metrics â itâs helping people live more freely, more skillfully, and more honestly.
If youâve lived it, share it. If youâre learning, read everything. If youâre considering it, ask questions in the comments â thereâs almost certainly someone here whoâs already faced exactly what youâre worried about.
Welcome to Off Grid Stories. The mountain is steeper than it looks. The view is better than they say.
â Eric Wichman & the OGLS team