The TKSTAR TK905B is the best horse-trailer GPS tracker because its 10,000mAh battery, rated up to 80 days of standby, survives long idle stretches between shows. The Tracki Pro is the pick for the fastest movement alert.
A horse trailer spends most of the year parked, then hauls precious cargo a few weekends a season. It needs a tracker that survives long idle months and still warns you the moment it moves. Equine insurers report that trailer and horsebox theft makes up the bulk of equine-equipment claims, and a report on rising equine crime confirms thieves now target the yards and show grounds where trailers sit unattended for hours.
- TKSTAR TK905B is the top pick — 10,000mAh battery gives up to 80 days of standby for trailers that sit idle for weeks at a time
- Tracki Pro sends the fastest alert — 4G live tracking with geofence movement warnings the second the trailer rolls
- Optimus 3.0 adds an SOS button — up to 1-month battery on default reporting, from $27 upfront
- A geofence alert beats live tracking for parked trailers — you only need to know the trailer moved, then follow it live
- Battery is the deciding factor — a short-runtime tracker can die before show season ends and leave you blind
What Makes a Horse-Trailer Tracker Different From a Car Tracker?
A car tracker plugs into the OBD port and recharges every drive. A horse trailer has no engine, no 12V power, and no climate-controlled cabin, so the tracker runs entirely on its own battery while parked outdoors for weeks.
That single difference decides which trackers actually work. Any unit that lasts under two weeks needs a recharging routine most owners abandon by mid-season.
The second difference is how you use the data. You want one reliable movement alert the moment the trailer leaves its geofence, not a live map every three seconds. According to the Capturs trailer-tracker page, the units used across European horse yards run for months on a sealed battery and wake only on motion or a zone exit.
That sleep-until-it-moves behavior is exactly what an idle horse trailer needs.
This is a narrower problem than our broader guide to GPS trackers for utility, boat, and cargo trailers, which covers trailers used weekly and recharged often. A horse trailer is a long-idle, seasonal case, so battery standby matters more than update frequency.
1. TKSTAR TK905B — Best for Long-Idle Trailers
The TKSTAR TK905B is the top pick for trailers that sit untouched between shows. Its 10,000mAh battery delivers up to 80 days of standby, so a trailer parked for weeks at a time still answers when you next check it. Five strong magnets clamp it inside the frame or the tack-room cavity, and the IP65 housing shrugs off rain and yard dust.
It runs a bring-your-own micro-SIM on 4G, keeping running costs near $5 a month on a prepaid plan instead of a fixed subscription. Parked long-term, GPS+AGPS positioning is the main advantage over a Bluetooth tag that waits for nearby phones.
The honest trade-off: no SOS button and a basic app. This is a recover-it tracker, not daily telematics.
TKSTAR TK905B

2. Tracki Pro — Best for Instant Movement Alerts
If your worry is the trailer rolling off a show ground while you are in the ring, the Tracki Pro answers fastest. It’s a small 4G LTE unit with live tracking and geofence movement alerts that push to your phone when the trailer crosses the boundary you draw around the yard. That app-first alert flow is the reason to choose it over slower standby units.
Its 10,000mAh battery is rated up to a year in power-save mode, though live tracking during a theft drains it quicker. IP67 sealing handles a damp compartment, the global SIM works across state lines, and a subscription rides on top of the $36 device.
The Tracki earns its spot for one reason: when the trailer moves, you get an app alert instead of waiting on a manual check-in.
Tracki Pro

3. Optimus 3.0 — Best for Safety With an SOS Button
The Optimus 3.0 adds something the others lack: an SOS panic button alongside real-time GPS, geofencing, and speed alerts. On its default 1-minute reporting it holds up to a month of battery, and stretching the interval pushes that further for a parked trailer.
At $27 upfront it’s the cheapest device here to buy.
For an equestrian use case the SOS button earns its place. Hand it to whoever hauls the trailer, and a single press fires your location to chosen contacts during a roadside breakdown with horses aboard. The catch is a subscription from $19.95 a month, which lands higher than a bring-your-own-SIM tracker over a year.
Optimus 3.0
4. LandAirSea 54 — Best Magnetic Quick-Attach
The LandAirSea 54 moves easily between a trailer, a truck, and a tack box because the magnet is built into the case. Stick it under the frame rail when you need a quick removable install. It runs 4G LTE real-time GPS with geofencing, and the battery lasts about two weeks per charge.
Two weeks is the honest limit here. For a trailer abandoned in a back field for two months, the TK905B is the safer call.
The LandAirSea app is among the most polished of the magnetic units here, and plans start at $15 a month on the annual plan.
LandAirSea 54

5. Family1st Portable — Best Budget Pick
The Family1st Portable covers the basics for the lowest all-in cost: 4G LTE real-time GPS, a built-in magnetic mount, and an SOS button, with about two weeks per charge. At $30 upfront and plans from $22 a month, it suits an owner who wants theft recovery without the TK905B’s hands-on SIM setup.
Its limit matches the LandAirSea: a two-week battery means it’s built for a trailer that comes home and gets recharged, not one left idle for a season. Setup is app-guided, with the geofence alert configured from the app on first use.
For a one-trailer owner on a budget, it’s the simplest way to get a movement warning.
Family1st Portable

How Long Should a Horse-Trailer Tracker’s Battery Last?
Aim for a tracker that survives the longest gap between uses, which for most owners is the off-season.
A trailer that sits from October to April needs roughly six months of standby, longer than any battery here lasts. The TKSTAR TK905B holds out the longest, at up to 80 days per charge, so plan on a single mid-winter recharge instead of leaving it dead. None of these units truly clears a full off-season untouched, which is why a long-idle pick plus one scheduled top-up beats a two-week magnetic tracker you would forget five times over.
The trick is matching the reporting interval to the situation. A parked trailer can sleep and wake only on motion, stretching battery to weeks or months. The moment it moves, the tracker switches to live mode and burns through power faster, which is fine because by then you want every ping.
Owners on the Horse & Hound horse-trailer tracker thread repeat one warning: a tracker you have to recharge every five days gets forgotten, and a forgotten tracker is a dead tracker the night the trailer disappears.
Can You Get an Alert if Your Trailer Moves?
Yes, and for a parked horse trailer this geofence movement alert is the feature that matters most. You draw a boundary around your yard, barn, or show parking, and the tracker pushes an SMS or app notification when the trailer crosses it. Every pick here supports it, with Tracki Pro and Optimus 3.0 best suited to live follow-up.
This is why an idle trailer does not need constant live tracking. The tracker stays asleep, saving battery, until motion or a zone exit wakes it.
Recovery groups like Stolen Horse International (NetPosse) have reported that only about 42 percent of stolen equine property is ever recovered, largely because theft reports come in late. A movement alert closes that gap. Instead of noticing the empty parking spot hours later, you get the warning while the trailer is still close and still trackable.
Best Hiding Spots on a Horse Trailer
Pick a spot a thief won’t check during a quick hitch-and-go theft, and one without a power lead they can yank. Good options:
- Inside the tack-room cavity — a battery tracker tucked behind a wall panel stays dry and out of sight
- Up inside the frame rail or A-frame tongue — the magnet holds it against bare steel, hidden from below
- Behind interior trim or under a mat — works on aluminum trailers where magnets fail, using adhesive or hook-and-loop
Battery trackers win here because, as the Horse & Hound discussions note, thieves look first for wiring to disable. A self-contained magnetic unit with no leads is far harder to find and kill. Keep it away from the obvious license-plate bracket and hitch coupler, the two spots a thief checks by reflex.
Bottom Line
For a horse trailer that sits idle for months, buy the TKSTAR TK905B. Its up to 80-day standby is the longest battery here, so it needs the fewest recharges across an off-season, and a self-contained magnetic unit gives thieves no wire to cut. If you haul most weekends and bring the trailer home to power, the Tracki Pro delivers the fastest movement alert, and the Optimus 3.0 is worth the extra subscription for the SOS button when horses are aboard.
Whichever you choose, set the geofence around your yard the day it arrives. The alert that fires the moment the trailer moves is what recovers it, not the tracker sitting in a drawer.
FAQ
What is the best GPS tracker for a horse trailer?
The TKSTAR TK905B is the best choice for most horse-trailer owners because its 10,000mAh battery gives up to 80 days of standby, which survives the long stretches a trailer sits idle between shows. If you want a faster app-based movement alert instead of the longest battery, the Tracki Pro is the easier live-tracking pick.
How long does a horse-trailer tracker battery last?
It ranges from about two weeks on magnetic units like the LandAirSea 54 and Family1st to up to 80 days on the TKSTAR TK905B. Battery is the deciding factor for a horse trailer because it sits unpowered outdoors for long stretches. Most trackers extend their life by sleeping while parked and waking only when the trailer moves.
Will I get an alert if someone moves my trailer?
Yes. Every tracker here supports a geofence movement alert that pushes an SMS or app notification when the trailer leaves the boundary you set. Tracki Pro and Optimus 3.0 are better suited to live follow-up than long-idle standby units, which gives you a clearer handoff for police.
Where should I hide a GPS tracker on a horse trailer?
Good spots are inside the tack-room cavity behind a panel, up inside the steel frame rail or A-frame tongue where a magnet holds, or behind interior trim on aluminum trailers. Avoid the license-plate bracket and hitch coupler, which thieves check first. A self-contained battery tracker with no wiring is hardest for a thief to find and disable.
Do horse-trailer trackers need a subscription?
Most do. The Tracki Pro, Optimus 3.0, LandAirSea 54, and Family1st each run a monthly plan that ranges from about $15 to $22. The TKSTAR TK905B is the exception because it takes your own prepaid micro-SIM, which can cut the running cost to around $5 a month if you set it up yourself.
Can I use an AirTag on my horse trailer instead?
An AirTag only works when an iPhone passes nearby. Apple’s Find My documentation confirms that it relies on the crowd-sourced network rather than its own connection, so it can leave you blind on a trailer parked at a rural yard or hauled through empty back roads. A cellular GPS tracker reports its own location over 4G anywhere with signal, which is why it’s the safer choice for a horse trailer that travels and parks away from crowds.
Does an aluminum horse trailer block GPS or magnets?
Aluminum does not block a GPS signal the way a sealed steel box can, but a magnetic mount won’t stick to it. On an aluminum trailer, mount the tracker with adhesive or hook-and-loop behind interior trim, inside the tack room, or near a window for the clearest sky view and the strongest fix.