Germany has a dense network of campsites and dedicated motorhome stopovers, often with paid electricity, water and waste disposal.
Camper Rules Assistant
Build a country route and get compact allowed/do-not-assume/check cards for overnight rules, LEZ, tolls, documents and winter requirements.
Germany
Germany is friendly to motorhome touring when you use signed Stellplaetze, campsites and normal legal parking. Wild camping is broadly restricted, and city access can depend on environmental stickers.
Treat an overnight roadside stop as parking, not camping: keep awnings, chairs, steps and leveling gear inside the vehicle footprint unless a site explicitly allows them.
Private leisure motorhomes are normally outside Germany's truck toll system, but heavy or goods-use vehicles need a closer check before travel. Many German low-emission zones require a valid environmental sticker, and foreign vehicles may need to apply before entering.
Indonesia
Indonesia motorhome travel is an advanced logistics exercise: island ferries, customs Vehicle Declaration or carnet handling, BPJT toll categories, national-park permits, urban access, monsoon risk and volcanic or remote-area disruption must be planned together.
Motorhome service density is low and island logistics dominate, so each leg needs water, waste, fuel, ferry and overnight checks.
Use campsites, guesthouses with secure parking, private permission, national-park facilities or authorised tourism sites instead of assuming wild camping is allowed.
Toll roads are route and class based, while ferries, parking, park permits and marine-park tickets can add separate costs. Jakarta, Bali, old towns, mountain roads and protected areas need access and parking checks before routing a large camper in.
Seasonal and winter
Winter travel is common, but alpine routes, campsites and service points can close or require winter-ready tyres and equipment.
- Check road status before crossing the Alps or low mountain regions after snow or freezing rain.
- Book Christmas, ski-season and summer holiday campsites early; popular regions fill quickly.
Rainy-season flooding, landslides, volcanic alerts, earthquakes, ferry disruption and remote fuel gaps should shape route timing and backup plans.
- Check weather, park alerts, ferry notices and volcanic or earthquake information before mountain, island and national-park legs.
- Carry drinking water, offline maps, fuel margin and a plan for delays where ferries or roads close.