South Korea has many auto-camping facilities, but size limits, reservation rules, barbecue rules, power and dump options differ by site.
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.
South Korea
South Korea motorhome planning should focus on official campsites, expressway tolls, dense-city parking, ferry or customs checks for foreign vehicles, recognised licence documents and monsoon or winter disruption.
Use registered campsites, auto-camping grounds, KNPS reservation sites, private permission or paid parking that clearly allows overnight stays.
Expressway tolls, Hi-Pass compatibility, bridges, tunnels, ferries, paid parking and campsite fees should be part of the route budget. There is no simple visitor sticker that makes a large camper city-friendly: Seoul, Busan and other dense areas need parking, height and access checks.
New Zealand
New Zealand is excellent for campervans when you plan around freedom-camping rules, self-containment certification, DOC restrictions, diesel road-user charges, toll roads and fast-changing alpine weather.
Use DOC campsites, holiday parks and council-approved sites for predictable overnight stays, water and waste handling.
Freedom camping is legal only where national law, council bylaws and land-manager rules allow it, and many places require a certified self-contained vehicle.
New Zealand has a small number of electronic toll roads, but diesel, heavy and some electric vehicles also need road user charges. There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring campervans, but practical access limits come from ferries, one-lane bridges, gravel roads, height and parking rules.
Documents and insurance
Foreign drivers need documents recognised in Korea, and foreign-plated motorhomes should confirm customs, port, insurance and registration handling before shipping or ferry travel.
- Korean guidance recognises international driving permits or certain recognised foreign licences for limited visitor use.
- For an own vehicle, confirm customs clearance or temporary-use procedure with the port operator, customs broker and insurer before arrival.
Visitors must meet NZTA visitor-driving rules and carry licence documents accepted for driving in New Zealand.
- If the licence is not in English, carry an approved translation or International Driving Permit alongside the original licence.
- Check rental restrictions for unsealed roads, beaches, snow chains, ferry travel, gas bottles and accident excess.