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.
North Macedonia
North Macedonia is a useful Balkan motorhome corridor between Serbia, Kosovo, Albania, Bulgaria and Greece. Plan official campsites or explicit permission, keep toll receipts, check foreign-vehicle customs deadlines, and treat mountain roads and winter equipment as route-critical.
Auto-camping tourism exists, but motorhome service coverage is thinner than in western Europe. Treat water, dump and electricity as planned stops.
Do not assume that a lake shore, mountain track or city parking bay is a legal overnight camp. Use campsites, signed tourist facilities, private permission or clearly allowed park facilities.
North Macedonia uses motorway toll plazas rather than a simple vignette. PESR says tolls are collected at open toll plazas and users must keep proof of payment while on the road. There is no broad tourist low-emission sticker system to plan around, but access limits are local and practical: city streets, lakeside parking and protected areas can be unsuitable or restricted.
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.
From 15 November to 15 March, vehicles on public roads must carry prescribed winter equipment. Outside winter, heat, wildfire risk, narrow mountain roads and poor rural lighting still matter.
- For motorhomes, verify tyre tread, chains, 4x4 rules and gross-weight category before winter mountain routes.
- Avoid rural mountain driving at night, keep fuel and water reserves, and check weather/road notices before Mavrovo, Galicica, Pelister or Shar Mountain legs.