South Africa has many caravan parks and park camps, but gate rules, booking windows, wildlife behaviour and vehicle size must be checked before arrival.
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 Africa
South Africa has strong road-trip infrastructure, but motorhome planning needs toll classes, SANParks gate and campsite rules, foreign licence documents, guarded overnight stops and weather or wildlife-route timing.
Use formal campsites, caravan parks, SANParks rest camps, private reserves or guarded parking rather than informal roadside overnight stops.
Toll roads are common on major national routes, and charges vary by plaza and vehicle class. There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but access can be limited by city safety rules, private estates, passes, beaches and park roads.
Namibia
Namibia is one of Africa's best self-drive motorhome countries, but gravel-road planning, cross-border road charges, national-park permits, water range and desert weather are central to every route.
Namibia has strong campsite culture, but distances between fuel, water, workshops and tyre help can be very long.
Use campsites, lodges, community conservancy camps and official park sites; do not assume roadside desert stops or park areas are legal overnight locations.
Foreign-registered vehicles entering Namibia must handle Road Fund Administration cross-border charges, and heavier vehicles can trigger mass-distance charging. There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but access depends on road class, gravel conditions, park permits, vehicle mass and recovery risk.
Overnight and wild camping
Use formal campsites, caravan parks, SANParks rest camps, private reserves or guarded parking rather than informal roadside overnight stops.
- National parks and reserves can enforce gate times, campsite boundaries, speed limits and vehicle restrictions.
- In cities and along long-distance routes, security and daylight arrival are part of overnight planning.
Use campsites, lodges, community conservancy camps and official park sites; do not assume roadside desert stops or park areas are legal overnight locations.
- MEFT park guidance says permits can be required for specific areas, and park rules can restrict roads, fires, pets and leaving the vehicle.
- For remote tracks, plan camps with reliable water and inform someone of the route before leaving main roads.