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.
Uruguay
Uruguay is approachable for motorhomes when border paperwork, foreign-vehicle toll registration, coastal camping rules, wind and storm exposure, and secure urban parking are planned before arrival.
Uruguay has practical camping and hosted-stop options around coastal and interior towns, but availability is seasonal and holiday-driven.
Treat overnights as permission-based: use formal campsites, tourist farms, authorised hosted parking, private permission or clearly signed municipal areas.
Budget for Uruguay's national-route tolls, foreign-vehicle toll registration or pass setup, bridge or ferry costs, coastal parking and peak-season campsite rates. There is no simple national low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but practical limits come from city parking, port zones, protected dunes, wetlands and beach access rules.
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.
Uruguay's main motorhome risks are coastal wind, thunderstorms, heavy rain, holiday traffic, ferry disruption, soft shoulders and crowded summer beach towns.
- Check weather and roadwork updates before long coastal, riverfront, bridge or ferry-dependent legs.
- Plan shorter days around January, Carnival, Easter week, school holidays and stormy frontal systems moving across the Rio de la Plata.