Morocco has official tourism accommodation categories that include campings and bivouacs, but motorhome facilities vary widely by region.
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.
Morocco
Morocco is strong for winter and spring motorhome touring, but it needs planning around motorway toll classes, legal campsites or aires, temporary vehicle admission, desert heat, Atlas weather and medina access.
Use campsites, aires, guarded parking, bivouacs or private permission; avoid assuming beaches, desert edges or protected natural sites are free overnight zones.
Motorway tolls are route- and class-based, and motorhome class can depend on height, axles and vehicle length. There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring motorhomes, but city geometry and local access rules are decisive.
Argentina
Argentina is excellent for long motorhome trips, but travellers should plan formal overnight stops, temporary vehicle paperwork, licence acceptance, national-park rules, fuel gaps and Patagonian weather.
Plan water, waste, electricity and fuel stops by region: distances are large and service quality changes sharply between cities, tourist towns and remote routes.
Use campings, private permission, organised estancias, municipal areas or signed overnight stops instead of treating every roadside pull-out as a campsite.
Argentina has toll roads and many border-heavy routes, so budget for peajes, fuel reserves, park tickets, insurance and temporary vehicle paperwork. There is no broad national low-emission sticker for motorhome touring, but practical restrictions come from city parking, toll approaches, parks, private land and seasonal roads.
Overnight and wild camping
Use campsites, aires, guarded parking, bivouacs or private permission; avoid assuming beaches, desert edges or protected natural sites are free overnight zones.
- Local police, municipal rules and site owners can define what is acceptable for overnight parking.
- Keep camping furniture, awnings, fires and waste disposal inside authorised sites unless permission is explicit.
Use campings, private permission, organised estancias, municipal areas or signed overnight stops instead of treating every roadside pull-out as a campsite.
- Remote Patagonia and the Andes have many tempting pull-outs, but wind, land ownership, protected areas and police checks can make informal camping risky.
- Inside national parks, follow each park's camping, entry-ticket, fire and route rules; services can be seasonal or capacity-limited.