Motorhome-grade dump points, shore power and fresh-water service are uneven, so route planning should be conservative outside known caravan parks and resorts.
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.
India
India can work for carefully planned caravan travel, but rules and facilities are state-led. Plan around official caravan parks or hosted stops, FASTag and toll categories, forest and national-park permissions, monsoon or heat risk, and vehicle-entry paperwork before committing to a route.
Do not assume roadside or beach wild camping is acceptable; use registered caravan parks, camps, hotels with secure parking or private permission.
National Highway tolls, state tolls, bridges, city parking, ferries and park fees can matter more than distance alone. Dense cities, low bridges, narrow streets, old-town access, air-quality restrictions and protected-area rules can make a large camper impractical.
Indonesia
Indonesia motorhome travel is an advanced logistics exercise: island ferries, customs Vehicle Declaration or carnet handling, BPJT toll categories, national-park permits, urban access, monsoon risk and volcanic or remote-area disruption must be planned together.
Motorhome service density is low and island logistics dominate, so each leg needs water, waste, fuel, ferry and overnight checks.
Use campsites, guesthouses with secure parking, private permission, national-park facilities or authorised tourism sites instead of assuming wild camping is allowed.
Toll roads are route and class based, while ferries, parking, park permits and marine-park tickets can add separate costs. Jakarta, Bali, old towns, mountain roads and protected areas need access and parking checks before routing a large camper in.
Overnight and wild camping
Do not assume roadside or beach wild camping is acceptable; use registered caravan parks, camps, hotels with secure parking or private permission.
- India's national caravan policy is a framework, while practical permissions and sites are mainly handled by state or union-territory authorities.
- Near beaches, forests, deserts, villages and religious sites, ask locally before stopping overnight or setting out chairs, awning or cooking gear.
Use campsites, guesthouses with secure parking, private permission, national-park facilities or authorised tourism sites instead of assuming wild camping is allowed.
- Beaches, temples, villages, plantations and protected landscapes can have local adat, religious, security or conservation rules.
- Ask before setting out awnings, chairs, cooking gear or generators outside a formal campsite.