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.
New Zealand
New Zealand is excellent for campervans when you plan around freedom-camping rules, self-containment certification, DOC restrictions, diesel road-user charges, toll roads and fast-changing alpine weather.
Use DOC campsites, holiday parks and council-approved sites for predictable overnight stays, water and waste handling.
Freedom camping is legal only where national law, council bylaws and land-manager rules allow it, and many places require a certified self-contained vehicle.
New Zealand has a small number of electronic toll roads, but diesel, heavy and some electric vehicles also need road user charges. There is no broad low-emission sticker for touring campervans, but practical access limits come from ferries, one-lane bridges, gravel roads, height and parking rules.
Documents and insurance
Carry passport, licence, registration, insurance proof and rental permission; treat temporary admission of the vehicle as a key border requirement.
- If the vehicle is foreign-registered, respect the temporary admission deadline and keep customs paperwork available until exit.
- Confirm Moroccan insurance or green-card coverage before ferry boarding and keep rental cross-border permission with the vehicle documents.
Visitors must meet NZTA visitor-driving rules and carry licence documents accepted for driving in New Zealand.
- If the licence is not in English, carry an approved translation or International Driving Permit alongside the original licence.
- Check rental restrictions for unsealed roads, beaches, snow chains, ferry travel, gas bottles and accident excess.