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03 March 2026 20 min read
Guide to What Is Motorhome Insurance?
Motorhome insurance is a legal requirement. It covers your motorhome as a vehicle and as a living space, including third party liability, fire, theft, and the contents and fixtures inside. Standard car insurance does not cover motorhomes. You need a specialist policy matched to your body type, usage, and storage.
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A guide to what is motorhome insurance?

Key takeaways

  • Motorhome insurance is a legal requirement under the Road Traffic Act 1988. Driving without it carries 6 penalty points, an unlimited fine, and the risk of seizure
  • Standard car insurance doesn’t cover a motorhome. Motorhomes are classed as motor caravans on the V5C and need specialist policies that account for living accommodation, fixtures, and contents
  • There are five motorhome body types (coach-built, A-class, low-profile, panel van conversion, American RV) and each is rated differently by insurers. Your body type affects your premium, not just your vehicle value
  • Agreed value cover is worth thinking about for motorhomes over £40,000. Market value settlements can leave you significantly short if your motorhome holds or increases in value
  • If you live in your motorhome full time, a standard touring policy is invalid. You need a specialist full-timing or van-life policy with continuous occupation declared
  • The UK leisure vehicle market continues to grow, with the National Caravan Council reporting record motorhome registrations in recent years. More insurer choice has come with greater variation in policy quality and exclusions

Motorhome insurance isn’t a variation of car insurance with a few extra boxes ticked. A motorhome is at once a vehicle and a home.

It carries a fitted kitchen, sleeping area, LPG gas, electrical systems, personal belongings, and often specialist accessories worth thousands of pounds. No standard motor policy is designed for that combination of risk. You need a policy that covers the vehicle on the road and the habitation inside it.

The UK motorhome market has grown sharply. Per National Caravan Council industry data, hundreds of thousands of motorhomes and campervans are now registered on UK roads, with registrations sitting at or near record levels in recent years.

That growth has brought more insurer choice, but also greater variation in what policies actually cover. Two quotes at similar prices can differ dramatically in European cover days, accessory limits, and settlement basis.

This guide covers everything you need to know: what motorhome insurance is, the five body types and how they’re rated, cover levels, the full-timing gap, agreed value vs market value, what it costs, and the policy checks that matter before you buy.

💬 From the MMC insurance team | FCA Reg. 916241

“The most common mistake we see is owners using a standard touring policy when they use their motorhome for extended periods, or insuring a self-converted van without declaring it as a motor caravan on the V5C. Both can end in a claim being rejected outright. Insurers rate motorhomes on body type, usage pattern, and storage location, not just vehicle value. Getting those three things right at the quote stage is what prevents disputes at claim time.”

⚖️

Legal basis

Motorhome insurance is compulsory under Road Traffic Act 1988, s.143. All motor vehicles used on public roads must have at least third party insurance. Motorhomes are motor vehicles regardless of weight. The only exception is a valid SORN (Statutory Off Road Notification) via the DVLA, which means the vehicle can’t be driven or parked on a public road.

~£500

Avg. annual premium (£50k vehicle)

3-5k

Typical motorhome miles per year

6 pts

Penalty for no insurance

3.5t

Cat B licence limit (post-1997)

What is motorhome insurance?

Motorhome insurance is a specialist motor policy designed to protect a vehicle that’s both driven on public roads and used as a living space.

Unlike car insurance, it has to account for fixed habitation equipment (cookers, fridges, shower units, LPG systems), personal contents kept inside the vehicle, and the higher replacement cost of a specialist body built on a commercial van or bus chassis.

On the V5C logbook, a motorhome is registered as “motor caravan.” That classification matters. If your vehicle is registered as a panel van but you use it as a motorhome without updating the V5C, some insurers will treat it as a commercial vehicle and exclude habitation cover entirely.

Always check your V5C body type before buying a policy.

The relationship between motorhomes and campervans is worth clarifying. Motorhomes are typically factory-built, with a clearly separated cab and living area. Campervans are usually converted from a standard panel van, with the living space and cab combined.

Insurers sometimes rate them differently, particularly for conversion costs and fitted equipment limits. If your vehicle is a self-built conversion, you need to confirm with the insurer whether it’s rated as a campervan or motorhome, and what documentation they ask for to validate the declared value.

The five motorhome body types and how they affect your policy

Insurers don’t rate all motorhomes the same way. Your body type affects premium, accessory limits, windscreen excess, and in some cases whether standard comprehensive cover is available at all.

Here’s what each type means for your insurance.

Body type Description Insurance consideration
Coach-built GRP or timber body built on a van chassis (Fiat Ducato, Peugeot Boxer). Most common UK body type. Body panels are specialist. Repair costs can be high even for minor damage. Check panel replacement limits in your policy.
A-class Full cab-over design, no separate cab. The windscreen extends across the entire front of the vehicle. A-class windscreens are bonded and can cost £2,000 to £5,000+ to replace. Check whether your windscreen cover has a sub-limit. Many standard policies cap windscreen payouts well below the real replacement cost.
Low-profile Separate cab below the overcab sleeping area. Lower roofline than coach-built. Popular compact option. Generally straightforward to insure. Overcab bed area may be excluded from personal contents cover if not specified.
Panel van conversion Standard van (Mercedes Sprinter, VW Transporter) converted for habitation. May be professional or self-build. V5C must show “motor caravan” for specialist cover to apply. Self-builds need a declared conversion value and possibly a gas safety certificate. Mismatch between V5C class and actual use can void a claim.
American RV Large US-imported motorhomes on Class A, B, or C chassis. Often 7.5m to 12m in length. Fewer mainstream insurers will quote. Specialist broker needed. Replacement parts are imported, adding repair cost and delay. Values can be £100,000 to £300,000+, making agreed value cover essential.

Driving licence requirements: what you actually need

Your driving licence category determines which motorhomes you can legally drive, and getting this wrong can invalidate your insurance. The rules depend on your licence category and when you passed your test.

⚠️ Post-1997 licence holders

If you passed your driving test after 1 January 1997, your Category B licence only covers vehicles up to 3,500kg MAM (maximum authorised mass). Many popular motorhomes, including large coach-built models and A-class vehicles, exceed this limit. Driving a motorhome over 3,500kg on a Category B licence is a criminal offence and will void your insurance.

Licence category Who holds it Weight limit
Category B All drivers. Pre-1997 passers also hold Category C1 automatically. Up to 3,500kg MAM
Category C1 Post-1997 drivers who passed a separate C1 test. Pre-1997 passers hold this automatically. 3,500kg to 7,500kg MAM
Category C HGV licence holders. Needed for very large American RVs and race trucks. Over 7,500kg MAM

Always confirm the MAM of any motorhome before buying, and check your licence carefully. Insurers will ask for your licence category at the quote stage.

Providing incorrect information is a material misrepresentation under the Insurance Act 2015 and can end in claims being voided.

Motorhome cover types explained

There are three legal cover levels for motorhomes, the same framework as car insurance. Comprehensive is the right choice for most owners.

Cover level What it covers What it doesn’t cover
Third party only Injury or property damage you cause to others Your vehicle, fire, theft, your contents, your injuries
Third party, fire and theft Third party liability, plus fire damage and theft of the vehicle Accident damage to your own vehicle, contents, your injuries
Comprehensive All of the above, plus accidental damage to your motorhome, personal contents, windscreen, often European cover Mechanical breakdown, wear and tear, deliberate damage, unlisted modifications

Comprehensive motorhome insurance is, in most cases, cheaper than third party, fire and theft for the same vehicle.

This is a counterintuitive feature of the market: TPFT policies attract higher-risk owners, so insurers price them accordingly. If you’re being quoted cheaply for TPFT, check the exclusions carefully.

Standard policy vs specialist motorhome policy: what’s the difference?

Not all motorhome policies are the same. A standard policy written on a car or van book will miss the specific risks that come with a vehicle you live in.

Here’s what separates a standard policy from a specialist motorhome policy at a glance.

Feature Standard policy Specialist motorhome policy
Vehicle classification Car or panel van only Motor caravan V5C class recognised
Habitation contents Not covered Up to £3,000 to £5,000 included
Fixed accessories (awnings, solar, satellite) Not covered Covered up to declared limit
European cover Minimum legal only 30 to 365 days, often comprehensive
Settlement basis Market value only Agreed value available
Full-timing / van-life use Excluded Available as a declared option
Self-build / conversion cover Not recognised Covered with declared conversion value
Emergency accommodation Not included Included if motorhome undriveable

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What does motorhome insurance cover?

A comprehensive motorhome policy covers a wider range of risks than a car policy, reflecting the fact that you live, cook, and sleep in the vehicle.

Here’s what’s typically included, and what needs a separate add-on or declaration.

✔ Typically included in a comprehensive policy

  • Third party liability, including passenger injury
  • Accidental damage to your motorhome body and chassis
  • Fire, theft, and vandalism
  • Windscreen and body glass repair or replacement (excess and sub-limits apply)
  • Personal contents and belongings up to a set limit (typically £3,000 to £5,000)
  • European cover for a limited period (typically 30 to 90 days per year)
  • Emergency accommodation cover if your motorhome is undriveable

✗ Common exclusions to check

  • Accessories above the declared limit, such as awnings, solar panels, satellite dishes, and bike racks. These usually have a low default cap of £500 to £1,500. Declare high-value accessories separately.
  • Damage to tyres caused by braking, punctures, cuts, or bursts. This is standard across most policies.
  • Theft of the vehicle if left unattended with the engine running. A near-universal exclusion.
  • Undeclared modifications. Fitting a Truma heating system, lithium battery bank, or towbar without telling the insurer can void your policy.
  • Full-time occupation on a standard touring policy. If you live in your motorhome permanently, a standard policy doesn’t cover you. See below.

European cover: the days trap

Most comprehensive motorhome policies include some European cover as standard, but the number of days varies enormously between insurers.

This is one of the most common sources of disputes for motorhome owners who use their vehicles abroad.

🌍 European cover: what to check before you travel

Cover type Typical days Watch out for
Standard European 30 days Often only third party level abroad, not full comprehensive. Check the small print carefully.
Extended European 60 to 90 days May be per trip or aggregate over the year. A 60-day policy with a 30-day per-trip limit wouldn’t cover a 45-day France itinerary.
Full European (specialist) 180 to 365 days Breakdown cover is often sold separately even on specialist policies. Confirm whether European breakdown recovery is included or a paid add-on.

Agreed value vs market value: which settlement basis is right for you?

This distinction matters more for motorhomes than almost any other vehicle type. A car depreciates over time. A well-maintained classic campervan or American RV can hold or increase in value.

If your policy settles on market value at the time of a write-off, you may receive considerably less than you paid or than it would cost to replace.

Agreed value means the insurer and policyholder agree the vehicle’s value at the start of the policy. In the event of a total loss, that figure is paid out without deduction.

For motorhomes above £40,000, or any vehicle with specialist conversion work, agreed value is worth asking for at the quote stage even if it costs slightly more in premium.

📋 Quick facts: motorhome insurance at a glance

Legal basis

Road Traffic Act 1988, s.143. Minimum cover: third party. Penalty for no cover: 6 points, unlimited fine, possible seizure.

V5C body type

Must show “motor caravan” for specialist habitation cover to apply. Panel vans without this classification may be treated as commercial vehicles.

Full-timing gap

Standard touring policies exclude continuous occupation. If you live in your motorhome, declare it. Specialist full-timing policies are available, typically priced higher than standard touring cover.

Typical cost

Around £500 per year for a motorhome valued at £50,000. Storage location and security measures can reduce or significantly push this up.

Agreed vs market value

Market value policies pay what the vehicle is worth at claim time. Agreed value locks in a figure upfront. Essential for high-value, classic, or American RV motorhomes.

NCD portability

No claims discount earned on a motorhome policy generally doesn’t transfer to a car policy. It stays as motorhome NCD. Confirm portability rules with your insurer at renewal.

Full-timing and van-life cover: the gap nobody talks about

A growing number of people in the UK live in their motorhome or campervan full time. The insurance market calls this “full-timing” or “van-life” usage, and it’s a material fact that has to be disclosed to your insurer.

Most standard touring policies include language that excludes “continuous occupation” or “permanent habitation.” An owner who parks up in the same location for more than 30 days at a time, or uses the vehicle as their sole residence, is in breach of these conditions.

If their motorhome is damaged, stolen, or causes a third party claim during this period, the insurer can refuse to pay.

🏡 What full-timing insurance needs to cover

  • Continuous occupation declared. Insurer must be told the vehicle is your primary residence
  • Home contents equivalent cover. High-value items, electronics, and personal possessions stored in the vehicle year-round
  • Correspondence address. Many full-timing policies need a UK correspondence address even if you have no fixed home address
  • Breakdown cover tailored to full-timing. Standard breakdown products often exclude “home callouts,” which is a problem when your home is your motorhome

Specialist full-timing policies cost more than a standard touring policy, but they’re the only policy that’s legally valid for full-time motorhome residents.

Self-build and conversion insurance: what you need to declare

Self-converted vans represent some of the most valuable motorhomes on UK roads, with owners investing £10,000 to £50,000 in bespoke interiors, electrical systems, and specialist fittings.

Standard motorhome policies aren’t automatically designed for them.

To get the right cover for a self-build, you typically need to provide a declared conversion value, a photographic record of the build, confirmation of the V5C body type (it must show “motor caravan,” not “panel van”), and in some cases a gas safety certificate for LPG installations.

Some insurers also ask for proof of electrical sign-off if a 240V hookup system has been fitted.

🔧 Self-build: the agreed value rule

The real value of a self-converted campervan is usually in the conversion, not the base vehicle. A 2015 Transit van with a £22,000 handcrafted interior might have a market value of £28,000 as a van, but a replacement cost of £40,000 as a conversion. Always ask for agreed value cover on self-builds, and provide a full itemised build cost to your insurer.

What does motorhome insurance cost? Sample profiles

Indicative ranges only. Premiums depend on vehicle value, storage location, declared mileage, driving history, and insurer.

Profile Vehicle Storage Indicative annual premium
Couple, aged 45 and 47, 10 yrs NCD, 5,000 miles/yr Coach-built, £35,000 Driveway £350 to £480
Single driver, aged 62, 5 yrs NCD, 3,000 miles/yr A-class, £60,000 Secure storage facility £480 to £650
Family, parents aged 38 and 40, 3 yrs NCD, 8,000 miles/yr Low-profile, £42,000 Driveway £490 to £640
Solo full-timer, aged 35, no fixed address, 12,000 miles/yr Self-build conversion, £30,000 Various £500 to £800 (specialist policy)
Couple, aged 55 and 58, 8 yrs NCD, 4,000 miles/yr, extended Europe use American RV, £120,000 Specialist facility £900 to £1,500 (specialist broker)

How to bring your motorhome insurance premium down

Storage location has the single biggest impact on premium after vehicle value.

Insurers rate motorhomes stored in a locked garage or CASSOA-recognised storage site significantly lower than those stored on the street or a shared carpark. Moving from street parking to a recognised facility can knock 15% to 30% off your premium.

Other premium levers include declared annual mileage (limited mileage policies are available for owners who use their motorhome seasonally), security devices such as Thatcham-approved alarms and tracking units, membership of recognised motorhome clubs, and paying annually rather than monthly to avoid credit interest charges.

Many insurers offer 5% to 10% discounts for active members of the Camping and Caravanning Club or the Caravan and Motorhome Club.

Don’t overstate or understate your annual mileage. If you declare 3,000 miles but actually drive 9,000, the insurer can argue the risk was materially misrepresented under the Insurance Act 2015 and reduce or void your payout.

Track your actual mileage across a full season before picking a policy limit.

Five policy checks before you buy

  • [1]Settlement basis. Is it agreed value or market value? For motorhomes over £40,000, ask for agreed value before accepting a quote.
  • [2]Accessory limits. Check the default accessory limit. If your awning cost £1,800 and the policy caps accessories at £500, you’re underinsured from day one.
  • [3]European cover days and level. Confirm total days per year AND per trip, and whether the cover abroad is comprehensive or third party only.
  • [4]Windscreen sub-limit. A-class owners should confirm the windscreen replacement limit explicitly. Ask for the OEM replacement cost, not a third-party copy cap.
  • [5]Occupation clause. Confirm whether the policy permits the level of usage you intend. If you tour for more than 30 days at a time or use the vehicle as a primary residence, make sure the policy wording explicitly permits this.

📋 Before you get a quote: 8-point checklist

Have these details to hand. Getting them right at the quote stage prevents disputes at claim time.

  • V5C body type. Must show “motor caravan” not “panel van”
  • Vehicle MAM (maximum authorised mass). Confirms which licence category applies
  • Current market value of the motorhome, or conversion cost if self-built
  • List of accessories with individual values (awning, solar panels, satellite dish, bike rack)
  • Intended annual mileage and how many months per year you plan to use the vehicle
  • Storage location (driveway, locked garage, CASSOA-recognised facility, on-street)
  • European travel plans and maximum days per single trip abroad
  • Usage type. Occasional touring, seasonal, or full-time occupation

Frequently asked questions

Do I need motorhome insurance by law in the UK?
+

Yes. Motorhomes are motor vehicles and must have at least third party insurance under the Road Traffic Act 1988 if driven or parked on a public road. The only exception is a valid SORN, which means the vehicle can’t be on any public road at all. Driving without insurance carries 6 penalty points, an unlimited fine, and the risk of your motorhome being seized and crushed.

Can I insure a motorhome on my normal car insurance?
+

No. Standard car insurance doesn’t cover motorhomes. Motorhomes have a different V5C body classification (motor caravan), a different risk profile (habitation equipment, LPG, personal contents), and a significantly higher replacement cost. You need a specialist motorhome policy. Some very small campervans under 3.5 tonnes may be quotable on a modified van policy, but this is the exception rather than the rule, and it won’t cover habitation contents or accessories.

What driving licence do I need to drive a motorhome?
+

If you passed your driving test after 1 January 1997, your Category B licence covers motorhomes up to 3,500kg MAM. For motorhomes between 3,500kg and 7,500kg, you need a Category C1 licence. Drivers who passed before 1 January 1997 hold Category C1 automatically. Motorhomes over 7,500kg, including some American RVs and race trucks, need a full Category C licence. Always check your vehicle’s MAM before driving. Using the wrong licence category voids your insurance.

Is it cheaper to insure a motorhome than a car?
+

Often yes, despite the higher vehicle value. Motorhomes are typically driven far fewer miles than cars (many owners average 3,000 to 6,000 miles per year), stored securely when not in use, and driven by older, more experienced owners. These factors bring the statistical risk of a claim down. A £50,000 motorhome can cost around £500 per year to insure, which is comparable to or cheaper than many family cars worth half that amount.

Does motorhome insurance cover my belongings inside the vehicle?
+

Most comprehensive motorhome policies include personal contents cover, but with a limit, typically between £3,000 and £5,000. Fitted equipment such as a built-in cooker or shower unit is usually included in the vehicle’s declared value. Accessories such as awnings, bike racks, solar panels, and satellite dishes are usually covered only up to a separate, often low default limit. Home contents insurance is unlikely to cover items kept permanently in a motorhome. Check both policies for any overlap or gap.

Can I live in my motorhome full time and stay insured?
+

Yes, but you can’t use a standard touring policy. You have to declare continuous occupation to your insurer and take out a specialist full-timing or van-life policy. Standard touring policies contain exclusions for permanent habitation that will invalidate your cover if you live in the vehicle full time. Specialist full-timing policies typically cost more than standard touring policies and need a UK correspondence address.

Does motorhome insurance include European cover?
+

Most comprehensive policies include some European cover as standard, but the number of days varies from 30 to 365 depending on the insurer. Crucially, some policies only provide third party level cover abroad, not full comprehensive. If you plan extended European trips, confirm the total annual days, any per-trip limit, and whether the cover abroad matches your UK level. European breakdown cover is often sold separately, even on specialist motorhome policies.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance or financial advice. Premiums, cover and policy conditions vary by insurer. Always read the policy wording carefully and compare quotes from FCA-regulated brokers before buying. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), registration number 916241.

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Michael Harrington, Founder of MyMoneyComparison.com

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Michael Harrington
Founder & Director, MyMoneyComparison.com
Michael founded MyMoneyComparison.com in 2013 and has over a decade of experience in UK insurance and financial services. He leads editorial standards, broker partnerships, and compliance, working with FCA-authorised specialist brokers across the UK.

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Content is produced in collaboration with FCA-authorised insurance brokers and reviewed for accuracy and regulatory compliance. MyMoneyComparison.com Ltd is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN: 916241).