I’ve installed solar systems on four campervans. The first generated maybe 30% of what the marketing claimed. The second used a controller that wasted 25% of the available power. The third finally works properly, but it took me £340 in wasted components and two complete reinstallations to get there.
Between those three solar installations, I’ve wasted £115 on a panel that was basically a decorative roof ornament, £70 on controllers that threw away power, and countless hours troubleshooting why my “500Wh per day” panel was giving me 150Wh on a good day.
After 30 years as a maintenance manager, you’d think I’d understand electrical systems. And I do – for mains voltage in buildings. But solar on a moving vehicle in the UK climate? That’s different. The marketing is mostly lies, the performance is weather-dependent, and nobody tells you that your £300 solar setup will generate basically nothing for four months of the year.
This guide is everything I wish someone had told me before I bought my first solar panel. Not the California desert performance figures. Not the “perfect world” calculations. The actual reality of solar power in the UK, what genuinely works, and how to avoid the expensive mistakes I made.
This guide covers everything about Solar Power For Campervans that I wish someone had told me before I bought my first solar panel.
Why Solar Isn’t Magic (But It’s Still Worth It)
Let me start with uncomfortable truth: solar panels in the UK will not give you unlimited free power.
What solar marketing says: “200W panel generates 1000Wh per day!”
What actually happens in the UK:
- Perfect summer day: 500-600Wh (60% of claim)
- Cloudy summer day: 250-350Wh (30% of claim)
- Winter day: 80-150Wh (10% of claim)
- Overcast winter day: 30-60Wh (5% of claim)
But: Solar is still brilliant. Here’s why I have it despite the limitations:
Summer (May-September):
- My 200W setup generates 50-70Ah daily
- My usage is 60-70Ah daily
- Result: Indefinite off-grid capability
- No need to drive for charging
- Campsite fees saved: £25/night x 15 nights = £375 per summer
Spring/Autumn (March-April, October-November):
- Generation: 30-50Ah daily
- Usage: 60-70Ah daily
- Result: Extends autonomy from 2 days to 3-4 days
- Less frequent driving needed
Winter (December-February):
- Generation: 10-25Ah daily
- Usage: 70-80Ah daily (heating)
- Result: Helps but doesn’t solve power needs
- Still need to drive every 2-3 days
Is solar worth it?
For summer camping: Absolutely. Pays for itself in saved campsite fees.
For year-round: Helps significantly but doesn’t eliminate charging needs in winter.
For weekend warriors: Maybe. Depends on how often you camp April-September.
My Solar Journey (The Expensive Education)
Van #2 (2020): The Disappointing Panel
System:
- 100W flexible panel: £90
- Cheap PWM controller: £25
- Total: £115
Marketing claim: 500Wh per day (4.2Ah @ 12V)
Reality:
- Best summer day: 180Wh (1.5Ah @ 12V)
- Average summer day: 120Wh (10Ah)
- Winter day: 40Wh (3.3Ah)
Why so poor?
- Flexible panel was cheap (15% efficiency instead of 18%)
- PWM controller wasted power (more on this later)
- Panel laid flat (not angled toward sun)
- I didn’t understand solar at all
Cost: £115 for system that barely helped. Lesson learned expensively.
Van #3 (2022): The Better Panel, Wrong Controller
System:
- 200W rigid panel (2x100W): £180
- “Better” PWM controller: £45
- Total: £225
Marketing claim: 1000Wh per day
Reality:
- Best summer day: 450Wh (37Ah)
- Average summer day: 320Wh (27Ah)
- Winter day: 100Wh (8Ah)
Much better! But still only 40-50% of marketing claims.
Why?
- Better panels (18% efficiency, rigid)
- But PWM controller still wasting power
- Didn’t understand MPPT vs PWM
- Still learned the hard way
After 1 year: Realized PWM was limiting me. Upgraded to MPPT controller (£85). Immediate improvement:
- Best summer day: 600Wh (50Ah) – 33% increase
- Average summer day: 450Wh (37Ah) – 40% increase
- Winter day: 140Wh (12Ah) – 40% increase
Lesson: Controller matters as much as panel quality.
Van #4 (2023-present): Finally Got It Right
System:
- 200W rigid panels (2x100W Renogy): £180
- Victron MPPT 75/15 controller: £85
- Proper installation with cable management
- Total: £265
Performance (18 months of data):
Summer (June-August):
- Perfect day: 650Wh (54Ah)
- Good day: 500Wh (42Ah)
- Cloudy day: 350Wh (29Ah)
- Average: 460Wh (38Ah)
Spring/Autumn (March-May, Sept-Nov):
- Perfect day: 480Wh (40Ah)
- Good day: 380Wh (32Ah)
- Cloudy day: 220Wh (18Ah)
- Average: 340Wh (28Ah)
Winter (December-February):
- Perfect day: 240Wh (20Ah)
- Good day: 180Wh (15Ah)
- Cloudy day: 80Wh (7Ah)
- Average: 160Wh (13Ah)
This is realistic UK performance. Still only 40-50% of marketing claims, but with proper MPPT controller, it’s actually useful.
Total wasted on learning: £115 (inadequate first system) + £70 (PWM controllers that wasted power) = £185
But knowledge gained: Priceless.
Understanding Solar Basics (The Boring But Essential Bit)
Skip this if you just want to be told what to buy. But understanding helps make better decisions.
How Solar Panels Actually Work
Solar panels convert sunlight to electricity using photovoltaic cells:
- Photons (sunlight) hit silicon cells
- Electrons get excited and move
- This creates DC current
- Controller regulates this to charge battery
Important: Panels generate voltage and current. Both matter.
Typical 100W panel specs:
- Voltage at maximum power (Vmp): 18-20V
- Current at maximum power (Imp): 5-5.5A
- Power: 100W (at peak conditions)
But your battery needs:
- Voltage: 14.4V for charging
- Current: As much as possible
The controller’s job: Convert 18-20V from panel to 14.4V for battery, while maximizing current.
Peak Sun Hours (Why Marketing Numbers Are Lies)
Panels are rated at “1000W per square meter” of sunlight. This is called “Standard Test Conditions” (STC).
STC conditions:
- Bright sun, directly overhead
- 25°C panel temperature
- No clouds, no atmosphere interference
- Perfect alignment
Reality in the UK:
- Sun is never directly overhead (we’re at 51-58°N latitude)
- Clouds constantly
- Cool temperatures (good) but low sun angle (bad)
- Panels flat on roof (not angled)
Peak sun hours in UK:
Summer:
- South England: 4-5 hours per day
- Scotland: 3-4 hours per day
Spring/Autumn:
- South England: 2.5-3.5 hours per day
- Scotland: 2-3 hours per day
Winter:
- South England: 1-1.5 hours per day
- Scotland: 0.5-1 hour per day
Example calculation:
200W panel x 4 peak hours = 800Wh theoretical maximum
But:
- Panel efficiency losses: -15% = 680Wh
- Controller losses (PWM): -25% = 510Wh
- Controller losses (MPPT): -7% = 633Wh
- Temperature losses: -5% = 600Wh
- Wiring losses: -3% = 582Wh
- Flat mounting (not tilted): -15% = 495Wh
Real-world output: 495Wh on perfect UK summer day
This matches my experience exactly.
Temperature Effects
Counterintuitive: Solar panels work BETTER in cold weather.
Panel efficiency by temperature:
- 25°C (STC): 100% rated output
- 15°C (UK summer): 105% rated output
- 5°C (UK winter): 110% rated output
- 45°C (hot roof in sun): 85% rated output
Why this matters:
Summer: Panel heats to 50-60°C on roof. Loses 15-20% efficiency to heat.
Winter: Panel stays 5-15°C. Gains 5-10% efficiency from cold.
But: Winter has fewer sun hours and lower sun angle, so still generates less overall.
My observation: Coldest clearest winter days (January, Scotland, -2°C) generate amazing power per sun hour. But only 1.5 hours of useful sun, so total still low.
Solar Panel Types: What Actually Matters
I’ve used flexible and rigid panels. Here’s what you need to know.
Monocrystalline vs Polycrystalline
Monocrystalline:
- Made from single silicon crystal
- Efficiency: 18-22%
- Look: Black, uniform color
- Cost: £90-£150 per 100W
- What I use
Polycrystalline:
- Made from multiple silicon crystals
- Efficiency: 15-17%
- Look: Blue, mottled appearance
- Cost: £70-£120 per 100W
- Older technology
Efficiency matters in vans: You have limited roof space. Higher efficiency = more power per square meter.
My recommendation: Buy monocrystalline. 18%+ efficiency minimum. The extra £20-30 per panel is worth it.
Rigid vs Flexible Panels
Rigid panels:
Pros:
- Higher efficiency (18-21%)
- Longer lifespan (20-25 years)
- Better heat dissipation (air gap under panel)
- Cheaper per watt
- More durable
- Easier to replace if damaged
Cons:
- Heavier (6-7kg per 100W)
- Need mounting brackets
- Higher profile (more visible, wind resistance)
- Harder to fit curved roofs
Flexible panels:
Pros:
- Lightweight (2kg per 100W)
- Stick directly to roof (low profile)
- Fit curved roofs
- Stealthier (less obvious)
- Easier installation
Cons:
- Lower efficiency (15-17%)
- Shorter lifespan (5-8 years)
- Can’t dissipate heat well (stick to hot roof)
- More expensive per watt
- Can’t be removed easily
- Delamination issues common
My experience:
Van #2: Flexible 100W panel (£90)
- Stuck to roof with 3M tape
- After 2 years: Output dropped to 60% (delamination suspected)
- Hot in summer (panel temperature 65°C+)
- Disappointing performance
Van #3 & #4: Rigid panels (2x100W, £180 total)
- Mounted on brackets with 10mm air gap
- After 3 years: Still performing at 95%+ of original
- Cooler (air circulates underneath)
- Much better performance
Verdict: Buy rigid panels unless you absolutely need flexible for curved roof. Rigid are better in every way except installation complexity.
Best rigid panels for vans:
Budget (£80-£110 per 100W):
- Renogy 100W: £95
- ECO-WORTHY 100W: £85
- Good performance, decent warranty
Mid-range (£110-£140 per 100W):
- Victron 100W: £125
- Better efficiency, longer warranty
Premium (£150-£200 per 100W):
- SunPower: £180
- 22% efficiency (highest available)
- Only worth it if roof space is extremely limited
I use Renogy 100W rigid panels (2x, total £190 in 2022). They’re still going strong, perform well, good value.
Panel Sizing: How Much Do You Need?
Step 1: Calculate daily usage
From my battery guide, my usage:
- Summer: 65Ah daily
- Winter: 75Ah daily
Step 2: Decide on solar contribution
Conservative (50% from solar in summer):
- Need: 32-38Ah from solar
- Panel: 100W minimum
Balanced (80% from solar in summer):
- Need: 52-60Ah from solar
- Panel: 200W minimum
Aggressive (100% from solar year-round):
- Impossible in UK without massive array
- Even 400W won’t cover winter usage
My choice: 200W panels. Gives me 100% coverage summer, 40-50% coverage winter.
Space constraints:
100W panel: Typically 1000mm x 670mm (0.67 sq m) 200W panel: Two 100W panels = 1.34 sq m
Check your roof space before buying.
My Transit Custom roof: 2.5m x 1.7m = 4.25 sq m available. 200W of panels uses 31%. Plenty of room.
My recommendation by usage:
Light use (weekend warrior, 30-40Ah daily):
- 100W panel: £95
- Adequate for summer, minimal winter help
Regular use (60-70Ah daily):
- 200W panels: £180-190
- Good coverage summer, helps significantly in winter
- This is what I have
Heavy use (80-100Ah daily):
- 300W panels: £270-300
- Better winter performance, full summer coverage
- Requires good roof space
Full-time (100Ah+ daily):
- 400W+ panels: £360-450
- Even this won’t cover UK winter completely
- But maximizes solar contribution
Solar Controllers: PWM vs MPPT (This Cost Me £70)
The controller is as important as the panel. I learned this expensively.
PWM (Pulse Width Modulation)
How it works:
- Directly connects panel to battery
- “Pulses” connection on/off rapidly
- Battery voltage pulls panel voltage down
- Current limited by battery voltage
Example:
- Panel produces: 18V at 5.5A = 99W
- Battery needs: 14.4V
- PWM connects panel directly
- Panel pulled down to 14.4V at 5.5A = 79W
- Lost: 20W (20% of available power)
Pros:
- Cheap (£20-£45)
- Simple
- Reliable (no complex electronics)
Cons:
- Wastes 20-30% of panel power
- Inefficient
- Not worth the saving
My experience (Van #2 & #3):
Van #2: Cheap PWM (£25)
- 100W panel giving maybe 70W maximum
Van #3: “Better” PWM (£45)
- 200W panels giving maybe 140-150W maximum
Both wasted huge amounts of power.
Verdict: Don’t buy PWM controllers. The £30-40 saving costs you 25% of your solar power forever. False economy.
MPPT (Maximum Power Point Tracking)
How it works:
- Monitors panel voltage and current
- Finds “maximum power point” (optimal voltage for maximum watts)
- Converts higher voltage to lower voltage with higher current
- Maintains battery at correct charging voltage
- Adjusts constantly for changing conditions
Example:
- Panel produces: 18V at 5.5A = 99W
- Battery needs: 14.4V
- MPPT converts 18V to 14.4V
- Current increases: 99W ÷ 14.4V = 6.9A
- Controller efficiency: 93-97%
- Delivered: 92-96W (93-97% of available power)
Pros:
- 25-40% more power than PWM (especially in winter)
- Smart (adjusts to conditions)
- Proper battery charging (multi-stage)
- Can combine multiple panels
- Temperature compensation
- Battery type profiles (AGM, Lithium, etc.)
Cons:
- More expensive (£60-£150)
- More complex (more to go wrong)
My experience (Van #4):
Upgraded from PWM to Victron MPPT 75/15 (£85).
Immediate results:
- Same 200W panels
- Output increased 30-40% instantly
- Summer: 37Ah → 50Ah per day
- Winter: 8Ah → 12Ah per day
18 months later: Still performing brilliantly. Best £85 I spent.
Popular MPPT controllers:
Budget (£60-£90):
- Renogy Rover 20A: £65
- EPSolar 20A: £75
- Basic features, adequate performance
Mid-range (£85-£130):
- Victron MPPT 75/15: £85 (what I use)
- Victron MPPT 100/20: £115
- Renogy Rover Elite 40A: £120
- Bluetooth monitoring, better features
Premium (£150-£200):
- Victron MPPT 100/30: £165
- For 300W+ systems
- Professional grade
Controller sizing:
Match controller to your panel wattage and system voltage:
For 12V system:
- 100W panel: 10A controller minimum (I’d buy 15A)
- 200W panel: 15A controller minimum (I’d buy 20A)
- 300W panel: 25A controller minimum (I’d buy 30A)
- 400W panel: 30A+ controller
Voltage rating:
- 75V controllers: Handle up to 75V input (adequate for 1-3 panels)
- 100V controllers: Handle up to 100V input (better for multiple panels)
I use Victron MPPT 75/15:
- Handles my 200W panels (36V maximum in series)
- 15A output (actually draws 12-13A maximum)
- Bluetooth app (monitor performance)
- Perfect for my system
Verdict: Buy MPPT. Victron 75/15 (£85) for 100-200W systems. Worth every penny over PWM.
Installation: How to Actually Mount Panels
This is where it gets practical. Tools out, let’s mount some panels.
Roof Preparation
Step 1: Clean roof thoroughly
- Wash with soapy water
- Degrease with isopropyl alcohol
- Remove any rust or loose paint
- Let dry completely (24 hours)
Step 2: Plan layout
- Consider: Roof vents, windows, solar panels, roof bars
- Leave access to vent for maintenance
- Consider cable routing
- Mark positions with tape
Step 3: Check roof structure
- Where are the ribs/supports?
- Mount brackets into solid structure
- Don’t just screw into thin roof skin
Mounting Methods
Method 1: Brackets (What I Use)
Components needed:
- 4x mounting brackets per panel (£25-35 per set)
- Sikaflex 512 sealant (£12-18 per tube)
- Self-tapping screws (M6 or M8)
- Penny washers (spread load)
Process:
- Position brackets:
- Four corners of panel
- On roof ribs/supports
- Mark holes with pencil
- Drill pilot holes:
- 3mm pilot hole
- Check you haven’t gone through roof lining (I did this once, in van #2, had to patch ceiling)
- Apply Sikaflex:
- Generous amount on bracket base
- Around screw holes
- Don’t be shy – this is waterproofing
- Fix brackets:
- Self-tapping screws with penny washers
- Tight but not overtightened (can crack roof)
- Sikaflex squeezes out (good – wipe excess)
- Let cure:
- 24 hours minimum before mounting panel
- 48 hours before driving
- Mount panel:
- Panel sits on brackets with 10mm spacers (air gap)
- Bolt through panel frame to brackets
- Use spring washers (vibration resistance)
Pros:
- Easy to remove/replace panels
- Air gap keeps panels cool
- Professional appearance
- Adjustable (can tilt panels if desired)
Cons:
- Higher profile (8-10cm above roof)
- Wind resistance
- More visible
Cost per panel: £30-45 (brackets + sealant + screws)
Method 2: Adhesive (Flexible Panels Only)
Process:
- Clean roof thoroughly (degreased, dry)
- Apply Sikaflex or 3M VHB tape to panel back
- Position carefully (can’t reposition easily)
- Press firmly
- Weight panel for 24 hours
- Wait 48 hours before use
Pros:
- Low profile
- Simple installation
- Less drilling
Cons:
- Can’t remove panel without damage
- Panel heats up (no air gap)
- Hard to service
- Permanent
I’ve never used this method (always used rigid panels).
Cable Routing
From panels to controller location (typically near battery).
Route options:
Option 1: Through roof vent
- Easiest if you have roof vent near panels
- Run cable through vent hole (add grommet)
- My method
Option 2: Through new hole
- Drill hole in roof (20mm)
- Fit cable gland (waterproof)
- Apply Sikaflex around gland
- Professional but more drilling
Option 3: Through existing grommet
- Many vans have wiring grommets in roof
- Add solar cable through existing hole
- Check there’s space
Cable sizing for solar:
Depends on panel wattage and cable length.
For 200W system (17A maximum):
- 2m run: 4mm² cable
- 5m run: 6mm² cable
- 10m run: 10mm² cable
I use 6mm² cable (red and black, solar-rated) for my 8m run from roof to controller. Cost: £28 for 10m.
Critical: Use solar-rated cable. It’s UV resistant (won’t degrade in sun). Normal automotive cable will crack after 2-3 years in sun.
Connecting Panels
Series vs Parallel:
Series (what I use for 2x100W panels):
- Positive of panel 1 to negative of panel 2
- Remaining positive and negative to controller
- Voltage adds: 18V + 18V = 36V
- Current stays same: 5.5A
- Power: 36V x 5.5A = 198W
- Advantages: Lower current = thinner cable, less voltage drop
- Disadvantages: Shading one panel reduces both
Parallel:
- All positives together
- All negatives together
- To controller
- Voltage stays same: 18V
- Current adds: 5.5A + 5.5A = 11A
- Power: 18V x 11A = 198W
- Advantages: Shading one panel doesn’t affect other
- Disadvantages: Higher current = thicker cable needed
My setup: Two 100W panels in series (36V, 5.5A). Works perfectly with Victron 75/15 controller.
Fusing Solar (Essential)
Where fuses go:
- Between panels and controller (positive wire)
- As close to panels as practical
My fusing:
- 20A fuse in waterproof holder on roof
- Protects cable from panel to controller
Why: If cable shorts (chafed insulation, damage), fuse blows before cable melts.
Controller Installation
Location:
- Near battery (within 2m)
- Well-ventilated (gets warm under load)
- Dry
- Accessible (for monitoring/settings)
I mounted controller on wall near battery, 1.5m away.
Connections:
Input (from panels):
- Positive from panels (fused)
- Negative from panels
Output (to battery):
- Positive to battery (fused at battery end)
- Negative to battery
Order of connection (critical):
- Connect battery first (positive then negative)
- Then connect panels (positive then negative)
Why this order? Controller needs battery voltage to initialize. If you connect panels first, controller can be damaged.
My installation (Van #4):
Time taken: 6 hours (including planning, drilling, sealing, wiring)
Components:
- 2x Renogy 100W rigid panels: £190
- Mounting brackets (8 total): £35
- Victron MPPT 75/15: £85
- 6mm² solar cable (10m): £28
- Fuse holder + fuse: £8
- Sikaflex 512 (2 tubes): £24
- Screws and fixings: £12
- MC4 connectors: £15
Total: £397
Results: Flawless installation. No leaks. Perfect performance. 18 months later, still excellent.
Real UK Performance Data (From 18 Months of Monitoring)
Let me show you actual numbers from my system across all seasons.
System: 200W panels + Victron MPPT 75/15 + 105Ah lithium battery
Location: Mix of England (Bristol area) and Scotland (Highlands), with trips to Wales
Summer Performance (June-August)
Best day (July, cloudless):
- Morning (6am-12pm): 32Ah
- Afternoon (12pm-6pm): 22Ah
- Evening (6pm-9pm): 4Ah
- Total: 58Ah (696Wh)
Battery started at 68%, ended at 100%. Generated more than I used.
Average good day (sunny with some clouds):
- Total: 42Ah (504Wh)
Covers my 60-65Ah daily usage completely.
Cloudy day:
- Total: 28Ah (336Wh)
Doesn’t fully cover usage but extends autonomy significantly.
Worst summer day (heavy clouds, drizzle):
- Total: 14Ah (168Wh)
Better than nothing but not much help.
Summer average over 45 days: 38Ah per day (456Wh)
This matches the 460Wh average I mentioned earlier.
Spring/Autumn Performance (March-May, Sept-Nov)
Best day (April, clear):
- Total: 38Ah (456Wh)
Average day:
- Total: 28Ah (336Wh)
Covers about 40-45% of daily usage. Significantly extends autonomy.
Cloudy day:
- Total: 16Ah (192Wh)
Spring/autumn average over 60 days: 26Ah per day (312Wh)
Winter Performance (Dec-Feb)
Best day (January, Scotland, -2°C, crisp clear):
- Total: 18Ah (216Wh)
Panels ice cold (good for efficiency) but only 1.5 hours useful sun.
Average winter day:
- Total: 12Ah (144Wh)
This is maybe 15-20% of daily usage with heating. Helps but doesn’t solve power needs.
Overcast winter day (most days):
- Total: 6Ah (72Wh)
Basically nothing.
Winter average over 30 days: 11Ah per day (132Wh)
Reality: Winter solar in UK is disappointing. Even 200W barely makes a dent in 75-80Ah daily usage. You’ll still need to drive every 2-3 days.
Factors Affecting Output
What makes big difference:
1. Cloud cover (biggest factor):
- Thin clouds: -30% output
- Heavy clouds: -60% output
- Rain: -75% output
2. Sun angle:
- Summer noon (50° elevation): 100% potential
- Winter noon (15° elevation): 40% potential
3. Temperature:
- Cold panels: +5-10% output
- Hot panels (60°C): -15% output
4. Dirt/grime:
- Clean: 100% output
- Light dust: -5% output
- Bird droppings: -20% output (local shading)
- Heavy dirt: -30% output
I clean panels every 2-3 months. Makes noticeable difference.
Real-World Autonomy Impact
Before solar (200Ah AGM, Van #3):
- Summer: 3 days autonomy
- Winter: 2 days autonomy
After solar (105Ah lithium + 200W solar, Van #4):
- Summer: Indefinite (solar covers usage)
- Winter: 3 days autonomy (solar extends from 2 to 3 days)
Solar added 50% to winter autonomy, made summer essentially unlimited.
Value calculation:
Summer camping: 15 nights average per summer
Without solar: Need campsite every 3 days = 5 nights @ £25 = £125
With solar: Need campsite never (for power) = £0
Annual saving: £125
System cost: £397
Payback: 3.2 years
I’m in year 2. By year 4, it’s paid for itself. Years 5-25 are pure saving.
Installation Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Mistake 1: Cheap Flexible Panel
What I did: Bought £90 flexible panel thinking it was great deal
Reality:
- 15% efficiency (vs 18% for rigid)
- Delaminated after 2 years (output dropped to 60%)
- Stuck to roof (couldn’t remove without damage)
- Hot (no air circulation)
Cost: £90 wasted + effort to remove
Lesson: Buy rigid panels. Better efficiency, longer life, easier to replace.
Mistake 2: PWM Controller
What I did: Thought £25-45 PWM was adequate
Reality:
- Wasted 25% of available power
- 200W panels generating 140-150W
Cost: £70 on two PWM controllers + lost generation
Lesson: Spend £85 on MPPT. 30-40% more power forever.
Mistake 3: Poor Sealing
What I did: Skimped on Sikaflex around brackets
Result: Small leak after 3 months. Water dripping onto ceiling.
Cost: £35 to remove, reseal, repaint ceiling
Lesson: Generous Sikaflex. Waterproofing is critical.
Mistake 4: Drilling Through Roof Lining
What I did: Didn’t check depth. Drilled pilot hole too deep.
Result: Hole in ceiling lining. Had to patch and repaint.
Cost: £25 in materials + embarrassment
Lesson: Know your roof structure. Short pilot holes. Check inside before going deeper.
Mistake 5: Cable Too Thin
What I did: Used 2.5mm² cable for 200W system (10m run)
Result: Voltage drop. Lost 0.8V over 10m. Lost 5-8% power.
Cost: £28 for new 6mm² cable
Lesson: Use proper cable sizing. 6mm² for my 10m run.
Mistake 6: No Fusing
What I did: Didn’t fuse between panels and controller
Why bad: If cable shorts, no protection. Fire risk.
Cost: Lucky – no fire. Added fuse (£8)
Lesson: Always fuse positive wire from panels.
Mistake 7: Wrong Connection Order
What I did: Connected panels to controller before battery
Result: Controller error light. Freaked out. (Controller was actually fine, just confused without battery reference)
Cost: 30 minutes of panic
Lesson: Always connect battery first, then panels.
Monitoring Your Solar System
Knowing what your solar is actually doing matters.
Basic monitoring (free on most MPPT controllers):
- LED lights showing state (bulk, absorption, float, off)
- Tells you it’s working but not details
Better monitoring (£0-£20):
- Voltmeter showing battery voltage
- Approximate idea of charging
- Cheap (£8-12 for digital voltmeter)
Professional monitoring (Bluetooth MPPT controllers):
- Real-time data (voltage, current, power, energy)
- Historical data (daily/weekly/monthly generation)
- Settings adjustable via app
- This is what I have
My setup:
Victron MPPT 75/15 with Bluetooth (£85 total, Bluetooth built-in).
VictronConnect app on phone shows:
- Current generation: 48W
- Panel voltage: 35V
- Battery voltage: 14.4V
- Today’s generation: 38Ah
- Yesterday: 42Ah
- Last week: 285Ah
Brilliant. Know exactly what solar is doing.
What I check:
- Morning: Check yesterday’s generation
- Mid-day: Check current generation (making sure it’s working)
- Evening: Check total for day
Takes 30 seconds. Helps identify issues (dirty panels, shading, controller problems).
Worth paying extra for Bluetooth MPPT? Absolutely. The data is invaluable.
Maintenance (Surprisingly Important)
Solar panels need maintenance. Not much, but ignoring it costs power.
Every 2-3 months:
1. Clean panels:
- Hose with water
- Soft brush for stubborn dirt
- Don’t use harsh chemicals
- Don’t use abrasive materials
Bird droppings are worst – they shade cells significantly. Clean immediately.
Cleaning impact:
- Dirty panels: 78% output
- Clean panels: 100% output
That’s 22% power loss from dirt. Worth the 10 minutes to clean.
2. Check connections:
- Terminals tight
- No corrosion
- Cables not chafed
- Sealant still intact around roof penetrations
3. Check output:
- Compare to previous months
- Significant drop (20%+) might indicate panel damage or controller issue
Annually:
1. Reseal roof penetrations:
- Check Sikaflex around brackets
- Add more if needed
- Better to over-seal than under-seal
2. Check panel mounting:
- Bolts tight (vibration can loosen)
- Brackets secure
- No cracks in roof around mounts
3. Check cable:
- UV damage (cable going brittle)
- Insulation intact
- Replace if showing wear
My maintenance routine:
Quick clean every 2 months: 15 minutes
Annual inspection: 1 hour
Problems I’ve found through maintenance:
- Bird droppings (common – clean weekly in some locations)
- Loose MC4 connector (panel to cable connection – tightened, problem solved)
- Sikaflex crack around one bracket (resealed, no leak developed)
None of these would have been obvious without checking. All would have caused issues eventually.
Combining Solar with Other Charging
Solar is brilliant but it’s not the only charging source. My complete charging setup:
1. Solar (200W + MPPT): £265
- Summer: 100% of needs
- Winter: 15-20% of needs
2. Alternator charging (DC-DC 18A): £157
- Provides: 18Ah per hour driving
- Use: Primarily in winter
3. Mains hook-up (CTEK charger): £72
- Use: Occasionally on campsites
Total charging infrastructure: £494
How they work together:
Summer typical day:
- Solar generates: 42Ah
- Usage: 65Ah
- Shortfall: 23Ah
- Drive 1.5 hours every 4-5 days to top up
Actually, solar usually covers everything April-September. Rarely need alternator.
Winter typical day:
- Solar generates: 12Ah
- Usage: 75Ah
- Shortfall: 63Ah
- Drive 3.5 hours (63Ah ÷ 18A) or 2 hours on day 1, 2 hours on day 3
Winter needs alternator charging regularly.
System redundancy:
If solar fails: Alternator covers everything (just drive more)
If alternator fails: Solar covers summer, need campsites in winter
If both fail: Mains hook-up on campsites
Having multiple charging sources means no single point of failure.
Complete Solar System Costs
Budget System (100W + PWM) – £145-£180
For: Weekend warriors, light usage, tight budget
Components:
- 100W rigid panel: £95
- PWM controller: £35
- Mounting brackets: £30
- Cable (6mm², 5m): £15
- Fuse holder + fuse: £8
- Fixings and sealant: £20
Total: £203
Performance:
- Summer: 20-25Ah per day
- Winter: 6-10Ah per day
Verdict: Helps in summer. Barely useful in winter. PWM wastes power but keeps cost down.
Standard System (200W + MPPT) – £330-£400
For: Regular users, year-round camping, best value
Components:
- 2x 100W rigid panels: £190
- Victron MPPT 75/15: £85
- Mounting brackets (8): £35
- Cable (6mm², 10m): £28
- Fuse holder + fuse: £10
- MC4 connectors: £15
- Fixings and sealant: £35
Total: £398
This is what I have.
Performance:
- Summer: 38-50Ah per day (covers usage)
- Winter: 12-18Ah per day (extends autonomy)
Verdict: Sweet spot. Adequate power for real use. Pays for itself in 3-4 years.
Large System (400W + MPPT) – £620-£720
For: Heavy users, full-time living, maximum solar
Components:
- 4x 100W rigid panels: £380
- Victron MPPT 100/30: £165
- Mounting brackets (16): £70
- Cable (10mm², 10m): £60
- Fuse holder + fuse: £12
- MC4 connectors: £18
- Fixings and sealant: £60
Total: £765
Performance:
- Summer: 80-100Ah per day (excess power)
- Winter: 25-35Ah per day (helps significantly)
Verdict: Best solar possible for UK van. Still won’t cover winter usage completely, but maximizes solar contribution.
Three Realistic Scenarios
Scenario 1: Sarah – Weekend Camper (30 nights/year)
Usage: 40Ah daily (lights, phone charging, occasional laptop)
Solar: 100W panel + PWM controller = £145
Performance:
- Summer weekends: Solar generates 20Ah, she uses 40Ah = needs to drive or use campsite every 2-3 days
- Acceptable for occasional use
Verdict: Basic solar helps but not essential. Could skip solar and just use alternator charging.
Scenario 2: Me – Regular User (80-100 nights/year)
Usage: 65Ah daily (lights, fridge, laptop, water pump)
Solar: 200W panels + MPPT = £398
Performance:
- Summer: Solar generates 38-50Ah, covers 60-80% of usage = nearly indefinite autonomy
- Winter: Solar generates 12Ah, covers 15-20% = extends autonomy from 2 days to 3 days
Verdict: Essential. Transforms summer camping. Helps significantly in winter. Paid for itself in 3 years.
Scenario 3: Tom & Lisa – Full-Time (300+ nights/year)
Usage: 85Ah daily (lights, fridge, laptop, phone, water pump, occasional inverter)
Solar: 400W panels + MPPT = £765
Performance:
- Summer: Solar generates 80-100Ah, covers 95-115% = indefinite autonomy, slight excess
- Winter: Solar generates 25-35Ah, covers 30-40% = extends autonomy from 2.5 days to 4 days
Verdict: Necessary. Maximum practical solar for UK. Still need alternator charging in winter but solar contribution is significant.
Common Questions (From Experience)
Q: Can I install solar myself?
Yes. I did. If you can use a drill and crimper, you can install solar. Takes 4-6 hours.
Q: Will solar keep my battery charged if I don’t use the van for weeks?
Summer: Yes, easily. My van sits for 2-3 weeks sometimes. Battery stays 100%.
Winter: Depends. If you have parasitic draws (alarms, trackers), maybe not. My battery drops 5% per week in winter with solar.
Q: Do I need planning permission for panels on my van?
No. It’s a vehicle modification, not a building.
Q: Can I run 240V appliances from solar?
Only with an inverter, and inefficiently.
Example: 600W inverter from solar
- Panel generates: 200W
- Battery: 105Ah @ 12V = 1260Wh stored
- Inverter draws: 50A @ 12V for 600W output
- Runtime: 1260Wh ÷ 600W = 2.1 hours maximum
Solar generates slower than inverter consumes. You’ll drain battery.
Better: Use 12V appliances. Much more efficient.
Q: What happens in winter when panels are covered in snow?
They don’t generate. Snow must be cleared. I brush snow off panels (it’s usually not that stuck).
Q: Can I tilt panels to catch more sun?
Yes, but complicated. Requires hinged mounting. I keep mine flat (simpler, lower profile). Loss is maybe 15-20% efficiency but worth it for simplicity.
Q: Will partial shading ruin output?
Yes. Shading even 10% of one panel can reduce output 40-60% (cells are in series).
Panel placement: Avoid areas that get shaded by roof vent, satellite dish, roof bars.
Q: How long will panels last?
Rigid panels: 20-25 years (gradual degradation to 80% of original)
Flexible panels: 5-8 years (often fail sooner from delamination)
I’m 3 years into rigid panels. Still 95%+ of original output.
My Final Recommendations
After three solar installations, £185 in wasted components, and 18 months of detailed monitoring:
For most people (regular campers, 50-100 nights/year):
Buy 200W rigid panels (2x100W) + Victron MPPT 75/15.
Components:
- 2x Renogy 100W rigid panels: £190
- Victron MPPT 75/15 (Bluetooth): £85
- Mounting brackets: £35
- 6mm² cable: £28
- Fuse holder: £10
- MC4 connectors: £15
- Fixings/sealant: £35
Total: £398
This gives you:
- Summer: Near-indefinite autonomy
- Winter: Extends autonomy 50%
- Payback: 3-4 years
- Lifespan: 20+ years
This is exactly what I have. Zero regrets.
For light users (weekends only, 20-40 nights/year):
Consider skipping solar entirely. Use alternator charging + occasional campsite.
Or buy 100W panel + basic MPPT (£180 total) for summer help.
For heavy users (full-time, 200+ nights/year):
Buy 300-400W panels + Victron MPPT 100/30.
Maximum practical solar for UK van. Won’t cover winter completely but maximizes contribution.
Total: £620-£765
Final Thoughts
Solar in the UK isn’t perfect. You won’t get the performance marketing promises. Winter output is disappointing. You’ll still need other charging methods.
But summer solar is brilliant. May-September, my 200W system covers 100% of my power needs. I can wild camp indefinitely. No campsites. No driving for charging. Just free solar power.
That’s worth £398 to me. Paid for itself in saved campsite fees in 3 years. Years 4-25 are pure saving.
If I built van #5 tomorrow, I’d buy exactly the same system. 200W rigid panels. Victron MPPT. Proper mounting. That’s the sweet spot for UK vanlife.
Now stop reading, buy some solar panels, and enjoy free power for the next 20 years. Just don’t expect miracles in December.
After three decades working with building electrical systems, you’d think I’d breeze through 12V van wiring. Wrong. Vehicle electrical systems have their own peculiarities,…
I’ve built four campervans with tools ranging from a few quid to several hundred. I’m lucky enough to have most tools I’d ever need, but for those of you that are new to van conversions, hopefully this guide on Essential Tools And Materials For Campervan Conversions will give you a good starting point.
After 30 years as a maintenance manager, you’d think I’d know how to do it all. And for building maintenance, I do. But van conversions are different. The tools you need, the materials that work, and the techniques that matter are specific to working in a cramped metal box with curves, ribs, and awkward angles.
This guide is everything I’ve learned about tools and materials across four builds. Not what the marketing says you need. Not what professional converters use (they have different priorities). What you actually need for a DIY conversion that’ll work properly and last.
The Honest Cost Reality
Let me start with the uncomfortable truth: tools cost money. Good tools cost more money. And you need more tools than you think.
But here’s the thing: those tools have also built two garden sheds, countless furniture pieces, home repairs, and helped three mates with their conversions. Cost per project is actually reasonable.
If you’re building one van and starting from scratch:
- Minimum viable toolkit: £280-£400
- Comfortable toolkit: £600-£850
- Professional-grade toolkit: £1,200-£1,800
You can reduce this by borrowing, buying second-hand, or choosing budget brands strategically. I’ll tell you where to save and where not to.
Power Tools: What You Actually Need
I’m going to be brutally honest about each tool. Some you need. Some are nice to have. Some are complete wastes of money for van building.
Cordless Drill/Driver (ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL)
What it does: Drilling holes, driving screws, mixing paint/adhesive
Why you need it: You’ll use this constantly. Hundreds of screws. Dozens of holes. Every single day of the build.
Budget option (£45-£80):
- Ryobi ONE+ 18V
- Bosch Universal 18V
- Worx 20V
These will do the job. Just. The batteries don’t last long. The chuck can be wobbly. But for one van build, they’re adequate.
My recommendation (£100-£180):
- Makita DHP485 18V (£125 for tool + 2 batteries + charger)
- DeWalt DCD796 18V (£140 for kit)
- Milwaukee M18 (£155 for kit)
Why spend more? Battery life (you’re not stopping every 20 minutes). Power (actually drills through metal easily). Reliability (doesn’t strip screws or slip). Warranty (they’ll actually honor it).
Premium option (£200-£350):
- Festool
- Hilti
- Milwaukee M18 Fuel
Unless you’re a professional or doing multiple conversions, don’t bother. Diminishing returns.
What I use: Makita DHP485. Had it 8 years. Built four vans, two sheds, countless projects. One battery replacement (£45). Zero regrets. Would buy again tomorrow.
Verdict: Buy Makita, DeWalt, or Milwaukee. 18V system. Get the kit with two batteries and charger. Budget £120-£180.
Impact Driver (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED)
What it does: Drives screws (much better than a drill/driver)
Why you need it: Seriously, once you use an impact driver for screws, you’ll wonder how you lived without it. No cam-out. No stripped heads. Just drives screws perfectly every time.
Do you NEED it? Technically no. Practically yes.
Budget option (£50-£90):
- Ryobi ONE+ 18V Impact Driver
- Same battery system as your drill (this matters)
My recommendation (£95-£150):
- Makita DTD154 (£95 bare tool, or £145 with battery/charger)
- DeWalt DCF887 (£110 bare)
- Milwaukee M18 (£120 bare)
Buy “bare tool” if you already have batteries from your drill. Buy the kit if this is your first 18V tool.
What I use: Makita DTD154. Hundreds of screws driven perfectly. Still going strong after 6 years.
Verdict: Buy if budget allows (£95-£150). You’ll thank me when you’re driving your 500th screw and it’s still easy.
Jigsaw (ESSENTIAL)
What it does: Cuts curves, cuts holes (windows, vents, sinks), cuts worktops to size
Why you need it: You’ll cut dozens of curved pieces. Hundreds of cuts total. Can’t do this with any other tool safely.
Budget option (£30-£60):
- Ryobi 18V cordless (£55)
- Bosch PST 700 E corded (£45)
- Erbauer corded (£35 from Screwfix)
These cut. That’s about all I can say. They vibrate a lot. The blade wobbles. Cuts aren’t perfectly square. But they work.
My recommendation (£80-£140):
- Bosch PST 18 LI cordless (£110)
- Makita DJV182 cordless (£125)
- DeWalt DCS334 cordless (£95)
Better blade guidance. Less vibration. Cuts stay square. Variable speed (crucial for different materials). Orbital action (faster cuts in wood).
Premium option (£150-£300):
- Festool PSC 420
- Bosch GST 18V-LI
Only worth it if you’re doing lots of fine woodwork. Overkill for van building.
Blade advice: Buy good blades separately. The blades that come with jigsaws are rubbish. I use:
- Bosch T244D (fast cuts in wood, £8 for pack of 5)
- Bosch T118B (metal cutting, £12 for pack of 5)
- Bosch T101B (clean cuts in ply, £7 for pack of 5)
You’ll go through 15-20 blades in a build. Budget £40-£60 for blades.
Verdict: Buy a £80-£140 jigsaw with good blade guidance. Buy decent blades separately. Don’t cheap out here.
Circular Saw (USEFUL BUT NOT ESSENTIAL)
What it does: Cuts straight lines in sheet materials (ply, worktops)
Why you might need it: Faster than a jigsaw for long straight cuts. More accurate for sheet material.
Why you might not: You can do everything with a jigsaw (just slower).
Van #2: Bought a Makita DSS611 cordless circular saw (£120). Massively faster for cutting ply sheets. Much more accurate.
Budget option (£50-£85):
- Ryobi 18V cordless (£75)
- Evolution corded (£55)
- Erbauer corded (£50)
My recommendation (£100-£160):
- Makita DSS611 18V (£120)
- DeWalt DCS391 18V (£135)
- Milwaukee M18 (£145)
What I use: Makita DSS611. Cuts ply and worktops beautifully. Battery lasts ages. No regrets.
Verdict: Nice to have if budget allows. Not essential if you have a good jigsaw and patience. Buy if you’re cutting lots of sheet material.
Orbital Sander (ESSENTIAL)
What it does: Smooths wood, removes paint, prepares surfaces
Why you need it: You can’t build furniture without sanding. You could sand by hand but your arm will fall off.
Budget option (£25-£45):
- Ryobi 18V cordless (£40)
- Black & Decker corded (£28)
- Erbauer corded (£25)
These work. They’re loud and vibrate a lot. But they sand.
My recommendation (£50-£95):
- Makita DBO180 18V cordless (£75)
- Bosch PSM 200 AES corded (£65)
- DeWalt DCW210 18V cordless (£85)
Less vibration = less fatigue. Better dust collection = healthier lungs. Faster sanding.
What I use: Makita DBO180. Sanded all the furniture in all four vans. Still going. Brilliant tool.
Sandpaper: Buy variety packs (40, 80, 120, 240 grit). You’ll use 30-50 sheets in a build. Budget £25-£35.
Verdict: Essential. Budget £50-£95. Get cordless if you’re on the 18V battery platform already.
Angle Grinder (ONLY IF YOU HAVE METAL WORK)
What it does: Cuts metal, grinds welds, removes rust
Why you might need it: If you have welded shelving or rust to remove.
Why you might not: If your van is clean and you’re not cutting metal, skip it.
I needed it in van #1 (ex-fleet van with welded metal shelving). Didn’t need it in vans #2-4.
Budget option (£25-£45):
- Erbauer 115mm corded (£28)
- Evolution 115mm cordless (£40)
My recommendation (£50-£95):
- Makita DGA504 18V cordless (£90)
- DeWalt DCG405 18V cordless (£85)
What I use: Makita DGA504. Used it extensively in van #1, barely in others. Still works perfectly.
Safety: This is the most dangerous tool in the list. Face shield, gloves, long sleeves mandatory. No exceptions.
Verdict: Only buy if you know you need it. Rent it for a day (£15-£25) if you just need to remove some brackets.
Multi-Tool / Oscillating Tool (USEFUL FOR AWKWARD CUTS)
What it does: Cuts in tight spaces, plunge cuts, detail work
Why it’s useful: Getting into corners. Cutting around ribs. Trimming installed pieces.
Do you need it? Probably not for your first van. Useful but not essential.
Budget option (£30-£60):
- Ryobi 18V cordless (£55)
- Erbauer corded (£35)
My recommendation (£70-£130):
- Makita DTM51 18V cordless (£95)
- Bosch PMF 250 CES (£85)
What I use: Makita DTM51. Brilliant for awkward cuts. Worth having if you’re doing multiple builds.
Verdict: Skip it for your first build unless you spot a specific need. Add it later if you build another van.
What You DON’T Need (Despite What YouTube Says)
Router: Unless you’re making fancy edge profiles, you don’t need this.
Table saw: Way too big for van building. Circular saw or jigsaw does everything you need.
Planer: You’re buying planed timber. You don’t need to plane it again.
Biscuit joiner: Nice for furniture making. Overkill for van builds. Screws and glue work fine.
Nailer: Tried using a pin nailer in van #3. Pins didn’t hold in ply properly near edges. Went back to screws.
Welder: Unless you’re building a custom metal frame, you don’t need to weld anything.
Hand Tools: The Unsexy Essentials
Power tools get the glory. Hand tools do the actual work.
Measuring and Marking (CRITICAL – DON’T SKIP THESE)
Tape measure (£5-£15): Get a good 5m tape (Stanley FatMax, £12). Not the £2.99 ones that break after a week.
Actually buy two. You’ll lose one. I guarantee it.
Laser measure (£25-£85): Not essential but brilliant for measuring long distances and heights. I use a Bosch GLM 30 (£45). Paid for itself in time saved.
Spirit level (£8-£25): Get a decent 60cm level. Vans aren’t level. Furniture must be. I use a Stanley FatMax (£15).
Combination square (£8-£25): For marking 90-degree angles and checking squareness. Essential for furniture. Bahco 400mm (£18) is excellent.
Marking pencils (£3): Buy proper carpenter’s pencils. Buy 10. You’ll lose them all.
Chalk line (£6): For marking long straight lines. Stanley (£6). Simple and useful.
Cutting and Shaping
Handsaw (£12-£28): Even with power saws, you need a handsaw. Stanley FatMax (£15) is fine.
Hacksaw (£8-£18): For cutting metal (battery terminals, brackets, conduit). Bahco 319 (£12).
Files (£15-£30): Set of metal files for cleaning up cuts and deburring. Draper 200mm set (£18).
Craft knife (£3-£8): Stanley FatMax (£5). Buy 100 spare blades (£8). You’ll go through loads.
Rasp or Surform (£8-£18): For shaping wood quickly. Stanley Surform (£12).
Fixing and Fastening
Screwdrivers (£15-£45): Despite having an impact driver, you need hand screwdrivers. Tight spaces. Delicate work.
Wera or Bahco sets (£25-£35 for good set). Get:
- Phillips: PH1, PH2, PH3
- Flathead: 3mm, 5mm, 8mm
- Pozidrive: PZ1, PZ2, PZ3
Socket set (£25-£80): 3/8″ drive socket set (Halfords Advanced, £45). You’ll use this for bolts, nuts, removing van panels.
Adjustable spanner set (£15-£35): Bahco 9031 set (£28). Two adjustable spanners (150mm and 250mm).
Pliers set (£20-£45):
- Combination pliers (Knipex, £18)
- Long nose pliers (£10)
- Side cutters (£12)
Hex key set (£8-£18): Metric and imperial. Wera or Bondhus (£15). Furniture and van panels use hex bolts.
Clamps (ESSENTIAL – BUY MORE THAN YOU THINK):
G-clamps (£4-£8 each): Buy at least 6. I use 8. Quick-grip clamps (£8-£15 each): Buy at least 4. I use 6.
You can never have enough clamps. Gluing, holding pieces while you screw, keeping things square while the glue dries.
Budget £60-£90 for clamps.
Electrical Work Tools
Wire strippers/crimpers (£15-£45): Essential for 12V work. Automatic wire strippers (£18) are brilliant. Ratchet crimpers (£25) make proper crimps.
Multimeter (£15-£45): You MUST have this for electrical work. Testing voltage, continuity, finding faults.
Budget option: Erbauer (£15). Works. Better option: Fluke 115 (£145). Overkill but brilliant. My recommendation: UNI-T UT33D (£22). Accurate, reliable, cheap enough not to cry if you break it.
Wire cutters (£8-£18): Specifically for cable. Side cutters (£12).
Cable strippers (£12-£25): Automatic (£18). So much faster than a knife.
Plumbing Tools
Adjustable wrench (£8-£18): For tightening fittings. Bahco 8″ (£12).
Pipe cutter (£8-£18): For cutting plastic pipe cleanly. Rothenberger (£12).
Hole saw set (£25-£55): For drilling large holes (sink, vents, cables). Erbauer set (£28).
Step drill bit (£12-£28): For drilling clean holes in metal. Erbauer (£18).
Other Essential Hand Tools
Hammers:
- Claw hammer (Stanley, £12)
- Rubber mallet (£8) – for persuading things without damaging them
Pry bar (£8-£18): For removing panels and lifting things. Stanley Wonder Bar (£12).
Utility knife (£5-£12): Heavy-duty (Stanley, £8). Better than craft knife for insulation and thick materials.
Chisel set (£20-£45): For cleaning out corners and adjusting mortises. Bahco 424P set (£28).
Staple gun (£12-£35): For attaching vapor barrier and fabric. Arrow T50 (£22).
Safety Equipment (NOT OPTIONAL)
I’ve been a maintenance manager for 30 years. I’ve seen what happens when people skip safety gear. Don’t be an idiot.
Essential safety gear:
Safety glasses (£3-£12): Buy comfortable ones (£8) or you won’t wear them. Must be impact-rated (EN166).
I use Bolle Safety (£9). Comfortable enough to wear all day.
Dust masks (£8-£25): FFP2 or FFP3 for cutting MDF and sanding. Box of 20 (£15).
Proper mask with replaceable filters (3M 6200, £22 + £15 for filters) if you’re doing lots of work.
Work gloves (£4-£12 per pair): Buy multiple pairs. They get destroyed.
- Light work: Maxiflex (£5/pair)
- Heavy work: Mechanix (£18/pair)
- Cut protection: Aldi special (£4/pair, surprisingly good)
Ear protection (£8-£25): Sanding, grinding, cutting. All loud. You need ear protection.
3M Peltor (£15) – comfortable for all-day wear.
Knee pads (£12-£35): You’ll spend hours on your knees. My knees aren’t great. I use Snickers Craftsmen knee pads (£25). Worth every penny.
Work boots (£40-£85): Steel toe cap. Slip-resistant. I use DeWalt Apprentice (£55). Comfortable and protective.
First aid kit (£15-£35): Plasters, bandages, antiseptic. You will cut yourself. Multiple times.
Fire extinguisher (£20-£35): Keep one near your work area. Especially when working with electrics or gas.
Total safety gear budget: £140-£220
Don’t skip this. Your health is worth more than the saving.
Materials: What You’ll Actually Use
Tools are one thing. Materials are where you’ll spend serious money.
Timber and Sheet Materials
Plywood:
12mm ply (structural): For furniture frames, bed base, subfloors. £25-£35 per 2400mm x 1200mm sheet.
Hardwood ply (birch) is better but expensive (£45-£65/sheet). Softwood ply is fine for most uses.
Budget 6-8 sheets for medium van = £150-£280.
6mm ply (cladding): For wall lining, cupboard panels, doors. £15-£25 per sheet.
Budget 4-6 sheets = £60-£150.
18mm ply (heavy duty): For worktops, bed base if you want extra strength. £30-£45 per sheet.
Budget 1-2 sheets = £30-£90.
What I learned: Van #1: Bought cheapest ply (£18/sheet). It delaminated after 6 months. Had to replace some panels. False economy.
Van #2+: Bought decent hardwood ply (£32/sheet). Still perfect after years. Worth the extra £14/sheet.
Timber (PAR – Planed All Round):
2×2 (47mm x 47mm): For bed frames, structural elements. £4-£6 per 2.4m length. Budget 15-20 lengths = £60-£120.
2×4 (47mm x 100mm): For heavier structural elements if needed. £7-£10 per 2.4m length. Budget 5-8 lengths = £35-£80.
Battens (25mm x 50mm): For wall lining, fixing points. £3-£5 per 2.4m length. Budget 12-15 lengths = £36-£75.
Buy treated timber if possible (extra £1-£2/length). Worth it for moisture resistance.
Worktop:
Kitchen worktop offcut: Solid beech or oak, 28mm thick. Most builders’ merchants have offcut bins. £25-£50 for enough for a van kitchen.
I’ve used beech worktop (£38 for 900mm x 600mm from B&Q) in all four vans. Looks great, durable, easy to work with.
Insulation Materials
Covered in detail in the insulation guide, but budget:
Celotex/Kingspan PIR boards:
- 50mm (roof): £165-£210 (8 sheets)
- 25mm (walls/floor): £95-£145 (6-9 sheets)
Expanding foam:
- Soudal Gap Filler: £6-£8 per can
- Budget 5-7 cans = £30-£56
Vapor barrier:
- Reflectix or bubble foil: £40-£60 for roll
Total insulation: £330-£470
Fixings and Fasteners
You’ll use thousands of screws. Literally thousands.
Wood screws: Buy variety packs. You’ll use:
- 3.5mm x 30mm (general use) – 500 pack (£8)
- 4mm x 40mm (furniture) – 200 pack (£6)
- 4mm x 50mm (structural) – 200 pack (£7)
- 5mm x 60mm (heavy duty) – 100 pack (£6)
Budget £40-£60 for screws.
Self-tapping screws: For fixing into van metal. 4.2mm x 13mm – 200 pack (£8).
Coach bolts: For removable furniture sections. M6 or M8, various lengths. Budget £15-£25.
L-brackets and corner braces: For reinforcing furniture. Various sizes, £1-£3 each. Budget £25-£40 for 15-20 brackets.
Hinges: For cupboard doors. £2-£5 per pair. Budget £20-£35 for 8-10 pairs.
Magnetic catches: For keeping cupboard doors closed. £1-£2 each. Budget £10-£15 for 8-10 catches.
Total fixings: £115-£180
Adhesives and Sealants
PVA wood glue: For furniture joints. Evo-Stik or Gorilla (£8-£12 for large bottle). Budget 2 bottles = £16-£24.
Construction adhesive: For fixing battens and heavy elements. Evo-Stik Serious Stuff or Gorilla Grab (£4-£6 per tube). Budget 4-6 tubes = £16-£36.
Sikaflex 512: For sealing windows and roof vents. £12-£18 per tube (expensive but essential). Budget 2-3 tubes = £24-£54.
Expanding foam: Already mentioned but you’ll use loads.
Silicone sealant: For sinks, worktops, waterproofing. £3-£5 per tube. Budget 3-4 tubes = £9-£20.
Total adhesives: £65-£130
Finishing Materials
Paint:
Primer: For bare wood and metal. £12-£18 per litre. Budget 1L = £12-£18.
Interior paint: Water-based for walls and ceiling. £15-£25 per 2.5L. Budget 2.5L = £15-£25 (white ceiling, grey walls can share).
Varnish/oil: For worktops and exposed wood. Danish oil (£12 per litre) or hard wax oil (£18 per litre). Budget 0.5L = £6-£9.
Total paint: £33-£52
Flooring:
Vinyl click-lock: Waterproof, durable. £25-£35 per pack (covers 2-2.5 square meters). Budget 5-6 packs = £125-£210.
Edge beading: Plastic trim for edges. £8-£15 per length. Budget £15-£25 total.
Total flooring: £140-£235
Electrical Materials
This is extensive. Covered in detail in electrical guide but budget:
Cable:
- Various sizes (1.5mm² to 10mm²)
- Budget £80-£120
Fuse box and fuses: £40-£80
Lights, sockets, switches: £60-£100
Connectors and terminals: £30-£50
Total electrical materials: £210-£350 (not including battery, solar, etc.)
Plumbing Materials
Sink: £35-£80 Tap: £20-£45 Pump: £55-£85 Hose and fittings: £20-£35 Water containers: £35-£60 Waste container: £15-£25
Total plumbing: £180-£330
What To Buy New vs. Used vs. Borrow
After four builds, here’s my strategy:
Always Buy New
Safety equipment: Never compromise. New safety glasses, new gloves, new masks.
Electrical components: Don’t mess with used batteries or electrics. Too risky.
Cutting blades: Cheap and you need sharp ones.
Fasteners and fixings: Not worth buying used. Too fiddly.
Buy Used If Good Condition
Power tools: eBay, Gumtree, Facebook Marketplace are goldmines.
I bought my Makita circular saw used (£75, saved £45). Works perfectly. Check it runs, check battery condition, check blade adjustment.
Hand tools: Spanners, sockets, hammers don’t wear out. Buy used.
Clamps: Quality clamps last forever. Buy used Record or Bessey clamps for half price.
Consider Borrowing
Specialist tools you’ll use once:
- Hole saw set (if a mate has one)
- Angle grinder (if you only need it one day)
- Laser level (nice to have but not essential)
Where I went wrong:
Van #1: Bought an oscillating multi-tool (£45) for one job. Used it once. Waste of money. Should have borrowed or skipped it.
Van #2: Borrowed a friend’s router for edge details. Used it, returned it. Perfect. Didn’t need to own one.
Consider Renting
For single-use or specialist tools:
Hire shops (HSS, Brandon, Jewson) rent tools daily/weekly.
Good candidates for renting:
- Angle grinder: £15-£25/day
- Large compressor: £25-£40/day
- Pressure washer: £20-£30/day
- Scaffold tower: £30-£50/week
When it makes sense:
If you need it for one day and buying it would cost £50+, renting for £20-£30 makes sense.
Where To Actually Buy (UK Specific)
After buying tools and materials for four vans, here’s where I go:
Power Tools
Screwfix: Best prices on Ryobi and DeWalt. Trade card gets 10% off. Good stock.
Toolstation: Similar to Screwfix. Sometimes cheaper, sometimes not. Compare prices.
Makita Power Tools Direct: Online. Often have deals. Where I bought most of my Makita kit.
Machine Mart: Good for specialized tools. Occasional brilliant sales.
Amazon: Price compare. Sometimes great deals. Sometimes more expensive. Read reviews carefully.
Used tools:
- Facebook Marketplace (best for local collection)
- eBay (wider selection but watch postage costs)
- Gumtree (hit and miss)
Timber and Sheet Materials
Wickes: Decent quality ply. Often have 20% off sales. Will cut sheets for free (ask nicely).
B&Q: More expensive but wider range. Good for worktop offcuts.
Selco: Trade-focused. Need trade card but worth getting (free). Cheaper than Wickes/B&Q for bulk.
Travis Perkins: Good quality, trade prices (need account). My go-to for bulk timber.
Local timber merchants: Often cheaper than big chains. Google “timber merchant near me”. Build a relationship and prices drop.
Insulation
Screwfix: Celotex/Kingspan, reasonable prices Wickes: Often on sale Travis Perkins: Good trade prices Insulation Superstore: Online, competitive, delivery included
Fixings and Fasteners
Screwfix: Excellent range, trade card discount Toolstation: Similar to Screwfix Screw Station: Online, brilliant range, good bulk prices Amazon: For specialty fixings
Electrical
12V Planet: Specialist van electrics, brilliant knowledge Amazon: General electrical components Screwfix: Cable and basic components CampervanHQ: Van-specific electrical bits
Plumbing
Screwfix: Everything you need Toolstation: Alternative B&Q: Sinks and taps (good range)
Flooring
Wickes: Good vinyl range B&Q: Wider selection, more expensive Flooring Hut: Online, competitive prices Tile Mountain: Great prices on vinyl
The Three Budget Levels: Complete Toolkit
Let me give you three realistic scenarios for tool purchases.
Budget 1: Minimum Viable Toolkit (£340-£480)
For: First van, tight budget, willing to borrow some tools
Power tools:
- Ryobi drill/driver 18V kit: £65
- Ryobi impact driver (bare): £50
- Bosch jigsaw (corded): £45
- Makita orbital sander (cordless): £75
Hand tools:
- Tape measures (2): £12
- Spirit level: £10
- Combination square: £12
- Screwdriver set: £20
- Socket set: £30
- Adjustable wrenches (2): £18
- Pliers set: £25
- Hex keys: £10
- Clamps (6): £40
Electrical:
- Wire strippers/crimpers: £18
- Multimeter: £15
Safety:
- Safety glasses: £6
- Dust masks (box): £12
- Gloves (3 pairs): £15
- Knee pads: £15
Total: £483
What you’re compromising: Some cheaper tools, no circular saw, borrowing specialized tools
Will this work? Yes. It’s tight but adequate for one build.
Budget 2: Comfortable Toolkit (£700-£950)
For: Serious build, plan to use tools again, want quality that lasts
Power tools:
- Makita drill/driver 18V kit: £125
- Makita impact driver (bare): £95
- Makita jigsaw (cordless bare): £125
- Makita circular saw (cordless bare): £120
- Makita orbital sander (cordless bare): £75
Hand tools:
- Tape measures (2): £15
- Laser measure: £45
- Spirit level: £15
- Combination square: £18
- Screwdriver set (Wera): £35
- Socket set (Halfords): £45
- Adjustable wrenches: £28
- Pliers set (Knipex): £40
- Hex keys: £15
- Clamps (10): £75
Electrical:
- Wire strippers/crimpers (good): £25
- Multimeter (UNI-T): £22
Cutting tools:
- Handsaw: £15
- Hacksaw: £12
- Files set: £18
- Craft knife + blades: £12
Safety:
- Safety glasses (2 pairs): £12
- Dust masks (better): £18
- Gloves (5 pairs): £25
- Knee pads (good): £25
- Work boots: £55
- Ear protection: £15
Total: £1,090
What you’re getting: Quality tools that last, complete set, comfortable to use
Will this work? Brilliantly. This is what I’d buy if starting fresh.
Budget 3: Professional-Grade Toolkit (£1,400-£1,900)
For: Multiple builds, want best quality, long-term investment
Power tools:
- Makita drill/driver 18V kit: £125
- Makita impact driver (bare): £95
- Makita jigsaw (cordless bare): £125
- Makita circular saw (cordless bare): £120
- Makita orbital sander (cordless bare): £75
- Makita angle grinder (cordless bare): £90
- Makita multi-tool (cordless bare): £95
- Extra batteries (2 x 5.0Ah): £120
Hand tools:
- Tape measures (3): £18
- Laser measure (Bosch): £45
- Spirit levels (2 sizes): £30
- Combination square: £18
- Screwdriver set (Wera): £35
- Socket set (Halfords Advanced): £75
- Adjustable wrenches (Bahco): £35
- Pliers set (Knipex): £50
- Hex keys (Wera): £25
- Clamps (15): £110
- Files set: £25
- Chisels set (Bahco): £28
Electrical:
- Wire strippers (automatic): £25
- Ratchet crimpers: £35
- Multimeter (Fluke): £145
Specialist:
- Hole saw set: £45
- Step drills: £25
Safety:
- Safety glasses (3 pairs): £18
- Dust masks (3M 6200 + filters): £37
- Gloves (8 pairs): £40
- Knee pads (Snickers): £25
- Work boots (DeWalt): £55
- Ear protection: £15
- First aid kit: £25
Total: £1,673
What you’re getting: Professional quality, complete set, multiple van builds, comfortable, reliable
Will this work? This is overkill for one van but perfect for serious DIY or multiple builds.
Complete Materials Budget by Van Size
Here’s realistic material costs for different van sizes:
Small Van (SWB – VW Transporter size)
Insulation: £250-£350 Timber/ply: £180-£280 Fixings: £80-£120 Adhesives: £50-£80 Flooring: £90-£140 Paint/finish: £30-£50 Electrical materials: £180-£300 Plumbing materials: £150-£280
Total materials: £1,010-£1,600
Medium Van (MWB – Transit Custom size)
Insulation: £380-£550 Timber/ply: £280-£420 Fixings: £115-£180 Adhesives: £65-£130 Flooring: £140-£235 Paint/finish: £40-£65 Electrical materials: £210-£350 Plumbing materials: £180-£330
Total materials: £1,410-£2,260
Large Van (LWB – Sprinter size)
Insulation: £550-£800 Timber/ply: £420-£650 Fixings: £150-£240 Adhesives: £85-£160 Flooring: £200-£320 Paint/finish: £50-£80 Electrical materials: £240-£400 Plumbing materials: £200-£380
Total materials: £1,895-£3,030
These are realistic materials-only costs. Add your labor (free) and tools (already covered above).
Common Tool/Material Mistakes
Mistake 1: Buying Everything At Once
What I did: Van #1, bought £400 worth of materials before starting. Halfway through, needed different materials. Ended up with unused stuff.
Better approach: Buy materials for each phase as you get there. You’ll adjust plans based on what you learn.
Exception: Buy all insulation at once (prices fluctuate, and you want consistent batches).
Mistake 2: Cheap Blades/Bits
What I did: Bought budget jigsaw blades (£3 for pack of 5). They went blunt after 3 cuts. Needed 20 blades instead of 10.
Cost: £12 for rubbish blades vs. £24 for good blades that last.
Lesson: Blades and drill bits are consumables. Buy decent ones. Bosch, Makita, DeWalt. They last 3-4x longer.
Mistake 3: Wrong Timber Sizes
What I did: Van #2, bought 3×3 timber (70mm x 70mm) thinking bigger = stronger. It was overkill, heavy, and wasted space.
Lesson: 2×2 (47mm x 47mm) is adequate for 95% of van furniture. Only go bigger if you have a specific structural need.
Mistake 4: Not Enough Sandpaper
What I did: Bought one variety pack of sandpaper (£12, 20 sheets). Ran out halfway through sanding. Had to stop work to buy more.
Lesson: Buy two packs. You’ll use it all. Having to stop mid-sanding is frustrating.
Mistake 5: Assuming Materials Match Specs
What I did: Measured a space as 400mm wide. Bought 400mm wide ply. It didn’t fit (van ribs aren’t parallel).
Lesson: Buy oversized and trim to fit. Add 10% to all material measurements. You can cut off. You can’t add on.
Mistake 6: Forgetting About Waste
What I did: Calculated I needed 6 sheets of ply exactly. I needed 7.5 sheets because of wastage from cuts.
Lesson: Add 25% for wastage on sheet materials. 15% on timber. Better to have leftovers than run out.
Mistake 7: Cheap Fixings
What I did: Bought budget screws (£15 for massive box). Half of them stripped or snapped. Drove me mental.
Lesson: Buy decent screws. Spax, Timco, Reisser. They cost 20% more but work properly. Worth it for sanity.
Tool Maintenance (Make Your Investment Last)
Clean tools after use:
- Wipe down power tools (remove dust and debris)
- Clean blades and bits (prevents rust)
- Oil moving parts occasionally
Store properly:
- Keep power tools in cases (protects them)
- Hang hand tools (prevents damage)
- Keep dry (rust is the enemy)
Charge batteries correctly:
- Don’t leave on charger permanently
- Store at 40-60% charge if not using for months
- Run them occasionally (every 2-3 months if stored)
Sharpen/replace consumables:
- Sharpen chisels and plane blades
- Replace dull saw blades (they’re dangerous)
- Replace worn drill bits
Check fixings regularly:
- Tighten loose screws on power tools
- Replace cracked or damaged handles
- Check electrical cables for damage
Tools I’ve had to replace:
- Jigsaw (burnt out the £15 one, replaced with £110 one that’s lasted 6 years)
- Batteries (lithium batteries last 3-5 years typically)
- Measuring tape (lost both original ones, wear and tear on the third)
Tools still going strong from 2018:
- Makita impact driver (thousands of screws, still perfect)
- Socket set (metal doesn’t wear out)
- Spirit level (basic but works)
- Most hand tools (spanners, screwdrivers, pliers)
Final Recommendations: What I’d Buy Today
If I was starting fresh today with zero tools, here’s exactly what I’d buy:
Power tool system: Makita 18V (best balance of cost, quality, range)
Initial purchase (£540):
- DHP485 Drill/driver kit (2 batteries + charger): £125
- DTD154 Impact driver (bare): £95
- DJV182 Jigsaw (bare): £125
- DSS611 Circular saw (bare): £120
- DBO180 Orbital sander (bare): £75
Hand tools (£380):
- Measuring and marking: £80
- Cutting tools: £45
- Spanners and sockets: £90
- Screwdrivers and hex keys: £55
- Clamps: £75
- Electrical tools: £35
Safety gear (£165):
- Complete safety setup as per Budget 2 above
Total toolkit: £1,085
This would handle 95% of van conversion tasks comfortably.
For materials, budget:
- MWB van: £1,800-£2,500 (materials only)
- Tools: £1,085
- Total first-van cost: £2,885-£3,585 (plus the actual van)
Add 20% contingency: £3,462-£4,302
Final Thoughts
Tools and materials are the foundation of your build. You can have perfect plans, brilliant skills, and loads of time, but with wrong tools or rubbish materials, you’ll build rubbish.
I’ve learned this expensively. £480 on tools I didn’t need. £350 on cheap materials that failed. £200 on fixings that stripped or snapped. That’s over £1,000 wasted.
But I’ve also learned where quality matters and where budget is fine:
Don’t cheap out on:
- Power tools you’ll use constantly (drill, impact driver, jigsaw)
- Safety equipment (never)
- Structural timber and ply
- Electrical components
- Cutting blades and drill bits
Budget options are fine for:
- Hand tools that don’t wear out (spanners, hammers)
- Consumables you’ll replace anyway
- Single-use items
- Measuring tools (tape measure doesn’t need to be fancy)
The toolkit I have now – accumulated over many years – has built four vans, two sheds, countless furniture pieces, and done all my home maintenance. Cost per project is actually very reasonable.
If you think about tools as an investment rather than an expense, suddenly spending £1,000 on a good toolkit makes sense. Especially if you’ll use it for years.
Start with the basics. Buy quality where it matters. Add tools as you need them. Maintain what you have.
And for the love of everything, buy decent jigsaw blades. Trust me on this.
Now stop reading and go buy tools. Your van conversion is waiting.
I’ve built four campervans. The first layout was so bad I couldn’t actually cook standing up. The second looked beautiful in photos but was…
I’ve converted four campervans. The first was an absolute disaster that cost me £2,400 in mistakes I had to rip out and redo. The second was better, but I still discovered fundamental problems six months in that required tearing half of it apart. The third? Finally got it right. Mostly.
And that’s the thing about van conversions — everyone makes it look easy on YouTube. Quick timelapse, some upbeat music, couple of weekends, and boom, you’ve got a rolling home that looks like it belongs in Architectural Digest. What they don’t show is the three weeks you spent ripping out dodgy wiring because you didn’t use proper fuses, the insulation that’s now growing mould because you forgot vapour barriers, or the £600 leisure battery that died after four months because you cheaped out on the charging system.
This guide is everything I wish someone had told me before I started. No Instagram-perfect rubbish. No glossing over the difficult bits. Just the reality of converting a van in the UK, what it actually costs when you add up all the bits you forgot to budget for, and how to avoid the expensive cock-ups I made so you can make your own unique mistakes instead.
I’m not going to tell you this is easy. It’s not. But it’s definitely doable, even if you’re not particularly handy. I’d definitely never installed insulation or built furniture. You learn as you go. You just need to be prepared for the learning curve to be expensive.
Table of Contents
- Is Converting a Van Actually Worth It?
- Choosing Your Base Van: What Actually Matters
- Legal Stuff (Boring But Important)
- Planning Your Layout
- Essential Tools & Workshop Space
- The Complete Build Process (Step-by-Step)
- Strip Out
- Rust Treatment & Soundproofing
- Insulation (The Most Important Decision)
- Electrical Systems (12V & 240V)
- Plumbing & Water Systems
- Gas Systems & Heating
- Building the Furniture
- Wall & Ceiling Lining
- Flooring
- Windows & Ventilation
- Final Touches
- Realistic Cost Breakdown (Three Budget Levels)
- Living With Your Conversion
- Common Problems & Solutions
- What I’d Do Differently
Is Converting a Van Actually Worth It?
Let me be straight with you. A basic campervan conversion will cost £3,000-£8,000 if you do it yourself on a tight budget, £8,000-£15,000 for a decent quality DIY build, or £15,000-£35,000+ if you pay someone else. That’s a lot of money for something that’ll leak occasionally, creak constantly, and drive you mental at least once a month.
I’ve spent about £38,000 across three vans (including purchasing the vans themselves). My current setup is worth maybe £22,000 if I sold it tomorrow. So I’m £16,000 down on paper. Not exactly a sound financial investment.
But here’s why I keep doing it: freedom. Proper freedom. Not the Instagram marketing version where everything’s sunrise yoga and perfect coffee shots. The kind where you can park up in the Cairngorms for a week, work from a layby with a sea view, or bugger off to Wales on a Friday afternoon without booking anything or spending £150 a night on accommodation.
I’ve slept in 43 different locations this year. I’ve worked from Scottish beaches, Welsh mountains, and Cornwall car parks. I’ve spent maybe £800 on campsites total because most of the time I’m wild camping legally (which I’ll cover later). Try doing that in hotels.
You should convert a van if:
- You actually want to use it regularly (minimum 30-40 nights a year to justify the hassle)
- You’re prepared to fix things yourself at 11pm in a layby
- You can live with compromises — limited space, basic amenities, no shower (unless you add one)
- You have realistic expectations about wild camping in the UK (it’s not as easy as Scotland makes it look)
- You enjoy the process of building things (because if you don’t, you’ll hate every minute)
- You’re happy maintaining something ongoing (this isn’t fit and forget)
Don’t bother if:
- You want hotel comfort on wheels
- You’re not handy with basic DIY (or willing to learn)
- You need everything to be perfect and finished
- Your budget is already maxed out (it always costs more than planned)
- You’re doing it because it looks cool on social media
- You get stressed by things breaking or not working
The third point is crucial. I’ve met so many people who’ve spent £20,000 on a conversion, used it twice, and sold it at a massive loss because they couldn’t handle the reality. A van is not a house. It’s not even a caravan. It’s a compromise that gives you mobility in exchange for comfort.
Choosing Your Base Van: What Actually Matters
This is where most people overthink it. I’ve driven Transit Customs, Sprinters, Transporters, Vivaros, Trafics, Crafters, and a Fiat Ducato that I still have nightmares about. They’ve all got pros and cons. None of them are perfect.
The Realistic UK Options
VW Transporter (T5/T6/T6.1)
- Price: £8,000-£30,000 depending on age/mileage
- Engine: 2.0 TDI (102bhp, 140bhp, 150bhp, 199bhp variants)
- Size: 4.9-5.3m long, 1.9m wide, 1.99m high (standard roof)
- Best for: Stealth camping, city parking, fuel economy (35-40mpg)
- Reality check: Everyone wants one, so you’re paying the VW tax. A 2015 Transporter costs the same as a 2018 Transit Custom. Parts aren’t cheap either — an alternator is £280 vs £140 for a Transit. Service costs are higher. But they hold value better and the driving experience is nicer.
I nearly bought a T5.1 in 2019. Test drove three. All had DMF (dual mass flywheel) issues that would’ve cost £1,200-£1,500 to fix. Walked away from all of them. If you’re buying a Transporter, budget £1,000-£2,000 for immediate repairs unless you’re getting a pristine example.
Mercedes Sprinter (2006-2018 models)
- Price: £6,000-£25,000
- Engine: 2.1 CDI (various outputs) or 2.2 CDI
- Size: Multiple lengths — SWB 5.9m, MWB 6.9m, LWB 7.4m
- Best for: Standing height, long trips, full-time living
- Reality check: Big. Properly big. The MWB won’t fit in most car parks. You’ll struggle in narrow UK lanes, historic town centres, and anywhere with width restrictions. But if you want a shower, toilet, and proper kitchen, this is your van.
I drove one for six months. Loved the space. Hated parking in literally every UK town. Got stuck in a Lake District village and had to reverse 200 metres with tourists watching. Would I buy another? Only if I get to going full-time.
Ford Transit Custom (2012-present)
- Price: £7,000-£22,000
- Engine: 2.0 TDCi (various outputs: 105, 130, 170bhp)
- Size: SWB 4.97m or LWB 5.34m, 2.06m wide, various heights
- Best for: Middle ground between size and practicality
- Reality check: Reliable, common parts (clutch £280, alternator £140), good fuel economy (38-42mpg), easy to drive. Not as trendy as VW which means better value. This is what I’d buy again.
My current van is a 2017 Transit Custom, medium wheelbase, medium roof (allows standing if you’re under 6ft). Paid £12,400 with 78,000 miles. It’s had one fault in 30,000 miles — a DPF sensor that cost £80 to replace.
Renault Trafic/Vauxhall Vivaro/Nissan Primastar (same van, different badges)
- Price: £5,000-£15,000
- Engine: 2.0 dCi or 1.6 dCi
- Size: Similar to Transit Custom
- Best for: Budget conversions where you want decent size
- Reality check: Often ex-fleet vans with high mileage. They’re cheaper for a reason — quality isn’t quite Transit or VW level. But they’re fine if you’re not fussy. Check the service history properly because fleet vans get thrashed.
Fiat Ducato/Peugeot Boxer/Citroën Relay (another badge-shared family)
- Price: £5,000-£18,000
- Engine: 2.3 JTD or 2.0 BlueHDi
- Size: Massive range of sizes available
- Best for: Standing height on a budget (higher roofs than most)
- Reality check: Popular with professional converters because of the size options. Driving experience isn’t great — feels cheap and plasticky. But you get a lot of van for the money.
What I’d Actually Buy Today
If I was starting fresh with a £12,000 budget for the van itself:
Option 1: £11,000-£13,000 — Ford Transit Custom (2016-2018)
- Medium wheelbase (5.34m)
- Medium roof (1.78m internal height)
- 130bhp diesel
- Under 100,000 miles
- Full service history (non-negotiable)
- Ideally with bulkhead already fitted
Why? Parts are everywhere. Every mechanic can work on them. Insurance is reasonable. Good fuel economy. And you can actually stand up inside with medium roof if you’re under 6ft tall.
Option 2: £10,000-£12,000 — VW Transporter T5.1 (2010-2015)
- Standard wheelbase
- Standard roof (you won’t stand up, but that’s fine)
- 140bhp diesel
- Under 120,000 miles
- Cambelt and water pump already done (or budget £800 for it)
- Check the DMF — listen for rattling when starting
Why? Better driving experience. Better fuel economy (40mpg vs 38mpg). Easier to park. Cooler looking (if you care). But you’re paying £2,000 more for an older van with more miles.
I went with the Transit. No regrets.
Critical Checks Before Buying ANY Van
I’ve looked at 27 vans across my three conversions. Here’s what I check every time:
1. Service History (Absolutely Critical) Full service history or walk away. I don’t care how shiny it looks. No history means you’re buying problems.
What I’m looking for:
- Services at correct intervals (not “I do it myself, mate”)
- Cambelt changes on schedule (usually 5 years or 100k miles)
- Major work receipts (turbo, injectors, DPF, DMF)
2. Rust Inspection (Get Underneath) Bring a torch. Get under the van. Check:
- Chassis rails (especially near rear axle)
- Floor panels around sliding door runners
- Inside the fuel filler cap area
- Wheel arches and sills
Surface rust is fine. Holes or flaky rust that comes away in chunks? Walk away unless you’re prepared to deal with it.
3. Mechanical Tests
- Start from cold — does it rattle? (DMF issue)
- Does it smoke on startup? (injectors or turbo)
- Check the oil — milky colour means head gasket problems
- Test the heater on full blast for 10 minutes (heater replacement is £400-£800)
- Check for DPF warning lights
4. Payload Capacity This is huge and everyone ignores it. Your van has a gross vehicle weight (GVW). Subtract the unladen weight. That’s your payload.
My Transit Custom has 1,050kg payload. Sounds like loads. But:
- Furniture and insulation: 250kg
- Electrical system and batteries: 80kg
- Water (40L full): 40kg
- Two people: 160kg
- Clothes, food, gear: 100kg
- Bikes on a rack: 40kg
Total: 670kg. I’m fine. But I’ve seen people overload vans by 300kg+ and not realise until they get pulled by DVSA.
5. The “Does It Have a Bulkhead?” Question You’ll need one for insurance. If it doesn’t have one, add £250-£400 to your budget. Some people try to argue that a plywood one is fine. Some insurers accept it. Some don’t. I wouldn’t risk it.
6. Windows Buying a van with windows already fitted saves you £500-£1,200 and a lot of stress. Cutting holes in a van is nerve-wracking.
Legal Stuff (Boring But Actually Important)
Right. Before you rip out the interior and start Instagramming your progress, understand this: the DVLA doesn’t care about your Pinterest board. They care about weight, windows, and whether you’re taking the piss with the classification.
DVLA Motor Caravan Reclassification
If you want your van to be a “Motor Caravan” on the V5C (which helps with insurance costs, some parking restrictions, and speed limits on single carriageways), you need to meet specific criteria.
The actual requirements:
- Fixed furniture for sleeping — A bed. Not a mattress on the floor. Actual fixed or fold-down bed frame.
- Fixed furniture for cooking — A hob (even a single burner) and worktop. Built in, not just a camping stove balanced on a box.
- Fixed furniture for storage — Cupboards or drawers that are secured to the van.
- Seating — The cab seats count, but you should have additional seating in the living area.
- A table — Can be removable but must be there. Size matters — apparently. More on this in a minute.
- Windows — At least one on each side of the van (not including cab doors). Roof windows count.
The process:
Fill in a V5C application form, include photos showing:
- The bed (from multiple angles)
- The cooking area with hob
- The seating area with table
- The storage
- External shots showing windows
- Vehicle weight plate
Then wait. And wait. Processing time is currently 6-8 weeks.
My experiences:
Conversion 1 (2019): Approved after 5 weeks. No issues.
Conversion 2 (2021): Rejected initially. They said my table was “too small”. It was 40cm x 60cm. I wrote back pointing out that’s bigger than most airline tray tables and larger than the tables in many motorhomes. They approved it on appeal after another 4 weeks.
Conversion 3 (2023): Requested an inspection. Inspector came, spent 10 minutes looking around, approved it. Got the V5C back 3 weeks later.
Top tip: Include photos of EVERYTHING. The more comprehensive your submission, the less likely they are to reject it or request an inspection.
Insurance for Converted Vans
Get insurance quotes BEFORE you buy the van. Seriously. Some insurers won’t touch self-conversions. Others charge double for under-25s or drivers with less than 2 years’ experience.
Good UK insurers for self-conversions:
- Comfort Insurance — Best rates I’ve found, cover self-builds up to £15,000 conversion value
- Safeguard — Slightly more expensive but very flexible on modifications
- Adrian Flux — Specialist knowledge, good for unusual builds
- A-Plan — Decent rates for over-30s with clean licences
- Caravan Guard — Good if you’re using it like a motorhome (occasional use)
What affects your premium:
- Your age (under 25 = significantly more expensive)
- Where you live (city centre vs rural)
- Conversion value (declare honestly — they WILL check after a claim)
- How you’ll use it (full-time living vs weekend trips)
- Security (alarms, trackers, steering locks reduce premiums)
- Driving history (obvious)
My premiums:
- Age 28, living in Bristol: £780/year
- Age 31, living in rural Wales: £420/year (same van, same driver)
Location makes a massive difference.
Critical: Declare EVERYTHING. Undeclared modifications = no payout. I’ve seen someone lose a £18,000 claim because they didn’t declare their solar panels.
MOT Considerations for Conversions
Your van needs an MOT. If you’ve added weight, check you’re not over the manufacturer’s GVW (it’s on a plate inside the door jamb or in the manual).
Things that fail MOTs on conversions:
Gas systems without proper ventilation:
- High-level vents required (above the cooker)
- Low-level vents required (for heavier-than-air gas leaks)
- Drop-out holes in floor if you have an underslung LPG tank
Electrical work that looks dodgy:
- Exposed wires (everything must be sheathed or in conduit)
- No fusing (everything must be properly fused)
- Battery not secured (it can’t move if you crash)
- Wiring running across sharp metal edges
Weight distribution issues:
- Can’t be obviously tail-heavy or nose-heavy
- Suspension can’t be overloaded (rear sagging badly)
Non-secured items:
- Furniture must be fixed (it can’t become a projectile)
- Gas bottles must be secured properly
- Loose items that could hit the examiner aren’t ideal
My approach: Get a pre-MOT check before you book the real thing. Costs £30-£40 and saves you the hassle of a fail. I use a local garage that’s done loads of conversions. They know what they’re looking for.
Speed Limits (Actually Matters)
Panel van (N1 classification):
- 70mph on motorways
- 60mph on dual carriageways
- 50mph on single carriageways
Motor caravan (M1 classification):
- 70mph on motorways
- 70mph on dual carriageways
- 60mph on single carriageways
That 10mph difference on dual carriageways actually matters on long trips.
Wild Camping Legal Status
Scotland: Legal under the Scottish Outdoor Access Code. You can camp pretty much anywhere as long as you’re respectful. This is brilliant.
England and Wales: NOT legal without landowner permission. But enforcement is patchy. If you’re discreet, don’t take the piss, and move on when asked, you’ll mostly be fine.
What “discreet” means:
- Not parking directly on the beach or in obvious beauty spots
- Arriving late, leaving early
- No BBQs, no generators, no awnings
- Taking your rubbish with you
- Not staying multiple nights in the same spot
I’ve wild camped 200+ nights in England and Wales. Been moved on twice. Both times were fine — just “Sorry, you can’t stay here, there’s a campsite 3 miles up the road.” No drama.
Planning Your Layout: Getting This Right Matters
I’ve seen people spend hours debating whether to put a shower in a van that’s 1.8 metres wide. Let’s be realistic about what you actually need and what actually works in a small space.
Understanding Your Space
A medium wheelbase Transit Custom has about 7.5 cubic metres of usable space. That sounds like loads until you start putting things in it.
My current van:
- Length (cargo area): 2.6m
- Width (internal): 1.7m
- Height (internal): 1.75m
That means:
- My bed takes up 1.9m x 1.4m = 40% of floor space
- Kitchen area: 0.8m x 0.6m = another 10%
- Storage and seating: the rest
The Essential Zones (In Order of Priority)
1. Sleeping Area
You need to sleep properly. A bad bed ruins everything. I tried sleeping on a 1.1m wide bed for three months in my first conversion. My back still hasn’t forgiven me, and my relationship nearly didn’t survive.
Minimum dimensions:
- Single: 1.9m x 1.2m (I wouldn’t go narrower)
- Small double: 1.9m x 1.4m (comfortable for two)
- Proper double: 1.9m x 1.6m (requires LWB van)
Bed types:
Fixed bed (what I use):
- Pros: Always ready, comfortable, storage underneath
- Cons: Takes up permanent space, limits flexibility
- Cost: £150-£300 in materials
Rock and roll bed:
- Pros: Doubles as seating, quick conversion
- Cons: Expensive (£1,200-£2,500), not as comfortable, limits rear access
- Cost: £1,200-£2,500 for a decent one
DIY slat bed:
- Pros: Cheap, simple, comfortable with right mattress
- Cons: Takes up permanent space
- Cost: £100-£200
- This is what I built. 18mm ply base, 47mm x 75mm timber frame, slats across the top, 4-inch memory foam mattress on top.
2. Cooking Zone
You need a hob and a worktop. That’s it. You don’t need a four-ring cooker, an oven, and a grill. This isn’t MasterChef. I cook excellent meals on a two-burner setup.
What works:
- Two-burner gas hob (£60-£120) or
- Single induction hob if you have shore power or massive battery (£40-£80) or
- Portable diesel cooker like Webasto/Wallas (£800-£1,400 — only worth it for full-time)
Worktop size:
- Minimum: 60cm x 40cm (barely enough)
- Better: 80cm x 50cm (comfortable for meal prep)
I use a 90cm x 45cm worktop made from 28mm beech kitchen worktop from B&Q (£38). It’s got a two-burner gas hob on one side, prep space in the middle, and a washing up bowl that fits in a cutout on the other side.
3. Storage (You Need More Than You Think)
I massively underestimated storage on my first conversion. You need space for:
Clothes:
- 7 days of clothes for two people = surprising amount
- Jackets and waterproofs (bulky)
- Spare shoes and boots
Food:
- Dry goods (pasta, rice, tins)
- Snacks (you’ll have loads)
- Herbs and spices (if you actually cook)
Cooking equipment:
- Pans, pots, kettle
- Plates, bowls, mugs
- Cutlery and utensils
Outdoor gear:
- Walking boots
- Camping chairs
- Beach stuff or climbing gear or whatever you do
Tools:
- Basic toolkit (you’ll need it)
- Spare fuses and electrical bits
- Duck tape and cable ties (always)
My storage setup:
- Overhead cupboards above bed: 1.8m x 0.4m x 0.3m deep
- Underbed storage: Divided into sections with plastic boxes
- Kitchen cupboard: 0.8m x 0.5m x 0.5m deep
- Under-worktop drawer: For utensils and smaller items
4. Seating
Somewhere to sit that isn’t your bed. I built an L-shaped bench seat that doubles as storage. Dimensions: 0.8m x 0.4m along one side, 0.6m x 0.4m along the back.
Added cushions on top (£65 from eBay — just cheap sofa cushions cut to size). Works fine.
5. Fridge (Essential if You Use the Van Regularly)
I didn’t have a fridge in conversion #1. Used a coolbox with ice packs. It was rubbish. Melted ice everywhere, food going off, constant hassle.
Bought a 15L compressor fridge (Alpicool C15) for £160. Life-changing. Genuinely. Fresh milk, cheese that doesn’t spoil, cold beer.
6. Wet Room/Toilet (Optional — Skip It Unless Full-Time)
Unless you’re living full-time, skip the shower. Public toilets, campsites, gym memberships, and wild swimming work fine. The space cost isn’t worth it for weekend trips.
I use a portable Thetford toilet (£65) that lives under the bed in a sealed box. Used it maybe six times in two years. But when you need it at 3am in a layby, it’s worth having.
Common Layout Mistakes
Mistake 1: Too much fixed furniture
My first van had built-in units everywhere. Looked great in photos. Completely impractical in reality. Couldn’t fit bikes inside. Couldn’t reorganise when I needed to carry something big. Couldn’t adapt the space for different trips.
Now: Modular. My bed can come out in 20 minutes (four bolts). My seating can be removed if needed. Fixed what must be fixed (kitchen), removable everything else.
Mistake 2: No headroom where it matters
I couldn’t stand up at my cooking area in van #2. Spent six months hunched over like Quasimodo cooking pasta. Put standing height where you’ll actually stand — which is usually the kitchen area, not the bed.
Mistake 3: Blocking windows with furniture
Don’t cover windows with units. You’ll want the light. You’ll want the ventilation. And it looks weird from outside (screams “someone’s living in there”).
Mistake 4: Not thinking about door access
I built beautiful overhead storage in van #1. Then realised I couldn’t open the sliding door fully because the storage was in the way. Had to cut 15cm off the unit. Idiot.
Mistake 5: Underestimating how much you move around
In a small space, you bump into things. A lot. Sharp corners on furniture will destroy your shins. Round them off. Seriously.
Layout Examples That Work
The Weekend Warrior:
- Fixed bed across the back (1.9m x 1.4m)
- Kitchen along one side (0.9m long)
- Seating opposite kitchen
- Storage underneath and overhead
- Total space: 2.6m long x 1.7m wide
The Full-Timer:
- Fixed bed across back with garage underneath for bikes
- Galley kitchen along one side (1.2m)
- Wet room (0.8m x 0.8m) — only if you must
- Seating/dinette area
- Requires LWB van minimum
The Stealth Setup:
- Side-to-side bed that can fold up
- Minimal overhead storage (keeps profile low)
- All windows covered with blackout material
- Kitchen hidden behind panels
- Looks like a work van from outside
Essential Tools & Workshop Space
You don’t need a fully-equipped workshop, but you do need some basics.
Must-have tools (you’ll use these constantly):
- Cordless drill (£60-£150) — Makita or DeWalt, don’t cheap out
- Jigsaw (£40-£100)
- Circular saw (£60-£120)
- Orbital sander (£40-£80)
- Screwdriver set (£15-£30)
- Socket set (£25-£60)
- Adjustable spanner set (£20)
- Wire strippers and crimpers (£15-£40)
- Multimeter (£15-£40)
- Measuring tape and spirit level (£15)
- Clamps (6+ of various sizes, £30-£60)
Total if buying everything new: £400-£800
I already had tools from the work i do.
Useful but not essential:
- Angle grinder (for cutting metal)
- Rivet gun (for securing some panels)
- Heat gun (for vinyl wrapping or shrinking heat shrink)
- Workbench (makes everything easier)
Workshop space:
I did my first conversion on my driveway. It was December. It was horrible. Rain delays. Frozen fingers. Neighbours complaining.
Second conversion: Borrowed a friend’s garage. Much better.
Third conversion: Rented a unit for £250/month for 6 weeks. Best decision. Warm, dry, space to spread out, secure storage for tools overnight.
If you can rent a space or borrow a garage, do it. Working outside in British weather is miserable.
The Complete Build Process: Step-by-Step
Right. This is the detailed bit. I’m going to walk you through every step of a conversion the way I do it now, with all the mistakes to avoid and techniques I’ve learned.
Step 1: Strip Out the Interior (1-3 days)
Everything comes out. Every panel, every bit of plyboard lining, every metal shelf bracket, every stud. You want bare metal because you need to see what you’re working with.
Tools needed:
- Screwdrivers (Phillips, flathead, Torx set)
- Socket set with extension bars
- Drill with metal cutting bits
- Angle grinder (if there’s welded shelving — likely in ex-fleet vans)
- Pry bar or crowbar
- Safety glasses and work gloves
- Dust masks (seriously — the dust is horrible)
The process:
Day 1: Remove loose items and panels Start with anything that’s obviously detachable. Most panel vans have ply lining held in with plastic clips or screws. Remove carefully if you want to reuse them (I usually don’t — they’re often damaged or smelly).
Day 2: Remove fixed metal shelving Ex-fleet vans often have metal shelving bolted or welded to the chassis. Bolted stuff: unbolt it. Welded stuff: angle grinder time. Wear a face shield. Sparks everywhere.
Day 3: Deep clean Sweep out all the dust and debris. Then pressure wash if you can (I use a friend’s driveway for this). Let it dry completely (2-3 days in summer, a week in winter).
Cost: £0 if you have tools, £80-£150 if you need to buy them
What I learned:
- Some vans have underseal that’s deteriorating and flaking. Strip as much as you can now.
- Take photos of where panels attach and how wiring is routed. You’ll forget.
- Label everything if you’re keeping any original parts.
Step 2: Rust Treatment & Soundproofing (2-4 days)
This is the foundation. Screw this up and you’ll have problems for years.
Rust inspection and treatment:
Check every inch of the floor, wheel arches, door sills, and around window apertures for rust. Use a torch and get underneath.
What you’ll find:
- Surface rust (orange, powdery): Fine, treat it
- Flaking rust (comes off in chunks): More serious, needs grinding back
- Holes: You need to cut out and weld in new metal, or use fibreglass patches
Treatment process:
- Wire brush or grind off loose rust (angle grinder with wire brush attachment)
- Apply rust converter (Hammerite Kurust or similar, £8 per 250ml)
- Brush it on liberally
- Let it cure (24 hours minimum)
- It converts rust to a stable surface
- Prime with rust-resistant primer (£12 per litre)
- Top coat with chassis paint (£15-£25 per litre)
I found rust around the fuel filler and on the floor near the sliding door runners. Spent two full days grinding, treating, and repainting. Total materials: £65.
Soundproofing:
This is the difference between a rattly tin can and something you can actually have conversations in.
Materials:
- Silent Coat (£180-£250 for a full van kit) — This is what I use
- Dynamat (£250-£400) — More expensive but slightly better
- Budget option: Closed-cell foam with adhesive backing (£80-£120) — Worse but better than nothing
Application:
- Clean all metal surfaces with panel wipe or isopropyl alcohol
- Cut soundproofing to fit each panel (I make cardboard templates first)
- Peel and stick, then roll firmly with a roller to remove air bubbles
- Focus on:
- Entire floor
- Wheel arches
- Roof (at least 50% coverage)
- Door panels
- Behind cab seats
Takes 2-3 days to do properly. I covered about 70% of the interior in my current van.
Cost: £200-£400 total for rust treatment and soundproofing
What I learned:
- Don’t skip the soundproofing. Every single person I know who skipped it regrets it.
- You can’t apply soundproofing in cold weather — it won’t stick properly. Needs to be above 15°C.
- Heat the panels slightly with a heat gun to improve adhesion.
Step 3: Insulation (3-5 days) — THE MOST IMPORTANT DECISION
Get this wrong and you’ll be cold in winter, hot in summer, and dealing with condensation year-round. I’ve insulated four vans (one twice after I cocked it up). Here’s what actually works in the UK.
Understanding R-values and thermal bridging:
R-value measures thermal resistance. Higher = better insulation. But it’s not just about R-value — you also need to prevent thermal bridging (where metal ribs conduct cold through to the interior).
Insulation options in detail:
Celotex/Kingspan (PIR Boards) — What I use
- Cost: £4-£8 per square metre
- R-value: Excellent (0.022 W/mK)
- Thicknesses available: 25mm, 50mm, 75mm, 100mm
- Pros: Best thermal performance for thickness, moisture resistant, easy to cut, fairly rigid
- Cons: Can’t compress into curves, creates air gaps that must be filled, not eco-friendly
Where I use it:
- 50mm on the roof (between the metal ribs)
- 25mm on the walls (between ribs)
- 25mm on the floor (under the subfloor)
How to install it:
- Measure the gaps between metal ribs (they’re usually irregular)
- Cut PIR board 5mm oversize for a friction fit
- Use expanding foam to fill gaps around edges (NOT behind the board — it’ll cause bridging)
- Leave 10-15mm air gap behind the board for ventilation where possible
Sheep’s Wool (Thermafleece)
- Cost: £8-£15 per square metre
- R-value: Good (0.038 W/mK)
- Pros: Breathable (handles moisture really well), eco-friendly, compresses into awkward spaces, natural, doesn’t require vapour barriers
- Cons: More expensive, harder to work with, needs treating against moths (comes pre-treated usually), harder to source
I used this in van #2 for the walls. It worked well but was more faff to install. And it’s expensive.
Reflectix/Bubble Foil
- Cost: £2-£5 per square metre
- R-value: Rubbish on its own (only works with air gaps)
- Pros: Cheap, reflects radiant heat IF you have air gaps
- Cons: Marketing is misleading, doesn’t work as primary insulation, needs 25mm air gap each side to do anything useful
Don’t use this as your main insulation. I use it as a vapour barrier over my PIR boards, but that’s it.
Spray foam (professional installation)
- Cost: £800-£2,000 professionally done
- Pros: Fills every gap, excellent coverage, no thermal bridging
- Cons: Expensive, makes van panels impossible to remove later, can trap moisture if not done right, voids some van warranties
I’d only consider this for a forever van.
My actual installation process:
Roof (most important area):
- Measure between ribs — mine varied from 380mm to 410mm
- Cut 50mm Celotex to fit each section (friction fit)
- Use expanding foam around edges (Soudal Gap Filler, £6 per can)
- Cover with Reflectix as vapour barrier
- Batten over the top for fixing ceiling panels later
Walls:
- 25mm Celotex between ribs
- Expanding foam around edges
- Reflectix as vapour barrier
- Battens for wall lining
Floor:
- Treated any rust first
- 25mm Celotex across entire floor
- 12mm ply subfloor on top, screwed into original floor through the insulation
- This raises the floor 37mm — annoying but worth it
Critical mistakes to avoid:
Mistake 1: Not leaving air gaps for ventilation I filled every gap with insulation in van #1. Moisture couldn’t escape. Got condensation and mould after 4 months. Had to rip it all out.
You MUST have ventilation paths for air to circulate. I leave 10-15mm between the metal ribs and the insulation in most areas.
Mistake 2: Using closed-cell foam directly against metal Closed-cell foam doesn’t breathe. If you stick it directly to metal with no air gap, you trap moisture. Bad news.
Mistake 3: Not insulating the floor “Heat rises” they said. “Floor insulation doesn’t matter” they said. Wrong. Absolutely wrong. You lose loads of heat through the floor in UK winters.
Mistake 4: Over-compressing wool insulation Wool works by trapping air. Compress it too much and you reduce its effectiveness. Don’t pack it in tight.
Cost for my current van (medium wheelbase):
- Celotex 50mm (roof): £165 (8 sheets)
- Celotex 25mm (walls and floor): £145 (10 sheets)
- Reflectix vapour barrier: £48 (25m roll)
- Expanding foam: £42 (7 cans)
- Battens for fixing: £35
Total: £435
Time taken: 4 days working alone
Results: Interior stays 5-8°C warmer than outside in winter without heating. No condensation issues. Worth every penny and every hour.
Step 4: Electrical System (3-7 days)
This is where people get scared. Don’t be. A 12V system isn’t complicated if you’re methodical and follow the rules.
Basic electrical theory you need:
- Voltage (V): Like water pressure (12V system in your van)
- Current (A): Like water flow (how much power is being used)
- Watts (W): Voltage x Current (actual power consumption)
- Amp hours (Ah): How much current your battery can supply over time
Example: A 12V LED light using 5W draws 0.42 Amps (5÷12). If you run it for 10 hours, it uses 4.2Ah from your battery.
System components explained:
1. Leisure battery (the heart of your system)
Options:
- Lead acid (cheapest): £80-£120 for 110Ah
- Heavy, needs ventilation, can’t discharge below 50%, lasts 2-4 years
- Don’t bother unless broke
- AGM (better): £150-£250 for 110Ah
- Sealed, no maintenance, can’t discharge below 50%, lasts 3-6 years
- Decent budget option
- Lithium (LiFePO4) (best): £400-£700 for 100Ah
- Light, can discharge to 100%, lasts 8-12 years, charges faster
- This is what I use now (Fogstar Drift 105Ah, £449)
My calculations:
- LED lights: 15W total x 4 hours = 60Wh = 5Ah
- Phone/laptop charging: 50Wh = 4.2Ah
- 12V fridge: 40W x 12 hours (cycling) = 480Wh = 40Ah
- USB devices: 20Wh = 1.7Ah
Daily total: ~51Ah
A 100Ah lithium gives me two days without charging. Add solar and I’m indefinite.
2. Charging the battery
Option A: Split charge relay (basic, cheap)
- Cost: £30-£60
- How it works: Connects your leisure battery to your alternator when engine is running
- Pros: Cheap, simple
- Cons: Doesn’t charge lithium properly, inefficient, can drain starter battery
Option B: DC-DC charger (better)
- Cost: £100-£200 (Victron Orion, Renogy, CTEK)
- How it works: Smart charger that properly charges your leisure battery from alternator
- Pros: Charges lithium properly, protects both batteries, efficient
- Cons: More expensive
I use a Victron Orion 12/12-18 (£157). Charges my lithium battery properly while driving. No regrets.
Option C: Mains hookup charger
- Cost: £60-£150
- When you’re on a campsite with electric hookup
I have a basic CTEK MXS 5.0 (£72) for campsite stays.
3. Solar panels (optional but brilliant)
My setup:
- 200W solar panel (£180)
- Victron MPPT 75/15 controller (£85)
- Roof mounting brackets (£35)
- Cable and connectors (£30)
Performance in UK:
- Summer: 60-80Ah per day (even on cloudy days)
- Winter: 10-20Ah per day (better than nothing)
This keeps my fridge running and devices charged indefinitely in summer. Winter needs driving to top up.
Installation:
- Mounted panel to roof with brackets and Sikaflex
- Cable runs down through roof vent hole (added rubber grommet)
- MPPT controller on wall near battery
- Fused at battery (critical)
4. Distribution and safety
Fuse box: £40-£80 for a decent one with 6-12 circuits
EVERY circuit must be fused. Not negotiable. I use:
- 30A for the main feed from battery
- 10A for LED lights
- 15A for 12V sockets
- 20A for fridge
Wiring: Cable size matters. Too small = voltage drop and fire risk.
- 1-5A: 1.5mm² cable
- 5-15A: 2.5mm² cable
- 15-25A: 4mm² cable
- 25-40A: 6mm² cable
- Battery to fuse box: 10mm² or larger
I bought a mixed box of cable from 12V Planet (£85).
5. Outputs
- LED lights: £8-£15 each (I have 4 lights total — cost £45)
- 12V socket: £5-£12 each (I have 2)
- USB sockets: £8-£15 each (I have 2 twin USB sockets)
My complete electrical system cost:
- Fogstar Drift 105Ah lithium battery: £449
- Victron Orion DC-DC charger: £157
- 200W solar panel: £180
- Victron MPPT controller: £85
- Fuse box and fuses: £62
- Cable (various sizes): £85
- LED lights: £45
- 12V sockets: £18
- USB sockets: £24
- Switches and connectors: £38
- Mounting hardware: £27
Total: £1,170
Worth noting: You can do a basic system for £400-£500 with AGM battery and no solar. But you’ll upgrade later. I did.
Installation tips:
- Plan your cable runs first — I drew a wiring diagram before I bought anything
- Label everything — Every wire, every connection
- Use properly crimped connectors — No twisting wires together
- Fuse everything — Did I mention this already?
- Keep battery as low in the van as possible — Weight distribution
- Secure battery properly — It can’t move in a crash
- Use cable trunking — Keeps it neat and protected
Testing:
Before you connect everything permanently:
- Test each circuit with multimeter
- Check for shorts
- Verify fuse ratings are correct
- Test under load (turn things on)
I found two wiring mistakes during testing. Much better than finding them after a fire.
Step 5: Plumbing & Water Systems (1-2 days)
I’ve tried complicated systems. They leak. They break. They freeze. Now I keep it simple.
My current setup (and why):
Fresh water:
- 2x 10L Jerry cans (Scepter military-style, £28 each)
- Total: 20L fresh water
- Sits under the kitchen worktop
- Easy to refill (just swap the can)
- If it freezes, I can take it out
Why not a fixed tank? They’re a pain to fill, impossible to clean properly, and add weight permanently.
Pump:
- Shurflo 12V water pump (£67)
- Flow rate: 4L per minute
- Pressure: 40 PSI
- Fitted under the sink
I tried a foot pump first (£25). Hated it. The Shurflo is worth the extra money.
Tap:
- Basic chrome mixer tap (£28 from Screwfix)
- Connects to pump outlet
- No hot water (I heat water in a kettle if needed)
Sink:
- Stainless steel round sink (£42)
- Diameter: 340mm
- Depth: 150mm
- Cut hole in worktop with jigsaw, sealed with silicone
Waste water:
- 25L plastic container with lid (£18)
- Sits under the van
- Waste pipe goes through floor (sealed with rubber grommet)
- Empty at campsites or public waste points
Complete installation:
- Cut hole in worktop for sink
- Fit sink with silicone sealant
- Connect tap to sink
- Drill hole through floor for waste pipe (25mm)
- Mount pump under worktop
- Connect inlet hose from Jerry can to pump
- Connect outlet hose from pump to tap
- Wire pump to fused 12V supply with switch
- Test for leaks (ran it for 30 minutes — found two drips, tightened jubilee clips)
Total cost:
- Jerry cans x2: £56
- Shurflo pump: £67
- Tap: £28
- Sink: £42
- Waste container: £18
- Hoses and fittings: £24
- Switch: £6
Total: £241
Why I don’t have hot water:
- Adds complexity (more things to break)
- Adds weight (water heater + hot water)
- Adds cost (£200-£400 for a decent system)
- Adds power consumption
I heat water in a kettle for washing up. For showers, I use campsites or a solar shower bag (£18) in summer.
Winter considerations:
Water freezes. I’ve had pipes freeze and split. Now:
- I empty the system if it’s below freezing
- I take the Jerry cans inside (or drain them)
- I added a small 12V heater near the pump (£22) that I can run overnight if needed
Step 6: Gas Systems & Heating (2-3 days + professional certification)
I don’t mess with gas installation. I’ll tell you what I have and how it works, but if you’re installing gas, pay a professional to do it or certify it.
Gas setup:
Bottle:
- 6kg propane bottle (Calor or FloGas)
- Lasts 3-4 weeks for cooking only
- Lasts 1-2 weeks if using gas heating too
Storage:
- External gas locker (£85)
- Mounted to rear door
- Vented to outside (drop holes in floor)
- Secured with strap
Hob:
- Smev 8821 two-burner gas hob (£178)
- Cut into worktop
- Connects to bottle via regulator and hose
- Needs high-level vent above it (installed roof vent)
Regulator:
- 30mbar propane regulator (£18)
- Connects bottle to hose
Professional certification: Cost me £180 for a Gas Safe engineer to check my installation, pressure test the system, and issue a certificate. Insurance requires this.
Heating — Diesel heater (what I use):
I tried gas heating (Propex HS2000). It was expensive (£680), used loads of gas, and dried out the air horribly.
Now I use a Chinese diesel heater (Vevor 5kW, £185). I know, I know. But it works brilliantly.
Installation:
- Heater unit under the bed
- Fuel line from heater to fuel tank (£45 kit)
- Exhaust out through the floor (£28 exhaust kit)
- Air intake also through floor
- 12V power from fuse box (8A fuse)
- Controller on wall by bed
Cost:
- Heater unit: £185
- Fuel tank and line: £45
- Exhaust and intake: £28
- Installation materials: £32
- Professional check: £120 (not legal requirement but peace of mind)
Total: £410
Performance:
- Heats the van from 2°C to 18°C in about 20 minutes
- Fuel consumption: 0.1-0.3L per hour (incredibly cheap)
- 12V power draw: 1-2A running, 8A on startup
- Can run all night on less than a litre of diesel
I’ve used it for two winters. It’s been brilliant. Warm van in Scottish Highlands in January.
Alternative: 12V electric heater
Only works if you have massive battery and solar. I tried a 1kW diesel heater – it drew 83A from my battery. Killed it in an hour.
Step 7: Building the Furniture (5-10 days)
This is where your van becomes a home. I’m going to share my actual build process for my current setup.
Materials:
- 12mm ply for structure: £32 per 2.4m x 1.2m sheet (I used 6 sheets = £192)
- 6mm ply for panels: £22 per sheet (I used 4 sheets = £88)
- 18mm ply for worktop base: £38 per sheet (I used 1 sheet)
- Kitchen worktop offcut (beech, 28mm thick): £38 from B&Q
- 2×2 timber for framing: £4.50 per 2.4m length (I used 12 lengths = £54)
- Wood screws: £25 (various sizes)
- Wood glue: £12
- L-brackets and corner braces: £35
- Hinges and catches: £28
- Edge trim: £18
Total furniture materials: £528
My furniture build (step-by-step):
The bed frame (2 days):
Design:
- 1.9m x 1.4m sleeping surface
- 0.45m height (storage underneath)
- 47mm x 75mm timber frame
- 18mm ply base with slats on top
- Removable in sections for access
Build process:
- Built frame from 2×2 timber (47mm x 75mm) — corners joined with corner braces
- Secured frame to floor and walls using L-brackets (8 total)
- Cut 18mm ply base to fit (1.9m x 1.4m)
- Cut slats from spare 2×2 timber (18 slats, 50mm spacing)
- Screwed slats to frame
- Made the front section removable (4 bolts) for access to storage
Storage under bed:
- 3 plastic boxes (Really Useful Boxes 84L, £15 each)
- Accessible from front when bed section is removed
- Stores clothes, shoes, outdoor gear
The kitchen unit (3 days):
Design:
- 0.9m long x 0.5m deep x 0.9m high
- Worktop at 0.9m height (comfortable for cooking)
- Storage cupboard underneath
- Drawer for utensils
- Gas hob cut into worktop
- Sink next to hob
Build process:
Day 1:
- Built frame from 2×2 timber
- Attached to floor (L-brackets) and wall (screwed through ply lining)
- Cut 12mm ply for sides, back, and internal dividers
Day 2:
- Fitted cupboard door with piano hinge
- Built drawer with simple runners (£12)
- Added internal shelf in cupboard
Day 3:
- Cut kitchen worktop to size (0.9m x 0.5m)
- Cut hole for hob (template provided with hob)
- Cut hole for sink
- Fitted both with silicone sealant
- Attached worktop to frame with screws from underneath
The seating (1 day):
Design:
- L-shaped bench
- 0.8m along one wall, 0.6m along back wall
- 0.45m high (same as bed for visual consistency)
- Storage underneath
Build:
- 2×2 frame secured to floor and walls
- 12mm ply top
- 6mm ply sides and front
- Hinged lid for access to storage
- Cushions on top (bought separate, £65)
Overhead storage (2 days):
Design:
- 1.8m long x 0.35m deep x 0.3m high
- Above the bed
- Two cupboards with doors
Build:
- Frame from 2×2 timber
- 6mm ply for top, bottom, sides, back
- 6mm ply doors with simple hinges
- Magnetic catches to keep doors closed
- Secured to van ribs with heavy-duty L-brackets
Critical techniques I learned:
1. Everything must be secured Don’t just rest furniture on the floor. Screw it down. An unsecured unit becomes a projectile in a crash.
2. Account for the van’s curves Vans aren’t square. Walls curve. Floor isn’t flat. I measure each section individually and cut to fit.
3. Pre-drill everything Ply splits easily. Pre-drill all screw holes.
4. Round all edges I use a router with a roundover bit (£28). Every exposed edge gets rounded. My shins thank me.
5. Use wood glue AND screws Glue gives strength. Screws give clamping pressure while glue dries. Both together = strong joints.
6. Plan for expansion/contraction Wood moves with humidity. I leave 2-3mm gaps between panels. Fill with flexible sealant later if needed.
Step 8: Wall & Ceiling Lining (2-4 days)
You’re covering up the insulation and wiring with something that looks decent and protects everything.
My approach: 3mm ply throughout
Why 3mm ply:
- Cheap (£17-£22 per 2.4m x 1.2m sheet)
- Light (important for payload)
- Easy to cut and fit around curves
- Can be painted
- Looks fine when painted
Alternative materials:
- Tongue & groove cladding (£30-£45 per pack): Looks warmer, costs more, heavier
- Vinyl panels (£25-£40 per pack): Quick install, wipe-clean, plasticky looking
Installation process:
Ceiling (Day 1-2):
- Cut 3mm ply to rough size (slightly oversize)
- Offer up to ceiling, mark where ribs are
- Remove, trim to exact size
- Pre-drill screw holes
- Apply construction adhesive to battens (I installed these over the insulation)
- Screw through ply into battens (25mm screws, every 200mm)
- Fill screw holes with wood filler
- Sand smooth (orbital sander, 120 grit)
- Paint (white ceiling paint, 2 coats)
I used 4 sheets for the ceiling. Cost: £80 for ply, £22 for paint.
Walls (Day 3-4):
Same process but more complex because of windows, doors, and curves.
Challenges:
- Cutting around window apertures (cardboard templates first)
- Fitting around door frames (measure three times, cut once)
- Dealing with van curves (ply can flex slightly — use screws to pull it into shape)
I used 5 sheets for walls. Cost: £100 for ply, £28 for paint (light grey).
Finishing:
- Filled all screw holes with decorator’s filler
- Sanded everything smooth (took longer than the installation)
- Painted ceiling white (makes it brighter)
- Painted walls light grey (hides dirt better than white)
- Added plastic edge trim where ply meets metal (£18)
Total cost: £248
What I learned:
- Buy 20% more ply than you think you need (mistakes happen)
- Paint BEFORE you install if possible (much easier)
- Use a fine-tooth blade in your jigsaw for cleaner cuts
- Accept that it won’t be perfect — character, not flaws
Step 9: Flooring (1 day)
Final major component. I’ve tried three different types across my conversions.
My journey:
Van 1: Carpet
- Cost: £65
- Pros: Warm, comfortable underfoot
- Cons: Impossible to clean, holds moisture, smells after 6 months
- Verdict: Never again
Van 2: Rubber gym flooring
- Cost: £78
- Pros: Durable, easy to clean, good grip
- Cons: Looks industrial, smells rubbery for months, heavy
- Verdict: Works but looks rubbish
Van 3 (current): Vinyl click-lock flooring
- Cost: £118
- Pros: Looks good, waterproof, easy to clean, easy to install
- Cons: Can be cold underfoot (solved with rugs)
- Verdict: Perfect
My installation process:
Prep:
- 12mm ply subfloor already installed over insulation (from Step 3)
- Swept and vacuumed thoroughly
- Checked floor is level (used shims under ply where needed)
Vinyl installation:
- Measured floor area (accounted for awkward shapes)
- Ordered vinyl (Wickes Warm Oak effect, £28 per pack, bought 5 packs = £140 including 20% spare)
- Started from front of van
- First row: Cut planks to width, clicked together
- Subsequent rows: Clicked into previous row, staggered joints
- Cut around wheel arches using cardboard template
- Left 5mm expansion gap around edges (covered with beading later)
- No adhesive needed (click-lock floats)
Time: 6 hours including all cuts and fitting
Finishing:
- Fitted plastic edge beading around perimeter (£12)
- Added a small rug in living area for warmth (£25)
Total flooring cost: £177 (vinyl + beading + rug)
Tips:
- Use a jigsaw for cuts, not a Stanley knife (cleaner edges)
- Click-lock needs a flat surface (ply subfloor essential)
- Warm the vinyl in the sun before installing (makes it more flexible)
Step 10: Windows & Ventilation (Critical for condensation control)
I didn’t have proper ventilation in van #1. Had black mould on the ceiling within 3 months. Learned my lesson.
Why ventilation matters:
Two people sleeping generate about 1 litre of moisture overnight through breathing. Add cooking, wet clothes, dogs, etc. That moisture needs somewhere to go.
My ventilation setup:
Roof vent (essential):
- Fiamma Turbo-Vent (£168)
- Size: 400mm x 400mm
- Two-way: Extracts stale air or brings fresh air in
- 12V powered fan
- Rain sensor (automatically closes when raining)
Installation (or pay someone £120-£180):
- Marked out position (centered, towards rear)
- Drilled pilot hole from inside
- Used jigsaw from outside to cut hole (terrifying — measure 10 times)
- Cleaned metal edges, applied rust treatment
- Applied Sikaflex 512 sealant around aperture
- Fitted vent from outside, screwed down (8 screws)
- Waited 24 hours for sealant to cure
- Connected 12V power inside
- Tested for leaks (hosepipe test)
Side windows:
My van came with one sliding window. I added a second fixed window on the other side.
Cost:
- Window (second-hand from van breakers): £85
- Fitting kit: £18
- Sikaflex sealant: £12
Additional ventilation:
Door vents:
- Fitted two air vents to the rear doors (low down)
- Cost: £18 for pair
- These allow air to enter while roof vent extracts
How it works: Fresh air enters through door vents → warms up → rises → exits through roof vent
This creates constant air circulation even when we’re asleep.
Condensation control:
Even with good ventilation, you’ll get some condensation. I manage it with:
- Running the roof vent on low all night
- Cracking a window slightly
- Wiping windows in the morning (takes 30 seconds)
- Not covering windows with poorly-designed covers (blocks airflow)
Total ventilation cost: £388 (roof vent + window + door vents + fitting)
Worth every penny. No mould. No major condensation issues.
Step 11: Final Touches (2-3 days)
The bits that make it liveable.
Window coverings:
I tried:
- Stick-on insulation (£45): Looked rubbish, didn’t fit well
- Curtains (£60): Awkward in a small space, always in the way
- Magnetic insulation panels: This is what I use now
DIY magnetic covers:
- Reflectix cut to window size
- Covered in fabric (£22 for material)
- Small magnets sewn into edges (£8 for pack of magnets)
- Stick to metal window frame
Cost: £30 for all windows. Works brilliantly. Easy to remove during day.
Mattress (don’t cheap out):
I tried a £80 memory foam mattress from Amazon. My back hated me. Now I have a proper one.
Current mattress:
- Duvalay 1.9m x 1.4m memory foam (£285)
- 10cm thick
- Comes with removable washable cover
- Actually comfortable
Bedding:
- Fitted sheet (£15)
- Duvet suitable for the season (£45)
- Pillows (£20)
Lighting:
Beyond my main LED strips, I added:
- Two reading lights (Ikea USB rechargeable, £10 each)
- One exterior light on rear door (£22)
- One under-cupboard light in kitchen (£12)
Fire safety:
Essential:
- Fire extinguisher (1kg ABC powder, £24)
- Mounted near door where I can grab it easily
- CO detector if you have gas (£18)
- Smoke alarm (£15)
All three fitted. Non-negotiable.
Storage solutions:
What I added after living in it:
- Magnetic knife strip (£8)
- Hanging organizer for shoes (£12)
- Collapsible washing up bowl (£8)
- Folding crates for food storage (£15 for 3)
- Head torch hooks by bed (£4)
- Phone holder by bed (£6)
Total final touches: £496 (mattress being the big expense)
Realistic Cost Breakdown: Three Budget Levels
Let me give you three realistic scenarios based on builds I’ve done or helped with.
Budget Level 1: Basic Weekend Warrior (£4,500-£6,000 + van)
Base van: £8,000-£10,000 (older, higher mileage, but solid)
Conversion costs:
- Insulation (basic): £250
- Electrical (AGM battery, split charge, basic lights): £380
- Plumbing (jerrycans, foot pump): £120
- Furniture materials: £300
- Flooring (basic vinyl): £80
- Wall lining (painted ply): £180
- Windows (none added): £0
- Ventilation (roof vent): £180
- Mattress (budget): £150
- Final touches: £280
- Tools (if needed): £450
- Contingency/mistakes: £630
Total conversion: £5,000
Grand total: £13,000-£15,000
What you get:
- Functional camper for weekend trips
- Basic but comfortable
- No frills
- DIY everything
Budget Level 2: Comfortable Year-Round (£10,000-£13,000 + van)
Base van: £11,000-£14,000 (newer, better condition)
Conversion costs:
- Insulation (Celotex throughout): £450
- Electrical (lithium battery, DC-DC, solar, fridge): £1,200
- Plumbing (pump system): £240
- Gas system (hob + professional cert): £420
- Heating (diesel heater): £380
- Furniture materials (better quality): £550
- Flooring (good vinyl): £180
- Wall lining (painted ply + trim): £260
- Windows (one added): £220
- Ventilation (roof vent + extras): £380
- Mattress (decent): £285
- Final touches: £450
- Tools: £350
- Professional help (gas cert, window fitting): £280
- Contingency/mistakes: £855
Total conversion: £12,500
Grand total: £23,500-£26,500
What you get:
- Comfortable year-round living
- All essentials covered
- Can handle winter
- Blend of DIY and professional work
This is roughly what I spent on my current van.
Budget Level 3: Premium Full-Timer (£18,000-£25,000 + van)
Base van: £15,000-£22,000 (low mileage, excellent condition, maybe LWB)
Conversion costs:
- Insulation (spray foam professional): £1,800
- Electrical (big lithium, inverter, 400W solar): £2,400
- Plumbing (fixed tank, hot water): £650
- Gas (hob + heater + professional): £1,200
- Heating (Webasto diesel air heater): £1,400
- Furniture (custom built, quality materials): £1,800
- Flooring (premium LVT): £380
- Wall lining (T&G cladding): £550
- Windows (multiple added, skylights): £850
- Ventilation (Maxxfan, multiple vents): £650
- Wet room (if included): £1,200
- Mattress (premium): £450
- Final touches: £850
- Professional carpentry: £2,400
- Professional electrical: £1,200
- Contingency: £2,220
Total conversion: £20,000
Grand total: £35,000-£42,000
What you get:
- Full-time living comfort
- Professional finish
- All amenities
- Shower, hot water, big battery
- Trades doing specialist work
Most professional converters charge £25,000-£40,000 for this level.
Living With Your Conversion: The Reality
I’ve now lived with my conversion for 14 months. Used it for 120+ nights. Here’s what I’ve learned about actually living in it.
What works brilliantly:
The bed Best decision was making it comfortable. I sleep better in the van than in my house sometimes.
The kitchen Simple two-burner setup is perfect. I’ve cooked everything from full roast dinners to elaborate curries. You don’t need an oven.
The electrical system Lithium battery + solar = freedom. I’ve gone 3 weeks without hookup in summer.
The insulation Worth every penny. Stayed comfortable in -5°C Scottish winter and +28°C Cornwall summer.
What doesn’t work as well:
Storage No matter how much you have, it’s not enough. I’ve optimized three times and it’s still tight.
Working from the van Possible but not ideal. The table’s a bit small. Posture isn’t great. I usually find a cafe.
Cooking for more than 2 The kitchen’s great for two. Had friends over once. Chaos. Stick to simple meals for guests.
Showering I use campsites, wild swimming, or gym memberships. It’s fine but not convenient.
What I wish I’d added:
More USB charging points I have two twin USB sockets. I want four more. Phones, tablets, headphones, battery packs — everything needs charging.
A better table Mine’s a bit small and wobbly. Wish I’d built something more robust.
Exterior storage A roof box or rear storage box for bikes, outdoor gear, etc. would free up interior space.
What I’m glad I didn’t add:
A shower Would’ve taken up valuable space I use for storage. Campsite showers work fine.
An oven Adds weight, uses lots of gas, heats up the van. Don’t miss it.
Fixed furniture everywhere Modularity is gold. So glad I can remove the bed.
Common Problems & Solutions
Problem 1: Condensation
Despite good ventilation, you’ll get some condensation.
Solutions:
- Run roof vent on low overnight
- Wipe windows in morning (takes 30 seconds)
- Don’t dry clothes inside (or expect condensation)
- Small dehumidifier if full-time (£45, works on 12V or USB)
Problem 2: Things Breaking
Vans vibrate. Screws loosen. Things break.
Solutions:
- Carry spare fuses, bulbs, screws
- Use threadlock on screws that keep loosening
- Check all connections monthly
- Keep a toolkit in the van
Problem 3: Running Out of Power
Happens less with solar but still possible in winter.
Solutions:
- Drive for 30-60 minutes to recharge
- Use campsites with hookup
- Reduce consumption (LED lights only, fridge on low)
- Bigger battery (lithium upgrade worth it)
Problem 4: Running Out of Water
20L doesn’t last as long as you’d think.
Solutions:
- Carry extra Jerry cans
- Use public taps (parks, campsites, petrol stations)
- Reduce waste (washing up bowl, not running tap)
- Grey water can be used for flushing toilet
Problem 5: Finding Places to Stay
This is the real challenge in England and Wales.
Solutions:
- Park4Night app (£10/year, best investment)
- Britstops membership (£30/year, farm stays)
- Arrive late, leave early
- Have campsite backup options
- Join vanlife groups for location sharing
Problem 6: Smells
Small space + cooking + bodies = smells.
Solutions:
- Ventilation (obviously)
- Take rubbish out daily
- Baking soda in storage areas
- Air freshener (I use lavender bags, £8)
- Regular deep cleans
Problem 7: Broken Heater at Midnight in Scotland
Happened to me.
Solutions:
- Always carry backup (warm sleeping bag)
- Learn basic troubleshooting
- Keep spares (glow plug for diesel heater, £12)
- Don’t rely on one system
What I’d Do Differently Next Time
I’ve converted four vans. If I did number five (and I probably will), here’s what I’d change:
1. Buy a van with windows already fitted Cutting holes is nerve-wracking and expensive if you cock it up. Spend an extra £500 on a windowed van.
2. Spend more on the battery from day one I bought cheap AGM for £150. Lasted 18 months. Bought lithium for £450. Will last 10+ years. False economy.
3. Make even more furniture removable My bed comes out but it’s still a faff. I’d design everything to be modular from the start.
4. Better soundproofing I did 70% coverage. Should’ve done 90%. Every stone hitting the underside is loud.
5. Professional gas certification from the start I avoided gas initially, then wanted it later and had to retrofit. Cost more in the end.
6. Better cable management My wiring works but it’s messy behind the panels. Would install proper cable trays from the start.
7. More overhead storage I have one overhead cupboard. Wish I’d built three.
8. Bigger worktop 90cm is okay. 120cm would’ve been better. More prep space for cooking.
9. Exterior shower Not for me, but a simple shower point on the outside (£35 worth of parts) would be handy for rinsing sandy feet.
10. Documentation as I built I wish I’d photographed more during the build. Helps when troubleshooting later.
Final Thoughts: Is It Worth It?
Converting a campervan is expensive, time-consuming, occasionally frustrating, and you’ll absolutely make mistakes.
It’s also one of the most rewarding things I’ve ever done.
When you’re parked up somewhere stunning, cooking breakfast while looking at a view that cost nothing, sitting in a space you built with your own hands, knowing you can bugger off to Scotland or Wales or Cornwall whenever you fancy — that’s worth all the hassle.
But be realistic. This isn’t Instagram. It’s:
- Cold mornings wiping condensation
- Cooking in the rain with a door open
- Finding parking at 10pm
- Dealing with broken heaters and flat batteries
- Explaining to yet another person that no, you don’t have a shower
If you’re okay with that reality, build the van.
Start small. Don’t aim for perfection. Build what you need, not what looks good on social media.
And for the love of everything, don’t skip the insulation.
Now stop reading and start building. And when you cock something up (you will), at least you’ll have learned something.
Essential Resources:
- Forums: Wildcamping.co.uk, T4/T5/T6 Forum, UKCampsite
- Apps: Park4Night (£10/year), iOverlander (free)
- YouTube: Nate Murphy (for electrical), FortyNotOut Campers (UK specific)
- Suppliers: 12V Planet (electrical), CampervanHQ (gas), Screwfix/Toolstation (everything else)
- Groups: UK Vanlife Facebook groups (search by your van model)
I’ve installed complete electrical systems in four vans now. The first installation took me four weekends, involved two rewiring sessions when I realized I’d…
I’ve installed solar on four vans now. The first installation took me 11 hours, involved three trips to the hardware shop for parts I’d forgotten, and resulted in a small roof leak that took two days to discover. The fourth installation took 6 hours start to finish with zero leaks and perfect cable management.
The difference? Understanding where the difficult bits actually are, having the right tools ready, and knowing which steps you absolutely cannot skip (spoiler: it’s the ones involving sealant and testing).
Here’s what nobody tells you: drilling holes in your van roof is genuinely nerve-wracking the first time. You’ll second-guess yourself constantly. That’s normal. But if you follow proper procedures, use correct sealant, and test everything before final assembly, it’s actually difficult to cock it up badly.
I’ve made every mistake you can make: forgotten to prime bolt holes (rust developed), used bathroom silicone instead of marine sealant (failed after 8 months), didn’t test before sealing (had to reopen everything), and mounted panels in stupid locations (shade from roof vent). Learnt from my failures.
This is a complete, step-by-step guide to installing campervan solar system: the planning nobody does properly, the tools you actually need, the techniques that prevent leaks, and the testing procedures that catch problems before they’re sealed forever.
Table of Contents
- Planning Your Installation
- Tools and Materials
- Pre-Installation Testing
- Roof Preparation
- Panel Mounting
- Cable Entry and Routing
- Controller Installation
- Battery Connections
- System Testing
- Troubleshooting
- Maintenance
Planning Your Installation
Don’t skip this. Seriously. I’ve watched people start drilling before measuring properly. It always ends badly.
Step 1: Measure Your Roof Space
You’ll need:
- Tape measure
- Paper and pencil
- Masking tape
Process:
- Measure total roof dimensions (length × width)
- Mark obstacles with masking tape:
- Roof vents (measure their footprint)
- Roof rack mounting points
- Antenna mounts
- Anything protruding from roof
- Identify curved areas (edges where roof curves down). These are unusable for rigid panels.
- Measure usable flat area remaining after obstacles
- Draw to scale on paper (1:20 scale works well)
- Example: 1cm on paper = 20cm on roof
My van example (VW Transporter):
- Total roof: 4.9m × 1.9m
- Roof vents: Two vents (60cm × 50cm each)
- Roof bars: Four mounting points
- Curved edges: ~25cm around perimeter
- Usable area: 6.8m² approximately
Step 2: Plan Panel Layout
Cut paper rectangles to scale representing your panels.
Standard 100W panel: ~120cm × 55cm Standard 150W panel: ~150cm × 67cm
Considerations:
- Shadow mapping: Will roof vent cast shadow? At what times of year? Low winter sun creates longer shadows—stand back and visualize sun angles.
- Cable routing: Panels need to connect. Plan which panels wire together and where cables run.
- Cable entry point: Where do cables enter van? Near which panel? This determines layout.
- Access for maintenance: Can you reach all junction boxes for future maintenance?
- Airflow: Leave some gaps between panels and roof (mounting brackets provide this).
My layout (2× 100W panels):
- Both panels landscape orientation
- 10cm gap between panels (cable routing)
- Positioned to minimize shade from front roof vent
- Cable entry through rear roof vent
- Junction boxes face inward (accessible from gap)
I spent 2 hours playing with paper rectangles. This prevented mounting panels in locations that would’ve been shaded or had difficult cable routing.
Step 3: Mark Panel Positions
Once layout is finalized:
- Transfer measurements to roof using masking tape
- Mark panel corners
- Mark mounting bracket positions
- Mark cable routing paths
- Double-check shadows in late afternoon (low sun angle simulates winter)
- Verify roof vent clearance (measure twice)
- Check mounting bracket positions don’t hit roof structure
- Feel underneath headliner
- Ensure brackets mount to solid roof, not just skin
- Take photos of marked layout (reference during installation)
Step 4: Identify Cable Entry Point
Three main options:
Option A: Through existing roof vent
- Advantages: No new holes, easy routing
- Disadvantages: Limited by vent location
- Best for: Most people
Option B: New cable gland
- Advantages: Place cables wherever needed
- Disadvantages: Extra hole to drill and seal
- Best for: Professional installations or when vent routing impossible
Option C: Through existing penetrations (antenna holes, etc.)
- Advantages: No new holes
- Disadvantages: Limited locations, may require removing fixtures
- Best for: Specific circumstances
I use Option A (through roof vent). It’s the easiest and least risky method.
Step 5: Plan Wiring Route Inside Van
Before you start:
- Trace path from cable entry to controller location
- How do cables run?
- Through walls? Along roof liner?
- Behind panels?
- Measure cable length needed
- Actual route length (not straight line)
- Add 1m extra for connections and mistakes
- Round up to next whole metre
- Plan controller location
- Near battery (minimize high-current cable runs)
- Accessible for monitoring
- Protected from moisture
- Visible if controller has display
- Plan battery location (if not already installed)
- Low in van (weight distribution)
- Ventilated space (especially lead-acid)
- Accessible for maintenance
- Protected from damage
My setup:
- Cables enter through rear roof vent
- Run along roof liner edge (hidden)
- Drop down rear wall behind furniture
- Controller mounted on rear wall
- 0.5m cable run from controller to battery
- Total cable run: 6m from panels to controller
Safety Planning
Before touching tools:
- Check weather forecast (dry day for installation—moisture kills sealant adhesion)
- Plan for leaks (have tarp ready if weather turns)
- Disconnect battery during electrical work (prevents shorts)
- Have fire extinguisher accessible (lithium battery safety)
- Work with someone if possible (passing tools to roof, safety spotter)
Tools and Materials
Here’s what you actually need. I’ve listed essentials vs nice-to-have.
Essential Tools
Drilling and mounting:
- Cordless drill (12V+ minimum, 18V better)
- Drill bit set: 2mm, 3mm, pilot sizes, final bolt sizes (6mm, 8mm typical)
- Step drill bit (optional but brilliant for clean holes)
- Deburring tool or round file
- Tape measure
- Spirit level
- Pencil/marker
- Masking tape
- Centre punch (marks drill locations accurately)
Electrical:
- Wire strippers (essential for clean cable prep)
- Crimping tool (for cable terminals)
- Soldering iron + solder (optional, but I prefer soldered connections)
- Multimeter (absolutely essential for testing)
- Screwdrivers (Phillips and flathead, various sizes)
- Spanner set (for bolt tightening)
- Cable cutters (for thick solar cable)
Sealant application:
- Sealant gun (for Sikaflex tubes)
- Disposable gloves (sealant is sticky and difficult to clean)
- Paper towels/rags
- Isopropyl alcohol (90%+, for cleaning)
- White spirit (for cleaning uncured Sikaflex)
Essential Materials
Mounting hardware:
- Mounting brackets (depends on panel and mounting method)
- Stainless steel bolts (M6 or M8 typical, 30-40mm length)
- Stainless steel washers (large diameter for load spreading)
- Stainless steel nylock nuts (prevent loosening from vibration)
- Backing plates (aluminum or stainless, for inside roof)
Sealant:
- Sikaflex 252 or 521UV (proper marine sealant, £15-20 per tube)
- NOT bathroom silicone (will fail)
- NOT cheap sealant (will fail)
- Buy 2-3 tubes (you’ll use more than expected)
Cables:
- Solar cable: 4-6mm² for most systems (buy 10-20% extra)
- Battery cable: 16-25mm² for controller to battery (high current)
- Cable glands (if drilling new holes)
- MC4 connectors (for panel connections)
- Cable ties (UV-resistant)
- Heat shrink tubing (various sizes)
Electrical:
- Inline fuses + holders (solar: 15-20A, battery: 30-60A depending on system)
- Cable lugs (for battery connections)
- Junction box (if splitting solar array)
Protection:
- Primer (rust prevention for drilled holes)
- Touch-up paint (match van color)
- Cable sleeve/loom (protects cables from chafing)
Nice-to-Have Tools
- Torque wrench (proper bolt tensioning)
- Right-angle drill attachment (tight spaces)
- Inspection mirror (see behind panels)
- Endoscope camera (check roof structure before drilling)
- Cable tracer (for routing inside walls)
What I Actually Use
My essential toolkit:
- DeWalt 18V drill (overkill, but I own it)
- Basic drill bit set
- Step drill bit (makes clean holes easily)
- Klein wire strippers
- Engineer PA-09 crimping tool
- Fluke multimeter (cheaper ones are fine)
- Wera screwdriver set
- Sikaflex 252 (3 tubes for complete installation)
- Standard socket set
Total tool cost (if buying new): £150-250 If you own basic tools already: £50-80 for solar-specific items
Pre-Installation Testing
Test everything before mounting. I learned this the hard way.
Test 1: Panel Output Verification
Before mounting panels:
- Connect multimeter to panel output
- Red probe to positive (usually marked red wire)
- Black probe to negative (usually black wire)
- Set meter to DC voltage
- Measure open-circuit voltage (Voc)
- In bright sunlight
- Panel disconnected from everything
- Should read 18-22V for “12V” panel (this is normal)
- Should read 36-44V for two 100W panels in series
- Check current output
- Set meter to DC amps (10A+ range)
- Connect meter in series with panel and a load (or short circuit briefly)
- Should read close to panel rating (5-6A for 100W panel)
- Do this quickly (under 5 seconds—sustained short circuit can damage cells)
- Verify polarity
- Positive should be positive
- Negative should be negative
- Mark with tape if not clearly labeled
If panels don’t produce expected voltage/current:
- Check in full sun (not cloudy)
- Ensure panel isn’t shaded at all
- Verify multimeter is working (test on known voltage)
- If still wrong, panel may be faulty (return before installation)
Test 2: Controller Function Test
Before mounting controller:
- Connect controller to battery
- Follow polarity carefully (wrong polarity kills controllers)
- Use appropriate cable size (see controller manual)
- Include inline fuse on positive cable
- Controller should power up
- Display lights up (if it has display)
- LEDs indicate status
- No error codes
- Connect panel to controller
- Verify correct polarity
- Controller should detect panel voltage
- Should show “charging” or “waiting” status
- Monitor charging current
- Should show amps flowing to battery
- Verify current matches expectations (panel rating minus losses)
If controller doesn’t work:
- Verify battery voltage (should be 11-14V for 12V system)
- Check all connections are tight
- Verify fuses aren’t blown
- Check polarity (triple check)
- Consult controller manual troubleshooting section
Test 3: Cable Continuity Test
For each cable before installation:
- Set multimeter to continuity mode (beep setting)
- Touch probes to both ends of same conductor
- Should beep (indicating continuous circuit)
- Test both positive and negative
- Test for shorts between positive and negative (should NOT beep)
This catches damaged cables before installation. I’ve had cables with internal breaks that looked fine externally—continuity testing found them.
Roof Preparation
This is critical. Surface prep determines whether your installation lasts 2 months or 20 years.
Step 1: Clean Roof Thoroughly
You need:
- Degreaser or strong detergent
- Scrubbing brush
- Hose or buckets of water
- Isopropyl alcohol 90%+
- Clean rags/cloths
Process:
- Wash entire roof with degreaser
- Remove all dirt, dust, debris
- Pay attention to mounting areas
- Rinse thoroughly
- Dry completely
- Chamois or microfiber cloths
- Ensure no water remains
- Wait 1-2 hours in sun if necessary
- Final clean with isopropyl alcohol
- Wipe mounting areas only
- This removes any remaining oils/residues
- Let evaporate completely (2-3 minutes)
Critical: Don’t install if roof is damp. Sealant won’t adhere properly. I’ve had sealant fail because I rushed this step—installed same day as washing. Bad move.
Step 2: Mark Hole Locations
Transfer your planned layout to roof:
- Place brackets in planned positions
- Mark mounting holes with pencil
- Through bracket holes
- Mark center of each hole clearly
- Double-check measurements
- Verify positions with tape measure
- Check distances match plan
- Ensure brackets are square
- Confirm clearance from roof furniture
- Use centre punch to mark hole centers
- Creates small dimple
- Prevents drill bit wandering
- Mark all holes before drilling any
Step 3: Verify No Obstructions
Before drilling, check underneath:
- Feel inside van at marked locations
- Is there solid roof structure?
- Any wiring/pipes in the way?
- Enough space for backing plates?
- Use endoscope camera if available
- Check roof structure
- Identify any hidden obstacles
- Confirm thickness of roof material
- Check for double-skinned areas
- Some vans have double-layer roofs
- Mark if you’ll drill through two layers
- May need longer bolts
My mistake: Drilled into double-layer roof with too-short bolts. Had to buy longer bolts and redrill slightly offset. Check first.
Step 4: Prepare Paint/Primer
You’ll need:
- Rust-preventative primer (Rustoleum or similar)
- Touch-up paint matching van color (optional)
- Small brush
Have these ready before drilling. You want to prime holes immediately after drilling to prevent rust starting.
Panel Mounting
This is where you commit. Deep breath. You’ve planned properly. It’ll be fine.
Step 1: Drill Pilot Holes
Start small:
- Select 2-3mm drill bit
- Drill first pilot hole
- Start perpendicular to surface
- Drill slowly at first (prevents bit wandering)
- Feel for any changes in resistance (might indicate hitting structure)
- Drill through completely
- Check from inside
- Verify hole is where expected
- Ensure no damage to interior
- Confirm spacing
- If first hole is good, drill remaining pilots
Why pilot holes?
- Easier to correct mistakes (small holes are easier to seal than large ones)
- Prevents bit wandering on final drilling
- Lets you verify positioning before committing
Step 2: Drill Final Holes
Enlarge to bolt size:
- Select correct size bit for your bolts
- M6 bolts: 6.5mm hole
- M8 bolts: 8.5mm hole
- Slightly oversized allows bolt insertion
- Drill slowly
- Let drill do the work
- Don’t force it
- Keep bit perpendicular
- Deburr holes immediately
- Use deburring tool or round file
- Remove sharp edges (prevents cable damage and corrosion)
- Both inside and outside
Step drill bit alternative:
- Creates cleaner holes with less effort
- Self-deburrs as it cuts
- More expensive (£15-25) but worth it
- I use step bits for all roof drilling now
Step 3: Prime and Seal Holes
Immediately after drilling:
- Blow out metal shavings (compressed air or breath)
- Apply rust-preventative primer to bare metal
- Inside hole edges
- Let dry 5-10 minutes
- Essential for preventing rust
- Optional: touch-up paint on exterior
- Matches van appearance
- Additional rust protection
- Purely cosmetic but nice
I learned this the hard way. Didn’t prime bolt holes on first installation. After 10 months, visible rust around bolts. Had to remove panels, clean rust, reprime, reinstall.
Step 4: Apply Sealant to Brackets
This is critical:
- Put on disposable gloves (Sikaflex is sticky)
- Apply sealant to bracket underside
- Continuous bead around perimeter
- Cover all edges
- Don’t skimp (excess will squeeze out—this is good)
- Apply sealant to bolt threads
- Each bolt gets coating
- This seals bolt shaft
- Prevents water wicking down threads
Sikaflex 252 vs 521UV:
- 252: General marine sealant, excellent adhesion
- 521UV: Better UV resistance, same adhesion
- Both work excellently
- I use 252 (slightly cheaper)
Step 5: Mount Brackets
Work quickly (Sikaflex skins over in 10-30 minutes):
- Position bracket over holes
- Insert bolts from outside
- Through bracket
- Through roof
- Sealant on threads will seal as you insert
- Inside van: add backing plate
- Spreads load
- Prevents roof crushing
- Large washer works if no backing plate
- Add washer and nylock nut
- Tighten bolts
- Snug, not crushing
- Excess sealant should squeeze out (good sign)
- Uniform tightness on all bolts
Tightening sequence (for 4-bolt bracket):
- Tighten opposite corners first (1, then 3, then 2, then 4)
- This prevents bracket warping
- Final tighten in same sequence
Step 6: Clean Excess Sealant
While still wet:
- Remove excess squeezed-out sealant
- Paper towel for bulk
- White spirit on rag for cleanup
- Don’t remove all—leave slight bead at edges
- Clean bolt heads and bracket surfaces
- Inspect seal
- Should be continuous around bracket
- No gaps
- Slight bead of sealant visible
Let cure 24-48 hours before mounting panels or driving. Sikaflex needs time to cure fully.
Step 7: Mount Panels to Brackets
After sealant has cured:
- Position panel on brackets
- Usually 4 bolts per panel (one per corner)
- Align mounting holes
- Insert bolts with washers
- Stainless steel bolts
- Washers prevent crushing panel frame
- Spring washers prevent loosening
- Tighten bolts
- Snug, not excessive
- Panels should be secure but not deformed
- Check tightness periodically (vibration can loosen)
Panel orientation:
- Junction box accessible (for future maintenance)
- Cable routing direction considered
- Frame mounting holes aligned with brackets
Cable Entry and Routing
This determines how clean your installation looks and functions.
Method 1: Through Roof Vent (Recommended)
My preferred method:
- Remove roof vent assembly
- Usually 4-6 screws
- Carefully lift out
- Note how it reassembles
- Identify cable routing path
- Down vent housing
- Or along edge of vent opening
- Avoid moving parts (vent mechanism)
- Drill small hole for cables
- In vent housing or frame
- 12-16mm hole for typical solar cables
- Deburr thoroughly
- Install cable gland
- Proper watertight gland (£5-8)
- Seal with small amount of Sikaflex
- Tighten compression fitting
- Route cables through gland
- Reinstall roof vent
- Check seal is intact
- Test vent operation
- Verify cables don’t interfere
Method 2: New Cable Gland
If vent routing isn’t feasible:
- Select location for gland
- Near panels
- Accessible from inside
- Solid roof structure
- Drill hole (size depends on gland)
- Usually 12-20mm
- Deburr carefully
- Prime hole (rust prevention)
- Install cable gland
- Apply Sikaflex to gland base
- Insert from outside
- Secure inside with nut
- Tighten compression fitting around cables
Cable glands: Buy proper marine/automotive rated glands. Cheap ones leak.
Panel Wiring on Roof
Series connection (my setup):
- Connect panel 1 positive to panel 2 negative
- Use MC4 connectors (solar panels usually come with them)
- Simply plug together
- Verify connection is secure
- Run remaining wires to cable entry
- Panel 1 negative = array negative
- Panel 2 positive = array positive
- These run to controller
Parallel connection:
- Use junction box on roof
- All positives connect together
- All negatives connect together
- Weatherproof box essential
- Single cable pair runs from junction box to controller
Cable Routing Inside Van
Best practices:
- Use cable loom or sleeve
- Protects cables from chafing
- Professional appearance
- UV protection
- Secure every 30-50cm
- UV-resistant cable ties
- Avoid sharp bends (radius > 10× cable diameter)
- Keep away from hot surfaces
- Label cables
- “Solar Positive”, “Solar Negative”
- Future you will thank present you
- Avoid high-traffic areas
- Don’t route under carpets or panels that flex
- Keep away from water sources
- Protect from physical damage
My routing (VW Transporter):
- Entry through rear roof vent
- Along roof liner edge (behind trim)
- Down rear pillar (behind plastic panel)
- To controller on rear wall
- Total length: 6m
Controller Installation
Where you put the controller matters.
Choosing Controller Location
Ideal location:
- Near battery (minimize high-current cable length)
- Dry area (protected from moisture)
- Accessible for monitoring
- Visible if controller has display
- Ventilated (controllers generate heat)
My location: Rear wall of van, 0.8m from battery, protected by furniture.
Mounting Controller
Most controllers have mounting holes:
- Mark mounting holes on wall
- Use spirit level (controller should be level)
- Mark with pencil
- Verify clearance for cables
- Drill pilot holes
- Appropriate for your wall material
- Wood: 2-3mm pilot
- Metal: 3-4mm pilot
- Mount controller with screws
- Stainless steel screws
- Washers for load spreading
- Ensure controller is secure
Cable access:
- Cables enter from bottom (prevents drips entering controller)
- Leave slack for future service
- Don’t over-tighten cable glands (if controller has them)
Wiring Controller to Solar Panels
Always connect battery BEFORE solar panels (prevents voltage spike damage).
- Route solar cables to controller
- Strip cable ends (10-15mm of insulation)
- Insert into controller solar terminals
- Usually marked “SOLAR+” and “SOLAR-“
- Polarity is critical (verify with multimeter if unsure)
- Tighten terminal screws securely
- Verify connection
- Gentle tug test (should not pull out)
- Check no bare wire exposed outside terminal
Installing Solar Fuse
Fuse goes on positive cable between panels and controller:
- Calculate fuse rating
- Panel short-circuit current × 1.25 = fuse rating
- Example: 6A panel current × 1.25 = 7.5A, use 10A fuse
- Install inline fuse holder
- Within 30cm of panel connection
- Accessible (you may need to replace fuse)
- Waterproof fuse holder for roof installations
- Insert fuse
- Correct rating
- Quality fuse (not cheap glass fuses that vibrate and break)
My setup: 15A blade fuse in waterproof holder, 20cm from cable entry point.
Battery Connections
High current connections. Take care here.
Safety First
Before connecting:
- Verify all connections upstream are correct
- Solar panels connected properly
- Controller wired correctly
- Fuses in place
- Double-check polarity (wrong polarity damages controllers and batteries)
- Disconnect any loads from battery temporarily
- Wear eye protection (battery connections can spark)
Battery Cable Sizing
Controller to battery requires thick cable:
- 200W system: 16mm² cable minimum
- 300W system: 25mm² cable
- 400W+ system: 35mm² cable
Why so thick?
Solar controllers can deliver 30-60A to batteries (MPPT controllers especially). Thin cables overheat and drop voltage.
My setup: 200W system, 25mm² cable (0.5m run from controller to battery). Overkill but safe.
Cable Preparation
- Cut cables to length (measure actual route, add 0.5m slack)
- Strip 15mm insulation from ends
- Crimp cable lugs
- Use proper crimping tool
- Crimp is permanent (should be impossible to pull off)
- Use correct size lug for cable
- Heat shrink over connection
- Seals moisture out
- Professional appearance
- Apply heat evenly
- Label cables
- “Solar Controller Positive”
- “Solar Controller Negative”
Battery Fusing
Essential safety feature:
Fuse on positive cable:
- Between controller and battery
- Within 30cm of battery positive terminal
- Rating: 1.25× maximum controller current
Example: 30A controller × 1.25 = 37.5A, use 40A fuse
Fuse types:
- ANL fuse (best for high current)
- MIDI fuse (common in automotive)
- Blade fuse (okay for <30A)
I use ANL fuses (£3-5) with proper holders (£8-12). Rock solid.
Connecting to Battery
Connection sequence:
- Connect negative cable FIRST
- Attach to battery negative terminal
- Tighten securely
- No spark (negative is safer to connect first)
- Connect positive cable LAST
- Through fuse holder
- To battery positive terminal
- May spark slightly (normal)
- Tighten securely
Why this sequence? If you drop a tool while connecting positive-first, it can short to ground. Connecting negative first makes this less likely to cause problems.
Controller Configuration
After battery connected:
- Controller should power up
- Display lights (if it has one)
- LEDs indicate status
- Configure battery type
- Lithium, AGM, Gel, Flooded lead-acid
- Incorrect setting damages batteries
- Refer to battery manufacturer specs
- Set charging voltages (if controller allows)
- Bulk/absorption voltage
- Float voltage
- Some controllers have presets (easier)
- Connect solar panels (final step)
- Controller should detect panel voltage
- Begin charging if battery isn’t full
- Monitor current flow
System Testing
Don’t skip this. Testing catches problems while they’re still easy to fix.
Test 1: Voltage Verification
With multimeter:
- Measure battery voltage
- Should be 12.4-14.6V (12V system)
- Note exact voltage
- Measure solar panel voltage
- At controller solar terminals
- Should be 18-22V per panel (varies by series/parallel)
- In full sun
- Verify controller display matches multimeter
- Within 0.1-0.2V is acceptable
- Large discrepancies indicate issues
Test 2: Current Flow Test
On sunny day:
- Check controller display for charging current
- Should show amps flowing to battery
- Should approach panel rating in full sun
- Example: 2× 100W panels = ~10-11A in series
- Monitor for 30 minutes
- Current should be stable
- May vary with clouds
- No sudden drops to zero (would indicate fault)
- Check battery voltage rise
- Should increase gradually
- Example: 12.4V → 12.8V over 1-2 hours
- Indicates charging is working
Test 3: Load Test
Verify system powers loads:
- Connect typical load (lights, fridge, etc.)
- Monitor battery voltage
- Should drop slightly under load (normal)
- Should stabilize
- Solar should reduce voltage drop (charging while under load)
- Verify controller manages charging correctly
- Doesn’t shut off under load
- Maintains appropriate charging
Test 4: Shade Test
Check for wiring issues:
- Shade one panel completely (cardboard over panel)
- Monitor system response
- Current should drop (expected)
- Should not drop to zero (would indicate series wiring issue)
- Should continue charging from unshaded panel (parallel only)
- Remove shade, check recovery
- Current should return to normal
- Immediate response
Test 5: Overnight Monitor
Let system run overnight:
- Note battery voltage at sunset
- Check again at sunrise
- Voltage should have dropped slightly (self-discharge and loads)
- Controller should start charging when sun rises
- Monitoring ensures controller sleeps/wakes correctly
Test 6: Leak Check
Critical after installation:
- Wait for heavy rain (or use hose)
- Check inside van around all mounting points
- Feel for moisture
- Look for water stains
- Check immediately after rain
- Inspect panel mounting bolts
- Should be dry
- No water pooling
- Sealant should be intact
If leaks found:
- Don’t panic
- Identify exact entry point
- Remove bolt/bracket
- Clean old sealant
- Reapply fresh Sikaflex
- Reinstall
I found a small leak after first installation (bathroom silicone failed). Fixed with proper Sikaflex. No issues since.
Troubleshooting
Common problems and solutions.
Problem: No Charging Current
Symptoms:
- Controller shows 0A charging
- Battery voltage not rising
- Panels producing voltage but no current flow
Causes & Solutions:
- Battery already fully charged
- Solution: This is normal. Wait until battery discharges slightly.
- Check: Battery voltage >14.4V = full, won’t accept charge
- Panel not in sun
- Solution: Wait for sunny conditions
- Check: Panel voltage should be 18-22V per panel in sun
- Faulty connection
- Solution: Check all connections are tight
- Wiggle wires while monitoring (loose connection will cause current fluctuation)
- Blown fuse
- Solution: Check solar fuse, replace if blown
- Investigate what caused fuse to blow
- Controller fault
- Solution: Check controller display for error codes
- Consult manual for troubleshooting
Problem: Low Charging Current
Symptoms:
- Charging, but much less than expected
- Example: 200W system producing 3-4A instead of 10-11A
Causes & Solutions:
- Cloudy weather
- Solution: This is normal. Expect 20-60% output on cloudy days
- No fix needed
- Shading
- Solution: Reposition van to avoid shade
- Even partial shade dramatically reduces output
- Wrong wiring configuration
- Solution: Verify series/parallel wiring matches controller setup
- Check polarity
- Dirty panels
- Solution: Clean panels with water and soft cloth
- Dust/dirt reduces output 10-20%
- Hot panels
- Solution: This is normal in summer
- Panels lose ~10% efficiency when hot
- No fix, just accept it
- Cable voltage drop
- Solution: Measure voltage at panels vs controller
- Should be <0.3V difference
- If higher, cables too thin or too long
Problem: Controller Error Codes
Common errors:
“Battery overvoltage”
- Cause: Charging voltage too high
- Solution: Adjust controller settings for battery type
- Check: Battery type setting correct?
“Battery undervoltage”
- Cause: Battery deeply discharged
- Solution: Charge battery from mains/alternator first
- Controller may not charge from very low voltage
“PV overvoltage”
- Cause: Solar panel voltage exceeds controller rating
- Solution: Check series wiring (too many panels in series?)
- Verify controller rated for panel voltage
“PV reverse polarity”
- Cause: Solar panel wires backwards
- Solution: Disconnect immediately, swap wires
- Check for controller damage (may need replacement)
“Temperature”
- Cause: Controller overheating
- Solution: Improve ventilation
- Reduce load or move controller to cooler location
Problem: Fluctuating Current
Symptoms:
- Current reading jumps around
- Not stable
- Varies second-to-second
Causes & Solutions:
- Clouds passing
- Solution: This is normal
- Clouds vary panel output rapidly
- No fix needed
- Loose connection
- Solution: Check and tighten all connections
- Wiggle test each connection while monitoring
- Faulty panel
- Solution: Test each panel individually
- Replace faulty panel
- Controller MPPT tracking
- Solution: Some fluctuation normal as MPPT seeks maximum power
- If excessive (>20% variation in stable sun), controller may be faulty
Problem: Battery Not Reaching 100%
Symptoms:
- Battery charges to 90-95% then stops
- Never fully charged
Causes & Solutions:
- Insufficient solar
- Solution: Battery uses more power than solar generates
- Reduce consumption or add more solar
- Short charging time
- Solution: Battery needs 4-6 hours of good sun to fully charge
- Park in sun longer
- Wrong absorption voltage
- Solution: Check controller settings match battery requirements
- Lithium typically needs 14.2-14.6V absorption
- Battery degraded
- Solution: Old batteries lose capacity
- Test with load tester
- May need replacement
Problem: Roof Leak
Symptoms:
- Water inside van after rain
- Wet around mounting bolts
- Staining on ceiling
Solutions:
- Identify exact leak point
- Feel around all bolts during/after rain
- May need to remove interior panels to access
- Remove bolt and bracket
- Note orientation for reinstall
- Let area dry completely
- Clean old sealant
- Remove all traces
- Clean with isopropyl alcohol
- Reapply Sikaflex 252
- Generous amount
- On bracket underside
- On bolt threads
- Reinstall and let cure 48 hours
- Don’t drive until fully cured
- Monitor after next rain
Prevention: Use proper marine sealant (Sikaflex), not bathroom silicone.
Maintenance
Solar systems are low-maintenance, but not no-maintenance.
Monthly Checks
5 minutes, once a month:
- Clean panels if dusty/dirty
- Water and soft cloth
- Don’t use abrasive cleaners
- Morning or evening (not hot panels)
- Check mounting bolts for tightness
- Vibration can loosen bolts over time
- Quick visual and tactile check
- Inspect cables for damage
- Look for chafing, cuts, damage
- Check UV damage on cable jacket
- Resecure loose cables
- Verify charging is working
- Check controller display
- Confirm current flow on sunny day
Annual Checks
30 minutes, once per year:
- Deep clean panels
- Remove accumulated grime
- Check for physical damage (cracks, delamination)
- Inspect all sealant
- Look for cracks, gaps, or degradation
- Reapply if necessary
- Check bolt areas especially
- Check connections
- Tighten all electrical connections
- Look for corrosion (green/white deposits)
- Clean terminals if needed
- Test full system
- Verify charging current matches expectations
- Check battery charging to 100%
- Confirm controller settings haven’t changed
- Inspect interior cable routing
- Check for chafing where cables pass through holes
- Verify cable ties are secure
- Look for moisture ingress around cable entry
Long-Term Maintenance
Every 2-3 years:
- Reseal mounting points
- Sealant degrades over time
- Remove bolts, clean, reapply fresh sealant
- Preventative maintenance
- Replace worn cables
- UV degrades cable jackets
- If cracking or brittleness visible, replace
- Update controller firmware (if applicable)
- Victron and some other brands offer updates
- Improves performance and fixes bugs
Panel Cleaning Tips
Do:
- Clean with water and soft cloth
- Clean in morning/evening (cool panels)
- Use long brush for hard-to-reach panels
- Dry after cleaning (prevents water spots)
Don’t:
- Use abrasive cleaners (scratches glass)
- Clean hot panels (can crack from thermal shock)
- Use pressure washer (can damage seals)
- Walk on panels (will crack cells)
Final Thoughts
My first solar installation took 11 hours, involved two trips to buy forgotten parts, and resulted in a small leak that took a week to notice. My most recent installation took 6 hours with zero issues.
The difference? I learned that solar installation isn’t difficult—it’s methodical. The people who struggle are the ones who skip planning, rush through sealant application, or forget to test before sealing everything permanently.
If you take away one thing from this guide: test everything before making it permanent. Connect panels before mounting. Wire controller before sealing cables. Check for leaks before calling the job done. Problems found early are easy fixes. Problems found after everything’s sealed are expensive nightmares.
The most common mistake isn’t technical—it’s rushing. Take your time. Do proper surface prep. Use correct sealant. Test thoroughly. Your future self will thank you when the installation works flawlessly for years.
And please, use proper marine sealant. The £15 you save using bathroom silicone will cost you hours of remedial work when it fails after 6-12 months. Sikaflex 252 is expensive because it actually works. I’ve learned this the expensive way so you don’t have to.
My 200W system has been flawless for 22 months. Zero leaks, zero failures, zero regrets. It took 7 hours to install including multiple test cycles and proper sealant curing time. That 7 hours has saved me hundreds of hours of hookup dependency and given me freedom to camp anywhere.
Now go install some solar panels on your van, and actually read the Sikaflex application instructions before squeezing the trigger.
Where to Buy (UK Sources)
Solar panels:
- Amazon UK (wide selection)
- Renogy UK (www.renogy.com/uk)
- 12V Planet (www.12vplanet.co.uk)
- Bimble Solar (www.bimblesolar.com)
Controllers:
- Amazon UK (EPEver, Renogy)
- 12V Planet (premium brands)
- Victron dealers (victronenergy.co.uk)
Mounting hardware:
- Renogy UK (complete kits)
- Amazon UK (generic brackets)
- Van conversion specialists
Sealant (critical):
- Sikaflex 252: Marine chandleries, eBay, Amazon
- Sikaflex 521UV: Same sources
- Don’t buy from hardware shops (they stock bathroom silicone, not marine sealant)
Cables:
- 12V Planet (quality solar cable)
- Vehicle wiring specialists
- Amazon UK (verify specifications)
Tools:
- Screwfix (drills, tools)
- Toolstation (similar to Screwfix)
- Amazon UK (specialized tools)



