
Motorhome clubs in the UK range from vast national organisations with campsite networks spanning thousands of sites, to small, volunteer-run groups for owners of a single make of van. Whether you want discounted pitches, organised rallies, make-specific technical help, or simply a community of people who understand why you spent that much on a vehicle you can also sleep in, there is a club for you.
This guide covers every major option, from the big two national motorhome clubs through to the most active make-specific owners' groups.
About this guide: MotorhomeFun has been the UK's largest motorhome-only club since 2007, with around 81,000 members who between them have experience of every club on this list. We are well placed to give you an honest comparison.
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Quick Comparison: UK Motorhome Clubs at a Glance
| Club | Founded | Members | Annual Cost | Primary Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caravan and Motorhome Club | 1907 | 1,000,000 | £69 | Campsite network |
| Camping and Caravanning Club | 1901 | 750,000 | £56.95 | Campsite network |
| Motor Caravanners' Club | 1960s | 3,800 | £41 | Rallies (motorhome only) |
| MotorhomeFun | 2007 | 80,000 | Free / £20 | Motorhome club |
| Auto-Trail Owners' Club | 1993 | 2,000 | £28 | Auto-Trail rallies |
| Auto-Sleeper Owners' Club | 1989 | N/A | £20 | Auto-Sleeper rallies |
| Bailey Owners Club | 1970 | N/A | £20 | Bailey rallies |
| Hymer Club International | 1990 | 300 | £15 | Hymer rallies |
| Swift Owners Club | 1989 | 400 | £20 | Swift rallies |
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The National Clubs
These are the organisations open to all makes and models, with site networks, member services, and a broad appeal.
The Caravan and Motorhome Club

The big one. Founded in 1907 as The Caravan Club, it rebranded in 2017 to acknowledge that motorhomers had become a significant part of its membership. Given its more recent additions to the site offering, maybe soon it will change its name again to the Caravan, Motorhome and Glamping Pod Club. Either way, it now represents close to one million members across the UK and Ireland.
The CMC's main draw is its site network. The club operates around 200 main club sites and over 2,200 smaller privately owned certificated locations, known as CLs, which are 'supposed to be' exclusive to members.
If you're a regular site user, membership pays for itself quickly. Members save £15 per night on UK Club campsite pitch fees, and membership covers you, a partner, and children under 18 for £69 a year by direct debit.
Beyond campsites, there are ferry discounts, a monthly magazine, technical advice, insurance products, and access to over 300 European sites. The CMC is also ABTA and ATOL bonded, which matters if you're booking European package tours through them.
It is a broad church. Caravanners, motorhomers, and campervanners are all welcome, though tent campers will need to pitch that tent on top of their car. That breadth is a strength if you want scale, but it also means the club doesn't feel specifically motorhome-focused. For every story about miserable wardens you'll find another about how wonderful they are. They have a peculiar habit of locking the showers just as you want to use them, but when not locked, those showers will be clean and in good repair.
Best for: Site-heavy tourers who want the widest campsite network in the UK.
Cost: £69 per year by direct debit. https://www.caravanclub.co.uk/
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The Camping and Caravanning Club

The other big one, and older than the CMC. The Camping and Caravanning Club has been going for over 120 years. It is a not-for-profit organisation, meaning every pound earned goes back into its facilities and services.
Digital membership costs £56.95 per year. Paper membership, which includes a printed SiteSeeker guide and the monthly magazine posted to you, costs £59.95.
Members have access to nearly 100 club-owned sites across the UK, from the Cornish coast to the Scottish Highlands, plus more than 1,200 member-exclusive sites. Their Temporary Holiday Sites, run by local District Associations, are a popular perk for members who like a more relaxed, booking-light approach to weekends away.
The C&CC has always had a reputation as the friendlier, slightly less corporate of the two big clubs. Whether that's still true probably depends on your local experience.
Best for: Tourers who want a not-for-profit alternative to the CMC with a solid site network and a community feel.
Cost: £56.95 (digital) or £59.95 (paper) per year. https://www.campingandcaravanningclub.co.uk/
The MotorhomeFun Club

MotorhomeFun is the UK's largest motorhome-only club, with around 80,000 members and more than seven million posts across its forums. Founded in 2007, it is free to join and open to all motorhome and campervan owners.
MotorhomeFun is a club in every meaningful sense. Members hold rallies all over the UK and help each other daily across thousands of active discussions. There is a library of motorhome guides, resources and manuals, a newsletter, a stolen motorhome database, annual community awards, and dedicated spaces for almost every make and model on the market. Community is not a feature bolted onto MotorhomeFun. It is the point of it.
Because the membership is so large, the breadth of knowledge available is extraordinary. Whatever your motorhome, whatever your problem, someone on MotorhomeFun has been there. Someone has stripped the same water heater, bought the same van from the same dealer, driven the same route through the same country. That collective experience is what a club actually means in practice.
MotorhomeFun members also enjoy genuine exclusive discounts across a broad range of motorhome accessories and services.
Best for: Anyone who loves friendly rallies, wants real-world advice from real motorhomers, available whenever they need it.
Cost: Two tiers: free membership, or full membership at £20 per year. https://www.motorhomefun.co.uk
The Motor Caravanners' Club

The Motor Caravanners' Club is a not-for-profit organisation, run for members by a Council of Management elected by those members, with all regional and special interest groups run entirely by volunteers. Annual reports over the last four or five years have shown membership to be in steady decline.
Crucially, it is for motorhome owners only. Members must own or have the use of a motor caravan, whether factory built or privately converted, to an acceptable standard for hygiene and safety.
The MCC is all about rallies and social events, and it does this well. There are over 500 social gatherings spread across the entire UK each year, typically held over weekends or extended weekends at interesting venues.
Annual membership is £41, covering the applicant and a nominated joint member living at the same address, along with children under 18. There is also a free monthly magazine.
Best for: Motorhome owners who like committees, but who also want a social, rally-focused club that is exclusively for motorhomers.
Cost: £41 per year.
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Make-Specific Owners' Clubs
If you own a particular make of motorhome, there is a good chance a dedicated owners' club exists for it. These clubs tend to be smaller and more social than the national organisations, with a focus on rallies, technical know-how specific to your van, and the kind of camaraderie that comes from owning the same thing. Factory tours are a common perk.
Many of these clubs are also sponsored by the motorhome manufacturer. It is in their interest to see that you enjoy the club, because if you enjoy the club, when it comes time to change your motorhome, you are less likely to change the brand. Clever stuff.
Here are the most active ones.
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Auto-Trail Owners' Club (ATOC)
The Auto-Trail Owners' Club was formed in 1993 by a small group of owners who met at the Motor Caravan Show in Peterborough. It has since grown into one of the largest single-manufacturer motorhome clubs in the UK.
ATOC runs over 60 rallies a year, both in the UK and abroad, and is open to owners of Auto-Trail and Tribute motorhomes of any age or model. Members receive a quarterly magazine and an annual rally handbook, along with supplier discounts. Factory visits to the Auto-Trail plant are also organised periodically.
Best for: Auto-Trail and Tribute owners who want a busy rally programme and a large community of fellow owners.
Cost: Around £28 per year.
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Auto-Sleeper Owners' Club (ASOC)
The Auto-Sleeper Owners' Club has been running since 1989, when it started with a letter in a travel magazine and grew with direct support from the Auto-Sleepers directors at their factory in Willersey, Gloucestershire. The club is officially supported by AS Group Ltd and is open to current owners of Auto-Sleeper motorhomes and campervans.
In addition to the national rally held every year over the spring bank holiday, rallies are organised throughout the UK and Europe. Previous foreign destinations have included France, Germany, the Netherlands, Austria and Italy. Members receive a quarterly magazine and access to a resource area covering paint codes, technical information, recalls, and supplier discounts.
Best for: Auto-Sleeper owners who want factory-linked support, a quarterly magazine, and a well-organised rally programme.
Cost: £20 per year.
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Bailey Owners Club (BOC)
The Bailey Owners Club is an independent, volunteer-run organisation that has been bringing Bailey owners together for over 50 years, covering Bailey caravans, motorhomes, and campervans. It is entirely independent of Bailey of Bristol, which nonetheless actively points new owners towards it.
Members attend organised rallies across the UK and Europe, and every two years the club visits the Bailey manufacturing facility for a Works Rally, giving members an inside look at where their vehicle was built. Quarterly newsletters, an annual yearbook, and supplier discounts are also included.
Best for: Bailey motorhome and campervan owners who want a well-established, sociable club with strong manufacturer ties.
Cost: Around £20 per year.
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Hymer Club International (HCI)
Hymer Club International was founded in 1990 by a group of Hymer enthusiasts who wanted to hold rallies overseas. It is the main independent club for Hymer motorhome owners in the UK, covering Hymer-badged vehicles only.
The club has around 300 members from across the UK and Europe, holds rallies throughout the year in the UK and abroad, and publishes a regular newsletter with technical advice and travel content. Previous overseas gatherings have taken members to Ireland, the Isle of Man, Germany, Spain and France.
Annual membership costs £15, with a one-off joining fee of £5 for new members.
It is worth noting that MotorhomeFun's dedicated Hymer Owners Group subforum reaches more UK Hymer owners in one place than any formal club currently manages. The two are not mutually exclusive.
Best for: Hymer motorhome owners who want an independent, sociable club with a European rally tradition.
Cost: £15 per year (plus £5 joining fee).
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Swift Owners Club
The Swift Owners Club was founded in 1989, when over 40 owners responded to an advert in Practical Caravan magazine. It has since appointed a committee representing nine geographical areas of the UK.
Members have access to almost 50 rallies within the UK and Europe each year, exclusive discounts from suppliers, and a quarterly newsletter. The club covers Swift motorhomes specifically, with members sharing tips and guidance relevant to their vans.
Best for: Swift motorhome owners looking for a geographically well-structured club with a solid rally programme.
Cost: £20 per year (plus £5 joining fee).
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Elddis Owners Club
The Elddis Owners Club was established in 1973 at the suggestion of Elddis founder Siddle Cook, making it one of the oldest make-specific motorhome clubs in the UK. It covers Elddis, Xplore, Compass, and Buccaneer vehicles, all built at Erwin Hymer UK's County Durham headquarters.
Since the club's founding, nearly 4,000 rallies have been organised, including 70 in Europe. Members receive newsletters and a rally handbook, and weekends away can cost as little as £20 per unit.
Best for: Owners of Elddis, Compass, Buccaneer, or Xplore motorhomes who want a long-established, affordable club.
Cost: £17 per year.
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All those Motorhome Clubs - which Should You Join?
There is no wrong answer, and many motorhomers hold memberships in more than one club at once.
If you use sites regularly, the CMC or C&CC will likely pay for themselves within a handful of nights. If you want social events and rallies with a motorhome-only crowd, the Motor Caravanners' Club is excellent value. If you own a specific make and want to swap notes with people who have the same van and the same problems, there is almost certainly a dedicated owners' club worth looking at.
MotorhomeFun sits across all of this as the community layer. We don't replace campsite networks or organised rally programmes. What we offer is the largest pool of motorhome knowledge in the UK, free of charge, available at any time. Most members here also hold one or more paid memberships elsewhere and use MotorhomeFun for everything in between.
The sensible approach is to work out what you actually want from membership, then join the clubs that deliver it.
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Frequently Asked Questions about Motorhome Clubs
Is MotorhomeFun a club?
What is the best motorhome club in the UK?
Which motorhome club has the most members?
Do I need to join a motorhome club?
Can I join more than one motorhome club?
Is the Caravan and Motorhome Club worth joining if I have a motorhome?
What is the difference between the Caravan and Motorhome Club and the Camping and Caravanning Club?
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MotorhomeFun was founded in 2007 and is the UK's largest motorhome community. Membership is free and open to all motorhome and campervan owners. Join here.
