hello, I m just only toying with the idea of getting a static caravan within about an hour of west midlands I can use at weeknds for sel and family. are there any places that gives me the pros and cons f doing this? I also yet dont know how much it will cost to have a static caravan on a small quiet site. if anyone can give me ball park figure would be interested
The main consideration is the loss you will make if you later decide to sell. I had a static which cost £16000 new in 2001. In 2008 I had to give it up and the site gave me £3250 for it - in immaculate condition. The man in the next caravan enquired about it for his nephew the same afternoon and was told it was for sale for £14000!
We were paying around £2000 per annum - taking into account insurance, site fees and share of business rates. On top of this there is gas and electric. This was on a site in the Kidderminster area. If you decide to look around the Stourport area, check out the flooding history of the site - we lost one van to floods on a site there in 2000.
as suggested above, you need to check out the resale VERY carefully and also check to see if there is an age limit on vans, many sites dont allow private sales and insist on vans being replaced through the site if its more than 20 years old (which nowadays is silly but profitable for the site operator)
if its just a weekend retreat and youre not going far, have you considered a tourer, you wont be limited to one site and wont suffer high losses when selling/replacing
as an indication of costs elsewhere, we pay 2070 euros in france on the vendee - obviously not a weekend retreat- no age limit on vans, you can buy a second hand one in the uk as we did and ship it out, saving a LOT of money and once its sited its worth more than you paid for it (inc transport) if you buy a half decent one!!!
some of the sites around where we live in clacton, charge around 5k per year !!!
i did wonder about resale value. I would have to visit a lot to justify 2K . Thought about a tourer but as i only have very small car it would not be possible. Will keep on thinking!
Quote: Originally posted by happy-snapper on 15/4/2012
i did wonder about resale value. I would have to visit a lot to justify 2K . Thought about a tourer but as i only have very small car it would not be possible. Will keep on thinking!
We now have a tourer on a seasonal pitch (with winter storage) at £1600 a year. We can't tow ours as our car isn't big enough either. We had it delivered to the site from the dealer. Not sure where in the West Midlands you are, but we bought ours from Chichester Caravans, who delivered it to Oxfordshire for us.
The rent is not cheap but as we have no additional fuel costs for towing, we think it is worth it.
i suppose it comes down to benefits v cost - it might work out cheaper to stay in b&b's budget hotels - following cheap deals all the way !!! groupon were offering a dfds weekend away for two on a trip to denmark for 80 per couple !! of course you need to buy food/drink and you only get 4 hours in denmark, but hey, its a weekend away!!!
We have an old van, it only costs us £1300 a year ground rent and the van itself was just £200. We are in our 3rd year and the only problem we have had with an older van is it's chillier than a double glazed insulated one but no colder than when we were touring with a converted minibus.
It gives us as many weekends away as we want and we have our main holiday there too, all in all it pays for itself really as we are there 3 weekends a month and all bank holidays plus 4 weeks annual holidays.
It's worth looking at older vans IMO as the resale hardly matters if you have only paid a couple of hundred for it anyway.
thanks for all the input. what started me off was that i was going about with a friend who was looking for a camper and one place we went to had caravans also. There was an old one there for about£1500 which got me thinking. I couldnt afford anything over 4,000 anyway so unless I can find somehwere within an hours drive who accepts old caravans think my great plan wont go far.
I gave up caravaning about 3 years ago because of chronic back trouble, but even though we used B&B's I missed the caravaning lifestyle. We considered a static and decided against it with the high annual fees and the ridiculous admin fees etc it's a rip off in my opinion. Then I looked at siting a standard caravan but nowadays you can still pay well over £1500 a year.
Okay if you have a small car I'm sure you can get an older big van to do the job, but I still like to go to different sites.
So I have ended up with a tourer to see if I can manage it, I've tried to ensure everything is set up to be as easy as possible, I use a battery drill to wind the legs up & down, (it's even easier if I get the misus doin it)I have a van with an onboard water tank which means you don't run out when halfway through a shower. Plus I have just bought a great and easy to roll out awning and if you want the sides up you can, the same goes for the front.
I'm also looking at siting the van for a month on one site then another month on another etc. You can do this quite cheaply as a member of the caravan club. The sites to use are the quiet 5 van sites which are inexpensive & out of the way but for me I'll be selecting the ones within an hour from home. I'll also only be using it for the warmer months in the year so all in all I reckon it should all cost less than a grand for the year.
That's what I call, Having your cake and eating it!
We're also in the process of considering buying a static. Over the years we've holidayed in every imagineable type of van - from the extremely basic to the very luxurious. Our preference is for something in the middle - comfortable but practical. We're really not into the current trend for everything cream - I don't want to spend my leisure hours scrubbing carpets and upholstery! Am I also the only person who cannot stand all that fancy curtaining with dozens and dozens of fiddly tiebacks? - they drive me crazy. I'm also not a fan of two bathrooms which to me seems a waste of valuable space, or large kitchen appliances. The most recent van we stayed in had a bigger cooker and hob than we've got at home. That said, each to his own.
Our honest opinion is that you shouldn't consider buying a static unless you can afford to say goodbye to that wad of cash. You don't buy a caravan as a financial investment. Static ownership is a leisure activity, and like most, you just spend your money for the enjoyment you get out of it.