Off-road caravans combine the comfort of a traditional caravan with the capability to handle gravel roads and 4x4 tracks. They have higher ground clearance, reinforced chassis, and independent suspension.
Off-road caravans are the workhorse of South African bush travel. They give you a proper bed, kitchen, and bathroom while handling the corrugated gravel and rocky tracks that regular caravans cannot. Brands like Jurgens (Penta), Invader, and Conqueror lead this category. Most off-road caravans sleep between 2 and 6 people, depending on the model. The smaller units are easier to tow on narrow bush roads, while the larger ones provide more living space at the cost of manoeuvrability. All of them need a Code EB license in most cases due to their weight. Popular routes for off-road caravans include the Kruger bush camps, Kgalagadi 4x4 trails, Baviaanskloof, and the Richtersveld. These are places where you need the ground clearance and suspension travel, but still want to sleep in a proper bed at the end of the day.

Pretoria
R960/day

Pretoria
R900/day

Pretoria
R1000/day

Pretoria
R1450/day

City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
R980/day

Bloemfontein
R1000/day

Pretoria
R850/day

Brackenfell
R1050/day

Robertson
R1150/day

Pretoria
R1050/day

Alberton
R1200/day

Kroonstad
R980/day
Off-road caravans have reinforced chassis, independent suspension, higher ground clearance, and stone guards. They can handle gravel roads and 4x4 tracks that would damage a standard road caravan.
Most off-road caravans require a Code EB license due to their weight. Some lighter models can be towed with Code B. Each listing on Kampi shows the specific license requirement.
Typically 2 to 6 people, depending on the model. Smaller units are designed for couples, while family-sized models have bunk beds or convertible dinettes.