In the market for a small, self-contained camper? It won鈥檛 take you long to discover that there are few options in the United States, despite the flourishing #vanlife movement. Pickings have gotten slim since 2003, when Volkswagen laid to rest its iconic European Winnebago, the last U.S. factory option.
Meanwhile, Japan is inundated with a flood of new campers being built out of minivan-size vehicles (like this ), which were recently featured in the .
Surely, alongside the van lifers, there鈥檚 a large demographic of Americans with enough discretionary income who would drool over the chance to own a camper van small enough to parallel park outside a cramped Brooklyn loft and serve as a weekend adventuremobile, right?
But stateside, the list of options continues to shrink. There is a diminishing fleet of VWs, which you can find refurbished at or , but you鈥檙e likely to find yourself at the bottom of a long waiting list鈥攆or a used vehicle. converts Jeep Wranglers and Honda Elements with Westfalia-style pop tops, but they鈥檙e fairly spartan and lack a kitchenette. Winnebago still offers its Travato, and , , and continue to customize full-size vans, but they鈥檙e hardly compact, especially compared with what鈥檚 appearing in Japan.
Returning to the United States after living out of a camper van in New Zealand, I was disappointed to face the reality that vehicles I frequently encountered in the Southern Hemisphere鈥攍ike the and the Mitsubishi Delica/L300, or the 鈥攁re unavailable here.
Curious as to why this might be, I reached out to several manufacturers, but none seemed even remotely interested in addressing the topic. Finally, a Toyota spokesperson got back to me: 鈥淭here doesn鈥檛 appear to be enough demand to justify the cost鈥 of importing a scaled-down camper van to the United States, which is puzzling considering the nearly five decades of praise the company鈥檚 beloved HiAce has earned overseas.
鈥淚t鈥檚 all in the marketing,鈥 suggests Alan Feld of Sportsmobile, who maintains that his company, alongside 国产吃瓜黑料 Van and Roadtrek, are small game in this country.
Maybe Feld is right. It could be that the monumentally American ideology of 鈥渂igger is better鈥 continues to dictate the automobile market here, where large, towable campers and mammoth slide-out festooned diesel pushers remain king among recreational vehicles, according to the .
So as it stands, if you鈥檙e in the United States and on the hunt for a new compact camper van equipped with the relatively modest basics of a VW Vanagon, your options are limited unless you鈥檙e willing to dole out thousands of dollars in aftermarket conversions. Otherwise, you鈥檒l have to resort to undertaking your own project, which, with a bit of plywood, a few two-by-fours and some ingenuity, isn鈥檛 a bad idea. But it could become a lengthy, exhausting, expensive endeavor in its own right.
Maybe it鈥檚 time to bite the bullet and give Sportsmobile a call, checkbook in hand, since it doesn鈥檛 look like we鈥檒l be seeing souped-up Scions or Delicas arriving here anytime soon.
After all, 鈥渢he grass is always greener鈥 says Feld, noting that a Japanese magazine recently approached him with hopes of finding out why they couldn鈥檛 get full-size campers like Sportsmobile鈥檚 custom 4×4聽exported to Japan.