Finding free camping is one of the most valuable skills in van life — and the right apps make it dramatically easier. The community-powered databases have matured enormously over the last few years, and there are now millions of spots documented across the US, Europe, and beyond. These are the apps we actually use, with honest assessments of what each one is genuinely good for.
Once you’ve found your spots, use VanCalc’s route cost calculator to estimate your fuel costs getting there — and your monthly budget calculator to see exactly how much you save by mixing free and paid camping.
Best Camping Apps for Van Life in the US
1. The Dyrt PRO — Best Overall for the US
Cost: Free (basic) / $35/year (PRO) | Coverage: USA
The Dyrt is the most comprehensive camping database in the United States. The PRO version — $35/year — is genuinely one of the best value subscriptions in van life. The free version is useful, but PRO unlocks the features that actually matter.
What makes it worth paying for:
- Offline maps — works with zero cell signal, which is exactly when you need it most
- Cell coverage data for each campsite — critical if you work remotely and need to know before driving an hour down a dirt road
- Thousands of free dispersed camping spots plus paid sites all in one database
- User reviews with real photos and dates — you can see if a spot is still accessible
- Trip planning tools to string together multi-stop routes
Best for: Anyone doing van life in the western US. BLM land, National Forest dispersed camping, and state park campgrounds are all well covered. If you only pay for one camping app, make it this one.
Limitation: US-only. Completely useless in Europe.
2. Freecampsites.net — Best Completely Free Option
Cost: Free | Coverage: USA, Canada, some international
The best camping database you can use without spending a cent. Community-sourced, no subscription, and surprisingly comprehensive — especially for BLM land and dispersed camping in the western states. Works well alongside The Dyrt for double coverage of any area.
Best for: Van lifers who want solid free spot data without paying for an app. Use it as your backup to The Dyrt.
Limitation: No offline maps. Some listings are outdated — always read the comments and check the date of the last review.
3. Campendium — Best for Remote Workers
Cost: Free | Coverage: USA
Campendium’s standout feature is its cell signal data. Every listing shows which carriers get signal and how strong it is. If you work remotely and need to know whether a spot is viable before committing to the drive, Campendium saves you a lot of wasted trips.
Best for: Remote workers who need connectivity data before choosing a spot. Cross-reference with The Dyrt for the most complete picture.
4. iOverlander — Best for Remote & Off-Grid
Cost: Free | Coverage: Global
Originally built for overlanders crossing continents, iOverlander has a strong database of remote and unusual spots that other apps miss entirely. If you’re heading deep into the desert, mountains, or backcountry, check iOverlander first. It often has spots that simply don’t appear anywhere else.
Best for: Remote camping, border crossings, spots that other apps don’t have.
5. Recreation.gov — Essential for National Parks
Cost: Free (booking fees apply) | Coverage: US Federal lands
The official booking platform for National Park campgrounds and National Forest sites. The most popular spots book out months in advance — especially in summer. Set up alerts for cancellations if you want last-minute access to popular sites.
Pro tip: An America the Beautiful pass ($80/year) waives day-use fees at all federal sites and gives discounted camping. It pays for itself fast if you’re spending serious time in National Parks.
Best Camping Apps for Van Life in Europe
6. Park4Night — The #1 App for European Van Life
Cost: Free (basic) / ~€15/year (premium) | Coverage: Europe + worldwide
Park4Night is the single most important app for van life in Europe. With over 300,000 community-submitted spots across every European country — wild camping, Aires, Stellplätze, farms, parking areas — it’s the backbone of how people navigate European van life. If you’re driving in Europe and don’t have this app, you’re making things much harder than they need to be.
What makes it essential:
- Offline maps for every European country — download before you lose signal
- Filter by type: wild camping, motorhome area, farm stay, parking
- Recent user comments showing whether spots are still accessible (crucial — things change)
- Available in multiple languages
- Works seamlessly as you cross borders
Best for: Every single van lifer in Europe. No exceptions.
7. Campercontact — Best for Northern & Central Europe
Cost: Free (basic) / ~€10/year (premium) | Coverage: Europe
Campercontact specialises in official motorhome areas — Aires in France, Stellplätze in Germany, sosta camper in Italy — and is particularly strong in countries where wild camping is restricted. If you’re spending significant time in Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, or Scandinavia, Campercontact fills in the gaps that Park4Night misses.
Best for: Germany, Netherlands, Scandinavia, Belgium. Use it alongside Park4Night rather than instead of it.
8. iOverlander — Best for Eastern Europe & The Balkans
Cost: Free | Coverage: Global
iOverlander shines in places where Park4Night’s coverage thins out — Albania, North Macedonia, Kosovo, Bosnia, Morocco, Georgia. If you’re going off the standard European van life routes, iOverlander often has the best data.
Best for: Off-the-beaten-path Europe, Balkans, North Africa, anywhere that feels a bit adventurous.
9. Wikicamps — Best for Multi-Continent Travellers
Cost: ~$8 one-time | Coverage: Europe, Australia, NZ, North America
If you’re travelling across multiple continents and want a single app that works everywhere, Wikicamps is worth the one-time cost. Strong in Australia (where it started), expanding well into Europe. Solid UI, good filtering, reliable database.
Quick Comparison
| App | Best For | Cost | Offline Maps |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Dyrt PRO | US overall | $35/yr | ✓ PRO only |
| Freecampsites.net | US free option | Free | ✗ |
| Campendium | Remote workers (US) | Free | ✗ |
| iOverlander | Remote/global | Free | ✓ |
| Park4Night | Europe #1 | Free/€15yr | ✓ |
| Campercontact | N/Central Europe | Free/€10yr | ✓ |
| Wikicamps | Multi-continent | ~$8 once | ✓ |
Gear That Makes Free Camping More Comfortable
The more self-sufficient your van, the more free camping spots become viable. These are the key pieces:
- BougeRV 12V Portable Fridge (~$329) — Keeps food fresh without needing hookups or ice. Opens up remote spots that would otherwise be too far from a shop.
- Jackery Explorer 1000 Pro (~$899) — Off-grid power for days. Charges from solar, runs everything you need without a campsite hookup.
- Nemo Helio Pressure Shower (~$139) — Your own shower means you don’t need campsite facilities. Seriously expands where you can stay comfortably.
- WeBoost Drive Reach (~$499) — Amplifies weak cell signal in remote areas. Makes spots viable for remote work that would otherwise have no usable internet.
- The Dyrt PRO ($35/year) — The app itself. Worth more than its weight in saved campsite fees.
Tips for Using Camping Apps Well
- Download offline maps before you go. Signal disappears exactly when you need navigation most — in mountains, forests, and remote areas. Download every country or region before leaving civilisation.
- Read the comments, not just the pin. A spot can be beautiful but inaccessible for a high-roof van, or a great location that’s now blocked by a locked gate. Recent comments (last 3–6 months) tell the real story.
- Cross-reference between apps. A spot that appears on both Park4Night and iOverlander independently is much more likely to still be valid and accessible.
- Leave reviews when you visit. The entire system runs on community contributions. If a spot is still good, say so — it helps every van lifer who comes after you.
- Always have a backup. Have a second spot identified before arriving at your first choice. Spots get closed, blocked, or full — especially in peak season.
The Bottom Line
The best setup for most van lifers is simple:
- US: The Dyrt PRO ($35/year) + Freecampsites.net (free) + iOverlander (free)
- Europe: Park4Night (free or €15/year) + iOverlander (free) + Campercontact for northern Europe
Total annual cost for the best possible coverage: under $60. That’s less than two nights at a paid campsite — and these apps will save you hundreds of times that over a year on the road.
→ Use VanCalc to calculate exactly how much you save by mixing free and paid camping