A van conversion quote isn’t just a price — it’s the spec, the timeline, what’s included, what’s excluded, and what you’ll be held to if something goes wrong.

A lot of problems start because the quote is vague. Two converters might both say “Full camper conversion – £18,000”, but one includes a proper electrical system with named components and the other is basically a leisure battery and a couple of USB sockets.

This guide shows what a good quote looks like in the UK, what to insist on in writing, and a few simple examples you can use to compare quotes fairly.

Quick takeaway (read this first)

A good quote should clearly show:

The exact layout and build items (not “conversion package”)

Named components for key systems (especially electrics/heating/roof)

What’s included vs optional extras

Lead time + build duration

Payment stages and what triggers each payment

Warranty / aftercare in plain English

If it doesn’t, ask for the quote to b1) The basics every quote must have

Business details

Legal business name (Ltd/sole trader) and contact details

Quote date + quote reference number (helps later)

VAT status (is VAT included or not?)

Red flag: invoice name doesn’t match the bank account name.

Your vehicle details

Van make/model/year

SWB/LWB, roof height, tailgate/barn doors (if relevant)

Any existing work already done (windows, wiring, seats, etc.)


2) Scope: what is actually included

A good quote lists work in sections, for example:

A) Layout & furniture

Bed type (rock’n’roll / fixed)

Cabinet materials and finish

Flooring type

Upholstery included (yes/no) and what it covers

Ask for clarity on: number of cupboards, storage type, table, overhead lockers, etc.

B) Insulation & lining

Insulation type (and where)

Vapour barrier (yes/no)

Ply/lining material

Red flag: “Fully insulated” with no details.

C) Windows, vents and roof (if applicable)

Which windows (side/rear) and type (fixed/sliding)

Roof vent/fan model if included

Pop-top brand/model if included (this is a big cost driver)


3) Electrics: the quote must be specific (this is where vague quotes hide)

Electrics should never be written as “Full electrical system”.

A good quote includes:

Battery type + capacity (AGM/Lithium, Ah)

Charging method(s):

DC-DC charger (brand/model)

Solar (panel wattage + controller brand/model)

Mains charger (brand/model)

Fusing/protection:

what fuse type (MIDI/MEGA etc.) and rough ratings

What circuits you’ll get:

lights, USBs, 12V sockets, fridge feed, heater feed, etc.

If 230V is included:

inverter brand/model (if any)

sockets and RCD protection

Green flag: they name components (Victron/CTEK/Votronic etc.) and explain why.

Red flag: “Split charge system included” with no mention of DC-DC (important on modern vans).


4) Heating, gas, water: clarity matters

Diesel heater

Quote should state:

heater make/model and output (e.g., 2kW vs 5kW)

install location

intake/exhaust routing approach

what controller is included

Gas (if used)

bottle location and ventilation

regulator type

whether a gas test/cert is provided (if they do it)

Water

tank sizes (fresh + waste)

pump type

where the fill/drain points are

Red flag: “Plumbing included” with no tank sizes or pump info.


5) “Included vs optional extras” should be obvious

A professional quote makes it easy to see what you’re paying for.

It should include:

A clear base spec

A list of optional upgrades with prices

A list of exclusions (“Not included”)

Examples of common exclusions people miss:

carpet lining

pop-top bed boards

swivel seats

electrics upgrades (lithium/solar/inverter)

diesel heater

extra windows

upholstery upgrades


6) Timeline: lead time vs build time (people confuse these)

A quote should state both:

Lead time: how long until they can start (your slot)

Build time: how long the work takes once started

Example (good):
“Lead time: approx 12–16 weeks. Build time: 4–6 weeks depending on parts availability.”

Red flag: no dates, no estimate, or vague promises.


7) Payments: stage payments are safer than one big deposit

A good quote should show:

Deposit amount and when it’s due

Stage payments tied to milestones

Final payment terms (e.g., on completion / after snagging)

Safer milestone examples:

Deposit to reserve slot

Stage payment when materials ordered

Stage payment when build starts

Final payment after handover/snags

Red flag: huge deposit with no milestones.


8) Warranty / aftercare: get it written down

Good quotes mention:

workmanship warranty length

what’s covered and what isn’t

how issues are reported and fixed

Green flag: they have a written process for aftercare.e rewritten before you pay a deposit.

Quote examples (so you can compare “apples to apples”)

Example A: Too vague (warning)

“Full conversion package – £18,500
Includes insulation, electrics, furniture, lighting, bed and storage.
Deposit £5,000. Lead time TBC.”

Why it’s a problem: nothing is measurable, nothing is named, and “TBC” is how delays happen.


Example B: Good (what you want)

“Weekend camper conversion – £14,950 (incl VAT)
Includes: insulation + ply lining, floor, rock’n’roll bed, basic kitchen unit, lighting.
Electrics: 110Ah AGM battery, DC-DC charger (brand/model), mains charger (brand/model), fused distribution board, 4 LED lights, 4 USB points.
Lead time: 10–12 weeks. Build time: 3–4 weeks.
Payments: £750 holding deposit → 30% at start → balance on completion.
Warranty: 12 months workmanship + manufacturer warranties.”

Why it’s good: named kit, defined scope, timeline, payment structure.


Example C: Premium with options (best for comparing quotes)

“Full camper conversion – £23,900 (incl VAT)
Base spec includes: insulation (type), ply lining, carpet lining (colour), RnR bed, cabinets (material), flooring, windows (x2), roof vent (model).
Electrics base: 200Ah lithium (brand), DC-DC (brand/model), 300W solar + MPPT (brand/model), 30A mains charger (brand/model), 1000W inverter (brand/model), 2x 230V sockets, RCD protection.
Optional extras: pop-top (brand/model) +£X, diesel heater (brand/model) +£X, extra window +£X.
Lead time: 16–20 weeks. Build time: 6–8 weeks.
Payments: 10% booking → 30% at start → 30% mid-build → balance at handover.”

Why it’s great: base spec vs upgrades is clear, perfect for comparing multiple quotes.


How to compare two quotes properly (simple checklist)

Before you compare prices, make sure both quotes include:

Same bed type and upholstery scope

Same window count/types

Same heater (or both none)

Same battery type + charging methods

Same lining finish (ply vs carpet etc.)

Same “extras” included

If one quote is missing key items, it may look cheaper but isn’t comparable.


FAQ

Should a quote list brands/models?

For major systems, yes. Especially electrics (battery, chargers, solar controller), heaters, pop-tops, fridges, and inverters. If a converter won’t name components, ask why.

Is it normal for a quote to change?

It can change if you change the spec, or if you discover issues with the van (rust, wiring faults, hidden damage). But a good converter should explain clearly what can change and how it will be priced.

Should I pay a deposit without a proper quote?

No. Get the spec and payment schedule in writing first.


Next step

Before you pay anything, use this guide as a checklist and ask for a revised quote if anything is vague.

If you’re still choosing who to approach, start here:


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