Caravan Parks In Windsor And Maidenhead
Quick Overview
The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead is small, green and firmly tied to the River Thames, and that river shapes almost everything about touring here. This is the stretch of the Thames Valley where the water threads between Windsor, Maidenhead, Bray and Hurley, and the caravan parks that matter are the riverside ones, set on flat grass and hardstanding beside the towpath. We rate the borough as a comfortable, well-connected base rather than a wild one. You come for the castle, the river, the royal parkland and the easy run into London, then settle onto a quiet pitch by the water each evening.
The public and private split is clear. On the private side, family-run riverside parks lead the way. Hurley Riverside Park is the standout, a family-run park on the Thames at Hurley about 20 minutes from Windsor, with grass electric pitches, hardstanding and premium multi-service pitches spread across flat, tree-lined fields with slipway access to the river. Amerden Caravan Park is a smaller family-run site on the Thames towpath between Maidenhead and Windsor, roughly 5 miles from Windsor, with a limited number of electric hook-up pitches. These private caravan parks are your realistic bases in the borough. On the public side there is no national park here, but Windsor Great Park gives you thousands of acres of public royal parkland to walk, and the Caravan and Motorhome Club lists certificated locations nearby, so genuine open space and club options sit close to hand.
Pitches lean towards riverside grass with an electric hook-up, and the better parks add hardstanding and fully serviced multi-service pitches with water and drainage. An electric hook-up is standard, so plan for a 16 amp supply and bring your usual lead and adaptors. Because these are riverside sites, the one real caution is the Thames itself: after heavy rain the river can rise quickly, and low grass pitches occasionally flood, so we favour hardstanding in winter and always check for flood alerts before a wet-season stay. Every licensed park has a chemical disposal point and fresh-water tap on park.
The honest picture: this is a compact, fairly pricey borough with only a handful of parks, and Windsor town centre is narrow and tourist-heavy, so driving a large outfit in is a mistake. The winning move is to base by the river, leave the motorhome on the pitch, and use trains that reach Windsor in minutes and London Paddington or Waterloo in well under an hour. In return you get one of the most attractive touring bases in southern England, with Windsor Castle, Legoland, the royal Great Park and Henley-on-Thames all close by. Book Hurley early for the summer season, keep a careful eye on the river in winter, and this compact riverside borough rewards you well.
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Getting Around Windsor And Maidenhead by RV
Touring the Windsor and Maidenhead area by motorhome is simple on the main roads and fiddly in the town centres. The M4 runs east to west across the borough with junctions 6 to 9 serving Windsor, Maidenhead and Reading, and the M40 sits just to the north for anyone arriving from the Midlands. The A308 and A404 link the riverside towns. Most caravan parks sit close to a junction, then a short run down a Thames-side lane, and those final lanes near Hurley and Bray are narrow, so take them slowly in a longer outfit.
Do not try to drive a large motorhome into Windsor town centre; the streets are tight and packed with visitors, and parking is difficult. Base by the river and take the train, which reaches Windsor in minutes and London in under an hour. Fuel is easy on the M4 and A308, propane exchange is stocked around Maidenhead and Slough, and large supermarkets sit in every town. Overnight roadside parking is not allowed, so book a riverside pitch, and if you are visiting in a wet spell, check Thames flood alerts before committing to a low grass pitch.
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Windsor And Maidenhead trip, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.
Check your RV insurance coverage
A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.
Know your roadside assistance options
RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.
Decide about an extended warranty early
Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.
Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees
A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.
RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.
RV Parks Costs in Windsor And Maidenhead
This is one of the pricier corners of the UK for touring, which fits the affluent Thames Valley setting. A riverside pitch with an electric hook-up typically runs £25 to £40 a night in season, with premium multi-service pitches at the top of that range and grass electric pitches a little cheaper. Hurley Riverside Park sits at the higher end for its facilities and location, while smaller sites like Amerden can be more modest. Prices climb further in summer and over school holidays, when the riverside parks are in heavy demand.
Booking early is the main way to lock in a better rate and secure the pitch type you want. Midweek and shoulder-season stays cost less, and hardstanding may add a little over grass but protects you from a flooded departure in winter. Budget a train fare into Windsor or London rather than fighting for town parking, plus propane and any site laundry or slipway charges.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Windsor And Maidenhead by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
3°C - 8°C
Crowds: Low
Mild but damp, and the Thames can rise fast after rain. Favour hardstanding, check flood alerts, and expect some grass pitches to close.
Spring
Mar - May
5°C - 15°C
Crowds: Medium
Pleasant and quieter, ideal for towpath walks and Windsor Great Park, though watch the river level after wet spells.
Summer
Jun - Aug
13°C - 23°C
Crowds: High
Warm, dry and busy, with the riverside setting at its best. Book electric pitches well ahead for weekends and half-terms.
Fall
Sep - Oct
7°C - 15°C
Crowds: Medium
Mild in September with lovely colour in the Great Park, turning wetter and higher on the river by November.
Explore Windsor And Maidenhead
Base yourself by the river and use the trains. From Hurley or Amerden you can leave the motorhome on the pitch and be in Windsor in minutes or central London in under an hour, which is far easier than driving a large outfit into the tourist crush around the castle. Book Hurley Riverside Park well ahead for summer weekends and school half-terms, since it is popular and award-winning and fills quickly. Amerden is smaller with limited electric pitches, so reserve early there too.
Watch the water in the wetter months. The Thames can rise fast after heavy rain, and low riverside grass pitches occasionally flood, so favour hardstanding in winter and check flood alerts before you travel. In summer the riverside setting is the whole point: slipway access lets you launch a canoe or paddleboard, and flat towpath walks run for miles in both directions. For days out, Windsor Great Park offers thousands of acres of public royal parkland on foot or by bike, Windsor Castle and Legoland are close, and Henley and Marlow are a short drive upriver. Sort propane before the weekend, carry your electric lead and adaptors, and empty tanks only at the on-park chemical disposal point, never near the river.
Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Windsor And Maidenhead
Where are the caravan parks in Windsor and Maidenhead?
They are almost all riverside parks strung along the Thames between the towns. Hurley Riverside Park is the best known, a family-run park on the river at Hurley about 20 minutes from Windsor, with grass electric, hardstanding and multi-service pitches across flat, tree-lined fields. Amerden Caravan Park is a smaller family-run site on the Thames towpath between Maidenhead and Windsor, roughly 5 miles from Windsor. Both put you beside the water with slipway or towpath access. Because Windsor town centre is narrow and tourist-heavy, these edge-of-town riverside parks are the sensible bases, with fast trains into Windsor and London from nearby stations.
Do the parks have electric hook-up pitches?
Yes, an electric hook-up is standard on the touring pitches here, usually a 16 amp supply. Hurley Riverside Park offers grass electric pitches alongside hardstanding and premium multi-service pitches that add water and drainage, so you can choose how fully serviced you want to be. Amerden Caravan Park has a more limited number of electric hook-up pitches, which is worth knowing if you rely on power, so book early there. Bring your usual electric lead and any adaptors. When you reserve, confirm the pitch type and whether it is grass or hardstanding, since the riverside grass pitches are lovely in summer but less ideal in a wet winter.
What is the difference between public and private options here?
The private option is the riverside caravan parks such as Hurley and Amerden, family-run sites that provide the pitches, hook-ups and facilities you actually stay on. There is no national park within the borough, so the public side is different in character: Windsor Great Park gives you thousands of acres of public royal parkland managed by The Crown Estate to walk and cycle, and the Caravan and Motorhome Club lists certificated locations nearby for a quieter, more basic stay. In short, you sleep on a private riverside park and spend your days in genuinely public open space, which is a good combination in a borough this compact.
Can I flood-risk plan for a riverside pitch?
Yes, and you should if you are visiting outside high summer. The Thames is a managed river but it can rise quickly after heavy or prolonged rain, and low riverside grass pitches occasionally flood in a bad wet spell. The practical answers are simple: favour a hardstanding pitch in the wetter months, ask the park which pitches sit highest, and check the official flood alerts before you travel. In summer this is rarely a concern and the riverside setting is the whole appeal. The parks know their ground well and will steer you to safer pitches if you tell them when you are coming.
Should I drive my motorhome into Windsor town centre?
No. Windsor town centre has narrow, busy streets packed with tourists and very limited parking for large vehicles, so taking a motorhome in is more stress than it is worth. The far better approach is to base by the river at Hurley or Amerden, leave the outfit on the pitch, and take the train, which reaches Windsor in minutes. From Windsor and Slough you can also reach central London in under an hour. This keeps the driving to short, easy runs on the main roads and quiet Thames-side lanes, and lets you enjoy the castle and town on foot without parking worries.
When is the best time to visit in a caravan?
May through September gives the warmest, driest weather, and this part of the Thames Valley is among the sunnier corners of the UK with summer highs around 23°C. That is when the riverside setting shines, with towpath walks, slipway access and long evenings by the water. Spring and early autumn are quieter and cheaper and still pleasant, though you should keep an eye on the river level after rain. Winter is mild but damp, with a real chance of high water on the Thames, so favour hardstanding, check flood alerts, and expect some grass pitches to be closed until spring.
Do I need to book ahead or can I turn up?
Book ahead, especially in summer. The borough has only a handful of riverside parks, and popular award-winning sites like Hurley Riverside Park fill fast on weekends and during school half-terms. Amerden is smaller with limited electric pitches, so it too can sell out. Reserving online before you travel lets you request the pitch type you want, whether grass electric, hardstanding or a fully serviced multi-service pitch, rather than taking whatever is left. It also confirms the site is open, since riverside sites sometimes reduce grass pitches in winter. Turning up on spec is only realistic midweek in the quieter months.
Where can I empty tanks and refill fresh water?
Every licensed caravan park in the borough has a chemical disposal point on park for emptying the toilet cassette, along with grey-water drainage and a fresh-water tap for refilling. On a riverside site this matters more than usual: you must never empty tanks near the river or into an ordinary drain, both because it is against the rules and because it directly pollutes the Thames. Use the proper on-park facilities, which are included in your pitch fee. If you are moving between sites, top up fresh water and empty waste before you leave, as public facilities are scarce in this built-up part of the Thames Valley.
What is there to do near the parks?
A great deal for such a small area. Windsor Castle, the oldest occupied castle in the world and an official royal residence, is the headline attraction, and Windsor Great Park offers thousands of acres of public royal parkland to walk or cycle, including the famous Long Walk. Legoland Windsor is a short drive and a favourite with families, roughly 11 miles from Hurley. The Thames itself is an attraction, with slipway access for canoes and paddleboards and flat towpath walks in both directions. Henley-on-Thames and Marlow sit a little upriver, and central London is under an hour away by train.
Are the caravan parks open all year?
It varies, so check before you travel. Larger riverside parks with hardstanding tend to stay open year round, keeping tourers on the firmer pitches through winter, while grass pitches on the lower ground are often closed or reduced in the wet season because of the flood risk from the Thames. Winter here is mild rather than frozen, but high water is the real seasonal issue on a riverside site. If you are planning an off-season stay, confirm opening dates, ask which pitches sit highest and driest, and check that the facilities block, electric hook-ups and any shop are all running out of season.
Can larger motorhomes and twin-axle caravans be accommodated?
Usually yes on the bigger parks, especially on hardstanding and multi-service pitches, but ask when you book. Hurley Riverside Park spreads across 15 acres of flat fields with room for larger units and even offers dedicated RV pitches, while smaller sites like Amerden are tighter. The main challenge is the approach: the Thames-side lanes near Hurley and Bray are narrow, so drive them slowly in a long outfit. Mention your overall length and whether you are twin-axle so staff can allocate a pitch with enough manoeuvring room and easy access, which on riverside sites matters as much as the pitch length itself.
Is it easy to visit London from here?
Very. That is one of the borough's biggest draws for tourers. Trains from Windsor and nearby Slough and Maidenhead reach London Paddington or Waterloo in well under an hour, so you can leave the motorhome on a riverside pitch and spend a full day in the capital without driving or parking in the city at all. This makes Windsor and Maidenhead a popular base for people who want to combine a relaxed riverside stay with London sightseeing. Buy tickets in advance for the best fares, and time your return to avoid the evening commuter crush back out of the city.
Is there a national park nearby, or just the royal parkland?
There is no national park within the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, so the main public open space is Windsor Great Park, thousands of acres of royal parkland managed by The Crown Estate with free public access on foot and by bike. It gives you the walking and green space that a national park would elsewhere. If you want a true national park, the nearest are further afield, with the Chilterns and the North Wessex Downs areas of outstanding natural beauty closer to hand for hillier walking. For most tourers, though, the combination of the Thames, Windsor Great Park and the castle grounds is more than enough green space.
Where are the caravan parks in Windsor and Maidenhead?
They are almost all riverside parks strung along the Thames between the towns. Hurley Riverside Park is the best known, a family-run park on the river at Hurley about 20 minutes from Windsor, with grass electric, hardstanding and multi-service pitches across flat, tree-lined fields. Amerden Caravan Park is a smaller family-run site on the Thames towpath between Maidenhead and Windsor, roughly 5 miles from Windsor. Both put you beside the water with slipway or towpath access. Because Windsor town centre is narrow and tourist-heavy, these edge-of-town riverside parks are the sensible bases, with fast trains into Windsor and London from nearby stations.
Do the parks have electric hook-up pitches?
Yes, an electric hook-up is standard on the touring pitches here, usually a 16 amp supply. Hurley Riverside Park offers grass electric pitches alongside hardstanding and premium multi-service pitches that add water and drainage, so you can choose how fully serviced you want to be. Amerden Caravan Park has a more limited number of electric hook-up pitches, which is worth knowing if you rely on power, so book early there. Bring your usual electric lead and any adaptors. When you reserve, confirm the pitch type and whether it is grass or hardstanding, since the riverside grass pitches are lovely in summer but less ideal in a wet winter.
What is the difference between public and private options here?
The private option is the riverside caravan parks such as Hurley and Amerden, family-run sites that provide the pitches, hook-ups and facilities you actually stay on. There is no national park within the borough, so the public side is different in character: Windsor Great Park gives you thousands of acres of public royal parkland managed by The Crown Estate to walk and cycle, and the Caravan and Motorhome Club lists certificated locations nearby for a quieter, more basic stay. In short, you sleep on a private riverside park and spend your days in genuinely public open space, which is a good combination in a borough this compact.
Can I flood-risk plan for a riverside pitch?
Yes, and you should if you are visiting outside high summer. The Thames is a managed river but it can rise quickly after heavy or prolonged rain, and low riverside grass pitches occasionally flood in a bad wet spell. The practical answers are simple: favour a hardstanding pitch in the wetter months, ask the park which pitches sit highest, and check the official flood alerts before you travel. In summer this is rarely a concern and the riverside setting is the whole appeal. The parks know their ground well and will steer you to safer pitches if you tell them when you are coming.
Should I drive my motorhome into Windsor town centre?
No. Windsor town centre has narrow, busy streets packed with tourists and very limited parking for large vehicles, so taking a motorhome in is more stress than it is worth. The far better approach is to base by the river at Hurley or Amerden, leave the outfit on the pitch, and take the train, which reaches Windsor in minutes. From Windsor and Slough you can also reach central London in under an hour. This keeps the driving to short, easy runs on the main roads and quiet Thames-side lanes, and lets you enjoy the castle and town on foot without parking worries.
When is the best time to visit in a caravan?
May through September gives the warmest, driest weather, and this part of the Thames Valley is among the sunnier corners of the UK with summer highs around 23°C. That is when the riverside setting shines, with towpath walks, slipway access and long evenings by the water. Spring and early autumn are quieter and cheaper and still pleasant, though you should keep an eye on the river level after rain. Winter is mild but damp, with a real chance of high water on the Thames, so favour hardstanding, check flood alerts, and expect some grass pitches to be closed until spring.
Do I need to book ahead or can I turn up?
Book ahead, especially in summer. The borough has only a handful of riverside parks, and popular award-winning sites like Hurley Riverside Park fill fast on weekends and during school half-terms. Amerden is smaller with limited electric pitches, so it too can sell out. Reserving online before you travel lets you request the pitch type you want, whether grass electric, hardstanding or a fully serviced multi-service pitch, rather than taking whatever is left. It also confirms the site is open, since riverside sites sometimes reduce grass pitches in winter. Turning up on spec is only realistic midweek in the quieter months.
Where can I empty tanks and refill fresh water?
Every licensed caravan park in the borough has a chemical disposal point on park for emptying the toilet cassette, along with grey-water drainage and a fresh-water tap for refilling. On a riverside site this matters more than usual: you must never empty tanks near the river or into an ordinary drain, both because it is against the rules and because it directly pollutes the Thames. Use the proper on-park facilities, which are included in your pitch fee. If you are moving between sites, top up fresh water and empty waste before you leave, as public facilities are scarce in this built-up part of the Thames Valley.
What is there to do near the parks?
A great deal for such a small area. Windsor Castle, the oldest occupied castle in the world and an official royal residence, is the headline attraction, and Windsor Great Park offers thousands of acres of public royal parkland to walk or cycle, including the famous Long Walk. Legoland Windsor is a short drive and a favourite with families, roughly 11 miles from Hurley. The Thames itself is an attraction, with slipway access for canoes and paddleboards and flat towpath walks in both directions. Henley-on-Thames and Marlow sit a little upriver, and central London is under an hour away by train.
Are the caravan parks open all year?
It varies, so check before you travel. Larger riverside parks with hardstanding tend to stay open year round, keeping tourers on the firmer pitches through winter, while grass pitches on the lower ground are often closed or reduced in the wet season because of the flood risk from the Thames. Winter here is mild rather than frozen, but high water is the real seasonal issue on a riverside site. If you are planning an off-season stay, confirm opening dates, ask which pitches sit highest and driest, and check that the facilities block, electric hook-ups and any shop are all running out of season.
Can larger motorhomes and twin-axle caravans be accommodated?
Usually yes on the bigger parks, especially on hardstanding and multi-service pitches, but ask when you book. Hurley Riverside Park spreads across 15 acres of flat fields with room for larger units and even offers dedicated RV pitches, while smaller sites like Amerden are tighter. The main challenge is the approach: the Thames-side lanes near Hurley and Bray are narrow, so drive them slowly in a long outfit. Mention your overall length and whether you are twin-axle so staff can allocate a pitch with enough manoeuvring room and easy access, which on riverside sites matters as much as the pitch length itself.
Is it easy to visit London from here?
Very. That is one of the borough's biggest draws for tourers. Trains from Windsor and nearby Slough and Maidenhead reach London Paddington or Waterloo in well under an hour, so you can leave the motorhome on a riverside pitch and spend a full day in the capital without driving or parking in the city at all. This makes Windsor and Maidenhead a popular base for people who want to combine a relaxed riverside stay with London sightseeing. Buy tickets in advance for the best fares, and time your return to avoid the evening commuter crush back out of the city.
Is there a national park nearby, or just the royal parkland?
There is no national park within the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, so the main public open space is Windsor Great Park, thousands of acres of royal parkland managed by The Crown Estate with free public access on foot and by bike. It gives you the walking and green space that a national park would elsewhere. If you want a true national park, the nearest are further afield, with the Chilterns and the North Wessex Downs areas of outstanding natural beauty closer to hand for hillier walking. For most tourers, though, the combination of the Thames, Windsor Great Park and the castle grounds is more than enough green space.







