Discover the costs of electric camper vans with bathrooms in 2026.

Electric camper vans with built-in bathrooms are moving from prototypes to early, real-world options, but pricing in Australia will vary widely in 2026. This guide explains the factors that shape cost, realistic budget ranges, and how bathroom layouts, charging, and compliance influence what you’re likely to pay across entry, mid, and premium builds.

Discover the costs of electric camper vans with bathrooms in 2026.

Electric camper vans that include a proper bathroom combine two cost drivers: an EV commercial van chassis and a full-feature camper fit-out. In Australia, both elements are still maturing for 2026, with limited local supply, developing converter expertise, and evolving charging infrastructure. The result is a broad price band and a strong need to understand where each dollar goes—chassis, electrical systems, water and waste, and compliant installation.

What affects the costs of electric camper vans with bathrooms in 2026?

Several big-ticket items shape pricing. First is the base EV chassis (for example, Ford E‑Transit or Mercedes‑Benz eSprinter), which typically costs more than comparable diesel vans due to traction-battery costs and lower production volumes. Next is the camper conversion: cabinetry, insulation, plumbing, water tanks, a wet bath with waterproofing, ventilation, and certified electrics. Because EVs already carry heavy traction batteries, converters often add lightweight materials and compact bathroom modules to preserve payload and range, which increases build complexity and cost. Australian Design Rules (ADR) compliance, right-hand-drive availability, and shipping or import charges (if a van or finished camper is sourced overseas) further influence total spend.

Find out what electric camper vans with bathrooms will cost in 2026

Indicative 2026 budgets in Australia can be mapped by adding a base chassis to a bathroom-equipped conversion. As a guide, an EV panel van chassis may sit around A$110,000–A$160,000 depending on brand, battery size, and options. A quality camper conversion with a compact wet bath, certified plumbing, lithium house battery, induction cooking, hot water, and ventilation can add A$90,000–A$170,000, with EV-optimized, lightweight builds trending to the upper end. Import logistics, GST, and on-road costs add further variance. In total, many buyers should plan for roughly A$220,000–A$360,000 in 2026, with premium builds potentially higher. These are estimates that may change based on supply, exchange rates, materials, and labour.

Discover the pricing for electric camper vans with bathrooms in 2026

Bathroom design is a key budget lever. A true wet bath (integrated shower and toilet in a sealed compartment) adds waterproofing, quality fixtures, and grey/black-water management. Expect A$10,000–A$25,000 of the build cost to be tied to the bathroom alone, depending on the use of composite panels, space-saving basins, cassette or composting toilets, and compact hot-water systems. Space is another cost driver: the more floor area given to the bath, the more complex the cabinetry and the greater the compromise to storage—often solved with bespoke cabinetry that increases labour time.

Beyond upfront spend, bathrooms affect range and usability. Added mass slightly reduces efficiency, and shower use increases water carriage, further lifting weight. Converters offset this with lighter materials, modular tanks, and efficient 12V/48V systems for ventilation and hot water. These choices nudge prices upward but help preserve drivability and charging flexibility.

Charging and running costs in Australia also matter when weighing total ownership. Typical electric vans consume roughly 25–35 kWh per 100 km, and real-world camper builds can be at the high end when fully loaded. Home charging tariffs often range lower than public DC fast charging; caravan parks may offer powered sites suitable for overnight AC charging. While energy costs per kilometre are generally below diesel, DC rates vary by network and location, and peak/off-peak home tariffs can change. Maintenance for EV drivetrains is usually lower (fewer moving parts), but camper systems—water pumps, seals, heaters—still require routine upkeep.

Below are indicative 2026 estimates for real products and providers relevant to bathroom-equipped electric camper vans. Availability in Australia may be limited; figures reflect landed or locally built scenarios where applicable.


Product/Service Provider Cost Estimation
eRV2 (wet-bath Class B, pre‑production/limited runs) Winnebago A$250,000–A$320,000 est. (if offered locally or privately imported, incl. GST/on-road assumptions)
Iridium EV motorhome (coachbuilt with bathroom; EU market) Iridium E‑Mobil (WOF/EFA‑S) A$300,000–A$400,000 est. (imported to AU with shipping, GST, and compliance)
Custom bathroom conversion on Ford E‑Transit (panel van) Licensed camper converters in Australia A$220,000–A$350,000 est. (chassis + wet‑bath build, incl. GST/on-road)
Custom bathroom conversion on Mercedes‑Benz eSprinter Licensed camper converters (AU/EU, model availability varies) A$240,000–A$380,000 est. (chassis + wet‑bath build, incl. GST/on-road)

Prices, rates, or cost estimates mentioned in this article are based on the latest available information but may change over time. Independent research is advised before making financial decisions.

How do these ranges translate to real choices in your area? Entry budgets typically pair a smaller EV van with a compact wet bath and a modest house battery, focusing on efficiency and weight. Mid-tier builds may add induction cooking, a larger lithium bank (for off-grid days without shore power), roof solar, and upgraded hot-water/ventilation to make daily showers feasible. Premium projects push space and comfort—larger bathrooms, upgraded fixtures, and sophisticated heating/hot-water systems—plus custom cabinetry to keep weight down, all of which can increase cost and build time. Availability of DC fast charging along tourist routes and at holiday parks can influence battery sizing and whether you invest more in solar and energy storage.

To navigate the 2026 market in Australia, focus on a few practical steps. First, confirm local availability of your preferred EV chassis in right-hand drive with the battery size you need. Second, request detailed itemised quotes from licensed converters, including bathroom component brands, waterproofing methods, weight forecasts, and ADR compliance. Third, compare total ownership: home charging options, public network access on planned routes, water and waste logistics, and insurance coverage for high-voltage systems. Lastly, allow contingency in your budget for exchange-rate shifts and material lead times, which remain variable as electric van supply scales.

In short, bathroom-equipped electric camper vans in 2026 are achievable but remain a premium segment in Australia. Costs cluster around the EV chassis, lightweight bathroom design, and compliant installation, with final prices shaped by availability and specification. Careful planning—especially around weight, range, and charging—will determine whether an entry, mid, or premium build aligns with your travel style and budget.