Skip to Main Content

Skipped to Main Content

Blog

Your Camplify tools: Refreshing your listing

Owner guides

Your Camplify tools: Refreshing your listing

Camplify

Your listing isn't a set-and-forget exercise. The best-performing owners revisit and refresh their listings regularly to stay competitive and attract new hirers.

When to refresh

Give your listing a review at least every 3–6 months, and any time you make a change to your van. Key triggers include:

  • New photos (you've upgraded the interior, visited a stunning campsite, or it's a new season)

  • Updated features (new solar panel, upgraded bedding, added an awning)

  • Pricing adjustments (seasonal changes, market shifts, or a new pricing strategy)

  • Description updates (better wording, more detail, or new route recommendations)

  • Review feedback (if hirers consistently mention something — positive or negative — address it in your listing)

Fresh photos matter

Older photos with poor lighting or a dated interior can quietly drag down your bookings. If your van looks better now than it did in your original photos, update them. Seasonal photos can also be effective — a van set up at a beach in summer or a cosy interior shot in winter helps hirers imagine the experience.

Test your listing

Look at your listing as if you were a hirer seeing it for the first time. Does the title grab attention? Do the photos show the van at its best? Does the description answer all the key questions? Compare it to top-performing listings in your area and see if there's anything you can borrow or improve on.

Get seen in search

Even if you’re in off-peak season or haven’t had a booking for a while, refreshing your listing ensures you maintain a solid ranking in search results and more hirers seeing your listing. Sometimes its as easy as shuffling your listing’s main photo or tweaking your price.

Ready to learn more? Back to Resources Hub

Let's go

The information in this blog is accurate and current as of the date of posting. Please be aware that information, facts, and links may become outdated over time.