The best low-profile motorhomes are popular because they provide more space than a van conversion and are cheaper than an A-class ‘van.

They’re the most favoured type of coachbuilt both here in the UK and the rest of Europe, and for very good reason. These will be among the best motorhomes for those who want a tempting combination of modern, sleek good looks and improved motorhome fuel efficiency over their overcab cousins. 

If you’re wondering how to find the one for you, the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025 are here to help, as our expert judging panel share our top picks. This year, we’ve chosen the Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565 as the best low-profile on the market for 2025. We love how it manages to offer such quality on a lighter chassis.

In this guide, you’ll be able to see exactly what we made of it, as well as the other models that we consider to be the standout options on the market. You’ll also be able to find the ‘vans that are our favourite options from recent years, featuring ‘vans from some of the best motorhome manufacturers, including Chausson, Joa and Pilote

What is a low-profile motorhome?

Low-profile motorhomes still retain the base vehicle cab, but have the benefit of extra room provided by a GRP shell. The low-profile name comes from not having any overcab to cause wind resistance. How the designers treat the interior space depends on the manufacturer – some leave the space within the low-profile area relatively open, so there’s a greater amount of headroom for the driver and passenger. Others choose to fill the space with lockers and shelves, giving you more storage, the type of useful feature that could swing you towards a low-profile option if you’re weighing up the pros and cons of a campervan or motorhome.

The best low-profile motorhomes

Shortlisted at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025

Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565
Adria Compact Max range
Auto-Trail Excel Range

Our top picks from recent years

Chausson X650
Pilote Atlas A656D
Dethleffs Globebus Go T15
Swift Voyager 584
Bürstner Lyseo Gallery TD 689 G
Chausson S514 Sport Line
Joa Camp 75Q

The best low-profile motorhome

The Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565
The Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565

Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565

  • Base vehicle: Mercedes Sprinter
  • Price: £112,050
  • Berths: 2
    Belts: 4
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • MIRO: 3160kg
  • Payload: 340kg
  • Length: 7.45m
  • Width: 2.41m

Reason to buy:

  • Quality on a lighter chassis

Reason to avoid:

  • It’s still a fair price

The best low-profile motorhome at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025

Launched right at the start of our judging period, the Sportivo, as its name implies, is designed to bring all the quality that was apparent in the original Travelmaster low-profiles, such as the Coachman Travel Master 565, to a younger, perhaps more sporty audience who may not be able to drive anything weighing more than 3500kg.

It certainly looks the part, with alloy wheels, and a sleek profile somewhat reminiscent of Coachman’s caravans. The decals on the aluminium side panels certainly have a 3D effect that you find on Coachman’s Lusso and Laser models.

Inside the Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565
Inside the Coachman Travelmaster Sportivo 565

But you still get a wide sun roof above the Mercedes facade, and the roof over the front lounge gracefully slopes up and down again – in so doing enhancing the headroom of the front lounge.

A solid Hartal habitation door adds that classy finishing touch.

Inside the Adria Compact Max SP
Inside the Adria Compact Max SP

Adria Compact Max range

  • Base vehicle: VW Crafter
  • Price: £93,695-£94,695
  • Berths: All 2
  • Belts: All 4
  • MTPLM: All 3500kg
  • MIRO: 2950-3090kg
  • Payload: 410-550kg
  • Length: 6.46-7.39m
  • Width: All 2.17m

Reason to buy:

  • A useful alternative for a proven range

Reason to avoid:

  • The Crafter-based models are around £15,000 dearer than the Fiats.

Highly commended at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025

Adria’s Compact range has been quietly doing business for much of the past decade, and has really been a precursor to the compact ranges just about every one of its rivals has brought out in recent years.

Up until this season, however, the Compact models have only been available with a Fiat Ducato base vehicle – perfectly adequate, but perhaps rather boxy.

But this season sees the launch of the Compact Max. These have the same raison d’être as the Fiat models, being designed to make city streets and narrow country lanes easier to navigate. They also include many similar motorhome layouts (although there is a transverse bed layout, the SP, that you won’t currently find in the Fiat-based Compact line-up).

But they are based on a VW Crafter. This makes them generally slightly longer – and slightly wider – but in particular slightly move svelte looking on the road.

You will probably take your pick between the two ranges. But it is always good to have variety.

Auto-Trail's Excel range - with pop-up roofs
Auto-Trail’s Excel range – with pop-up roofs

Auto-Trail Excel range

  • Base vehicle: Fiat Ducato
  • Price: £64,102-£68,206
  • Berths: 2-3
  • Belts: 2-4
  • MTPLM: All 3500kg
  • MIRO: 2755-2945kg
  • Payload: 555-745kg
  • Length: 6.20-6.90m
  • Width: All 2.24m

Reason to buy:

  • Extra space is always a good reason

Reason to avoid:

  • It is possible that a pop-up roof might entail more maintenance in the long run.

Highly commended at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025

Auto-Trail is one of many manufacturers who has brought out a compact range of low-profiles in recent years. Launched last year, the Excel range followed a similar pattern of aiming to be narrower than usual and slightly shorter, to allow users to explore narrower city streets and windier country lanes.

This year, along with expanding the range with the end kitchen 620S model, the company has done something truly novel in offering a pop-up roof on all models, a feature which saw it take our motorhome innovation category at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2025. You might have thought such a roof on a low-profile would look unwieldy, but not in this case. When fastened down, you hardly notice that it is there. And yet the extra berths it produces make a huge difference to the feel of the vans themselves.

Chausson X650

Chausson X650

  • Year: 2024
  • Berths: 4
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • MiRO: TBC
  • Payload: TBC
  • Length: 6.36m
  • Width: 2.1m

Reason to buy:

  • Innovative rear dressing room / garage, spacious lounge

Reason to avoid:

  • It’s as compact as you’d expect

We really like how last year’s new addition to the crossover ‘X’ range from Chausson manages to cross the comfort found in a coachbuilt with the flexibility seen in the best campervans, thanks to its width of only 2.10m.

One of our favourite features in the Fiat-based low-profile motorhome is the smart rear dressing room. We love the flexibility this innovative addition provides – it’s ideal for those who love getting active on tour, as it can be transformed into a garage with room for two bikes when you’re driving to your chosen site.

Rear garage in X650
The rear garage in use

Despite the motorhome’s more compact width, you still get a washroom with a swinging partition, while a drop-down bed can be found above the parallel seating in the spacious lounge area.

With its eye-catching exterior, 16-inch alloy wheels and handy features such as electric de-icing for the rearview mirrors, the X650 is a stylish – and deserving – winner.

Pilote Atlas A656D
The Pilote Atlas A656D

Pilote Atlas A656D

  • Year: 2024
  • Berths: 4
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • MiRO: 3015kg
  • Payload: 485kg
  • Shipping length: 6.60m
  • Width: 2.20m

Reason to buy:

  • Ideal for the more adventurous, smart appearance, well-lit lounge

Reason to avoid:

  • Turning travel seats to settees isn’t the easiest to do, cassette hatch likely to be within awning

Coming on the Trail Transit base vehicle from Ford, the A656D has a striking appearance, with those red and black decals really catching the eye.

We like the sporty interior. The curtains, upholstery and cabin seats are all black, while the floor is near enough – however, the look is brightened by the white locker doors and the woodgrain tabletop and kitchen work surface.

The lounge itself is a well-lit area – capable of seating seven, light streams in through the sunroof and windows. The drop-down bed is also easy to lower and we were impressed by its 1.42m width, a good size for a motorhome under 7 metres, even if it does mean the door is obstructed.

Lounge in Pilote Atlas A656D
The lounge in Pilote Atlas A656D

We were also impressed by the size of the washroom. The step up is slanted, allowing the space to be efficiently utilised, although the toilet’s position will likely mean the cassette hatch is within your awning.

Then, at the rear, you’ll find decent storage, including a well-lit hanging area to the left and a garage, which despite a gas bottle locker, provides room for a bike.

Full review: Pilote Atlas A656D

Dethleffs Globebus Go T15 
The Dethleffs Globebus Go T15

Dethleffs Globebus Go T15

  • Year: 2024
  • Berths: 3
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • MIRO: 2692kg
  • Payload: 508kg
  • Length: 5.99m
  • Width: 2.20m

Reason to buy:

  • Brilliant build quality

Reason to avoid:

  • A-class version may cost more but provides better insulation

The Ford Transit based Globebus Go T15 comes with a 130bhp engine fitted as standard and runs on a diesel heater, not only freeing up space but saving weight too.

Despite being a small motorhome, we’re impressed by how the ‘van manages to make the most of its space. A fixed transverse double bed can be located at the rear, an area which also offers plenty of storage, thanks to the overhead lockers and open shelving.

We liked the cleverness of the bathroom too. In here, the available space is optimised by the swivel wall nestling against the outer wall. When it’s time for a shower, you can release and swing it out to achieve a shower cubicle by combining it with the sliding door.

It’s got a great spec too, including heated and electrically adjustable wing mirrors, rear garage doors on both the left and right, and ambient lighting both above and below the overhead lockers.

The Swift Voyager 584

Swift Voyager 584

  • Year: 2023
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • Payload: 424kg
  • MIRO: 3076kg
  • Length: 7.85m
  • Width: 2.37m

Reasons to buy:

  • Great familiar Swift design, comfy lounge, huge garage

Reasons to avoid:

  • Not internal access to garage

Swift has been a Fiat-based manufacturer (except at the very top end) for so long now that you might wonder how well it might evolve to produce a motorhome on a different base vehicle partly because of Fiat’s ongoing supply issues. However, we found the first in a planned new range based on the existing Escape range to be an impressive start when we saw it in 2023, especially as it is the first time the Hull manufacturer has built anything on a Ford Transit.

The lounge of the Swift Voyager 584

You get the same Swift design that many of us have got very used to, although even then there is a noticeable shift away from the browns and beiges of the last few seasons to a cooler and more up to date silver, grey and blue look. There is a huge garage under the single beds at the rear, where you could store much more than just bicycles. And there is even room for nice touches too, such as the little drawers that come out together by the side of the steps up to the bed in addition to the cubbyholes in the steps themselves.

We like the way the decals on the side panels thin out and turn into birds as well, even if the birds are clearly seagulls, not swifts. It just goes to show how versatile designers can put their hand to any base vehicle.

Full review: Swift Voyager 584

The Bürstner Lyseo Gallery TD 689 G

Bürstner Lyseo Gallery TD 689 G

  • Year: 2023
  • MTPLM: TBC
  • Payload: TBC
  • MIRO: TBC
  • Length: 6.90m
  • Width: 2.30m

Reason to buy

  • This motorhome almost feels like a two-storey home

Reason to avoid

  • This is new technology, so a bit of a voyage into the unknown

This Bürstner comes with an inflatable pop-up roof and would certainly make an eye-catching ‘van to have pitched up next to you at a campsite. It was shortlisted at both the Practical Motorhome Awards 2022 and 2023 – in fact, it won a category in 2023.

The interior of the Bürstner Lyseo Gallery TD 689 G

The “bedroom space” you get inside that pop-up roof really is rather marvellous – much more substantial than average with two large roll-down windows, a rooflight and even a bit of shelving. It is accessed via a proper staircase too, and really give you the impression that this is a motorhome with two storeys.

Even down below there is still room for innovation, with kitchen workspace that slides out to reveal more shelving, and a sink cover that swivels to provide a workspace extension.

The Chausson S514 Sport Line

Chausson S514 Sport Line

  • Year: 2023
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • MIRO: 2600kg
  • Payload: 900kg
  • Length: 5.99m
  • Width: 2.10m

Reason to buy:

  • Great exterior, clever storage options

Reason to avoid:

  • Limited kitchen

If you think motorhomes can only ever be big white boxes on wheels then the 2023 version of Chausson’s compact van with the “butterfly bed” at the back is here to show how you might be wrong. For this season it’s a completely different colour – grey – and not just the side walls but all over the vehicle. That grey is a special grey too that you won’t find on any other motorhome. It has been developed by Chausson in-house from a colour supplied by Ford – the maker of the S514’s base vehicle – that is otherwise only used on the Ford Puma.

It certainly gives the motorhomes a striking look, improving on what already worked well in the Chausson S514. With the associated black edging to the windows and locker doors, black with a slash of green decals down the side, and black alloy wheels too, it looks very sporty – almost like a support vehicle you might see, say, on the Tour de France than on something that is going to turn up on the pitch next to yours.

But perhaps that’s not surprising. That “butterfly bed” is a transverse double that folds in half, providing enough room for you to store a bicycle upright in the garage below.

Full review: Chausson S514 Sport Line

The Joa Camp 75Q

Joa Camp 75Q

  • Year: 2023
  • MTPLM: 3500kg
  • Payload: 675kg
  • MIRO: 2825kg
  • Length: 7.4m
  • Width: 2.30m

Reason to buy:

  • Great value, bright interior

Reason to avoid:

  • It’s on a higher chassis, so you have more steps up into it

When Pilote first announced it was bringing out a new range that was going to be bug not just because it was based on a cheaper base vehicle – the Citroen Relay – but also because it would be relying more on modular construction, we did have a sense of foreboding.

After all, modular construction is by no means new to the industry, and its faults often become most apparent when Continental left-hand drive vehicles, of the kind Pilote would no doubt initially be designing, are swapped over onto right hand drive. We are talking shower trays that have bite taken out of them for a wheel arch when there is no wheel arch there, or roof vents that are ventilating a completely sealed cupboard – both these quirks have been known.

In the event, we didn’t need to worry at all. In this island bed model there are precious few of the snags mentioned. In fact there are precious few indications of it being a budget van at all. Instead you get a bright interior livened up by the odd splash of turquoise. And you even get some very clever storage solutions thrown in too, in the ‘van that was our winner of the best 2 berth motorhome category at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2023.

Full review: Joa Camp 75Q


If you’ve enjoyed reading this article, why not get the latest news, reviews and features delivered direct to your door or inbox every month. Take advantage of our brilliant Practical Motorhome magazine SUBSCRIBERS’ OFFER and SIGN UP TO OUR NEWSLETTER for regular weekly updates on all things motorhome related.

If you’ve enjoyed reading this article, why not get the latest news, reviews and features delivered direct to your door or inbox every month. Take advantage of our brilliant Practical Motorhome magazine SUBSCRIBERS’ OFFER and SIGN UP TO OUR NEWSLETTER for regular weekly updates on all things motorhome related.