A motorhome isn't just a vehicle.

It's a truck, a house, a water system, a power plant, a gas installation, heating, air conditioning, and often an office on wheels. Each of these parts needs regular care.

Yet most owners only deal with service once something has already broken.

The chassis manufacturer recommends engine service. The bodybuilder covers windows, the roof, or furniture. Victron documents batteries and inverters. Alde explains heating. Dometic covers the fridge.

But nobody brings all of this information together.

That's exactly why this series exists.

Its goal isn't to teach you how to repair an engine or strip down a gearbox. The point is to show you what to check, when to carry out preventive service, and why prevention is always cheaper than repair.

How to use this guide

Each chapter will include:

This will let you build your own service plan regardless of whether you own a Phoenix, a Morelo, a Concorde, a Carthago, a Hymer, or any other motorhome.

Quick service overview

Before every trip

After returning from a longer trip

Every month

Every 20,000 km or 1 year

Every 40,000 km

Every 60,000 km

Every 80,000–100,000 km

Every 100,000 km

Every 2 years

Every 3–5 years

How much does prevention cost, and how much does a repair cost?

ComponentPreventive serviceRepair if neglected
Engine oil€160–320€6,000–20,000
Automatic transmission€480–800€4,800–10,000
Differential€120–240€2,400–4,800
Brake fluid€40–120Risk of significantly reduced braking performance
Roof sealantA few hundred eurosTens of thousands of euros in the case of long-term water ingress

What comes next?

This article is the introduction to the whole series.

In the following chapters, we'll cover every system of the motorhome in detail:

Our goal is to create the most comprehensive guide to preventive motorhome maintenance — one that helps owners extend the life of their vehicles, increase reliability on the road, and avoid unnecessarily expensive repairs.

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