The best 2 berth campervan with a shower and toilet will give you the freedom to just head off and quite possibly never even have to bother about campsite facilities.
There are purists out there who claim that real campervans shouldn’t come with toilets. We say leave them to their pet theories.
When you’re making your mind up between a campervan vs motorhome, you may think you have to opt for the latter to have a shower and toilet. However, nowadays the best campervans will have every creature comfort, and a toilet and shower are certainly part of that.
Of course, many campervans come with external cold water showers. But, particularly if there are just the two of you travelling, and you have opted for one of the best vans for a camper conversion that comes on a long wheelbase vehicle, there should be room for a nice internal shower with hot water as well, where you don’t have to brace yourself against the weather. Such campervans also come into their own when you are off-grid.
If you’re on the hunt for one, the Practical Motorhome Awards 2026 are here to help, as we share our pick for the best 2 berth campervan with a toilet and shower, as well as the other highly commended contenders. We picked out the Bürstner Habiton HMX 6.0 as our standout choice – we’re impressed by the clever design it provides, with the option of packing away certain parts when they’re not in use.
The best 2 berth campervans with a shower and toilet
Shortlisted at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2026
Bürstner Habiton HMX 6.0
Malibu Relax 640 LE R
Carado CV541 Pro
Shortlisted at last year’s Awards
Bailey Endeavour B63
Vantage Ora F-Line
WildAx Meteor
The best 2 berth campervan with a shower and toilet

Bürstner Habiton HMX 6.0
- Base vehicle: Mercedes Sprinter
- Price: £80,795
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 4
- MTPLM: 3880kg
- MIRO: 3040kg
- Payload: 340kg minimum
- Length: 5.93m
- Width: 2.04m
Reason to buy:
- It’s a really clever design
Reason to avoid:
- That design depends on things working smoothly
The best 2 berth campervan with shower and toilet at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2026
Campervans coming in shorter than 6m are usually a godsend when touring. The only problem is space inside is at so much of a premium, particularly if you want to have your own washroom.
The designers of Bürstner’s new Habiton campervan have tried to solve that problem by realising that parts of a campervan can be packed away when not needed.

So, while in the daytime you can have a perfectly comfortable front dinette, come bedtime, you effectively pack the dinette away by folding up the table, moving the travel bench forward, and then sliding the sizable washroom immediately behind it forward to allow a second single bed to be created.
Doing all this is perhaps a bit of a faff, particularly if you were initially looking for a fixed bed to avoid having to move things around at night. But it’s an ingenious way to solve a real problem.
And for those who are committed to it, Bürstner has made it easier for you to take that convenience off-road: HMX models like this one have four-wheel drive.

Malibu Relax 640 LE R
- Base vehicle: Fiat Ducato
- Price: £52,340
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 4
- MTPLM: 3500kg
- MIRO: 2864kg
- Payload: 361kg minimum
- Length: 6.36m
- Width: 2.1m
Reason to buy:
- It’s a Malibu at an affordable price
Reason to avoid:
- There is still an options list of sorts to navigate
Highly commended at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2026
Malibu vans, made by Carthago in Germany, are becoming increasingly popular. The trouble is, they tend to be just a bit beyond the reach of a good many ordinary mortals, especially when you start adding in the optional extras that usually come with them. And some of the nicest ones are only available with a 4250kg MTPLM as well, making them completely beyond the reach of anyone who doesn’t have a C1 licence (see: “what driving licence do I need to drive a campervan?” for more on this.

So full marks to Malibu for bringing out this new model, which is designed to bring you all the extra refinement of Carthago at an affordable price, without too many extras and at a weight that anyone can drive.
You really don’t see that many signs of cost-cutting in the van, which still displays all the build quality you associate with the brand. Just perhaps little things such as a shower with a curtain rather than a swinging partition in the washroom. But the two of you can probably live with that.

Carado CV541 Pro
- Base vehicle: Fiat Ducato
- Price: £61,490
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 2
- MTPLM: 3500kg
- MIRO: 2912kg
- Payload: 588kg max
- Length: 5.41m
- Width: 2.05m
Reason to buy:
- It’s a cosy little place to spend time in
Reason to avoid:
- You might want to make sure you are OK with a van this length first.
Highly commended at the Practical Motorhome Awards 2026
Do you ever have a dream that it would be nice to have a two-berth where you could have a cosy lounge and kitchen downstairs, and a bed upstairs you could just retreat to? Well, with our winner of the best budget campervan at this year’s Awards from Carado, you can just about do that.
You reach the bed in the pop-up roof via a flight of stairs – yes really – but the downstairs lounge stays as just that: a lounge you can come back down to in the morning. (There is a third bed, but that is only an option.)

You still get a good-sized kitchen for a campervan, with an extension, and a washroom with a window and a basin that folds up to give you more room for a shower.
The van also includes a fair amount of storage for its 5.41m length, but if that isn’t enough for the two of you, as an option you can have storage boxes fitted or a bike rack fitted onto the barn doors.

Bailey Endeavour B63
- Base vehicle: Ford Transit
- Year: 2025
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 2
- MTPLM: 3500kg
- MIRO: 2919kg
- Payload: 581kg
- Length: 5.98m
- Width: 2.50m
Reason to buy:
- A well thought out space for two.
Reason to avoid:
- Foldaway tables can sometimes get in the way, and large tambour doors do have a reputation for jamming.
We were impressed by the B63 when it came out last year, naming it the best 2 berth campervan with a shower and toilet at our 2025 Awards.
Joining the likes of the Endeavour B62 in Bailey’s campervan range, the B63 most certainly does include a shower and toilet. The rear corner washroom is large for a van this size. But Bailey’s designers understand that you may not always need it. So thanks to the clever positioning of the tambour door, you can shut most of it away and have more space to enjoy the rest of what this campervan has to offer.

This includes a large settee from where you can admire the view. It slides forward to make the double bed (although if only one of you is travelling it is plenty long enough to serve as a single with easier access to the rear toilet). The foldaway table can be positioned in front of the settee and easily has enough space for two. There is even a stool on the other side (which doubles up as a storage unit) should you have a guest.
That extra space created by the tambour door also means you can use the rear kitchen more easily. It wisely has the fridge right at the end, so that, should you be dining outside, you can easily reach in for a beer.

Vantage Ora F-Line
- Base vehicle: Ford Transit
- Price: £77,950
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 2
- MTPLM: 3500kg
- MIRO: 3000kg
- Payload: 500kg
- Length: 5.93m
- Width: 2.47m
Reason to buy:
- A very comfy space
Reason to avoid:
- The table is only just right for two
Divine decadence, darling. Among the extras you can have on this 2 berth campervan, with a front lounge, end washroom layout, is (for £500) a wine cooler! I don’t think I have ever seen such a feature on a van conversion that is less than six metres long. But it is part of a rear side kitchen that is also amply furnished with large drawers. The washroom stretches across the back of the van, but Vantage has designed it so that instead of having a shower cubicle on one side you have a huge wardrobe, so you can get dressed in privacy.

The shower tray itself is in the middle of the room, and as a no cost option it can sit right in front of a door which leads in from the outside. So you can come back from the beach or mountain biking and step straight into the shower, without making the rest of the van dirty.
The F-Line is a Ford Transit-based version of a layout Vantage already does on a Fiat. Two such models have been launched this season.

WildAx Meteor
- Base vehicle: Ford Transit
- Price: £70,995
- Berths: 2
- Belts: 2
- MTPLM: 3500kg
- MIRO: TBC
- Payload: TBC
- Length: 5.98m
- Width: 2.05m
Reason to buy:
- A comfortable little two-berth with a great kitchen
Reason to avoid:
- There is no mini lounge up front, which some models with this layout include.
This rear lounge two-berth is the West Yorkshire-based company’s first conversion on a standard Ford Transit, as opposed to a Transit Custom. And a worthy job it is too. That rear lounge is big enough for the two of you to rest, plus a few guests if need be.
The table you sit around is a pedestal model, but with two legs, so you can have it large or small. The settees are long enough to make single beds for most people, or they come together with sliding platforms to make a big double. There is a particularly clever kitchen, with extra workspace that slides out from below the fridge, just where you need it.

If you want, you can go for the Volt Pack, which gives this van an all-electric interior, with no gas. Instead you get two induction hobs, a microwave and a 12V fridge in the kitchen, diesel heating, plus 400W solar panels, a 160Ah lithium battery and a 300W inverter which means all 3 pin sockets will work off-grid.
Full review: WildAx Meteor
If you’d like to see what a motorhome could offer the two of you instead, take a look at our best 2 berth motorhome roundup too.
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.
Leave a Reply