Australian made caravans are built for Australian conditions, supported by Australian dealers, and engineered for the roads, climate, and remoteness that imported vans were never designed to handle.
Built for the country it lives in
An imported caravan is designed for the country it was built in. European vans are built for autobahns and campsites in Bavaria. American vans are built for highways and RV parks.
Neither of those is the Tanami in February. Neither is a Tasmanian winter on a coastal headland. Neither is six months of corrugations on the Gibb.
An Australian made caravan is engineered for the roads, the heat, the dust, and the remoteness. Not adapted to them. Engineered for them.
Built to a different chassis standard
Australian builders use heavier-duty chassis than international equivalents. JB runs 6 inch Duragal hot-dipped galvanised on the full off-road range. European vans typically run 4 inch and lighter materials.
That extra weight is the difference between a chassis that flexes on corrugations and one that holds its line. It is also the difference between a 15-year van and a 7-year van.
Supported by a real dealer network
The single biggest after-sales failure on imported caravans is parts. A European part takes 6 to 8 weeks to arrive. An American part can take 12. Meanwhile your van sits on the dealership floor.
Australian made caravans use Australian-sourced components. Cruisemaster suspension. BMPro and EcoFlow electronics. Dometic appliances. All available at every JB dealer from Perth to Townsville, usually within 48 hours.
Built by people you can actually talk to
JB Caravans is built in Campbellfield, Melbourne. The team that welds the chassis, fits the kitchen, and tests the electrics is the team you ring when something needs sorting in year three.
That matters more than the brochure suggests. When you are 800km from anywhere and the fridge stops working, calling someone who knows the wiring diagram first-hand is a different conversation to calling a call centre overseas.
Resale value holds
Australian made caravans hold their resale value better than imports. The market knows the support is there. The market knows the parts are available. The market pays accordingly.
A five-year-old JB Scorpion Sting typically resells at 70 to 75% of new. A five-year-old imported equivalent often sits closer to 55 to 60%. On a $170,000 van, that difference is $25,000 to $30,000.
Built to Australian Design Rules
Every caravan sold in Australia must meet Australian Design Rules (ADRs). Imported caravans are modified to comply, often retrofitting Australian-rated brakes, couplings, and electrical systems.
Australian made caravans are built to ADR from day one. No retrofitting, no awkward bracketry where the imported part did not quite fit. Across 10 years of ownership, the total cost difference between a comparable import and an Australian made van is usually less than 5%.









