Your campsite might have the best views in the county, but if the photos on your website look like they were taken through a car windscreen in January, guests will scroll straight past. Good campsite photography is one of the simplest ways to turn browsers into bookers. You do not need a professional camera or a degree in design. A smartphone, some patience and a few practical techniques will transform the way your site looks online.
Why photos matter more than you think
When someone is browsing for a campsite, they are making a gut decision based on what they see. Your photos are doing the selling before a single word of your description gets read. A listing with bright, inviting images gets more clicks. A website with strong visuals keeps people scrolling long enough to hit the booking button.
Think about the last time you booked a holiday or chose a restaurant. You looked at the pictures first. Your guests do exactly the same thing. They want to see the pitches, the views, the facilities and the general feeling of your site. If your only photo is a grainy shot of the toilet block taken on a cloudy Tuesday, you are leaving bookings on the table.
Shoot at the right time of day
The single biggest improvement you can make to your campsite photos is choosing when you take them. The best light for photography is the hour after sunrise and the hour before sunset. Photographers call this golden hour, and it makes everything look warmer, softer and more inviting.
Midday sun creates harsh shadows and faded colours. That bright afternoon you think looks perfect for photos is actually the worst time to shoot. The sky goes white, the grass looks flat and everything has that unflattering passport photo feel.
Early morning is especially good for campsites. You get that low, warm light, mist hanging over fields, dew on the grass and a sense of calm that makes people think "I want to be there." If your site is surrounded by countryside, morning light will make the landscape look spectacular. Set an alarm, grab your phone and shoot before the guests wake up.
What to photograph
Think of your photos as telling a story. You want a mix of wide shots, detail shots and lifestyle images. Here is a checklist of the essentials:
- A wide shot of the whole site from the best angle, ideally showing space, greenery and a few pitches with caravans or tents set up
- Individual pitch photos showing the surface, hookup point and surrounding area
- Facilities: shower block, washing up area, laundry and any communal spaces
- Views from the site or nearby walks that guests can enjoy
- The local area: the nearest village, pub, beach or landmark
- Seasonal details: wildflowers in spring, autumn colour, a campfire glow in the evening
- People enjoying the site (with their permission): a family sitting outside their caravan, children playing, a couple walking a dog
You do not need all of these in one session. Build your photo library over the season. Some of the best campsite photos come from ordinary moments on a quiet afternoon when the light happens to be right and a guest has set up their awning nicely.
A word on facilities. Nobody books a campsite because the shower block looks incredible. But a clean, bright photo of your facilities reassures guests that you take care of the basics. One or two facility photos is enough. Do not make them the star of your gallery.
Smartphone tips that make a real difference
You do not need an expensive camera. Modern smartphones take excellent photos, especially in good light. Here are a few tips to get more out of yours:
- Clean the lens. This sounds obvious but it is the most common reason phone photos look hazy. Give it a quick wipe with your shirt before you start.
- Use the grid. Turn on the grid overlay in your camera settings. Place the horizon on the top or bottom third line, not in the middle. This simple rule makes every landscape photo look more balanced and professional.
- Hold the phone horizontally. Landscape orientation gives you wider, more natural images that work better on websites and listing sites. Vertical photos are fine for Instagram stories, but your booking pages and website need horizontal shots.
- Do not zoom. Digital zoom on a phone just crops the image and reduces quality. Walk closer instead, or crop the photo afterwards on your computer.
- Take lots of photos. Professional photographers take hundreds of shots to get a dozen good ones. Take ten photos of each scene from slightly different angles and heights. You can pick the best later.
- Edit lightly. Most phones have built in editing tools. A small increase in brightness and contrast can lift a dull photo. But keep it natural. Your campsite should look like your campsite, not something out of a holiday advert.
Capture the feeling, not just the facts
The photos that perform best online are not the ones that show every detail of every pitch. They are the ones that make someone feel something. A misty sunrise over a field of tents. A dog stretched out on the grass beside a campervan. Steam rising from a mug on a picnic table with rolling hills behind it.
These kinds of photos tell a story. They help a potential guest imagine themselves at your site, and that emotional connection is what drives bookings. You still need the practical shots of pitches and facilities. But mix them with a few atmospheric images that capture what it actually feels like to stay at your campsite.
If you run a CL site or a small touring park, this is one of your biggest advantages. Large commercial parks struggle to feel personal and peaceful. Your site probably looks exactly like that naturally. Show it.
Getting your photos where they count
Good photos only help if people actually see them. Make sure your best images appear in all the right places:
- Your website. This is the most important one. If your homepage still has stock photos or images from five years ago, it is time for a refresh. Use your best wide shot as the hero image and scatter others throughout your pages. Good photography is the foundation that everything else builds on.
- Listing sites. Pitchup, Cool Camping and the club directories all let you upload multiple photos. Use every slot available. The first image is the one that appears in search results, so make it your strongest.
- Google Business Profile. This is often overlooked. When someone searches your campsite name, Google shows photos from your profile. Upload your best images there too. Guests will see them before they even reach your website.
- Social media. A weekly post showing a sunset, a happy dog or a morning view keeps your site visible between bookings. You do not need a content plan. Just share what your site looks like right now.
Photos your booking page needs
If you take online bookings, the photos on your booking page matter more than almost anywhere else. This is where the guest makes their final decision. A booking page with no images feels impersonal and makes people hesitate.
Show the type of pitch the guest is about to book. If you have grass pitches and hardstanding, show both. If a pitch has a particular view or sits beside a stream, include a photo of it. Guests want to know what they are getting before they commit, and a good image removes doubt.
If your booking system lets you attach images to pitch types, use that feature. It makes the booking process feel more personal and helps guests pick the right pitch without needing to phone you and ask.
Start this weekend
You do not need to hire a photographer or buy new equipment. The best campsite photos come from knowing your site, choosing the right moment and taking more shots than you think you need. Walk around your site early one morning this week, take 50 photos, pick the five best and update your website.
Better photos lead to more clicks. More clicks lead to more bookings. It really is that straightforward.
If you need a booking system that shows off your site properly, CampSuite lets you add photos to your pitch types so guests can see exactly what they are booking. It is free for CL and CS sites and takes about 15 minutes to set up.