Most campsite owners rely on word of mouth and listing sites to fill their pitches. That works, up to a point. But when someone types "campsite near Keswick" or "touring caravan site Lake District" into Google, does your site show up? If it doesn't, you're invisible to a huge number of potential guests who are actively looking for exactly what you offer. Getting found on Google isn't as complicated as it sounds, and you don't need to hire an agency or learn to code. Here's what actually moves the needle for UK campsites.

Start with Google Business Profile

If you do nothing else from this article, do this. Your Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business) is the single most important thing for local visibility. It's the box that appears on the right side of Google when someone searches for your campsite by name, and it's what puts you on Google Maps.

Setting one up is free and takes about twenty minutes. You'll need your site name, address, phone number, website, opening hours, and a few photos. Google will verify your address by sending a postcard with a code, or sometimes by phone.

Once you're set up, keep it updated. Add new photos every few months. Post updates when you open for the season or run a special offer. Reply to every review, good or bad. Google rewards businesses that keep their profiles active, and a well maintained profile will appear higher in local search results than a neglected one.

Key details to get right

Get Your Website Working Harder

Your website is the foundation of your online presence. If you don't have one, you're relying entirely on third party platforms to represent your site. If you do have one, there are a few things that make a big difference to how Google ranks it.

Make it mobile friendly

More than half of campsite searches happen on phones. If your website is hard to read or navigate on a mobile screen, visitors leave quickly. Google notices this and ranks you lower. A modern, responsive website that works well on any screen size is essential. If your current site was built ten years ago and you have to pinch and zoom to read it on a phone, it's time for an update.

Speed matters

A slow website frustrates visitors and hurts your Google ranking. Common culprits include oversized images, cheap hosting, and outdated website builders. Your homepage should load in under three seconds. You can test your site speed for free using Google's PageSpeed Insights tool.

Use the right words on the right pages

Google reads the text on your website to understand what your site is about. If your homepage just says "Welcome to our campsite" with no further detail, Google has very little to work with. Think about what your ideal guest would type into Google and make sure those phrases appear naturally on your site.

For example, if you run a CL near Whitby, your homepage might include phrases like "Certificated Location near Whitby", "caravan site on the North Yorkshire coast", and "quiet campsite with sea views". Don't force them in awkwardly. Write naturally but specifically.

Every page on your site should have a clear purpose and a unique title tag. Your homepage title might be "Meadow Farm CL, Quiet Caravan Site Near Whitby". Your facilities page might be "Facilities and Hookups at Meadow Farm CL". These titles appear in Google search results, so they need to be clear and descriptive.

Reviews Are Your Secret Weapon

Google reviews directly affect where you appear in local search results. Sites with more reviews and higher ratings consistently outrank those without. Beyond the ranking benefit, reviews influence whether someone clicks on your listing in the first place. A campsite with 47 reviews averaging 4.8 stars looks far more appealing than one with 3 reviews and no responses.

How to get more reviews

How to handle bad reviews

Every site gets the occasional negative review. How you respond matters more than the review itself. Reply calmly, acknowledge the issue, and explain what you've done about it. Future guests reading the exchange will form their opinion based on your response as much as the complaint. Never argue, never get defensive, and never ignore it.

Get Listed in the Right Places

Google pays attention to how many other websites mention your campsite. These mentions, especially ones that include a link to your website, tell Google that your site is a real, trusted business. You don't need hundreds of links. A handful from the right places makes a meaningful difference.

Keep your details consistent

This sounds minor but it matters. Your business name, address, and phone number should be identical everywhere they appear online. If your Google profile says "Meadow Farm Campsite" but Pitchup lists you as "Meadow Farm Touring Park" and your Facebook page says "Meadow Farm CL", Google gets confused about whether these are the same business. Pick one name and use it everywhere.

Create Content That Answers Questions

One of the most effective ways to appear in Google results is to publish content that answers the questions your potential guests are asking. This is where a blog or guides section on your website becomes valuable.

Think about what guests ask you most often. "Can I bring my dog?" "Is there a shop nearby?" "What's the road like for large caravans?" "What's there to do in the area?" Each of these questions is something people also type into Google. A page on your website that answers them well can rank for those searches and bring new visitors to your site.

You don't need to publish every week. Even a handful of genuinely useful pages about your local area, your facilities, or common questions will make a difference over time. Quality beats quantity. One thorough guide to walking routes near your site is worth more than twenty short, thin posts.

Track What's Working

You don't need to become an analytics expert, but checking a few numbers occasionally will tell you whether your efforts are paying off.

If you see that most of your traffic comes from a specific search term, that's a clue about what guests are looking for. If a particular page gets lots of visitors but they all leave quickly, that page might need improving. You don't need to obsess over data, but glancing at it now and then helps you focus your time on what actually works.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

A few things that campsite owners often get wrong with Google visibility:

Take the First Step

You don't need to do everything at once. If you're starting from scratch, claim your Google Business Profile this week and spend twenty minutes getting it right. Next week, look at your website and make sure it loads well on a phone. The week after, ask your next batch of departing guests for a review. Small, consistent steps add up quickly.

If you want your website to include online booking so that guests who find you on Google can book immediately, that's where the real payoff happens. A guest who searches, finds your site, reads your page, and can book a pitch right there without picking up the phone is far more likely to follow through than one who has to call you during office hours.

CampSuite makes this easy. It's free for CL and CS sites, takes about fifteen minutes to set up, and gives your guests a simple way to book online. Pair that with a solid Google presence and you'll spend less time chasing bookings and more time running your site.