Cost of a UK Road Trip in 2026: Fuel, Accommodation, Food and the Real Total
The great British road trip has undergone a renaissance. The pandemic-era discovery that you do not need to board a plane to find spectacular scenery, combined with the soaring popularity of routes such as the North Coast 500, has turned the humble driving holiday into a mainstream annual event for millions of UK households.
The cost, however, is higher than most people budget for — particularly accommodation, which along popular routes in peak season can rival European city breaks on a per-night basis. A comfortable seven-day road trip for two now costs £1,200–£2,400 in total (£600–£1,200 per person), though the range is enormous and a well-planned frugal version can be done for half that.
The Cost Breakdown by Trip Style
The table below shows per-person costs for a seven-day road trip for two people sharing a car, based on 1,000 miles of driving, for three different budget tiers.
| Cost category | Budget (camping, self-catered) | Mid-range (B&Bs, one meal out/day) | Premium (boutique hotels, restaurants) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fuel (1,000 miles) | £80 | £80 | £80 |
| Accommodation (7 nights, per person) | £100 | £350 | £900 |
| Food and drink (7 days) | £120 | £250 | £500 |
| Activities, parking, entry fees | £60 | £120 | £250 |
| Incidentals (snacks, coffee, sundries) | £40 | £80 | £150 |
| Total per person | £400 | £880 | £1,880 |
Fuel is calculated at 14.5p per mile (petrol car at 45 mpg, £1.45 per litre), split two ways. Accommodation costs assume: camping at £15–£25 per night (campsite pitch, per person), B&B or budget hotel at £80–£120 per night for a double room (split two ways), or boutique hotel at £180–£280 per night.
Fuel: The Predictable Cost
Fuel is the most predictable road-trip cost, and for a 1,000-mile trip in a petrol car averaging 45 mpg, it is roughly £145–£160 at early-2026 prices — or £70–£80 per person split two ways. The table below shows fuel costs for different trip lengths and vehicle types:
| Miles driven | Petrol (45 mpg) | Diesel (55 mpg) | EV (home charging) | EV (public charging) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 | £75 | £60 | £12 | £85 |
| 1,000 | £150 | £120 | £25 | £165 |
| 1,500 | £225 | £180 | £38 | £245 |
| 2,000 | £300 | £240 | £50 | £330 |
The North Coast 500 is roughly 500 miles around the loop, but most people drive 800–1,000 miles once they include the journey to and from Inverness and detours. A Land's End to John o' Groats route covers roughly 850 miles on the most direct roads, or 1,200–1,500 miles on scenic routes.
Accommodation: The Budget Buster
Accommodation is the single largest cost on any road trip, and the price of rooms along popular routes has risen sharply as demand has grown. The NC500 is the most extreme example: a double room in a B&B or pub in Ullapool, Durness or John o' Groats now costs £100–£180 per night in peak season (June–September), and many properties are booked solid months in advance.
The mid-range strategy — mixing B&Bs, pub rooms and budget hotel chains (Premier Inn, Travelodge) — keeps the nightly cost to £80–£120 for a double room. Booking Premier Inn rooms 3–6 months ahead can secure rates as low as £35–£50 per night on the chain's "Saver" rate, though these are non-refundable.
Camping is the budget champion: campsites along the NC500, in the Lake District and in Snowdonia charge £15–£30 per night for a tent pitch for two people. Wild camping is legal in Scotland (under the Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003, with some restrictions around Loch Lomond and the Trossachs) but not in England and Wales except on Dartmoor (with restrictions) and with the landowner's permission elsewhere.
Campervans and motorhomes split the difference: the vehicle is both transport and accommodation, eliminating hotel costs entirely. A small campervan rents for £80–£140 per day in peak season, which is steep but covers both car hire and accommodation. For a couple, £120 per day for a campervan compares favourably with £80–£120 for a hotel room plus £20–£30 for car fuel.
Food: Self-Catering vs Eating Out
Eating out for every meal on a road trip adds up fast. A pub dinner for two with a drink each costs £35–£55; a café breakfast £12–£18 for two; lunch at a National Trust café or farm shop £15–£25. Three meals out per day for two people costs £60–£100, or £420–£700 over a week.
The self-catering alternative — a cool box, a camping stove, supermarket supplies — costs £50–£80 per person for a week of breakfasts, packed lunches and simple evening meals. Even mixing one meal out per day with self-catered breakfast and lunch cuts the food bill from £500 to £250 per person for the week.
Many B&Bs include a cooked breakfast in the room rate, which is effectively a free meal and reduces the need to buy lunch. Making the most of the included breakfast — and perhaps pocketing a piece of fruit or a pastry for later — is a time-honoured road-trip budgeting tactic.
Popular Routes and Their Costs
| Route | Distance | Highlights | Suggested duration | Est. mid-range cost per person |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| North Coast 500 (Scotland) | 500 miles (loop) + approach | Bealach na Bà, Smoo Cave, Dunnet Head, whisky distilleries, beaches at Achmelvich and Sandwood Bay | 5–7 days | £700–£1,000 |
| Atlantic Highway (Devon & Cornwall) | 170 miles (Barnstaple to Newquay) | Hartland Point, Bude, Tintagel, Padstow, Bedruthan Steps | 3–5 days | £400–£600 |
| Causeway Coastal Route (Northern Ireland) | 130 miles (Belfast to Derry/Londonderry) | Giant's Causeway, Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge, Dunluce Castle, Bushmills distillery | 2–4 days | £300–£500 |
| Peak District loop | 120 miles (Buxton, Castleton, Bakewell, Chatsworth) | Mam Tor, Stanage Edge, Bakewell pudding, Chatsworth House | 2–3 days | £250–£400 |
| Snowdonia to Brecon Beacons (Wales) | 200 miles | Snowdon, Portmeirion, Elan Valley, Pen y Fan | 4–6 days | £500–£750 |
How to Keep the Cost Down
- Book accommodation in advance. Popular routes in peak season fill up. Last-minute availability along the NC500 in August is close to zero, and what remains is expensive. Booking 3–6 months ahead secures better rates and a wider choice.
- Travel in the shoulder season. May, June and September offer good weather, quieter roads and lower accommodation prices than July and August. The NC500 in May has daylight until 9pm+ and dramatically fewer midges.
- Use a National Trust or English Heritage membership. If you already have one, entry to properties and parking is free — saving £50–£150 over a week. If you do not, a one-year membership (£91.20 for a couple, National Trust, 2026) pays for itself in 4–5 visits.
- Pack a cool box and a camping stove. Even if you are not camping, the ability to make a cup of tea, a sandwich or a simple pasta meal at a viewpoint or campsite kitchen saves £15–£25 per person per day compared with café and pub meals.
- Share the driving and the costs. A road trip for two splits fuel and accommodation costs; a trip for four in a larger car splits them further, though accommodation for four is harder to find and proportionally more expensive.
A UK road trip is not a budget holiday — the cost of accommodation and eating out sees to that — but it is a flexible one. The ability to change your route on a whim, stop at an unplanned beach or viewpoint, and carry everything you need in the boot is what makes it worth the money. Understanding the cost breakdown simply means you can enjoy the spontaneity without the financial hangover.