Most definitely, not! You can use your holiday caravan for short breaks and longer holidays, but it cannot be used as your main residence.
If you live in your holiday caravan, it would be in breach of our planning and Site Licence, and you would have none of the protection in law provided to occupiers of residential parks. We ask all our customers for proof (at the outset and at intervals in the future) that they have a genuine permanent home address elsewhere. A ‘paper’ address is not enough; you must really live there. If you wish to live in a caravan you should seek a suitable residential park.
We are required to ensure the holiday caravans are for holiday use only so, for example, our customers should not work locally and commute from their holiday caravan or enroll children into local schools. They should be registered to vote at their main place of residence too.
This important holiday requirement is included in our Licence Agreement, which would be your contract with us, and must be respected. If you broke this contract term, you would be asked to stop doing so. If you were to fail to comply, we would be entitled to terminate the contract and to ask you to remove your holiday caravan. The planning authority might also take action against you for breach of the holiday rule.