Skip to main content
    RoamWorthy
    guide
    motorhome
    license weight
    uprating
    downplating
    mam
    payload

    Motorhome uprating and downplating, a UK buyer guide

    Quick answer: uprating raises a motorhome's Maximum Authorised Mass (MAM) so you can carry more payload legally, downplating lowers it, usually to keep the vehicle inside a B-licence weight band. Both are paperwork changes backed by an engineering assessment, not a physical modification, and either can affect speed limits, insurance and resale.

    Quick answer: uprating raises a motorhome's Maximum Authorised Mass (MAM) so you can carry more payload legally, downplating lowers it, usually to keep the vehicle inside a B-licence weight band. Both are paperwork changes backed by an engineering assessment, not a physical modification, and either can affect speed limits, insurance and resale.

    5 min read
    Published 5 Feb 2026Updated 15 Jun 2026

    The RoamWorthy editorial team combines decades of caravan, motorhome and campervan ownership experience with industry expertise to provide trusted buying advice.

    View all articles →

    Quick answer

    Uprating raises a motorhome's Maximum Authorised Mass (MAM, also called gross vehicle weight). It is a paperwork change backed by an engineering assessment, usually issued by a specialist such as SV Tech. It can give you more legal payload without physically modifying the vehicle, provided the chassis is rated for it.

    Downplating lowers the MAM, most often from above 3,500 kg down to 3,500 kg, so the motorhome can be driven on a standard category B licence.

    Neither changes how the vehicle actually feels to drive. Both change what is legal and what is insured.

    Who this guide is for

    • Buyers looking at a heavy coachbuilt or A-class who only hold a category B licence.
    • Owners running close to their plated weight and worried about overloading.
    • Anyone reading "now 3,500 kg" in a dealer advert and wanting to understand what changed.

    The terms in plain English

    • MAM / MTPLM: the maximum the vehicle is legally allowed to weigh, fully loaded, on UK roads.
    • MIRO: mass in running order, roughly the empty weight with fluids and a nominal driver.
    • Payload: MAM minus MIRO. That is what you can put in, including water, gas, passengers and kit.
    • Axle limits: each axle has its own maximum. Uprating the vehicle does not always uprate every axle.

    Licence impact

    The headline question for most buyers is whether they can drive the motorhome on a standard car licence.

    • Category B (most post-1997 licences): up to 3,500 kg MAM.
    • Category C1 (often grandfathered for drivers who passed before 1 January 1997): up to 7,500 kg MAM.

    This is why downplating to 3,500 kg is so common, it keeps a heavy motorhome accessible to B-licence drivers. It is also why uprating above 3,500 kg only suits drivers who hold the right entitlement.

    When uprating makes sense

    • You routinely carry bikes, an awning, full water and two adults and the payload no longer fits.
    • The chassis manufacturer already lists a higher plated weight option for your model.
    • You hold C1 (or are happy to take the test) and want headroom rather than a constant payload tetris.

    When downplating makes sense

    • You only hold a category B licence and want a heavier coachbuilt.
    • You are buying second hand and the previous owner had C1 entitlement but you do not.
    • You want to stay below the lower speed limits and tolls that apply to vehicles above 3,500 kg in some places.

    Downplating reduces your legal payload. Before agreeing to it, work out what you actually need to carry. A downplated motorhome with no realistic payload is not a good outcome.

    Buyer checks before you sign

    1. Ask to see the current VIN plate and the revised plate, plus the engineering paperwork from the specialist who carried out the change.
    2. Cross-check the V5C. The revised MAM should be reflected on the logbook.
    3. Weigh the vehicle at a public weighbridge with a realistic load. Compare the result against the plated figures.
    4. Confirm with your insurer that the new plated weight is acceptable. A licence mismatch can void cover.
    5. If buying privately, ask whether the change has been disclosed to the DVLA.

    What this guide is not

    This is general buyer guidance, not engineering advice. Uprating and downplating decisions should be confirmed with a recognised specialist and, where relevant, your insurer. RoamWorthy does not certify weight changes.

    Related tools and guides

    Our content follows our editorial policy.

    Spotted an error? Let us know.