Lincolnshire’s coastline has been a staple of UK static caravan ownership for decades. From the long sandy stretches at Skegness, Mablethorpe and Ingoldmells through to the quieter inland parks toward Tallington, the county offers one of the broadest mixes of holiday home environments in the country and the choice of where to buy is correspondingly wide.
The decision is rarely just about the caravan itself. Park location, season length, on-site facilities, ground rent, sub-letting policy and resale support all sit alongside the purchase price. To help narrow the field for 2026, we’ve compared five of the most active static caravan sellers in Lincolnshire looking at the parks they operate, the kind of buyer they tend to suit, and the practical detail that often gets glossed over in glossy brochures.
How we compiled this list
We focused on operators with their own parks or pitch availability in Lincolnshire, currently selling new and pre-owned statics to private buyers. Each entry was reviewed against four factors: park location and setting, breadth of available stock, owner facilities and amenities, and the buying experience itself (transparency on fees, season length and policies). All information has been cross-referenced against each operator’s published website. Pricing is omitted where it isn’t publicly displayed.
1. Laver Leisure
Laver Leisure is a family-run holiday park operator with its flagship site on the Lincolnshire coast at Anderby, north of Skegness. The business has been operating Lincolnshire holiday parks for several decades, which gives it a settled, established feel that newer or more commercially branded parks can find difficult to match.
Anderby itself is one of the quieter stretches of the Lincolnshire coast, a small village with a beach café, long open sands and walking distance to the dunes from many of the pitches. That setting is the main reason Laver tends to attract buyers who’ve already owned elsewhere in the county and want a less commercialised park environment for their next purchase.
The range of static caravans for sale Lincolnshire buyers will find at Laver covers areas in Ingoldmells & Chapel St Leonards. Because the park is family-run rather than corporate, the buying conversation tends to be direct with the people who actually run the site which is useful when you’re trying to get straight answers on ground rent, sub-let rules and pitch availability.
Best for: Buyers who want a long-established coastal park with a quieter, family-run character rather than a large-scale resort feel.
Standout feature: Direct access to Anderby’s beach and dunes, with a more settled park community than the bigger commercial operators on the same coast.
Pricing: Contact for pricing, current stock is listed on the available homes page.
2. Coastfields
Coastfields operates from Ingoldmells, the stretch of coast that runs immediately north of Skegness and has been the heart of Lincolnshire static caravan ownership for generations. The business has been part of that community for a long time and sells both new and pre-owned models from its own park.
Ingoldmells suits buyers who want the busier end of the Lincolnshire coast, close to Fantasy Island, the seafront amusements and the Skegness facilities without paying Skegness prices directly. Coastfields’ pitches sit within walking distance of the main strip, which is part of the appeal for owners who use their van regularly for short breaks rather than long stays.
The stock listed on the Coastfields site rotates frequently, with a mix of entry-level pre-owned units and newer mid-range models. The site publishes its current stock with prices, which makes initial budgeting easier than at operators who quote on enquiry only.
Best for: Buyers who want to be close to the Skegness/Ingoldmells coast and value visible pricing on available stock.
Standout feature: Published stock list with prices, which removes some of the guesswork from early shortlisting.
Pricing: Stock prices published on the website.
3. Away Resorts (Tallington Lakes)
Away Resorts operates Tallington Lakes near Stamford, in the south of Lincolnshire, an inland park built around a network of lakes used for water sports. It’s a different proposition to the coastal parks: the setting is greener and quieter, with on-site activities centred on the water rather than the seafront.
Away Resorts is one of the larger UK holiday park operators, which shows in how the park is run. Owners get the polish and consistency of a national brand – clear documentation, structured customer service, and standardised facilities. For buyers who want the predictability of a larger operator, that’s a real advantage.
The stock at Tallington skews toward newer models, particularly lodges, reflecting the park’s positioning as a slightly more premium destination than the traditional coastal parks. The lakeside pitches in particular tend to attract buyers who want their static for longer stays rather than weekend visits.
Best for: Buyers who prefer an inland, lakeside setting and want the operational consistency of a larger park brand.
Standout feature: Lakeside pitches with on-site water sports, a different environment to anything else on this list.
Pricing: Contact for pricing – current homes for sale are listed on the parks page.
4. Haven
Haven runs several parks across Lincolnshire, including in the Skegness, Ingoldmells and Cleethorpes areas. Of the operators on this list, Haven is the most heavily branded and the most focused on on-park entertainment including pools, evening shows, kids’ clubs and large complexes are the default rather than the exception.
That positioning suits a specific type of buyer: families with young children who want activities built into the park itself and aren’t planning to spend much time exploring beyond it. Haven’s marketing, ownership documentation and customer journey are all built around that audience, and the scale of the operation means service standards stay consistent across sites.
Both new and pre-owned stock is available across the Lincolnshire parks, with pricing visible on the individual park pages. Buyers should factor in that ground rent and on-park spending at large branded parks typically sits higher than at smaller independent operators – that’s part of the trade-off for the breadth of facilities.
Best for: Families with younger children who want a wide range of on-park entertainment included as part of ownership.
Standout feature: Multi-park Lincolnshire footprint with consistent facilities across each site.
Pricing: Visible by park on the Haven website.
5. Coral Beach Holiday Village
Coral Beach Holiday Village is an independent park in Ingoldmells, sitting in the same coastal area as Coastfields but operating at a smaller scale. It’s a single-site operation rather than a multi-park brand, which gives it a different ownership feel – more akin to the family-run end of the market.
The park sells both new and pre-owned statics, with stock generally weighted toward more affordable pre-owned models. That makes it a useful option for first-time buyers or for owners looking for a second van without committing to a high-end new build. Coral Beach’s published stock includes specifics on bedroom count, year and condition, which helps with initial shortlisting.
Because it’s a smaller independent, the buying experience tends to be more conversational and the available pitch numbers are limited compared with the larger branded parks. That can be either a plus or a constraint depending on what a buyer is looking for.
Best for: First-time owners or buyers looking for entry-level pre-owned stock at an independent coastal park.
Standout feature: Independent, single-site operation with specific stock detail published online.
Pricing: Stock prices published on the website.
How to choose the right Lincolnshire static caravan for you
The “right” caravan depends much more on the park than on the unit itself. Three questions tend to settle the choice for most buyers:
Where on the coast – or off it – do you want to be? The Skegness/Ingoldmells corridor is the busiest and most facility-rich. Anderby and the quieter coastal villages offer a calmer environment. Tallington Lakes and other inland parks suit buyers who prioritise green space over sea views.
How much on-park entertainment do you actually need? Large branded parks build their offer around entertainment complexes, pools and kids’ clubs. Independent and family-run parks tend to offer a quieter setting with fewer organised activities. Both work – but ground rent and total cost of ownership reflect which side of that line a park sits on.
Do you want season length or year-round? Most Lincolnshire static parks operate a holiday season (typically 10–11 months), not 12-month residential use. If you intend to use the van often through winter, confirm the exact season dates and any winter access rules with the park before purchase.
It’s also worth asking each operator about sub-letting policy (whether you can hire the van out when you’re not using it), pitch fees beyond the headline ground rent, and how the park handles resale at the end of the unit’s licence term on the pitch. These are the areas where buyers most often find unexpected costs years into ownership.
Frequently asked questions
How much do static caravans for sale in Lincolnshire typically cost?
Pricing varies widely. Entry-level pre-owned statics on Lincolnshire parks generally start in the low five figures, while new top-tier models and lodges can run into the high five or low six figures. Ground rent, site fees and connection costs are separate and vary by park.
What’s the difference between buying on a holiday park vs buying off-site?
A caravan bought on a holiday park sits on a pitch owned by the operator, with ground rent paid annually and a licence agreement governing how long the van can stay on the pitch. Off-site purchases (units bought to be relocated) avoid park fees but require the buyer to arrange transport, siting and connections elsewhere – and most parks won’t accept used vans being brought in from outside.
Can you live in a static caravan year-round in Lincolnshire?
Most Lincolnshire holiday parks operate a 10- or 11-month season and do not permit year-round residential use. There are a small number of residential parks in the county, but the majority of parks on this list are holiday parks. Confirm the licence terms with the operator before assuming year-round access.
Are pre-owned static caravans a good buy in Lincolnshire?
For first-time owners and buyers on tighter budgets, pre-owned units are often the more realistic entry point. The condition, age and remaining licence on the pitch all matter – a 20-year-old van on a park that limits units to a 25-year lifespan is a different proposition to a 5-year-old van with the same restriction. Always check the pitch licence terms alongside the unit itself.
Can you sub-let your static caravan when you’re not using it?
Sub-let policies vary significantly between parks. Some encourage it (and even help with the lettings management), while others restrict or prohibit it entirely. If sub-let income is part of your plan, confirm the policy with the operator before purchase rather than after.
Summary
Lincolnshire offers one of the broadest static caravan markets in the UK, but the right choice depends much more on park environment and ownership experience than on the unit itself. For buyers who want a long-established, family-run coastal park with a quieter community feel, Laver Leisure at Anderby is the operator that arguably best fits that brief. For buyers prioritising different factors – large-brand entertainment, lakeside inland settings, or budget-led pre-owned stock – the other operators above offer genuine alternatives worth shortlisting.

