About Jucy Australia
About JUCY Australia
JUCY has been around since 2001, when a couple of New Zealand brothers launched a bright green-and-purple campervan company aimed squarely at backpackers who wanted something cheerful and affordable. More than two decades later, JUCY is one of the most recognisable names in Australian campervan hire — and the fleet has grown well beyond what those early days suggested.
What started as a single budget brand now operates across three tiers: the core JUCY range (mid-range campervans), Chill'd (the budget sub-brand), and Star RV (full motorhomes for travellers who want genuine self-containment). If you booked JUCY four or five years ago, you're looking at a meaningfully different company now.
Two Brands Worth Understanding
The most useful thing to know about JUCY Australia in 2026 is the brand split.
JUCY is the core range: the Coaster (2-berth, toilet included), the Crib+ (4-berth with a rooftop sleeping pod), and the Condo (4-berth with full standing height and toilet). These are purpose-built campervans with proper kitchen setups, air conditioning, and diesel engines. The Coaster in particular is genuinely good value for a couple who want self-containment without paying motorhome prices.
Chill'd is the budget sub-brand: the Cloudbreak (basic 2-berth, no toilet), the Malibu (2-berth with toilet), and the Big Kahuna (6-berth, awning, shower, toilet — the standout of the lot). Different name, same quality control. If price is the priority, start with Chill'd.
There's also Star RV — full motorhomes with bathrooms, proper standing room, and self-containment. Polaris models in 2, 4, and 6-berth. If you want something that travels like a house, Star RV is JUCY's premium answer. It's a different product category entirely.
The Fleet At A Glance
The old model names are gone. If you remember renting an El Cheapo Sleeper, a Champ, or a Compass — those vehicles no longer exist in JUCY's Australian lineup. Here's what you're working with now:
- Chill'd Cloudbreak (2-berth): Entry-level. Fridge, gas cooker, double bed, roof racks. No toilet. The cheapest way into the JUCY ecosystem.
- Chill'd Malibu (2-berth): One step up — toilet included, domestic battery, air con, kitchen basics. Good value for a couple who want self-containment at a budget price.
- Chill'd Big Kahuna (6-berth): The sleeper hit of the fleet. Six people, full shower and toilet, 240V battery, awning, heating and air con. Genuinely impressive at this price point.
- JUCY Crib+ (4-berth): Rooftop tent sleeps two upstairs, double bed inside. The pop-top setup is either exciting or a dealbreaker depending on how you feel about roof tents. If everyone's fine with it — solid option.
- JUCY Condo (4-berth): High-ceiling stand-up interior, toilet, 240V battery, child-friendly layout. The most practical 4-berth in the range. Families should start here.
- JUCY Coaster (2-berth): The pick of the JUCY range for couples. High ceiling, toilet, diesel engine, domestic battery. Drives well, packs a lot in, looks sharp. This is where most couples should land.
Every vehicle in the JUCY and Chill'd fleet has automatic transmission and air conditioning. That's not a given in this segment — it's worth noting, especially for international visitors who've never driven a manual on Australian roads.
Branch Network
Six locations, all at airports: Adelaide, Brisbane, Cairns, Melbourne, Perth, and Sydney.
The significant change from the last review: Perth is now open. JUCY now covers the entire continent, which matters for one-way renters doing the classic long routes — east coast, Darwin to Adelaide, Perth to Sydney.
Two closures to note. The Gold Coast depot at Coolangatta has closed — use Brisbane instead, roughly 45 minutes north on the M1. And the Melbourne CBD drop-off at St Kilda is gone; all Melbourne pickup and return is now at the airport in Tullamarine.
Insurance
JUCY offers three protection tiers. The structure — a bond-only option, a full excess-waiver option, and a premium tier that adds single-vehicle rollover coverage plus extras like GPS and camping furniture — has been consistent for years. The specific prices shift over time, so check the current rates on JUCY's website before booking. The figures in older guides (including the previous version of this page) are out of date.
The excess amounts vary by vehicle class: smaller vehicles carry a lower bond, larger ones a higher one. Read the fine print at pickup, not after.
Practical tip: check your credit card's rental vehicle excess coverage first. Some cards cover it entirely, which makes the bond-only option a reasonable call.
Age Policy
JUCY rents to drivers from 18 years old. Most major Australian operators draw the line at 21. If you're a younger traveller who's been turned away by other companies, JUCY is one of very few legitimate options at scale.
Perks Worth Knowing
Unlimited kilometres on all rentals. 24/7 road trip support. Book direct through JUCY's website and you earn Velocity Frequent Flyer Points — modest, but free if you're already a member.
How JUCY Compares
In the budget-to-mid segment, JUCY is up against Travellers Autobarn, Spaceships, and the lower Britz range. JUCY has broader fleet variety than Travellers Autobarn — two sub-brands, a genuine 6-berth option, and motorhomes. Travellers Autobarn has more character in its individual vehicles and also rents to under-21s, though with a narrower model range.
The Chill'd Big Kahuna is particularly competitive as a 6-berth option — groups of four to six who want a self-contained vehicle without motorhome prices should compare it carefully before defaulting to Britz or Maui. The price difference is meaningful over a 10–14 day trip.
The JUCY Coaster is the standout vehicle in the core range. It's what you'd rent if you wanted a proper self-contained couple's campervan without stepping into full motorhome territory. At this price point, the competition is thin.
Who Should Book JUCY
Book if: You're 18–25 and other companies won't hire to you. You're a couple who wants a self-contained 2-berth with toilet (Coaster is the pick). You're four people who want practicality over adventure (Condo). You're a large group wanting a budget 6-berth with proper facilities (Big Kahuna). You need airport pickup at any major Australian city including Perth.
Don't book if: You need a 4WD or outback-capable vehicle — JUCY doesn't have one. You want a premium near-new motorhome (look at Star RV directly or step up to Maui). You're looking for quirky hand-painted individual vehicles — the JUCY fleet is uniformly branded.
Final Verdict
JUCY has matured into a genuinely broad offering. The bright purple and green are still there, but underneath it's a company that now covers budget, mid-range, and motorhome categories across six airport locations with a minimum driver age of 18.
The JUCY Coaster is the best value 2-berth campervan in their lineup — toilet included, automatic, high ceiling, available everywhere. Hard to beat at this price point.
The Chill'd Big Kahuna is the other standout — a 6-berth with shower, toilet, and awning that punches well above its budget positioning.
Go in knowing what JUCY is: a fun, youth-oriented operator with solid national coverage and genuinely useful fleet diversity. It's not trying to be Britz or Maui, and it doesn't need to.
Pros & Cons
✓ Pros
- Rents from 18 years old — rare in the Australian market
- All vehicles automatic transmission and air conditioned
- Six airport locations including Perth
- Unlimited kilometres included
- Velocity Frequent Flyer Points on direct bookings
✗ Cons
- No 4WD vehicles — not suitable for off-sealed-road travel
- Gold Coast and Melbourne CBD depots closed
- Insurance pricing not transparent — verify current rates before booking
- Mixed customer service reputation historically
- No shower in most campervans (Big Kahuna excepted)
Vehicle Fleet
The Chill'd Cloudbreak is JUCY's entry-level 2-berth — the budget option for a couple who wants something functional without paying for extras they won't use. Fridge, gas cooker, kitchen sink, and a double bed. Roof racks handle the overflow gear. No toilet, no shower, and a domestic battery rather than a 240V system. If you're fine with camping facilities and just need reliable transport with a bed, this works. If you want a toilet, step up to the Malibu or Coaster.
The Chill'd Malibu sits between the Cloudbreak and the JUCY Coaster - a budget 2-berth that includes a toilet. If self-containment matters to you but the Coaster's price is a stretch, the Malibu is the sensible middle ground. Fridge, gas cooker, kitchen sink, double bed, domestic battery. Automatic transmission and air con as standard across the Chill'd range. No shower - campground facilities.
The JUCY Coaster is the pick of the 2-berth range. High ceiling so you can stand up properly, a toilet for self-containment, diesel engine for fuel efficiency on long hauls, and a proper double bed from the folded bench seats. All automatic. If you're a couple who wants a comfortable, self-contained campervan without stepping into 4-berth territory, this is the sensible endpoint.
The JUCY Condo is the practical 4-berth. High ceiling for full standing room, two double beds inside (no rooftop tent), a toilet, and a 240V battery system. It's marked as child-friendly, which tracks — all four people sleep inside in proper beds, making it genuinely workable for families. The 240V system means you're not dependent on campground power for appliances. This is where most families and groups of four should land in the JUCY range.
The JUCY Crib+ sleeps four: a double bed inside the vehicle and a pop-up rooftop tent for two. The rooftop setup is either a feature or a dealbreaker depending on your group. For friends or a couple-plus-two who are happy camping outdoors, it's a compact and affordable 4-berth solution. No toilet or shower in this model — plan around campground facilities. The old Jucy Crib was a 2-berth; the Crib+ is a different vehicle with different expectations.
The Chill'd Big Kahuna is the standout large-group option in the JUCY family. Six people, full shower and toilet, 240V battery, awning, heating and air con - that's a proper self-contained setup. It punches well above its budget positioning. Groups of four to six who want self-containment without paying motorhome prices should compare the Big Kahuna seriously before defaulting to Britz or Maui.
