Summer Builds Are Won in Spring
Let's do the maths. Real adult-with-a-job maths.
It's early March.
Your summer trip is locked in two or three weeks in July, somewhere warm, somewhere worth the drive. The bare van is sitting on the driveway. You've got the vision. You've got vanlife builds bookmarked for days. The kit is still a link in a browser tab you've had open since January.
July 1st. That's your target. Sixteen weeks away, give or take. Sounds like a lot, right? Let's have a look at what those sixteen weeks actually contain.
Four weekends in March, but one's already spoken for, and one you'll spend recovering from the one before Four in April Easter arrives, relatives arrive, a spring social you said yes to in February arrives Four in May, a bank holiday here, a long weekend there, a garden that's starting to judge you Four in June, wedding season opens, the sun makes you want to do anything except work in a van
Subtract rain. Subtract fatigue. Subtract the Saturday afternoon where you stood in the van for forty minutes, couldn't decide where to start, and went back inside.
You realistically have about 10 proper build days.
Sure, it could be more, but it really can't be much less. So let's say ten days. That's your budget. The question is whether you spend them wisely, or whether you spend them discovering things you should have sorted in March.
Picture the scene: we can, because we've lived it. Mid July. The drill running out of battery in the campsite car park. The cabinet door that's slightly off because the floor wasn't as flat as it looked. Your partner photographing it not because they want to remember the moment, but as evidence. These things happen. They're not a sign you've failed, they're a sign you ran out of time to fix them before July. The good news: this is completely solvable. But only if you're strategic about how you use the time you've got. Here's what a realistic spring build actually looks like.
Phase 1 — The Unglamorous Foundation (March–April)
• Rust treatment on anything that needs it (do it now, not in September when it's worse).
This is five to seven proper build days. Full days, not 'I popped out for a couple of hours.' Tools ready, materials ready to go in. It's not rocket science, but it's focused work.
If you start this in March and finish it by end of April, you're in good shape. If you start it in May, you're in trouble.
Phase 2 — The Part Everyone Imagines (May)
The van is prepped. The surfaces are true. The measurements are right. It's time for the fun part.
If you're going DIY designing and building your own cabinetry from scratch, this phase is not a weekend job. Depending on your skills, your tools, and how ambitious your layout is, custom-built van furniture takes anything from a week to a month. Most people land somewhere in the middle. If that's your path, the spring timeline in this article isn't going to save you. You needed to have started in January.
If you're using a modular kit, pre-engineered, pre-cut, ready to assemble, the picture is completely different. A Simple Vans kit goes together over a weekend. One or two serious build days if your van is prepped and ready. Three at the outside if you're being meticulous about every fitting.
Phase 2 is the reward for doing Phase 1 properly, and for not spending six weeks reinventing the sliding bed.
Phase 3 — The Month Everyone Forgets (June)
A finished van is one that's been used, tested, adjusted, and trusted. That process takes a month of low-pressure tinkering, which only happens if the furniture is in by the end of May.
The Strategic Move
Here's how this plays out when you get the timing right.
You order your kit now. Lead time is short – a couple of weeks – so the kit arrives while you're still in the middle of Phase 1. By the time your structural prep is finished and the ply is lined, the furniture is all ready to go. You've just started, and you've already got your eyes on the finishing line. That's not a flatpack kit, that's motivation in a box.
Same van. Same kit. Different outcome, entirely down to when you started.
This isn't a pitch for a dream build completed in a weekend. It isn't a promise that everything goes smoothly. Van conversions involve problem-solving, that's part of it.
If you're at the start of this process and working through the decisions, these might be useful next stops:
A deeper dive into your DIY and kit furniture options. If you’re still planning to build your own furniture, we salute you. Just read this first.
Insulating Your Campervan: A Simple DIY Guide
Phase 1 starts here. Everything you need to know about insulation and vapour barriers before the ply goes in.
How to Wire Your Camper Conversion: The Simple, No-Fuss Approach
Electric installs can seem pretty daunting to a DIY newbie, but modern tech like lithium power banks and LED lights is making it surprisingly simple.
Which Simple Vans Classic Kit Is Right for You?
If you haven't decided on a kit yet, this is where to start. Walks through the Classic range and helps you match layout to how you actually travel.
With every van conversion, there’s a hard way and an easy way. This is our guide to making everything as easy as installing one of our furniture kits.




