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RV Dump Stations In California

36.7783° N, 119.4179° W

Quick Overview

California is the most geographically varied RV state in the country, and its dump-station network sprawls to match: 280-plus state parks, nine national parks, 840 miles of coastline, and a massive desert snowbird scene. We've mapped several dump stations statewide, with some of them free. In a single loop you can dump above the Pacific in Big Sur, in a Sierra valley, and out in the Colorado River desert, so the trick is knowing what each region charges and when it's open.

The state parks are the backbone, but the system changed. Since 2018, California State Parks has rolled out automated Sani-Star dump stations at more than 20 park units. They're card-only (no cash) and cost $10 to $20 per use, separate from your camping or entry fee. If you're not camping, you'll pay $10 for park entry plus $10 to dump. The smart move for frequent visitors is the $125 annual state parks pass, which covers day-use access and dump use across the system. Keep a credit or debit card handy, because the kiosks won't take cash.

The national parks cover the marquee destinations. Yosemite's Upper Pines Campground has a dump station with fresh water open year-round, with Wawona and Tuolumne Meadows dumps open in summer. Kings Canyon's Azalea Campground has a dump, potable water, and flush toilets. None of these parks offer hookups, and some campgrounds cap RV length (Death Valley's Hidden Valley and White Tank sites top out around 25 feet), so check before you commit a big rig to a park road.

The southern deserts are where dumping gets cheap and dense, thanks to the snowbird crowds. Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, Barstow, and the Colorado River corridor have a thick concentration of sani-dump facilities. The Pilot Knob BLM long-term visitor area near Winterhaven (12 miles from Yuma) has a dump at the adjacent gas station for $15, with water at nearby rest stops. Slab City near Niland offers free desert camping, and Anza-Borrego's BLM land east of Borrego Springs is free boondocking. Up the Central Valley, the Highway 99 ag towns have plenty of municipal dumps at city parks and fairgrounds.

Rest areas help too: California's Caltrans rest areas cap stays at 8 hours per 24-hour period, and 20 of them have designated dump stations. You can sleep in your vehicle but not camp, and dumping anywhere but a designated station is prohibited. Climate drives the calendar, since the deserts are prime in winter, the Sierra in summer, and the coast year-round. Below you'll find every station we've mapped across California, with notes from fellow RVers on fees, payment, and seasonal access.

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Browse RV Dump Stations by City (374)

Acton

Adelanto

Aguanga

Albion

Alpine

Anaheim

Anderson

Angels Camp

Angelus Oaks

Anza

Apple Valley

Arcadia

Arroyo Grande

Artesia

Atwater

Avenal

Avila Beach

Azusa

Baker

Bakersfield

Banning

Barstow

Bass Lake

Beaumont

Beckwourth

Bellflower

Berkeley

Bethel Island

Big Bar

Big Bear City

Big Sur

Bishop

Blairsden

Bloomington

Blythe

Bodega Bay

Bonita

Borrego Springs

Boulder Creek

Boulevard

Brawley

Bridgeport

Browns Valley

Buellton

Burney

Cabazon

Calabasas

Calexico

California City

California Hot Springs

Calipatria

Calistoga

Cambria

Camino

Camptonville

Canyon Country

Canyon Dam

Capitola

Cardiff by the Sea

Carlsbad

Carpinteria

Castaic

Castro Valley

Cathedral City

Cerritos

Chilcoot

Chino

Chowchilla

Chula Vista

Citrus Heights

Cloud

Cloverdale

Clovis

Coarsegold

Coleville

Colfax

Coloma

Columbia

Concord

Corning

Corona

Costa Mesa

Coulterville

Crescent City

Crowley Lake

Daggett

Dana Point

Davis

Death Valley

Delhi

Desert Hot Springs

Dixon

Dobbins

Douglas City

Duarte

Dunlap

Dunnigan

Dunsmuir

Dutch Flat

Earp

Edwards AFB

El Cajon

El Centro

El Portal

Emigrant Gap

Encinitas

Escondido

Essex

Etna

Eureka

Fairfield

Fawnskin

Ferndale

Fillmore

Folsom

Foresthill

Forestville

Fort Bragg

Fortuna

Friant

Fullerton

Garberville

Garden Grove

Georgetown

Geyserville

Gilroy

Goleta

Goshen

Graeagle

Grass Valley

Greenbrae

Gridley

Groveland

Grover Beach

Gualala

Half Moon Bay

Hanford

Hat Creek

Havasu Lake

Healdsburg

Hemet

Herald

Hesperia

Highland

Hollister

Holtville

Hornbrook

Hume

Huntington Beach

Independence

Indio

Julian

Junction City

June Lake

Jurupa Valley

Kelseyville

Kernville

King City

Kingsburg

Klamath

La Grange

Lake Almanor

Lake Arrowhead

Lake Elsinore

Lake Forest

Lakehead

Lake Isabella

Lakeport

Lakeside

Lancaster

La Quinta

La Selva Beach

Lathrop

La Verne

Lebec

Lee Vining

Leggett

Lemon Cove

Lemoore

Lewiston

Likely

Lincoln

Little River

Livermore

Lockeford

Lodi

Loma Linda

Lompoc

Lone Pine

Long Beach

Los Banos

Lost Hills

Malibu

Mammoth Lakes

Manchester

Manteca

Mariposa

Markleeville

Martinez

Marysville

McArthur

McCloud

Mecca

Mendocino

Menifee

Mill Creek

Mineral

Modesto

Mojave

Montebello

Monterey

Moorpark

Moreno Valley

Morgan Hill

Morro Bay

Moss Landing

Mount Baldy

Mount Shasta

Murrieta

Myers Flat

Napa

Needles

Nevada City

Newberry Springs

Newhall

Newport Beach

Niland

Oakdale

Oak Hills

Oakhurst

Oakley

Oceano

Oceanside

Ocotillo

Old Station

Olema

Ontario

Oregon House

Orland

Orleans

Oroville

Paicines

Palmdale

Palm Springs

Parker Dam

Paso Robles

Patterson

Pauma Valley

Perris

Pescadero

Petaluma

Pico Rivera

Piedra

Pioneer

Piru

Pismo Beach

Placerville

Playa del Rey

Pleasanton

Plymouth

Pollock Pines

Pomona

Porterville

Port Hueneme

Portola

Potrero

Prunedale

Quincy

Ramona

Rancho Cucamonga

Raymond

Red Bluff

Redding

Redlands

Redwood City

Reseda

Rialto

Richmond

Ridgecrest

Rio Vista

Ripon

Riverside

Rohnert Park

Rosamond

Roseville

Sacramento

Salinas

Salton City

San Andreas

San Bernardino

San Clemente

San Diego

San Dimas

Sanger

San Jacinto

San Juan Bautista

San Juan Capistrano

San Lucas

San Luis Obispo

San Mateo

San Rafael

Santa Ana

Santa Barbara

Santa Clarita

Santa Margarita

Santa Maria

Santa Nella

Santa Paula

Santa Rosa

San Ysidro

Saratoga

Seal Beach

Shingletown

Sierra City

Sierraville

Simi Valley

Snelling

Sonoma

Sonora

South Lake Tahoe

Stevenson Ranch

Stockton

Sun Valley

Susanville

Sylmar

Tahoma

Taylorsville

Tecopa

Tehachapi

Temecula

Thermal

Thousand Oaks

Three Rivers

Tracy

Trinidad

Trinity Center

Truckee

Tujunga

Tulare

Tulelake

Tuolumne

Tupman

Turlock

Twain Harte

Twentynine Palms

Ukiah

Upper Lake

Valencia

Vallejo

Valley Center

Valley Springs

Ventura

Victorville

Walnut Grove

Waterford

Watsonville

Weed

Weldon

Westminster

Willits

Willows

Winchester

Winterhaven

Winters

Woodland

Wrightwood

Yermo

Yorba Linda

Yorkville

Yosemite National Park

Yreka

Yuba City

Yucaipa

Yucca Valley

Getting Around California by RV

California's size means picking the right corridor. I-5 is the fast Central Valley spine north to south, with CA-99 paralleling it through the ag towns. US-101 and CA-1 run the coast for the scenic, slower trip past Big Sur and the redwoods. I-15 carries you from SoCal toward Las Vegas, I-80 climbs from Sacramento over Donner Summit to Lake Tahoe, and I-8 and I-10 cross the southern deserts toward Arizona.

The mountains demand planning. Sierra passes like Tioga and Sonora close in winter and restrict large rigs even in summer, and grades on the I-5 Grapevine and I-80 over Donner are steep with seasonal chain controls. The deserts swing the other way, baking past 110F in summer, so time those for the cooler months and carry extra water. Wildfire smoke can affect the north and the Sierra in late summer. Check Caltrans and road conditions before mountain or desert crossings, and fuel up before the eastern Sierra and Death Valley, where services thin out fast.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your California trip, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.

Check your RV insurance coverage

A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.

Know your roadside assistance options

RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.

Decide about an extended warranty early

Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.

Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees

A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.

RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.

RV Dump Stations Costs in California

California dump costs run higher than neighboring states at the parks, but the deserts and valley towns keep things cheap if you plan. State park automated dumps are $10 to $20 per use, card-only, and separate from camping or entry. A non-camper pays $10 entry plus $10 to dump. The $125 annual state parks pass is the value play for frequent visitors, covering day-use and dump access across more than 100 units.

Away from the parks, costs drop. The Pilot Knob LTVA near Yuma dumps for $15 at the adjacent gas station, the dense snowbird facilities around Borrego Springs and Joshua Tree are competitively priced, and many Highway 99 valley towns offer free or low-cost municipal dumps at city parks and fairgrounds. Slab City and Anza-Borrego BLM land are free to camp. Travel centers like Flying J and Pilot charge the usual $10 to $15. To minimize spending, lean on the desert and valley municipal dumps, grab the annual pass if you're a regular, and reserve private parks for hookup nights.

Free: 337 stations (39%)
Paid: 523 stations (61%)

Contact station for pricing details.

Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About California

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Best Time to Visit California by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

45F - 62F

Crowds: High

Prime in the SoCal coast and deserts (Joshua Tree, Borrego, Colorado River snowbird zones). Sierra campgrounds and passes closed for snow.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

50F - 72F

Crowds: Medium

Green hills and desert blooms statewide; great before summer heat. Sierra high country still opening as snow melts.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

60F - 90F

Crowds: High

Coast mild with morning fog; Sierra pleasant and busy. Deserts dangerously hot (110F+); avoid the low desert.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

52F - 78F

Crowds: Medium

Arguably the best season statewide: mild weather, High Sierra color, thinner crowds, and dumps still open before winter Sierra closures.

Explore California

Here's what we've learned dumping tanks across California. First, if you'll hit several state parks, buy the $125 annual pass; it covers day-use and dump access and beats paying $10 entry plus $10 to dump each time. And remember the state park dumps are automated Sani-Star kiosks that take cards only, no cash, so don't roll up expecting to pay with bills. Second, match your season to the region: deserts in winter, Sierra in summer, and the coast pretty much any time.

Third, the southern deserts are your cheap-dump heartland. Snowbird zones around Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, and the Colorado River have dense facilities, the Pilot Knob LTVA near Yuma dumps for $15 at the adjacent gas station, and Slab City offers free camping near Niland. Fourth, the Highway 99 valley towns have free or cheap municipal dumps at city parks and fairgrounds. Finally, never dump anywhere but a designated station; it's prohibited statewide, including at rest areas without a dump. Carry a card, plan around the heat, and you'll dump easily across the state.

Helpful Resources

Federal Resources

Nearby States

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Dump Stations in California

Where can I dump my RV tanks in California?

California has dump stations everywhere RVers travel: 280-plus state parks, nine national parks, the desert snowbird zones, Highway 99 valley towns, travel centers, and 20 Caltrans rest areas with designated dumps. State parks use automated Sani-Star kiosks; national parks like Yosemite (Upper Pines) and Kings Canyon (Azalea) have dumps; and the southern deserts around Borrego Springs and Joshua Tree are dense with facilities. We've mapped several stations statewide. Coverage is heaviest in the SoCal deserts, the coast, and the Central Valley, with more spread-out options in the eastern Sierra and far north.

How much does it cost to dump at a California state park?

California state park dump stations are automated Sani-Star kiosks that cost $10 to $20 per use, and that fee is separate from your camping or entry fee. The kiosks are card-only and do not accept cash. If you're not camping, you'll pay $10 for park entry plus $10 to use the dump. For frequent visitors, the $125 annual state parks pass is the better deal, since it covers day-use access and dump use across more than 100 units. Always carry a credit or debit card, because there's no cash option at these automated stations.

Are there free RV dump stations in California?

Yes, mainly in the deserts and the Central Valley. Many Highway 99 ag towns offer free or low-cost municipal dumps at city parks and fairgrounds. Slab City near Niland and Anza-Borrego's BLM land are free to camp (though you dump elsewhere). The southern desert snowbird zones have competitively priced facilities. Of the stations in our California directory, some are free. Note that the state parks are not free to dump, since they switched to paid automated kiosks. So for free or cheap dumping, lean on the valley municipal stations and the desert corridors rather than the parks.

Can I dump my RV tanks at California rest areas?

Only at the ones with designated dump stations, of which there are 20 statewide. California rest areas, run by Caltrans, cap your stay at 8 hours per 24-hour period, and dumping sanitary waste anywhere except a designated station is prohibited. You can sleep inside your vehicle overnight within that 8-hour window, but you can't camp, pitch a tent, roll out an awning, or build a fire. So check whether the specific rest area has a dump before relying on it. For dependable dumping, route through the state parks, national parks, desert facilities, or travel centers instead.

What should I bring to a dump station in California?

Bring a quality sewer hose with good fittings, disposable gloves, a clear elbow, and crucially, a credit or debit card, since the state park Sani-Star kiosks are card-only with no cash option. A jug of fresh water and a separate non-potable rinse hose help with flushing. Tank chemicals and hand sanitizer round out the kit. In the desert, carry extra fresh water and dump in the cooler morning hours during summer. At higher Sierra elevations in the shoulder seasons, dump quickly to avoid freezing valves. Confirm payment type and hours, since automated and municipal stations vary.

Where can I dump in California's national parks?

Yosemite's Upper Pines Campground in the valley has a dump station with fresh water open year-round, and the Wawona and Tuolumne Meadows dumps open in summer. In Kings Canyon, Azalea Campground has a dump, potable water, and flush toilets. None of California's national parks offer RV hookups, and some campgrounds limit RV length (Death Valley's Hidden Valley and White Tank sites cap around 25 feet), so check before you drive a big rig in. Plan to dump on your way out, fill fresh water where available, and arrive with empty tanks, since in-park options are limited and seasonal at the higher elevations.

Where do snowbirds dump tanks in the California desert?

The southern deserts are loaded with options thanks to the winter RV crowds. Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, Barstow, and the Colorado River corridor have a dense concentration of sani-dump facilities. The Pilot Knob BLM long-term visitor area near Winterhaven, 12 miles from Yuma, has a dump at the adjacent gas station for $15, with potable water at nearby rest stops along the El Centro to Yuma highway. Slab City near Niland offers free desert camping, and Anza-Borrego's BLM land east of Borrego Springs is free boondocking. The pattern is to boondock and come into a dump every few days.

Are California dump stations open in winter?

It depends entirely on the region. Sierra Nevada campgrounds and their dumps close in winter due to snow, and the high passes shut down. But the SoCal coast and the deserts are prime in winter, so the Joshua Tree, Borrego Springs, and Colorado River facilities are fully active, packed with snowbirds. Yosemite's Upper Pines dump runs year-round in the valley. So winter is a great time to RV California; you just stay south and low. Travel centers along the interstates also stay open year-round. Plan your route around the open regions rather than expecting statewide access in the cold months.

When is the best time for RV camping in California?

Autumn, September through November, is arguably the best statewide, with mild weather, High Sierra fall color, thinner crowds, and dumps still open before the Sierra winter closures. Beyond that, match your region to the season: winter for the SoCal coast and deserts (Joshua Tree, Borrego, the Colorado River), summer for the Sierra and the cool coast, and spring for wildflowers and desert blooms. Avoid the low deserts in summer, when temperatures top 110F, and the Sierra in winter, when campgrounds close. California's variety means there's always somewhere in season, so plan around the weather and you can camp year-round.

Do travel centers in California have dump stations?

Yes. Flying J and Pilot travel centers along the interstates have dump stations, typically charging $10 to $15, and they stay open year-round, which makes them dependable when seasonal park dumps are closed. They're concentrated along I-5, CA-99, I-15, I-10, and I-8. For desert travelers, the Pilot Knob LTVA's adjacent gas station dumps for $15. Travel centers are especially useful for crossing the Central Valley or heading toward Las Vegas or Arizona, where you want a quick, predictable stop. As always, the specific location matters, so check the listing and call ahead to confirm current fees and hours.

Can I empty my tanks while boondocking on California public land?

Only at a designated dump station, never on the ground. California has enormous BLM and USFS dispersed camping in the deserts and Sierra foothills, plus free spots like Slab City and the Anza-Borrego BLM land, but you must haul your waste to a proper dump. Dumping sanitary waste anywhere but a designated station is prohibited statewide. The desert snowbird zones make this manageable, with dense, cheap facilities around Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, and the Colorado River. Set up self-contained, monitor your tanks, and dump and fill fresh water in town before heading into the backcountry, where there's nothing.

How much does RV camping cost in California?

California runs higher than most states, especially on the coast and at private resorts. State park camping is moderate but adds the $10 to $20 automated dump fee separately. National park camping is reasonable but offers no hookups. The deals are in the desert and the valley: free camping at Slab City and Anza-Borrego BLM land, cheap municipal dumps along Highway 99, and competitively priced snowbird facilities in the south. Travel-center dumps are $10 to $15. The $125 annual state parks pass pays off for regulars. To keep costs down, lean on the deserts and valley towns and reserve private coastal parks for special nights.

Where can I dump my RV tanks in California?

California has dump stations everywhere RVers travel: 280-plus state parks, nine national parks, the desert snowbird zones, Highway 99 valley towns, travel centers, and 20 Caltrans rest areas with designated dumps. State parks use automated Sani-Star kiosks; national parks like Yosemite (Upper Pines) and Kings Canyon (Azalea) have dumps; and the southern deserts around Borrego Springs and Joshua Tree are dense with facilities. We've mapped {{stationCount}} stations statewide. Coverage is heaviest in the SoCal deserts, the coast, and the Central Valley, with more spread-out options in the eastern Sierra and far north.

How much does it cost to dump at a California state park?

California state park dump stations are automated Sani-Star kiosks that cost $10 to $20 per use, and that fee is separate from your camping or entry fee. The kiosks are card-only and do not accept cash. If you're not camping, you'll pay $10 for park entry plus $10 to use the dump. For frequent visitors, the $125 annual state parks pass is the better deal, since it covers day-use access and dump use across more than 100 units. Always carry a credit or debit card, because there's no cash option at these automated stations.

Are there free RV dump stations in California?

Yes, mainly in the deserts and the Central Valley. Many Highway 99 ag towns offer free or low-cost municipal dumps at city parks and fairgrounds. Slab City near Niland and Anza-Borrego's BLM land are free to camp (though you dump elsewhere). The southern desert snowbird zones have competitively priced facilities. Of the stations in our California directory, {{freeCount}} are free. Note that the state parks are not free to dump, since they switched to paid automated kiosks. So for free or cheap dumping, lean on the valley municipal stations and the desert corridors rather than the parks.

Can I dump my RV tanks at California rest areas?

Only at the ones with designated dump stations, of which there are 20 statewide. California rest areas, run by Caltrans, cap your stay at 8 hours per 24-hour period, and dumping sanitary waste anywhere except a designated station is prohibited. You can sleep inside your vehicle overnight within that 8-hour window, but you can't camp, pitch a tent, roll out an awning, or build a fire. So check whether the specific rest area has a dump before relying on it. For dependable dumping, route through the state parks, national parks, desert facilities, or travel centers instead.

What should I bring to a dump station in California?

Bring a quality sewer hose with good fittings, disposable gloves, a clear elbow, and crucially, a credit or debit card, since the state park Sani-Star kiosks are card-only with no cash option. A jug of fresh water and a separate non-potable rinse hose help with flushing. Tank chemicals and hand sanitizer round out the kit. In the desert, carry extra fresh water and dump in the cooler morning hours during summer. At higher Sierra elevations in the shoulder seasons, dump quickly to avoid freezing valves. Confirm payment type and hours, since automated and municipal stations vary.

Where can I dump in California's national parks?

Yosemite's Upper Pines Campground in the valley has a dump station with fresh water open year-round, and the Wawona and Tuolumne Meadows dumps open in summer. In Kings Canyon, Azalea Campground has a dump, potable water, and flush toilets. None of California's national parks offer RV hookups, and some campgrounds limit RV length (Death Valley's Hidden Valley and White Tank sites cap around 25 feet), so check before you drive a big rig in. Plan to dump on your way out, fill fresh water where available, and arrive with empty tanks, since in-park options are limited and seasonal at the higher elevations.

Where do snowbirds dump tanks in the California desert?

The southern deserts are loaded with options thanks to the winter RV crowds. Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, Barstow, and the Colorado River corridor have a dense concentration of sani-dump facilities. The Pilot Knob BLM long-term visitor area near Winterhaven, 12 miles from Yuma, has a dump at the adjacent gas station for $15, with potable water at nearby rest stops along the El Centro to Yuma highway. Slab City near Niland offers free desert camping, and Anza-Borrego's BLM land east of Borrego Springs is free boondocking. The pattern is to boondock and come into a dump every few days.

Are California dump stations open in winter?

It depends entirely on the region. Sierra Nevada campgrounds and their dumps close in winter due to snow, and the high passes shut down. But the SoCal coast and the deserts are prime in winter, so the Joshua Tree, Borrego Springs, and Colorado River facilities are fully active, packed with snowbirds. Yosemite's Upper Pines dump runs year-round in the valley. So winter is a great time to RV California; you just stay south and low. Travel centers along the interstates also stay open year-round. Plan your route around the open regions rather than expecting statewide access in the cold months.

When is the best time for RV camping in California?

Autumn, September through November, is arguably the best statewide, with mild weather, High Sierra fall color, thinner crowds, and dumps still open before the Sierra winter closures. Beyond that, match your region to the season: winter for the SoCal coast and deserts (Joshua Tree, Borrego, the Colorado River), summer for the Sierra and the cool coast, and spring for wildflowers and desert blooms. Avoid the low deserts in summer, when temperatures top 110F, and the Sierra in winter, when campgrounds close. California's variety means there's always somewhere in season, so plan around the weather and you can camp year-round.

Do travel centers in California have dump stations?

Yes. Flying J and Pilot travel centers along the interstates have dump stations, typically charging $10 to $15, and they stay open year-round, which makes them dependable when seasonal park dumps are closed. They're concentrated along I-5, CA-99, I-15, I-10, and I-8. For desert travelers, the Pilot Knob LTVA's adjacent gas station dumps for $15. Travel centers are especially useful for crossing the Central Valley or heading toward Las Vegas or Arizona, where you want a quick, predictable stop. As always, the specific location matters, so check the listing and call ahead to confirm current fees and hours.

Can I empty my tanks while boondocking on California public land?

Only at a designated dump station, never on the ground. California has enormous BLM and USFS dispersed camping in the deserts and Sierra foothills, plus free spots like Slab City and the Anza-Borrego BLM land, but you must haul your waste to a proper dump. Dumping sanitary waste anywhere but a designated station is prohibited statewide. The desert snowbird zones make this manageable, with dense, cheap facilities around Borrego Springs, Joshua Tree, and the Colorado River. Set up self-contained, monitor your tanks, and dump and fill fresh water in town before heading into the backcountry, where there's nothing.

How much does RV camping cost in California?

California runs higher than most states, especially on the coast and at private resorts. State park camping is moderate but adds the $10 to $20 automated dump fee separately. National park camping is reasonable but offers no hookups. The deals are in the desert and the valley: free camping at Slab City and Anza-Borrego BLM land, cheap municipal dumps along Highway 99, and competitively priced snowbird facilities in the south. Travel-center dumps are $10 to $15. The $125 annual state parks pass pays off for regulars. To keep costs down, lean on the deserts and valley towns and reserve private coastal parks for special nights.

What is the highest-rated dump station in California?

The highest-rated is Lassen Volcanic National Park - Manzanita Lake with a rating of 4.8/5 stars.