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RV Parks In Ormond Beach, Florida

29.2858° N, 81.0559° W

Quick Overview

Ormond Beach sits on Florida's Atlantic coast just north of Daytona Beach, a quieter, more residential neighbor to the famous speedway town. It calls itself the Birthplace of Speed, where early automobile racing ran on its hard-packed sand, and that wide drivable beach is still the centerpiece. For RVers it offers a mild-winter snowbird base with something Florida's built-up northeast coast rarely allows: a couple of rare oceanfront RV sites right on the Atlantic, plus a shaded state park on a tidal river just inland.

The headliner is Coral Sands RV Resort, a small park set directly on the Atlantic beachfront, where all 33 sites have full hookups with 20, 30 and 50-amp service and water and sewer, a genuinely rare beachfront camping option amid the area's condos. Inland a few minutes, Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort offers full-hookup sites year-round near the Daytona Speedway, and Lake Belle RV Resort is a lakeside full-hookup park that welcomes snowbirds and seasonal stays close to both Ormond and Daytona beaches.

For public camping, Tomoka State Park sits about three miles north on the Tomoka River, with around 100 shaded campsites under live oaks, electric and water hookups, and a setting full of manatees, paddling routes and more than 160 bird species. It is a peaceful, nature-first contrast to the beachfront resorts, booked through Florida State Parks. So whether you want sand at your doorstep, full hookups near the racetrack, or oaks and a river, Ormond Beach has a fit.

Below we cover the campgrounds, when to reserve, seasonal timing, costs and the beaches, parks and motorsports that fill a stay. The big planning notes here are the winter snowbird rush and the huge crowds around the speedway's marquee events. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Ormond Beach.

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Traveling to Ormond Beach by RV

Getting to Ormond Beach is easy and flat. Interstate 95 runs just west of town for fast big-rig access up and down the coast, US Highway 1 threads through on the mainland, and State Route 40 connects the beach side to I-95 and points inland. None of it involves grades or tight turns, so a 40-foot rig travels comfortably from anywhere along Florida's east coast. The campgrounds sit near the beach or just off the main routes, so you are set up quickly once you arrive.

Daytona Beach International Airport is about 15 minutes south for a fly-and-rent trip, and Orlando, with its major airport and theme parks, is roughly an hour southwest, close enough for a day trip. Once you are parked, much of what you came for is right there: the beach, the Tomoka River and Ormond's walkable Granada Boulevard district. For Daytona's boardwalk, pier and the speedway, hop a few miles south, ideally in the tow vehicle, since beachside parking near the big attractions and during events is tight.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Ormond Beach, Florida, 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.

Dump Station Costs in Ormond Beach

Ormond Beach camping runs toward the higher end, as Atlantic-coast Florida tends to, with the beachfront and event premiums most noticeable. The private full-hookup resorts generally run in the $55 to $90-plus range per night, with the rare oceanfront sites at Coral Sands commanding the top of that and prices spiking hard around the Daytona 500, Bike Week and Biketoberfest. Weekly and monthly rates ease the per-night cost for the snowbirds who settle in for the season.

The value alternative is Tomoka State Park, booked through Florida State Parks at standard state-park rates, generally the $30s to around $50 for an electric-and-water site under the oaks, well below the beachfront resorts, though without sewer at the pad and a few miles from the sand. If you are watching the budget, the state park or an off-season stay outside the big event weeks stretches your dollar the furthest while keeping you close to the beach and Daytona's attractions.

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Paid: 3 stations (27%)

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What RVers Are Saying About Ormond Beach

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Best Time to Visit Ormond Beach by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

50F - 70F

Crowds: High

Prime snowbird season; mild, sunny days fill the parks with long-stay RVers. Book months ahead, and far ahead around the February speedway events.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

58F - 78F

Crowds: High

Beautiful beach weather and very busy with Speedweeks, Bike Week and spring break. Reserve early and expect premium rates during events.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

73F - 90F

Crowds: Medium

Hot and humid with afternoon thunderstorms and warm surf. Hurricane season runs June through November, so watch the forecasts.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

64F - 81F

Crowds: Medium

Warm water and thinner crowds make early fall pleasant, though hurricane season runs into November and Biketoberfest packs October.

Explore the Ormond Beach Area

Some local knowledge for Ormond Beach. If an oceanfront site is your dream, book it months ahead, because true beachfront RV spots on this coast are rare and Coral Sands' handful of sites disappear fast, especially for winter. The whole area is a major snowbird destination, so the parks fill from roughly December through March; reserve early and consider monthly rates for a long stay. For a shaded, nature-focused alternative, grab a Tomoka State Park site on Florida's 11-month rolling reservation window.

Plan carefully around the motorsports calendar. Daytona's marquee events, the Daytona 500 and Speedweeks in February, Bike Week in March and Biketoberfest in October, draw enormous crowds that fill every park for miles and push rates to premium levels, so either book far in advance to join the fun or avoid those weeks for a quieter, cheaper visit. This is also hurricane country from June through November, so watch the forecasts and know your inland evacuation route up I-95 if a storm threatens.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Ormond Beach

What are the best RV parks in Ormond Beach, FL?

The standout for location is Coral Sands RV Resort, a small park set directly on the Atlantic beachfront where all 33 sites have full hookups, a genuinely rare oceanfront option on this coast. For full hookups near the racetrack, Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort runs year-round minutes from the Daytona Speedway, and Lake Belle RV Resort is a lakeside full-hookup park that welcomes snowbirds close to both Ormond and Daytona beaches. For a shaded, nature-focused stay, Tomoka State Park three miles north offers riverside campsites under live oaks. Choose the beachfront for the sand, the resorts for hookups near the action, or the state park for oaks and a river.

Are there oceanfront RV sites in Ormond Beach?

Yes, but they are rare and in high demand, so plan ahead. Coral Sands RV Resort is the standout, a small park set directly on the Atlantic where every site has full hookups with water, sewer and 20, 30 or 50-amp service, letting you camp with the surf just steps away amid a coastline otherwise dominated by condos and homes. Because there are only a few dozen such sites and beachfront camping here is genuinely scarce, they book up months in advance, especially for the winter snowbird season and the big speedway weeks. If an oceanfront site is your goal, reserve as early as you possibly can.

Do Ormond Beach RV parks have full hookups?

The private parks do. Coral Sands RV Resort, Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort and Lake Belle RV Resort all offer full hookups with water, sewer and 30 or 50-amp electric at the site, which is what makes them comfortable for long snowbird stays. The public Tomoka State Park is more limited, with electric and water at its sites and a central dump station rather than sewer at every pad, which is standard for Florida state parks. So if you want full hookups with sewer at your site, book one of the private resorts; if you prefer a shaded, cheaper riverside site and can use the dump station, Tomoka is a lovely choice.

How much does RV camping cost in Ormond Beach?

It leans toward the higher end, as Atlantic-coast Florida does. The private full-hookup resorts generally run $55 to $90-plus a night, with the rare oceanfront sites at Coral Sands at the top and prices spiking around the Daytona 500, Bike Week and Biketoberfest. Weekly and monthly rates bring the cost down for snowbirds settling in for the season. The value alternative is Tomoka State Park, booked through Florida State Parks at standard state-park rates, roughly the $30s to around $50 for an electric-and-water site under the oaks. For the best value, the state park or an off-season stay away from the big event weeks stretches your budget the most.

Is Ormond Beach a good snowbird destination?

Yes, it is a popular and slightly calmer alternative to busier Florida snowbird hubs. The winters are mild and sunny, the beach is wide and walkable, and the full-hookup resorts offer monthly rates for long stays, while Ormond itself is more residential and laid-back than the Daytona party scene a few miles south. Snowbirds settle in from December through March to enjoy the warmth, the beach and easy access to Daytona, Orlando and the rest of central Florida. The trade-offs are that the prime sites book early and the nearby speedway events bring periodic crowds, but for a relaxed coastal winter base, Ormond Beach delivers.

Can I camp near the Daytona Speedway?

Yes, very conveniently. Ormond Beach sits just north of Daytona, and parks like Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort are only minutes from the Daytona International Speedway, making the area a favorite base for race fans. During the marquee events, the Daytona 500 and Speedweeks in February, Bike Week in March and Biketoberfest in October, the parks fill completely and rates jump, so if you want to camp for a big race weekend you must book far in advance. Outside those events, you can enjoy speedway tours and the year-round schedule from a relaxed, easy-to-book base. Just know that event weeks transform the whole area's camping demand.

What is Tomoka State Park like for RV camping?

It is a peaceful, nature-first contrast to the beachfront resorts. Tomoka State Park sits about three miles north of Ormond Beach on a peninsula where the Tomoka and Halifax rivers meet, with roughly 100 campsites shaded by live oaks, offering electric and water hookups and a dump station. The setting is the draw: you can paddle the rivers, watch for manatees, hike the trails and spot more than 160 species of birds, especially during spring and fall migrations. Sites vary in length, so confirm your rig fits, and book on Florida's 11-month window since it is popular. For RVers who want quiet and wildlife over the beach scene, Tomoka is excellent.

When is the best time to camp in Ormond Beach?

Winter and spring are the prime seasons, with trade-offs. Winter, December through March, brings the mildest, sunniest weather and the snowbird crowd, so it is the most pleasant time but the busiest and priciest, and you must book ahead. Spring has beautiful beach weather but coincides with Speedweeks, Bike Week and spring break, packing the parks. Early fall is an underrated sweet spot once summer's heat eases, with warm water and thinner crowds, though hurricane season runs into November and Biketoberfest fills October. Summer is hot, humid and stormy with the highest hurricane risk. For the best mix, target late fall or the calmer winter weeks away from events.

How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Ormond Beach?

For the oceanfront and the big event weeks, as far ahead as you can, months at minimum. The few beachfront sites at Coral Sands and any site during the Daytona 500, Bike Week or Biketoberfest sell out far in advance and command premium rates. The winter snowbird season also fills the parks from December through March, so reserve early and consider a monthly booking for a long stay. Tomoka State Park books on Florida's 11-month rolling window, and popular riverside sites go quickly. Outside the events and peak winter, availability eases and you can book on shorter notice, but this is a reservation-driven coastal market.

Can big rigs camp in Ormond Beach?

Yes. The private full-hookup resorts, Sunshine Holiday Daytona and Lake Belle, accommodate big rigs, and access is easy since Interstate 95 and US Highway 1 are flat, wide routes with no grades or tight turns. The two spots to confirm length are Coral Sands, the small beachfront park where sites come in varied lengths, and Tomoka State Park, where site sizes vary under the oaks, so check that your rig fits when booking either. Overall, with level coastal roads and several big-rig-friendly resorts, Ormond Beach is comfortable for large coaches and fifth-wheels, as long as you reserve a site sized for your rig ahead of time.

What is there to do in Ormond Beach besides the beach?

Quite a lot. Beyond the wide, drivable Atlantic beach and Andy Romano Beachfront Park, you can explore Tomoka State Park's trails and rivers for paddling, manatees and birdwatching, and visit the Ormond Memorial Art Museum & Gardens set in lush tropical grounds. The big draw nearby is motorsports: the Daytona International Speedway, about ten miles south, offers tours and a packed event calendar. Daytona Beach itself, just to the south, adds a boardwalk, a pier and its famous drivable beach. And Orlando's theme parks are about an hour southwest for a day trip. Between sand, nature, art and racing, a stay fills easily.

Do I need to worry about hurricanes camping in Ormond Beach?

You should stay aware, as anywhere on Florida's Atlantic coast. Hurricane season runs June through November, with the highest risk in late summer and early fall, and a coastal RV park is exposed if a storm approaches. The practical approach for visiting RVers is to watch the National Hurricane Center forecasts, know your inland evacuation route up Interstate 95, and be ready to move the rig if a system threatens. The reassuring part is that the riskiest months overlap with the hot, slower off-season, while the busy winter and early-spring snowbird months sit largely outside hurricane season. Plan around it and you can camp here safely.

Is Ormond Beach better than Daytona Beach for RVers?

It depends on what you want. Ormond Beach is the quieter, more residential neighbor just to the north, with a calmer, family-friendly feel, the same wide Atlantic beach, and a couple of rare oceanfront RV sites, making it a relaxing base. Daytona Beach to the south is livelier and more touristy, with the boardwalk, pier, nightlife and the heart of the speedway and biker scene. The good news is they are only a few miles apart, so from an Ormond Beach park you get the calmer setting and can still drive into Daytona for the action whenever you want. For most RVers seeking a peaceful coastal base, Ormond edges it.

What are the best RV parks in Ormond Beach, FL?

The standout for location is Coral Sands RV Resort, a small park set directly on the Atlantic beachfront where all 33 sites have full hookups, a genuinely rare oceanfront option on this coast. For full hookups near the racetrack, Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort runs year-round minutes from the Daytona Speedway, and Lake Belle RV Resort is a lakeside full-hookup park that welcomes snowbirds close to both Ormond and Daytona beaches. For a shaded, nature-focused stay, Tomoka State Park three miles north offers riverside campsites under live oaks. Choose the beachfront for the sand, the resorts for hookups near the action, or the state park for oaks and a river.

Are there oceanfront RV sites in Ormond Beach?

Yes, but they are rare and in high demand, so plan ahead. Coral Sands RV Resort is the standout, a small park set directly on the Atlantic where every site has full hookups with water, sewer and 20, 30 or 50-amp service, letting you camp with the surf just steps away amid a coastline otherwise dominated by condos and homes. Because there are only a few dozen such sites and beachfront camping here is genuinely scarce, they book up months in advance, especially for the winter snowbird season and the big speedway weeks. If an oceanfront site is your goal, reserve as early as you possibly can.

Do Ormond Beach RV parks have full hookups?

The private parks do. Coral Sands RV Resort, Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort and Lake Belle RV Resort all offer full hookups with water, sewer and 30 or 50-amp electric at the site, which is what makes them comfortable for long snowbird stays. The public Tomoka State Park is more limited, with electric and water at its sites and a central dump station rather than sewer at every pad, which is standard for Florida state parks. So if you want full hookups with sewer at your site, book one of the private resorts; if you prefer a shaded, cheaper riverside site and can use the dump station, Tomoka is a lovely choice.

How much does RV camping cost in Ormond Beach?

It leans toward the higher end, as Atlantic-coast Florida does. The private full-hookup resorts generally run $55 to $90-plus a night, with the rare oceanfront sites at Coral Sands at the top and prices spiking around the Daytona 500, Bike Week and Biketoberfest. Weekly and monthly rates bring the cost down for snowbirds settling in for the season. The value alternative is Tomoka State Park, booked through Florida State Parks at standard state-park rates, roughly the $30s to around $50 for an electric-and-water site under the oaks. For the best value, the state park or an off-season stay away from the big event weeks stretches your budget the most.

Is Ormond Beach a good snowbird destination?

Yes, it is a popular and slightly calmer alternative to busier Florida snowbird hubs. The winters are mild and sunny, the beach is wide and walkable, and the full-hookup resorts offer monthly rates for long stays, while Ormond itself is more residential and laid-back than the Daytona party scene a few miles south. Snowbirds settle in from December through March to enjoy the warmth, the beach and easy access to Daytona, Orlando and the rest of central Florida. The trade-offs are that the prime sites book early and the nearby speedway events bring periodic crowds, but for a relaxed coastal winter base, Ormond Beach delivers.

Can I camp near the Daytona Speedway?

Yes, very conveniently. Ormond Beach sits just north of Daytona, and parks like Sunshine Holiday Daytona RV Resort are only minutes from the Daytona International Speedway, making the area a favorite base for race fans. During the marquee events, the Daytona 500 and Speedweeks in February, Bike Week in March and Biketoberfest in October, the parks fill completely and rates jump, so if you want to camp for a big race weekend you must book far in advance. Outside those events, you can enjoy speedway tours and the year-round schedule from a relaxed, easy-to-book base. Just know that event weeks transform the whole area's camping demand.

What is Tomoka State Park like for RV camping?

It is a peaceful, nature-first contrast to the beachfront resorts. Tomoka State Park sits about three miles north of Ormond Beach on a peninsula where the Tomoka and Halifax rivers meet, with roughly 100 campsites shaded by live oaks, offering electric and water hookups and a dump station. The setting is the draw: you can paddle the rivers, watch for manatees, hike the trails and spot more than 160 species of birds, especially during spring and fall migrations. Sites vary in length, so confirm your rig fits, and book on Florida's 11-month window since it is popular. For RVers who want quiet and wildlife over the beach scene, Tomoka is excellent.

When is the best time to camp in Ormond Beach?

Winter and spring are the prime seasons, with trade-offs. Winter, December through March, brings the mildest, sunniest weather and the snowbird crowd, so it is the most pleasant time but the busiest and priciest, and you must book ahead. Spring has beautiful beach weather but coincides with Speedweeks, Bike Week and spring break, packing the parks. Early fall is an underrated sweet spot once summer's heat eases, with warm water and thinner crowds, though hurricane season runs into November and Biketoberfest fills October. Summer is hot, humid and stormy with the highest hurricane risk. For the best mix, target late fall or the calmer winter weeks away from events.

How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Ormond Beach?

For the oceanfront and the big event weeks, as far ahead as you can, months at minimum. The few beachfront sites at Coral Sands and any site during the Daytona 500, Bike Week or Biketoberfest sell out far in advance and command premium rates. The winter snowbird season also fills the parks from December through March, so reserve early and consider a monthly booking for a long stay. Tomoka State Park books on Florida's 11-month rolling window, and popular riverside sites go quickly. Outside the events and peak winter, availability eases and you can book on shorter notice, but this is a reservation-driven coastal market.

Can big rigs camp in Ormond Beach?

Yes. The private full-hookup resorts, Sunshine Holiday Daytona and Lake Belle, accommodate big rigs, and access is easy since Interstate 95 and US Highway 1 are flat, wide routes with no grades or tight turns. The two spots to confirm length are Coral Sands, the small beachfront park where sites come in varied lengths, and Tomoka State Park, where site sizes vary under the oaks, so check that your rig fits when booking either. Overall, with level coastal roads and several big-rig-friendly resorts, Ormond Beach is comfortable for large coaches and fifth-wheels, as long as you reserve a site sized for your rig ahead of time.

What is there to do in Ormond Beach besides the beach?

Quite a lot. Beyond the wide, drivable Atlantic beach and Andy Romano Beachfront Park, you can explore Tomoka State Park's trails and rivers for paddling, manatees and birdwatching, and visit the Ormond Memorial Art Museum & Gardens set in lush tropical grounds. The big draw nearby is motorsports: the Daytona International Speedway, about ten miles south, offers tours and a packed event calendar. Daytona Beach itself, just to the south, adds a boardwalk, a pier and its famous drivable beach. And Orlando's theme parks are about an hour southwest for a day trip. Between sand, nature, art and racing, a stay fills easily.

Do I need to worry about hurricanes camping in Ormond Beach?

You should stay aware, as anywhere on Florida's Atlantic coast. Hurricane season runs June through November, with the highest risk in late summer and early fall, and a coastal RV park is exposed if a storm approaches. The practical approach for visiting RVers is to watch the National Hurricane Center forecasts, know your inland evacuation route up Interstate 95, and be ready to move the rig if a system threatens. The reassuring part is that the riskiest months overlap with the hot, slower off-season, while the busy winter and early-spring snowbird months sit largely outside hurricane season. Plan around it and you can camp here safely.

Is Ormond Beach better than Daytona Beach for RVers?

It depends on what you want. Ormond Beach is the quieter, more residential neighbor just to the north, with a calmer, family-friendly feel, the same wide Atlantic beach, and a couple of rare oceanfront RV sites, making it a relaxing base. Daytona Beach to the south is livelier and more touristy, with the boardwalk, pier, nightlife and the heart of the speedway and biker scene. The good news is they are only a few miles apart, so from an Ormond Beach park you get the calmer setting and can still drive into Daytona for the action whenever you want. For most RVers seeking a peaceful coastal base, Ormond edges it.

Are there free dump stations in Ormond Beach?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Ormond Beach.