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RV Parks In Florida

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Quick Overview

<p>Florida is the RV capital of the East Coast, and for good reason. When the rest of the country is scraping ice off the windshield, we are setting up lawn chairs on a Gulf beach in shorts. The state pairs one of the best public campground systems in the country with a deep bench of private snowbird resorts, so you can spend $30 a night at a state park one week and splurge on a waterfront resort lot in the Keys the next.</p><p>On the public side, the <a href="https://www.floridastateparks.org/rv-camping">Florida State Parks</a> system is the value play. Topsail Hill Preserve near Santa Rosa Beach runs a full-hookup RV resort with paved pull-throughs and 50-amp service, which is rare for a state park. Fort De Soto outside St. Petersburg puts you on the water at Tampa Bay with 50-amp electric sites, and Jonathan Dickinson State Park on the Loxahatchee River is the largest park in southeast Florida, with a Pine Grove loop that adds sewer hookups. Myakka River State Park near Sarasota gives you 37,000 acres of gators and birds with electric and water sites. These parks are cheap, scenic, and they book out fast.</p><p>On the private side, Florida is built for snowbirds. Bay Bayou near Tampa runs around 300 oversized full-hookup sites with concrete patios. In the Lower Keys, Bluewater Key is an upscale lot-ownership resort where waterfront nights can run from $140 to well over $300 in peak season. Cypress Trail near Fort Myers offers big 35-by-90 concrete sites with cable and hard-wired internet. These private parks win on full hookups, big-rig room, and amenities, while the state parks win on price and setting.</p><p>Where you point the rig shapes the whole trip. The Gulf coast from Sarasota down through Fort Myers and Naples is the classic snowbird belt, loaded with private resorts, beaches, and golf. The Florida Keys deliver warm water and a famous drive, but you pay for it in price and scarce sites. The Atlantic side around Vero Beach and the Treasure Coast splits the difference, while the Panhandle near Pensacola and Destin runs cheaper and quieter with sugar-white sand. Inland you get the springs and forests of the central part of the state, plus easy access to the Orlando theme parks. Wherever you stay, the activities are a big part of why people keep coming back: Gulf and Atlantic beaches, crystal-clear freshwater springs for snorkeling and paddling, world-class fishing, and wildlife from manatees to alligators.</p><p>Most rigs fit somewhere in Florida, but big-rig owners should plan ahead. Older state parks tilt toward shorter sites, often capping at 36 to 40 feet, while Topsail Hill and the newer private resorts handle 40-foot rigs and up with full hookups. If you want to boondock, Ocala and Apalachicola national forests have free first-come dispersed sites, but they are dry camping on rough roads best suited to smaller, self-contained rigs. Below we break down the notable campgrounds, how the reservation systems work, what it costs, and when to come, so you can plan a Florida trip that actually fits your rig and your budget.</p>

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Getting Around Florida by RV

Getting around Florida with an RV is about as easy as it gets in the lower 48. The interstates are flat, wide, and well maintained: I-95 runs the Atlantic side, I-75 covers the Gulf side and dives down to Naples and the Everglades, I-10 crosses the Panhandle east to west, and I-4 links Tampa to Daytona through Orlando. Florida's Turnpike is the toll shortcut through the middle of the peninsula, so keep a transponder or budget for cash tolls.

The one route that demands respect is US-1, the Overseas Highway down to Key West. It is long, narrow, slow, and crosses dozens of bridges, so fuel up, leave early, and do not expect to make good time. For fly-and-rent trips, Orlando, Tampa, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Jacksonville all have major airports within easy towing distance of campgrounds. Wherever you land, watch the afternoon thunderstorms in summer and have an evacuation plan during hurricane season. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Florida.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Florida 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 Parks Costs in Florida

<p>Florida camping prices swing hard by season and by who owns the campground. State parks are the bargain, generally running $16 to $42 a night plus a one-time $6.70 reservation fee and a $7 nightly utility charge, with full facilities like water, electric, and access to a dump station. County parks like Fort De Soto land in a similar range with better beach access. Private RV parks and resorts run higher, commonly $60 to $150 a night, and the upscale waterfront resorts in the Keys can hit $140 to $340 in peak winter season.</p><p>If you are staying a month or a season, ask about monthly rates, which can drop the effective nightly cost dramatically, often landing somewhere between $500 and $1,200 a month depending on location and whether utilities are included. For the budget-minded, Ocala and Apalachicola national forests offer free dispersed camping, and shoulder seasons in spring and fall cut private-resort rates well below the January peak. Booking early is the real money-saver here, since the cheap public sites sell out first.</p>

Free: 337 stations (63%)
Paid: 198 stations (37%)

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

What RVers Are Saying About Florida

★★★★☆

Second time visiting Larry and Penny Thompson. The dump station had a short wait this time (about 10 min) but everything was clean and working properly. Great location if you want to explore Miami wit...

Kathy MoMo·at Larry And Penny Thompson Memorial Park And Campground·March 27, 2026
★★★★★

Hidden gem! Blue Bell has been around forever and the dump station is always clean. Free for guests, small fee for non-guests but totally worth it. The owners are super nice and will help you if it is...

Kathy MoMo·at Blue Bell Trailer Park Inc·March 25, 2026
★★★★½

Larry and Penny Thompson Park is our go-to dump station in South Florida. Clean, well-maintained, and the staff is always friendly. The campground itself is beautiful — right next to Zoo Miami. Only d...

Derrick Johnson·at Larry And Penny Thompson Memorial Park And Campground·March 23, 2026
★★★★☆

Silver Court is a solid option in the Miami area. Easy in and out, good water pressure for rinsing. They recently repaved the dump station area which was much needed. Would recommend for anyone passin...

Mowgli Rhoads·at Silver Court Trailer Park Inc·March 20, 2026

Best Time to Visit Florida by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

52°F - 72°F

Crowds: High

Prime snowbird season: dry, mild, and bug-free. State parks and private resorts book months ahead, so reserve the day your window opens. Best weather of the year statewide.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

62°F - 83°F

Crowds: High

Excellent weather and still in the dry season with no hurricanes. Great value once snowbirds head north in March and April; book popular beach parks ahead.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

74°F - 92°F

Crowds: Low

Hot, humid, and buggy with daily afternoon thunderstorms; hurricane season starts June 1. Lowest rates of the year, but pack a storm plan and good ventilation.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

66°F - 84°F

Crowds: Medium

Quieter and affordable early, though hurricane risk peaks in early September. Snowbirds start arriving in October and November as the humidity drops.

Explore Florida

<p>The single most important Florida camping tip is to treat reservations like a part-time job. State park windows open 11 months out for Florida residents and 10 months for everyone else, and the prime winter waterfront sites are gone within minutes of the window opening. Set a calendar alarm and be logged in early. For a snowbird month on the Gulf or in the Keys, do not wait until fall. Call the private resorts in May or June, because the good seasonal spots are committed by August.</p><p>State parks are the value pick for hookup camping, but most sites are water and electric only with a central dump station, so pack a long sewer hose for the full-hookup loops and a surge protector for the older electrical pedestals. If a park is fully booked, check back often for cancellations, which are common as plans change. Summer is the cheapest season by far, but plan around daily thunderstorms, mosquitoes, and the chance of a named storm. And if you want quiet over hookups, the national forests give you free first-come sites, just go in smaller and self-contained because the roads are rough.</p>

Helpful Resources

Federal Resources

Nearby States

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Florida

What are the best RV parks in Florida?

It depends on what you want. For value and scenery, the Florida State Parks system is hard to beat: Topsail Hill Preserve near Santa Rosa Beach offers rare full-hookup pull-through sites, Fort De Soto sits on the water near St. Petersburg, and Jonathan Dickinson covers the Loxahatchee River in the southeast. For amenities and big-rig room, private resorts like Bay Bayou near Tampa, Cypress Trail near Fort Myers, and Bluewater Key in the Lower Keys deliver full hookups, pools, and waterfront sites. Match the park to your rig size, budget, and the region you want to explore.

Do Florida RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Many do, but it varies. Private RV resorts almost always offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, sewer, cable, and WiFi. Florida State Parks are more mixed: most sites are water and electric only with a central dump station, though a few like Topsail Hill and the Pine Grove loop at Jonathan Dickinson add sewer at the site. If full hookups are a must, confirm before you book and pack a long sewer hose, since pedestal placement and site length vary widely from one campground to the next.

How much does RV camping cost in Florida?

State parks generally run $16 to $42 a night plus a one-time $6.70 reservation fee and a $7 nightly utility charge. County parks land in a similar range. Private RV parks and resorts typically run $60 to $150 a night, and upscale waterfront resorts in the Keys can reach $140 to $340 during peak winter. Monthly and seasonal rates are much cheaper per night, often $500 to $1,200 a month depending on location and utilities. National-forest dispersed camping is free if you can boondock without hookups.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Florida?

Far ahead, especially for winter. Florida State Parks open reservations 11 months out for Florida residents and 10 months for non-residents, and the prime waterfront sites disappear within minutes of the window opening. Set an alarm and be ready the morning your date becomes available. For private snowbird resorts, the seasonal monthly spots fill by August, so call in May or June for the following winter. If you are flexible or traveling in summer, you can often find sites much closer to your dates.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Florida?

Winter and spring are the sweet spot. From December through April you get mild, dry, bug-free weather in the 60s and 70s, which is exactly why snowbirds flood the state. Spring in particular offers great weather with slightly thinner crowds once the winter residents head home in March and April. Summer is hot, humid, buggy, and stormy with hurricane risk, though it brings the lowest prices. Fall is quiet and affordable but carries the highest hurricane odds in early September, so watch the forecast.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Florida?

Yes, but choose your campground carefully. Many older state parks were built decades ago and cap sites around 36 to 40 feet, so a 40-foot fifth wheel or a big diesel pusher with a toad can be tight. Topsail Hill Preserve and most modern private resorts like Bay Bayou and Cypress Trail are built for big rigs, with long concrete pads, pull-throughs, and full hookups. Always check the maximum site length when booking, and remember that tight, tree-lined loops in older parks can be harder to maneuver than the listed length suggests.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Florida?

Yes. Ocala National Forest in north-central Florida and Apalachicola National Forest in the Panhandle both offer free, first-come dispersed camping with a 14-day stay limit. Popular spots include Davenport Landing and Blue Sink in Ocala and Porter Lake and Harper's Hunt Camp in Apalachicola. These are dry camping only, meaning no water, sewer, or electric, and the access roads can be rough or rutted, so they suit smaller, self-contained rigs better than big motorhomes. Always camp in previously used sites and follow fire restrictions.

What are the best Florida State Parks for RV camping?

Several stand out. Topsail Hill Preserve near Santa Rosa Beach is the gold standard with full-hookup pull-through sites and Gulf dunes. Fort De Soto, run by Pinellas County, gives you 50-amp waterfront sites near a top-rated beach. Jonathan Dickinson is the largest state park in southeast Florida, on the Loxahatchee River, and Myakka River near Sarasota offers a 37,000-acre wilderness full of alligators and birds. Anastasia near St. Augustine and St. Andrews in the Panhandle are also popular. All book early, so reserve the moment your window opens.

How do I make Florida State Park reservations?

You book through the official Florida State Parks reservation website or by calling 800-326-3521 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern time. Reservations open 11 months ahead for Florida residents and 10 months for non-residents, and you pay a one-time $6.70 reservation fee plus a $7 nightly utility fee on top of the site cost. The most popular winter and waterfront sites sell out within minutes, so create your account in advance, save your payment info, and log in early on the morning your dates open.

Are Florida RV parks open year-round?

Most are. Unlike northern states where campgrounds close for winter, Florida runs year-round because winter is its busy season. State parks, county parks, and private resorts generally stay open all twelve months. The practical difference is demand and price: winter is packed and expensive, while summer is wide open and cheap but hot, humid, and stormy. A handful of seasonal private resorts cater almost entirely to snowbirds and may scale back amenities in summer, so confirm hours and pool or clubhouse availability if you are visiting in the off season.

Which part of Florida is best for snowbirds?

It comes down to the kind of winter you want. Southwest Florida around Fort Myers, Naples, and Sarasota is the classic snowbird belt, with big private resorts, golf, and Gulf beaches. The Keys are warmer and more laid back but pricey and tight on availability. The Atlantic side near Vero Beach and the Treasure Coast splits the difference. The Panhandle is cheaper and quieter but noticeably cooler in midwinter. Many full-timers settle on the Gulf coast for the balance of warm weather, beaches, and a strong supply of full-hookup parks.

Do I need reservations or can I just show up?

In winter and spring, plan on reservations. Popular state parks and snowbird resorts run full from December through April, and showing up without a booking usually means no site. In summer and early fall you have far more flexibility and can often find a spot a few days out or even same day, especially midweek. The free national-forest dispersed sites are first-come year-round. If you like spontaneity, travel in the off season or keep a backup list of parks and check cancellation openings, which pop up regularly.

What should I know about hurricane season when camping in Florida?

Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with peak activity from August into October. Most summers pass without a direct hit on any one campground, but you should always have a plan. Watch the National Hurricane Center forecast, know your evacuation route, and be ready to break camp and drive inland or north if a storm threatens. Many parks will order evacuations and issue refunds when a system approaches. The upside is that summer brings the lowest rates of the year, so the trade-off is cheaper camping for a bit more weather risk.

What are the best RV parks in Florida?

It depends on what you want. For value and scenery, the Florida State Parks system is hard to beat: Topsail Hill Preserve near Santa Rosa Beach offers rare full-hookup pull-through sites, Fort De Soto sits on the water near St. Petersburg, and Jonathan Dickinson covers the Loxahatchee River in the southeast. For amenities and big-rig room, private resorts like Bay Bayou near Tampa, Cypress Trail near Fort Myers, and Bluewater Key in the Lower Keys deliver full hookups, pools, and waterfront sites. Match the park to your rig size, budget, and the region you want to explore.

Do Florida RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Many do, but it varies. Private RV resorts almost always offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, sewer, cable, and WiFi. Florida State Parks are more mixed: most sites are water and electric only with a central dump station, though a few like Topsail Hill and the Pine Grove loop at Jonathan Dickinson add sewer at the site. If full hookups are a must, confirm before you book and pack a long sewer hose, since pedestal placement and site length vary widely from one campground to the next.

How much does RV camping cost in Florida?

State parks generally run $16 to $42 a night plus a one-time $6.70 reservation fee and a $7 nightly utility charge. County parks land in a similar range. Private RV parks and resorts typically run $60 to $150 a night, and upscale waterfront resorts in the Keys can reach $140 to $340 during peak winter. Monthly and seasonal rates are much cheaper per night, often $500 to $1,200 a month depending on location and utilities. National-forest dispersed camping is free if you can boondock without hookups.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Florida?

Far ahead, especially for winter. Florida State Parks open reservations 11 months out for Florida residents and 10 months for non-residents, and the prime waterfront sites disappear within minutes of the window opening. Set an alarm and be ready the morning your date becomes available. For private snowbird resorts, the seasonal monthly spots fill by August, so call in May or June for the following winter. If you are flexible or traveling in summer, you can often find sites much closer to your dates.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Florida?

Winter and spring are the sweet spot. From December through April you get mild, dry, bug-free weather in the 60s and 70s, which is exactly why snowbirds flood the state. Spring in particular offers great weather with slightly thinner crowds once the winter residents head home in March and April. Summer is hot, humid, buggy, and stormy with hurricane risk, though it brings the lowest prices. Fall is quiet and affordable but carries the highest hurricane odds in early September, so watch the forecast.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Florida?

Yes, but choose your campground carefully. Many older state parks were built decades ago and cap sites around 36 to 40 feet, so a 40-foot fifth wheel or a big diesel pusher with a toad can be tight. Topsail Hill Preserve and most modern private resorts like Bay Bayou and Cypress Trail are built for big rigs, with long concrete pads, pull-throughs, and full hookups. Always check the maximum site length when booking, and remember that tight, tree-lined loops in older parks can be harder to maneuver than the listed length suggests.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Florida?

Yes. Ocala National Forest in north-central Florida and Apalachicola National Forest in the Panhandle both offer free, first-come dispersed camping with a 14-day stay limit. Popular spots include Davenport Landing and Blue Sink in Ocala and Porter Lake and Harper's Hunt Camp in Apalachicola. These are dry camping only, meaning no water, sewer, or electric, and the access roads can be rough or rutted, so they suit smaller, self-contained rigs better than big motorhomes. Always camp in previously used sites and follow fire restrictions.

What are the best Florida State Parks for RV camping?

Several stand out. Topsail Hill Preserve near Santa Rosa Beach is the gold standard with full-hookup pull-through sites and Gulf dunes. Fort De Soto, run by Pinellas County, gives you 50-amp waterfront sites near a top-rated beach. Jonathan Dickinson is the largest state park in southeast Florida, on the Loxahatchee River, and Myakka River near Sarasota offers a 37,000-acre wilderness full of alligators and birds. Anastasia near St. Augustine and St. Andrews in the Panhandle are also popular. All book early, so reserve the moment your window opens.

How do I make Florida State Park reservations?

You book through the official Florida State Parks reservation website or by calling 800-326-3521 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern time. Reservations open 11 months ahead for Florida residents and 10 months for non-residents, and you pay a one-time $6.70 reservation fee plus a $7 nightly utility fee on top of the site cost. The most popular winter and waterfront sites sell out within minutes, so create your account in advance, save your payment info, and log in early on the morning your dates open.

Are Florida RV parks open year-round?

Most are. Unlike northern states where campgrounds close for winter, Florida runs year-round because winter is its busy season. State parks, county parks, and private resorts generally stay open all twelve months. The practical difference is demand and price: winter is packed and expensive, while summer is wide open and cheap but hot, humid, and stormy. A handful of seasonal private resorts cater almost entirely to snowbirds and may scale back amenities in summer, so confirm hours and pool or clubhouse availability if you are visiting in the off season.

Which part of Florida is best for snowbirds?

It comes down to the kind of winter you want. Southwest Florida around Fort Myers, Naples, and Sarasota is the classic snowbird belt, with big private resorts, golf, and Gulf beaches. The Keys are warmer and more laid back but pricey and tight on availability. The Atlantic side near Vero Beach and the Treasure Coast splits the difference. The Panhandle is cheaper and quieter but noticeably cooler in midwinter. Many full-timers settle on the Gulf coast for the balance of warm weather, beaches, and a strong supply of full-hookup parks.

Do I need reservations or can I just show up?

In winter and spring, plan on reservations. Popular state parks and snowbird resorts run full from December through April, and showing up without a booking usually means no site. In summer and early fall you have far more flexibility and can often find a spot a few days out or even same day, especially midweek. The free national-forest dispersed sites are first-come year-round. If you like spontaneity, travel in the off season or keep a backup list of parks and check cancellation openings, which pop up regularly.

What should I know about hurricane season when camping in Florida?

Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with peak activity from August into October. Most summers pass without a direct hit on any one campground, but you should always have a plan. Watch the National Hurricane Center forecast, know your evacuation route, and be ready to break camp and drive inland or north if a storm threatens. Many parks will order evacuations and issue refunds when a system approaches. The upside is that summer brings the lowest rates of the year, so the trade-off is cheaper camping for a bit more weather risk.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Florida?

The highest-rated is St. Joseph Peninsula State Park with a rating of 5.0/5 stars.