RV Dump Stations In Florida
27.6648° N, 81.5158° W
Quick Overview
Florida is the snowbird capital of RV America, and emptying your tanks here is mostly about knowing the state park system and the travel centers, because the rest areas won't help you. We've mapped several dump stations across the state, with some of them free. Whether you're wintering on the Gulf Coast around Fort Myers, exploring the Everglades, or running the Overseas Highway down to the Keys, you'll find places to dump black and grey water close to your route, especially if you're staying at the parks.
Florida's 175 state parks are the backbone. The Florida State Parks system includes a dump at most campgrounds, free for registered campers, with a $7 nightly utility fee on RV sites. If you're not camping, day-use dumping runs about $5, but you'll also owe the roughly $6 per-vehicle park entry, so a quick non-camper stop can land near $20. Bahia Honda in the Keys (with big-rig sites up to about 45 feet) and Hillsborough River near Tampa are good examples, and Hillsborough River dumps free for guests or $20 for a dump-only visit.
Here's the key thing Florida gets wrong for RVers: the rest areas and turnpike service plazas have no dump stations, none of them. FDOT rest areas cap you at a 3-hour stop with no dumps, and the Florida Turnpike service plazas don't even allow overnight parking. So don't plan to empty your tanks on the highway here. Instead, lean on the parks, the private resorts, and the travel centers. There's a Flying J near San Antonio in the Ocala area and a Pilot in Haines City, with the usual $10 to $15 truck-stop dump fees, sometimes free with a fuel purchase.
The private RV resorts carry a lot of the load, especially in the snowbird belt along the Gulf Coast from Sarasota through Fort Myers and Naples. Places like Sunshine Key RV Resort near Big Pine Key offer hundreds of full-hookup sites. Some county and municipal parks offer free dumps too, and Florida has around 14 free dump stations statewide. The Everglades is the exception to plan around: Flamingo and Long Pine Key campgrounds have no hookups, so arrive ready to dry camp and dump in a nearby town afterward.
Seasonality is upside-down from the northern states. Winter (December through February) is prime, with mild temperatures and the snowbird rush, so parks fill and rates jump 30 to 50 percent. Spring and the late-fall "secret season" of October and November offer great weather with thinner crowds. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy, and hurricane season runs June through November. Below you'll find every station we've mapped across Florida, with notes from fellow RVers on fees, hours, and what to expect.
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Browse RV Dump Stations by City (210)
Alachua
Altoona
Alva
Apopka
Arcadia
Astor
Baker
Bay Pines
Bell
Belle
Belleview
Beverly Hills
Big Pine Key
Bonifay
Bonita Springs
Bowling Green
Bradenton
Brandon
Branford
Bristol
Brooksville
Bunnell
Bushnell
Cape Canaveral
Carrabelle
Cedar Key
Century
Chattahoochee
Chiefland
Chokoloskee
Citra
Clearwater
Clermont
Clewiston
Cocoa
Cortez
Crawfordville
Crescent City
Cross City
Crystal River
Cypress
Dade City
Dania Beach
Davenport
Davie
Daytona Beach
Debary
Defuniak Springs
Deland
Delray Beach
Destin
Dover
Dundee
Dunedin
Dunnellon
Ebro
Eglin AFB
Ellenton
Estero
Eustis
Fernandina Beach
Fiesta Key
Flagler Beach
Florida City
Fort Denaud
Fort Lauderdale
Fort Mc Coy
Fort Myers
Fort Myers Beach
Fort Pierce
Fort White
Fountain
Freeport
Frostproof
Fruitland Park
Georgetown
Gibsonton
Grassy Key
Gretna
Haines City
Hallandale
High Springs
Holiday
Hollywood
Homestead
Homosassa
Indiantown
Inglis
Inverness
Jacksonville
Jennings
Juno Beach
Jupiter Island
Kenansville
Key Largo
Keystone Heights
Key West
Kissimmee
Labelle
Lake City
Lakeland
Lake Panasoffkee
Lake Placid
Lake Wales
Lake Worth
Largo
Leesburg
Live Oak
Long Key
Longwood
Lutz
Madison
Marianna
Mary Esther
Melbourne
Melbourne Beach
Miami
Miami Beach
Midway
Milton
Mims
Molino
Monticello
Moore Haven
Naples
Navarre
New Smyrna Beach
Niceville
North Fort Myers
Oakland Park
Ocala
Ochopee
Ocklawaha
Odessa
Okahumpka
Okeechobee
Old Town
Orange City
Orange Lake
Orlando
Ormond Beach
Osprey
Paisley
Palmdale
Palmetto
Palm Harbor
Palm Shores
Panacea
Panama City
Panama City Beach
Patrick AFB
Pembroke Park
Pembroke Pines
Pensacola
Pensacola Beach
Perry
Polk City
Pompano Beach
Ponce de Leon
Port Charlotte
Port Orange
Port Richey
Port Saint Joe
Punta Gorda
Reddick
Riverview
Ruskin
Saint Cloud
Saint James City
Salt Springs
San Antonio
Sanderson
Sarasota
Sebastian
Sebring
Seffner
Silver Springs
Sneads
Sopchoppy
South Bay
Starke
St. Augustine
Steinhatchee
Stuart
Sugarloaf Key
Summerland Key
Sumterville
Tallahassee
Tampa
Tarpon Springs
Thonotosassa
Tierra Verde
Titusville
Trenton
Venice
Vero Beach
Wauchula
Webster
Weeki Wachee
Weston
Wewahitchka
White Springs
Wildwood
Wimauma
Winter Garden
Winter Haven
Yankeetown
Yulee
Zephyrhills
Zolfo Springs
Getting Around Florida by RV
Florida is flat, easy RV driving with no mountain grades, but the geography funnels you onto a few key routes. I-75 runs down the Gulf side and across Alligator Alley to Miami, I-95 carries the east coast, I-10 crosses the panhandle, and I-4 links Tampa, Orlando, and Daytona through the middle. Florida's Turnpike is the fast toll spine through the center. For the Keys, US-1 becomes the Overseas Highway, a narrow, busy, beautiful island-hopping road where you should fuel up and dump before you head south.
The big planning factor isn't terrain, it's weather. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, peaking from late August into October, and storms can force evacuations and close roads and parks with little notice. Carry travel insurance and watch the forecasts if you're here in those months. Check FDOT for road conditions. Remember that Florida's rest areas and turnpike service plazas have no dump stations, so build your tank stops around the state parks, private resorts, and truck stops along your route instead.
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 Dump Stations Costs in Florida
Florida dump costs are moderate, but the structure rewards campers over quick stoppers. At state parks, the dump is free if you're a registered camper, with just the $7 nightly RV utility fee on your site. If you're not camping, day-use dumping is about $5, but you also pay the roughly $6 per-vehicle entry fee, so a non-camper dump can total near $20. That makes it cheaper to dump on your way out as a camper than to make a special trip in.
Off the parks, truck stops like the Flying J near Ocala and the Pilot in Haines City charge $10 to $15, sometimes free with fuel. County and municipal parks offer some free dumps, and Florida has roughly 14 free stations statewide. Private RV resorts are the priciest, especially in the Gulf Coast snowbird belt where winter rates run 30 to 50 percent above off-season, with panhandle parks about half the cost of Fort Myers or Naples. To keep spending down, use the free county dumps and camp at state parks, saving the resorts for hookup stays.
Contact station for pricing details.
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...”
“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...”
“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...”
“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...”
Best Time to Visit Florida by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
52F - 72F
Crowds: High
Snowbird prime: south and the Keys are tropical, the panhandle gets cold snaps to the 30s-40s. Parks fill and charge 30-50% premiums; book months ahead.
Spring
Mar - May
62F - 82F
Crowds: High
Lovely with lower humidity as snowbirds head north; great value and thinning crowds before the summer heat.
Summer
Jun - Aug
75F - 91F
Crowds: Low
Hot, humid, with daily afternoon storms. Hurricane season is underway; rates drop but watch the forecasts.
Fall
Sep - Oct
68F - 84F
Crowds: Medium
October and November are the 'secret season' with excellent weather once hurricane risk drops and crowds stay light.
Explore Florida
Here's what we've learned dumping tanks in Florida. First, the rest areas and turnpike service plazas have no dumps, full stop, so never count on the highway here. Plan around the state parks, private resorts, and the Flying J and Pilot truck stops (San Antonio near Ocala, Haines City). Second, if you're a winter snowbird, book Gulf Coast sites months ahead, because the Sarasota-to-Naples belt fills up and charges 30 to 50 percent premiums December through February.
Third, the panhandle is the budget play. Seasonal rates there run $600 to $900 a month, roughly half the Fort Myers or Naples cost, though you'll trade tropical warmth for winter cold snaps into the 30s. Fourth, many county and municipal parks offer free dumps, and Hillsborough River State Park dumps free for registered guests, so look local before paying. Finally, fill fresh water and dump before heading into the Everglades (dry camping, no hookups) or down the Keys, where services thin out fast along the Overseas Highway.
Helpful Resources
Federal Resources
- Recreation.gov— Federal campgrounds & recreation areas
- National Park Service— National parks & monuments
- Bureau of Land Management— BLM public lands & dispersed camping
- US Forest Service— National forests & grasslands
RV Tips & Articles
Frequently Asked Questions About RV Dump Stations in Florida
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Florida?
Florida's dump stations are concentrated at its 175 state parks, the private RV resorts, and travel centers, since the rest areas have none. State parks like Bahia Honda in the Keys and Hillsborough River near Tampa have dumps, free for registered campers. There's a Flying J near San Antonio in the Ocala area and a Pilot in Haines City. The Gulf Coast snowbird resorts from Sarasota to Naples have full-hookup sites with dumps. We've mapped several stations statewide. Coverage is densest in Central Florida, the Gulf Coast, and the east coast, with thinner options in the Everglades and lower Keys.
How much does it cost to dump at a Florida state park?
If you're a registered camper, the dump is free and included with your site, which carries a $7 nightly RV utility fee. If you're not camping, day-use dumping runs about $5, but you'll also pay the park's per-vehicle entry fee of around $6, so a quick non-camper stop can total near $20. Because of that, it's usually cheaper to dump on your departure day as a camper than to make a special non-camper trip. Hillsborough River State Park near Tampa, for example, dumps free for guests but charges $20 for a dump-only visit.
Are there free RV dump stations in Florida?
Yes, around 14 statewide, mostly at public and county parks plus a few truck stops. Many county and municipal parks offer free dumping, and some Pilot and Flying J locations dump free with a fuel purchase. Hillsborough River State Park near Tampa dumps free for registered guests. Of the stations in our Florida directory, some are free. Just remember the rest areas and turnpike service plazas have no dumps at all, free or paid, so don't count on the highway. For free dumping, check the county parks and municipal facilities along your route before paying at a resort.
Can I dump my RV tanks at Florida rest areas or service plazas?
No. This is important and catches a lot of travelers out: Florida does not have any dump stations at its rest areas or turnpike service plazas, none of them. FDOT rest areas cap your stay at 3 hours (10 for commercial trucks), have 24-hour security, and prohibit camping. The Florida Turnpike service plazas don't allow overnight parking at all. So you can't empty your tanks anywhere on the highway system here. Plan every dump around the state parks, private RV resorts, and truck stops like the Flying J near Ocala and the Pilot in Haines City instead.
What should I bring to a dump station in Florida?
Bring a quality sewer hose with good fittings, disposable gloves, and a clear elbow so you can see when the black tank runs clean. A jug of fresh water and a separate non-potable rinse hose help with flushing. Florida's heat and humidity mean tanks can get ripe fast, so don't let them sit full, and keep tank chemicals on hand. Bug spray helps at buggy parks near the water and the Everglades. Add hand sanitizer to the kit. In hurricane season, keep your tanks manageable in case you need to move quickly, and dump before any forecast storm.
When is the best time for RV camping in Florida?
It depends on your priorities. Winter (December through February) is the classic snowbird season, with mild, dry weather, but the Gulf Coast parks fill up and charge 30 to 50 percent premiums, so book months ahead. Many experienced Florida RVers prefer the spring and the late-fall 'secret season' of October and November, which offer excellent weather with far thinner crowds and better rates. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy, with the lowest prices but active hurricane season. For the best balance of weather, crowds, and cost, target spring or late fall outside the peak storm window.
Where can I dump near the Florida Keys?
Plan ahead, because services thin out down the Overseas Highway. Bahia Honda State Park is the standout, with a dump station and big-rig sites up to about 45 feet on the Buttonwood loop, plus hot showers and beaches. Sunshine Key RV Resort near Big Pine Key offers hundreds of full-hookup sites with dumps. Beyond those, options are limited the farther south you go toward Key West, so fill fresh water and dump before you leave the mainland or at one of the Keys resorts. Reserve well ahead in winter, since Keys camping is in high demand and short supply.
Where can I dump in the Everglades?
Not really inside the park, so plan around it. Everglades National Park's Flamingo and Long Pine Key campgrounds have no hookups, so you'll be dry camping, and you should arrive with empty tanks and full fresh water. Dump in a nearby town like Homestead or Florida City on your way in or out, since the park itself doesn't offer the dump infrastructure you'd find at a state park. The Everglades is a dry-camp destination, so come self-contained, monitor your tanks closely in the heat, and treat any town stop as your chance to service the rig.
Do travel centers in Florida have dump stations?
Yes, and they matter more here because the rest areas don't. Flying J and Pilot travel centers have RV dump stations, including a Flying J near San Antonio in the Ocala area and a Pilot in Haines City, typically charging $10 to $15, sometimes free with a fuel purchase. They stay open year-round, which makes them dependable when you're crossing the state or between park stays. They're concentrated along the interstate corridors (I-75, I-95, I-10, I-4). Since Florida has no highway rest-area dumps, these truck stops are your main on-the-road option, so note them on your route and confirm fees ahead.
Is Florida good for snowbird RV camping?
It's the top snowbird destination in the country. The Gulf Coast belt from Sarasota through Fort Myers to Naples is built specifically for winter RV residents, with full-service resorts and dense dump and hookup infrastructure. South Florida and the Keys stay tropical (70 to 80F), Central Florida is mild, and the panhandle is cheaper but gets cold snaps into the 30s and 40s. The catch is demand: parks fill up December through February and charge 30 to 50 percent premiums, so reserve months ahead. The panhandle, at $600 to $900 a month, is roughly half the cost of the southwest Gulf parks.
How does hurricane season affect RV camping in Florida?
It's the one real hazard to plan around. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with the most active period from late August into October. Storms can force park closures, evacuations, and road shutdowns with limited notice, so if you're camping in those months, carry travel insurance, watch the forecasts, and have a plan to move. Keep your tanks manageable so you can relocate quickly, and dump ahead of any approaching storm. The flip side is that summer and early fall bring the lowest rates and smallest crowds, and the late-fall window after the peak is often excellent.
Are there big-rig friendly dump stations and campgrounds in Florida?
Yes. Florida state park campsites accommodate rigs from 10 feet up to 104 feet depending on the park, and most have a central dump station. Bahia Honda State Park in the Keys fits rigs up to about 45 feet on its Buttonwood loop. Private resorts like Sunshine Key and the big Gulf Coast snowbird parks are built for large motorhomes with full hookups and easy pull-throughs. Lion Country KOA near West Palm Beach offers big-rig friendly sites. The flat terrain and wide park roads make Florida easy for large rigs overall, just confirm site length limits when you book, especially in the older or more compact parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Florida?
Florida ranges from very cheap off-season to premium in winter. State park camping is moderate, with the $7 nightly RV utility fee and free dump for campers. Truck-stop dumps are $10 to $15. The big swings are at private resorts: the Gulf Coast snowbird belt charges 30 to 50 percent premiums December through February, while the panhandle runs $600 to $900 a month, about half the southwest Gulf cost. Summer brings the lowest rates statewide but active hurricane season. To control costs, camp at state parks, use free county dumps, and consider the panhandle or shoulder seasons over the peak-winter Gulf Coast.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Florida?
Florida's dump stations are concentrated at its 175 state parks, the private RV resorts, and travel centers, since the rest areas have none. State parks like Bahia Honda in the Keys and Hillsborough River near Tampa have dumps, free for registered campers. There's a Flying J near San Antonio in the Ocala area and a Pilot in Haines City. The Gulf Coast snowbird resorts from Sarasota to Naples have full-hookup sites with dumps. We've mapped {{stationCount}} stations statewide. Coverage is densest in Central Florida, the Gulf Coast, and the east coast, with thinner options in the Everglades and lower Keys.
How much does it cost to dump at a Florida state park?
If you're a registered camper, the dump is free and included with your site, which carries a $7 nightly RV utility fee. If you're not camping, day-use dumping runs about $5, but you'll also pay the park's per-vehicle entry fee of around $6, so a quick non-camper stop can total near $20. Because of that, it's usually cheaper to dump on your departure day as a camper than to make a special non-camper trip. Hillsborough River State Park near Tampa, for example, dumps free for guests but charges $20 for a dump-only visit.
Are there free RV dump stations in Florida?
Yes, around 14 statewide, mostly at public and county parks plus a few truck stops. Many county and municipal parks offer free dumping, and some Pilot and Flying J locations dump free with a fuel purchase. Hillsborough River State Park near Tampa dumps free for registered guests. Of the stations in our Florida directory, {{freeCount}} are free. Just remember the rest areas and turnpike service plazas have no dumps at all, free or paid, so don't count on the highway. For free dumping, check the county parks and municipal facilities along your route before paying at a resort.
Can I dump my RV tanks at Florida rest areas or service plazas?
No. This is important and catches a lot of travelers out: Florida does not have any dump stations at its rest areas or turnpike service plazas, none of them. FDOT rest areas cap your stay at 3 hours (10 for commercial trucks), have 24-hour security, and prohibit camping. The Florida Turnpike service plazas don't allow overnight parking at all. So you can't empty your tanks anywhere on the highway system here. Plan every dump around the state parks, private RV resorts, and truck stops like the Flying J near Ocala and the Pilot in Haines City instead.
What should I bring to a dump station in Florida?
Bring a quality sewer hose with good fittings, disposable gloves, and a clear elbow so you can see when the black tank runs clean. A jug of fresh water and a separate non-potable rinse hose help with flushing. Florida's heat and humidity mean tanks can get ripe fast, so don't let them sit full, and keep tank chemicals on hand. Bug spray helps at buggy parks near the water and the Everglades. Add hand sanitizer to the kit. In hurricane season, keep your tanks manageable in case you need to move quickly, and dump before any forecast storm.
When is the best time for RV camping in Florida?
It depends on your priorities. Winter (December through February) is the classic snowbird season, with mild, dry weather, but the Gulf Coast parks fill up and charge 30 to 50 percent premiums, so book months ahead. Many experienced Florida RVers prefer the spring and the late-fall 'secret season' of October and November, which offer excellent weather with far thinner crowds and better rates. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy, with the lowest prices but active hurricane season. For the best balance of weather, crowds, and cost, target spring or late fall outside the peak storm window.
Where can I dump near the Florida Keys?
Plan ahead, because services thin out down the Overseas Highway. Bahia Honda State Park is the standout, with a dump station and big-rig sites up to about 45 feet on the Buttonwood loop, plus hot showers and beaches. Sunshine Key RV Resort near Big Pine Key offers hundreds of full-hookup sites with dumps. Beyond those, options are limited the farther south you go toward Key West, so fill fresh water and dump before you leave the mainland or at one of the Keys resorts. Reserve well ahead in winter, since Keys camping is in high demand and short supply.
Where can I dump in the Everglades?
Not really inside the park, so plan around it. Everglades National Park's Flamingo and Long Pine Key campgrounds have no hookups, so you'll be dry camping, and you should arrive with empty tanks and full fresh water. Dump in a nearby town like Homestead or Florida City on your way in or out, since the park itself doesn't offer the dump infrastructure you'd find at a state park. The Everglades is a dry-camp destination, so come self-contained, monitor your tanks closely in the heat, and treat any town stop as your chance to service the rig.
Do travel centers in Florida have dump stations?
Yes, and they matter more here because the rest areas don't. Flying J and Pilot travel centers have RV dump stations, including a Flying J near San Antonio in the Ocala area and a Pilot in Haines City, typically charging $10 to $15, sometimes free with a fuel purchase. They stay open year-round, which makes them dependable when you're crossing the state or between park stays. They're concentrated along the interstate corridors (I-75, I-95, I-10, I-4). Since Florida has no highway rest-area dumps, these truck stops are your main on-the-road option, so note them on your route and confirm fees ahead.
Is Florida good for snowbird RV camping?
It's the top snowbird destination in the country. The Gulf Coast belt from Sarasota through Fort Myers to Naples is built specifically for winter RV residents, with full-service resorts and dense dump and hookup infrastructure. South Florida and the Keys stay tropical (70 to 80F), Central Florida is mild, and the panhandle is cheaper but gets cold snaps into the 30s and 40s. The catch is demand: parks fill up December through February and charge 30 to 50 percent premiums, so reserve months ahead. The panhandle, at $600 to $900 a month, is roughly half the cost of the southwest Gulf parks.
How does hurricane season affect RV camping in Florida?
It's the one real hazard to plan around. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with the most active period from late August into October. Storms can force park closures, evacuations, and road shutdowns with limited notice, so if you're camping in those months, carry travel insurance, watch the forecasts, and have a plan to move. Keep your tanks manageable so you can relocate quickly, and dump ahead of any approaching storm. The flip side is that summer and early fall bring the lowest rates and smallest crowds, and the late-fall window after the peak is often excellent.
Are there big-rig friendly dump stations and campgrounds in Florida?
Yes. Florida state park campsites accommodate rigs from 10 feet up to 104 feet depending on the park, and most have a central dump station. Bahia Honda State Park in the Keys fits rigs up to about 45 feet on its Buttonwood loop. Private resorts like Sunshine Key and the big Gulf Coast snowbird parks are built for large motorhomes with full hookups and easy pull-throughs. Lion Country KOA near West Palm Beach offers big-rig friendly sites. The flat terrain and wide park roads make Florida easy for large rigs overall, just confirm site length limits when you book, especially in the older or more compact parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Florida?
Florida ranges from very cheap off-season to premium in winter. State park camping is moderate, with the $7 nightly RV utility fee and free dump for campers. Truck-stop dumps are $10 to $15. The big swings are at private resorts: the Gulf Coast snowbird belt charges 30 to 50 percent premiums December through February, while the panhandle runs $600 to $900 a month, about half the southwest Gulf cost. Summer brings the lowest rates statewide but active hurricane season. To control costs, camp at state parks, use free county dumps, and consider the panhandle or shoulder seasons over the peak-winter Gulf Coast.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Florida?
The highest-rated is St. Joseph Peninsula State Park with a rating of 5.0/5 stars.
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