RV Parks In Cartersville, Georgia
34.1653° N, 84.8023° W
Quick Overview
Cartersville sits about 45 minutes northwest of Atlanta in the north Georgia foothills, right beside Lake Allatoona and Interstate 75, and it's a genuinely good RV base that balances lake recreation with surprising culture and easy big-city access. You get a big Corps-of-Engineers reservoir for boating and fishing, a well-loved state park, a walkable historic downtown, and a cluster of excellent museums, all without fighting Atlanta traffic. We like it as a mild three-season stop and an easy stage on the I-75 snowbird route, when the foothills are green or showing fall color. Summers are warm and humid with afternoon storms, so a full-hookup site with 50-amp power for the air conditioning helps, and the mild winters make it a comfortable cool-weather break as well.
The public anchor is Red Top Mountain State Park, on a wooded peninsula in Lake Allatoona, with around 90 tent and RV sites offering water and electric (no sewer) and a dump station, plus hiking, swimming and boat ramps, at bargain state-park rates. Several Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds, including McKaskey Creek, Victoria and Sweetwater, ring the lake with more electric-and-water sites reservable through Recreation.gov. These public lakeshore options are scenic and inexpensive, just without full sewer hookups.
For full hookups, the private side delivers. Allatoona Landing Campground offers 103 big-rig-friendly full-hookup sites on the lake with a marina, boat slips, a store and a rec hall, making a comfortable full-service base. Here's our honest read: book Red Top Mountain or a Corps campground for the woodsy lakeshore setting and great value, and choose Allatoona Landing when you want full hookups with sewer, a marina and big-rig room. Many RVers passing through on I-75 use Cartersville as an easy, attraction-rich overnight or weekend. Below you'll find the parks grouped public and private, with reservation windows, hookup details and real seasonal costs.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Cartersville
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Gear for Your Trip to Cartersville
All Dump Stations Near Cartersville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winding Waters RV Park | 2.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Emerson RV | 2.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mountain View Mobile Home & RV Park | 3.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camp Windy Waters | 4.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mckaskey Creek Campground | 4.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Allatoona Landing Marine Resort | 6.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Eagle View Mobile Home Park | 6.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Holiday Harbor Campground | 7.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lake Forrest County Club | 7.7 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Clark Creek South Campground | 8.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Winding Waters RV Park
2.1 miEmerson RV
2.6 miMountain View Mobile Home & RV Park
3.3 miCamp Windy Waters
4.9 miMckaskey Creek Campground
4.9 miAllatoona Landing Marine Resort
6.5 miEagle View Mobile Home Park
6.6 miHoliday Harbor Campground
7.4 miLake Forrest County Club
7.7 miClark Creek South Campground
8.2 miTraveling to Cartersville by RV
Cartersville sits right on Interstate 75 about 45 minutes northwest of Atlanta, making it one of the easiest-access RV bases in north Georgia, with flat-to-rolling terrain and no clearance or grade concerns on the main routes. Red Top Mountain State Park and several lake campgrounds are just minutes off I-75 at the Red Top Mountain Road exit. US-41 and GA-20 provide local connections. Atlanta and its airport are an easy day trip south, Chattanooga, Tennessee about an hour north, and the north Georgia mountains and Blue Ridge are within reach to the northeast. The town has full services, including RV repair, propane, big-box stores and grocery. The main driving caution is simply Atlanta-area traffic if you head south at rush hour, so time city day trips accordingly. Otherwise this is relaxed, accessible interstate-corridor RVing, and the campgrounds being minutes off the highway makes Cartersville an unusually easy overnight when you're just passing through on a long travel day.
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Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Cartersville, Georgia, 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 Cartersville
Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds around Lake Allatoona are excellent value, with electric-and-water sites generally running about $23 to $35 a night, plus the Georgia parking pass at the state park, which is why they fill for nice weekends. The Corps sites often discount further with the federal senior and access passes. Private full-hookup camping at Allatoona Landing runs roughly $45 to $65 a night for big-rig sites with sewer, a marina and amenities, with weekly and monthly rates for longer stays. Expect the highest demand in spring, summer lake season and fall color; mild winter is quiet and inexpensive across the board, with comfortable camping and light heating needs. Budget for boat rentals and the museum admissions on top of your camping fee.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Cartersville
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Best Time to Visit Cartersville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
32F - 52F
Crowds: Low
Cool and mild with occasional cold snaps and rare ice. Comfortable camping with light heat. Quiet lake, low rates, easy availability. A handy I-75 snowbird stop.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 72F
Crowds: High
Beautiful and green, a prime season with blooming dogwoods. Lake fills with boaters. Watch for spring storms. Reserve ahead for nice weekends.
Summer
Jun - Aug
70F - 89F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms. Peak lake season for boating and swimming. A 50-amp full-hookup site for AC is a real plus.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 74F
Crowds: Medium
The best window: warm days, cool nights, low humidity and good foothill color. Thinning crowds and pleasant lake weather. Reserve popular weekends ahead.
Explore the Cartersville Area
Don't sleep on Cartersville's museums; for a small town it punches well above its weight. The Booth Western Art Museum is a Smithsonian affiliate with a huge Western and Civil War collection, the Tellus Science Museum has dinosaurs and a planetarium, and the Etowah Indian Mounds are a remarkable pre-Columbian site on the river. Lake Allatoona is the outdoor draw, so bring or rent a boat for fishing and cruising, or just enjoy the swimming beaches and shoreline trails at Red Top Mountain. Walk the historic downtown for the famous first outdoor Coca-Cola wall sign, shops and restaurants. Time a visit for spring or fall when the foothill weather is best; summer brings heat, humidity and afternoon thunderstorms, so book a 50-amp full-hookup site if you want to run the AC hard. If you only have one evening, the historic downtown is a pleasant, low-effort stroll with good restaurants and that famous painted Coca-Cola wall, an easy way to round out a travel day.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Cartersville
Are there full-hookup RV parks in Cartersville?
Yes. Allatoona Landing Campground on Lake Allatoona is the main full-hookup option, with 103 big-rig-friendly sites offering full hookups including sewer, plus a marina, boat slips, a store, a rec hall and laundry. The public campgrounds nearby, Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps of Engineers sites like McKaskey Creek, Victoria and Sweetwater, have water and electric hookups but no sewer, relying on dump stations. So for full hookups with power, water and sewer at your site and big-rig room, choose Allatoona Landing; for the woodsy state-park or Corps lakeshore setting at lower cost, choose Red Top Mountain or a Corps campground and use the dump station.
Does Red Top Mountain State Park have full hookups?
Not full hookups. Red Top Mountain State Park, on a wooded peninsula in Lake Allatoona, has around 90 tent and RV campsites, each with water and electricity, a picnic table and a fire ring, but no sewer hookups at the sites. There's a dump station in the park for emptying tanks. Camping runs an affordable $23 to $25 a night, a real bargain for a lakeside setting with hiking trails, a swimming beach, boat ramps and good facilities. For most RVers a water-and-electric site with a dump station works fine for a stay of several days. If you need sewer at your site, choose the private Allatoona Landing Campground instead. Red Top's appeal is the natural lakeshore setting at a low price.
What is there to do in Cartersville for RVers?
A surprising amount for a small town. Lake Allatoona is the outdoor centerpiece, with boating, fishing, swimming beaches and shoreline trails at Red Top Mountain State Park. Cartersville also has standout museums: the Booth Western Art Museum, a Smithsonian affiliate; the Tellus Science Museum with dinosaurs and a planetarium; and the ancient Etowah Indian Mounds on the river. The walkable historic downtown features the world's first outdoor painted Coca-Cola wall sign, shops and restaurants. Atlanta and its many attractions are an easy day trip south, and Chattanooga is about an hour north. Between the lake, the museums, the downtown and the big-city access, Cartersville easily fills several varied days.
Is Cartersville a good stop on the I-75 snowbird route?
Yes, an excellent one. Cartersville sits right on Interstate 75 about 45 minutes northwest of Atlanta, making it a convenient and attraction-rich overnight or longer stop for snowbirds heading to or from Florida and the Gulf Coast. You're minutes off the interstate at the Red Top Mountain Road exit, with lakeside camping, full-hookup options and a town full of services. The mild winters make it comfortable for a cool-weather break, and the museums and lake give you reasons to linger an extra day rather than just refueling. Whether you want a quick overnight or a multi-night pause to explore, Cartersville is one of the more rewarding I-75 corridor stops in north Georgia.
When is the best time to RV in Cartersville?
Fall is the standout, with warm days, cool nights, lower humidity and good foothill color, plus pleasant lake weather and thinning crowds. Spring is also lovely and green with blooming dogwoods, though it brings occasional severe storms, and the lake fills with boaters. Summer is warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms but is peak lake season for boating and swimming, manageable with a 50-amp full-hookup site for air conditioning. Mild winter is quiet, inexpensive and comfortable with light heat, and it's a handy I-75 snowbird stop. For the best overall weather and foothill scenery, target fall or spring, and reserve popular weekends ahead at the state park and lake campgrounds.
Can big rigs camp and drive around Cartersville?
Yes, very easily. Cartersville sits right on Interstate 75 with flat-to-rolling terrain and no clearance or grade concerns, and the campgrounds are just minutes off the highway at the Red Top Mountain Road exit. Allatoona Landing Campground is specifically big-rig friendly with full-hookup sites, and Red Top Mountain State Park and the Corps campgrounds accommodate larger rigs, though you should check individual site lengths when reserving. The town has full RV service, propane and big-box shopping. The only real driving caution is Atlanta-area traffic if you head south toward the city at rush hour, so time those day trips accordingly. Otherwise Cartersville is one of the most accessible big-rig bases in north Georgia.
Do I need reservations for Cartersville RV parks?
For spring, summer and fall weekends, yes. Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds around Lake Allatoona are popular and fill for nice weekends and the summer lake season, releasing through the Georgia State Parks and Recreation.gov systems on rolling windows, so book ahead, especially for holidays. Allatoona Landing's full-hookup sites also fill in peak season. Weekdays and the quiet winter off-season are much easier, often available with little notice, which makes Cartersville a flexible winter snowbird stop. For any popular weekend, summer lake trip or fall-color visit, reserve as far ahead as you can; for a casual midweek or winter stay, you'll usually find space.
Is Lake Allatoona good for boating and fishing?
Yes, very. Lake Allatoona is a large Army Corps of Engineers reservoir, one of the most-visited lakes in the country given its proximity to Atlanta, with abundant boating, water sports, swimming beaches and good fishing for bass, crappie and catfish. Marinas around the lake, including at Allatoona Landing and near Red Top Mountain, offer boat rentals, slips and launches, so you can get on the water whether or not you bring your own boat. The many coves and the wooded shoreline make for scenic cruising and quiet fishing spots away from the busier areas. If boating or fishing is your focus, base at a lakeside campground with a launch or marina and check current Georgia fishing regulations and lake conditions.
Are pets allowed at Cartersville RV parks?
Generally yes. The private Allatoona Landing Campground is pet-friendly with standard leash rules, and Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds welcome leashed dogs at campsites and on many trails and shoreline areas, making it easy to enjoy the lake with your pets. Keep dogs leashed, clean up after them, and bring plenty of water in the warm, humid Georgia summers, which dehydrate animals quickly. Watch for ticks in wooded and grassy areas in the warm months, and keep an eye on dogs near the lake and boat traffic. As always, confirm each park's specific pet policy when you book, including any breed or number limits, and note any restrictions at swimming beaches.
Where can I dump tanks and refill water near Cartersville?
Allatoona Landing Campground offers full hookups, so you can dump at your site, plus a dump station and potable water fill. Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds around Lake Allatoona have dump stations and water fills even though their individual sites are electric-and-water rather than full hookup. The town of Cartersville and the I-75 corridor have additional RV service points, fuel-stop water and dump options. Because this is an accessible interstate-corridor area near a major metro, finding dump and water service is straightforward. If you're staying on an electric-and-water site at the state park or a Corps campground, just plan to use the campground dump station before you head out.
How far is Cartersville from Atlanta and Chattanooga?
Both are easy reaches on Interstate 75. Atlanta is about 45 minutes south, putting the city's many attractions, the aquarium, sports and the world's busiest airport within an easy day trip, though you'll want to avoid rush-hour traffic with a big rig. Chattanooga, Tennessee, with Lookout Mountain, the aquarium and Civil War history, is about an hour north. The north Georgia mountains and the Blue Ridge are within reach to the northeast for a scenic drive. This central position on I-75 between two appealing cities, plus the lake and museums right at home, is a big part of what makes Cartersville such a practical and rewarding RV base in north Georgia.
What are the museums in Cartersville worth visiting?
Three stand out and are genuinely worth a stop. The Booth Western Art Museum is a Smithsonian affiliate and one of the largest museums of Western art in the country, with extensive Western, Civil War and presidential galleries. The Tellus Science Museum features dinosaur fossils, a mineral gallery, a planetarium and hands-on exhibits, making it a great rainy-day or family outing. The Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site preserves remarkable pre-Columbian earthworks built by the Mississippian culture along the Etowah River, with a small museum. Together they give Cartersville far more cultural depth than most small towns, and all are short drives from the lake campgrounds, easy to combine with a day on the water.
Are there full-hookup RV parks in Cartersville?
Yes. Allatoona Landing Campground on Lake Allatoona is the main full-hookup option, with 103 big-rig-friendly sites offering full hookups including sewer, plus a marina, boat slips, a store, a rec hall and laundry. The public campgrounds nearby, Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps of Engineers sites like McKaskey Creek, Victoria and Sweetwater, have water and electric hookups but no sewer, relying on dump stations. So for full hookups with power, water and sewer at your site and big-rig room, choose Allatoona Landing; for the woodsy state-park or Corps lakeshore setting at lower cost, choose Red Top Mountain or a Corps campground and use the dump station.
Does Red Top Mountain State Park have full hookups?
Not full hookups. Red Top Mountain State Park, on a wooded peninsula in Lake Allatoona, has around 90 tent and RV campsites, each with water and electricity, a picnic table and a fire ring, but no sewer hookups at the sites. There's a dump station in the park for emptying tanks. Camping runs an affordable $23 to $25 a night, a real bargain for a lakeside setting with hiking trails, a swimming beach, boat ramps and good facilities. For most RVers a water-and-electric site with a dump station works fine for a stay of several days. If you need sewer at your site, choose the private Allatoona Landing Campground instead. Red Top's appeal is the natural lakeshore setting at a low price.
What is there to do in Cartersville for RVers?
A surprising amount for a small town. Lake Allatoona is the outdoor centerpiece, with boating, fishing, swimming beaches and shoreline trails at Red Top Mountain State Park. Cartersville also has standout museums: the Booth Western Art Museum, a Smithsonian affiliate; the Tellus Science Museum with dinosaurs and a planetarium; and the ancient Etowah Indian Mounds on the river. The walkable historic downtown features the world's first outdoor painted Coca-Cola wall sign, shops and restaurants. Atlanta and its many attractions are an easy day trip south, and Chattanooga is about an hour north. Between the lake, the museums, the downtown and the big-city access, Cartersville easily fills several varied days.
Is Cartersville a good stop on the I-75 snowbird route?
Yes, an excellent one. Cartersville sits right on Interstate 75 about 45 minutes northwest of Atlanta, making it a convenient and attraction-rich overnight or longer stop for snowbirds heading to or from Florida and the Gulf Coast. You're minutes off the interstate at the Red Top Mountain Road exit, with lakeside camping, full-hookup options and a town full of services. The mild winters make it comfortable for a cool-weather break, and the museums and lake give you reasons to linger an extra day rather than just refueling. Whether you want a quick overnight or a multi-night pause to explore, Cartersville is one of the more rewarding I-75 corridor stops in north Georgia.
When is the best time to RV in Cartersville?
Fall is the standout, with warm days, cool nights, lower humidity and good foothill color, plus pleasant lake weather and thinning crowds. Spring is also lovely and green with blooming dogwoods, though it brings occasional severe storms, and the lake fills with boaters. Summer is warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms but is peak lake season for boating and swimming, manageable with a 50-amp full-hookup site for air conditioning. Mild winter is quiet, inexpensive and comfortable with light heat, and it's a handy I-75 snowbird stop. For the best overall weather and foothill scenery, target fall or spring, and reserve popular weekends ahead at the state park and lake campgrounds.
Can big rigs camp and drive around Cartersville?
Yes, very easily. Cartersville sits right on Interstate 75 with flat-to-rolling terrain and no clearance or grade concerns, and the campgrounds are just minutes off the highway at the Red Top Mountain Road exit. Allatoona Landing Campground is specifically big-rig friendly with full-hookup sites, and Red Top Mountain State Park and the Corps campgrounds accommodate larger rigs, though you should check individual site lengths when reserving. The town has full RV service, propane and big-box shopping. The only real driving caution is Atlanta-area traffic if you head south toward the city at rush hour, so time those day trips accordingly. Otherwise Cartersville is one of the most accessible big-rig bases in north Georgia.
Do I need reservations for Cartersville RV parks?
For spring, summer and fall weekends, yes. Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds around Lake Allatoona are popular and fill for nice weekends and the summer lake season, releasing through the Georgia State Parks and Recreation.gov systems on rolling windows, so book ahead, especially for holidays. Allatoona Landing's full-hookup sites also fill in peak season. Weekdays and the quiet winter off-season are much easier, often available with little notice, which makes Cartersville a flexible winter snowbird stop. For any popular weekend, summer lake trip or fall-color visit, reserve as far ahead as you can; for a casual midweek or winter stay, you'll usually find space.
Is Lake Allatoona good for boating and fishing?
Yes, very. Lake Allatoona is a large Army Corps of Engineers reservoir, one of the most-visited lakes in the country given its proximity to Atlanta, with abundant boating, water sports, swimming beaches and good fishing for bass, crappie and catfish. Marinas around the lake, including at Allatoona Landing and near Red Top Mountain, offer boat rentals, slips and launches, so you can get on the water whether or not you bring your own boat. The many coves and the wooded shoreline make for scenic cruising and quiet fishing spots away from the busier areas. If boating or fishing is your focus, base at a lakeside campground with a launch or marina and check current Georgia fishing regulations and lake conditions.
Are pets allowed at Cartersville RV parks?
Generally yes. The private Allatoona Landing Campground is pet-friendly with standard leash rules, and Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds welcome leashed dogs at campsites and on many trails and shoreline areas, making it easy to enjoy the lake with your pets. Keep dogs leashed, clean up after them, and bring plenty of water in the warm, humid Georgia summers, which dehydrate animals quickly. Watch for ticks in wooded and grassy areas in the warm months, and keep an eye on dogs near the lake and boat traffic. As always, confirm each park's specific pet policy when you book, including any breed or number limits, and note any restrictions at swimming beaches.
Where can I dump tanks and refill water near Cartersville?
Allatoona Landing Campground offers full hookups, so you can dump at your site, plus a dump station and potable water fill. Red Top Mountain State Park and the Army Corps campgrounds around Lake Allatoona have dump stations and water fills even though their individual sites are electric-and-water rather than full hookup. The town of Cartersville and the I-75 corridor have additional RV service points, fuel-stop water and dump options. Because this is an accessible interstate-corridor area near a major metro, finding dump and water service is straightforward. If you're staying on an electric-and-water site at the state park or a Corps campground, just plan to use the campground dump station before you head out.
How far is Cartersville from Atlanta and Chattanooga?
Both are easy reaches on Interstate 75. Atlanta is about 45 minutes south, putting the city's many attractions, the aquarium, sports and the world's busiest airport within an easy day trip, though you'll want to avoid rush-hour traffic with a big rig. Chattanooga, Tennessee, with Lookout Mountain, the aquarium and Civil War history, is about an hour north. The north Georgia mountains and the Blue Ridge are within reach to the northeast for a scenic drive. This central position on I-75 between two appealing cities, plus the lake and museums right at home, is a big part of what makes Cartersville such a practical and rewarding RV base in north Georgia.
What are the museums in Cartersville worth visiting?
Three stand out and are genuinely worth a stop. The Booth Western Art Museum is a Smithsonian affiliate and one of the largest museums of Western art in the country, with extensive Western, Civil War and presidential galleries. The Tellus Science Museum features dinosaur fossils, a mineral gallery, a planetarium and hands-on exhibits, making it a great rainy-day or family outing. The Etowah Indian Mounds State Historic Site preserves remarkable pre-Columbian earthworks built by the Mississippian culture along the Etowah River, with a small museum. Together they give Cartersville far more cultural depth than most small towns, and all are short drives from the lake campgrounds, easy to combine with a day on the water.
Are there free dump stations in Cartersville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Cartersville.
All Dump Stations Near Cartersville (107)
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RV ParkVictoria Campground At Lake Allatoona
RV ParkSweetwater Campground - Allatoona Lake
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