RV Parks In Illinois
40.6331° N, 89.3985° W
Quick Overview
<p>Illinois is easy, affordable RV country, and it splits cleanly into two experiences. Up north and along the rivers, the public side delivers scenery and value: a large <a href="https://dnr.illinois.gov/parks.html" rel="nofollow">Illinois state-park system</a> with electric sites tucked beside sandstone canyons, lakes, and the Lake Michigan shoreline. Down south, the Shawnee National Forest brings rugged bluff country and free dispersed camping. The full hookups and big-rig room concentrate in private parks near the metros and river towns. Knowing which is which is the key to a smooth Prairie State trip.</p><p>The public headliners are genuinely good. Starved Rock State Park is the most visited park in the state, with 18 sandstone canyons and seasonal waterfalls on the Illinois River, big-rig-friendly electric sites, and year-round access. Illinois Beach State Park in Zion stands out for its Lake Michigan shoreline and, unusually for a state park, full hookups that include sewer. Rock Cut State Park near Rockford offers lakeside camping and fishing with concrete pads at its Staghorn Campground. All of them book through the Illinois DNR reservation portal, and the popular ones fill fast for summer and fall.</p><p>Most state parks here are electric-only with dump stations, so when you want true full hookups you go private, and the private parks are strong. MillPoint RV Park on Upper Peoria Lake in East Peoria has 80 shaded full-hookup sites with pull-throughs built for the biggest rigs. Double J Campground near Springfield in Chatham offers full hookups, a pool, and laundry. Near St. Louis, big-rig parks like Bubba J's advertise 85-foot pull-throughs with 4-inch sewer. These are your go-to for larger coaches and longer stays.</p><p>The south is where Illinois gets wild. The Shawnee National Forest covers the hilly, forested tip of the state, with nine campgrounds (two with electric), dispersed first-come camping, and scenery like the Garden of the Gods rock formations and sandstone bluffs. The newest full-hookup option, Shawnee Forest Campground, runs 60 RV sites year-round at around $40 a night. It is the most scenic, rugged camping anywhere in the state and a complete change of pace from the flat prairie parks up north.</p><p>Reservations and hookups are the two decisions that shape an Illinois trip. State parks book through the DNR portal with summer and fall-color weekends going early; the national forest in the south is largely first-come and free; and the private parks book direct for full hookups. The terrain is flat and interstate-rich, so the driving is forgiving even for newer RVers, with tolls rather than mountain grades the main thing to watch on the road. Below you will find the standout campgrounds, booking lead times, honest cost ranges, big-rig notes, and a season-by-season guide so you can plan an Illinois trip around your rig and the calendar.</p>
Top Rated RV Parks in Illinois
Browse RV Parks by City (360)
Alhambra
Alton
Amboy
Antioch
Apple River
Argenta
Aroma Park
Arthur
Ashland
Ashton
Astoria
Atkinson
Atlanta
Aurora
Ava
Baldwin
Barrington
Bartonville
Bedford Park
Belleville
Belvidere
Bement
Benton
Bethalto
Big Rock
Birds
Bloomington
Blue Mound
Bolivia
Bourbonnais
Bridgeview
Brimfield
Brownstown
Buncombe
Bunker Hill
Burnham
Butler
Byron
Cahokia
Cambridge
Camp Point
Canton
Carbondale
Carlinville
Carlock
Carlyle
Carmi
Casey
Cave in Rock
Centralia
Cerro Gordo
Champaign
Chana
Chandlerville
Charleston
Chatham
Chebanse
Chenoa
Cherry Valley
Chester
Chicago
Chillicothe
Chrisman
Clayton
Clinton
Cobden
Colchester
Collinsville
Cottage Hills
Crete
Creve Coeur
Crystal Lake
Dallas City
Danville
Davis
Decatur
DeKalb
Des Plaines
Dewitt
Dixmoor
Dixon
Dunlap
Durand
Earlville
East Alton
East Moline
East Peoria
East Saint Louis
Edinburg
Effingham
Eldorado
Elgin
Elizabeth
Elizabethtown
Ellis Grove
Ellsworth
Equality
Erie
Eureka
Fairbury
Fairfield
Farmer City
Findlay
Fisher
Flora
Frankfort
Freeburg
Freeport
Galatia
Galena
Galesburg
Galva
Garden Prairie
Gardner
Geneseo
Gibson City
Gilberts
Gillespie
Gilman
Gilson
Girard
Glen Carbon
Godfrey
Golconda
Goodfield
Goreville
Grafton
Grand Chain
Grand Tower
Granite City
Grayville
Great Lakes
Greenfield
Hamilton
Hanover
Harrisburg
Hartford
Havana
Herod
Herrin
Heyworth
Highland
Hillsboro
Hillsdale
Hodgkins
Hudson
Ingleside
Ingraham
Jacksonville
Johnsonville
Johnston City
Joliet
Junction
Kankakee
Karnak
Keithsburg
Kenney
Kewanee
Keyesport
Kincaid
Kingston Mines
Kinmundy
Kirkwood
Knoxville
Lacon
Lake Bluff
La Moille
Lanark
Lane
La Salle
Lawrenceville
Leland
Lena
Lerna
Le Roy
Lewistown
Lexington
Lincoln
Litchfield
Loami
Loves Park
Lyndon
Lynwood
Mackinaw
Macomb
Mahomet
Makanda
Manito
Manteno
Marengo
Marion
Maroa
Marseilles
Marshall
Martinsville
Mascoutah
Matherville
Matteson
Mattoon
McClure
McHenry
McLeansboro
McNabb
Mendon
Mendota
Metamora
Milan
Milford
Millbrook
Miller City
Minooka
Modoc
Moline
Momence
Monmouth
Monticello
Montrose
Morris
Morrison
Morton
Mount Carmel
Mount Carroll
Mount Morris
Mount Vernon
Mulberry Grove
Murphysboro
Naples
Nashville
Nason
Neoga
New Athens
New Douglas
Newton
Normal
Norris City
North Chicago
North Utica
Oak Forest
Oakland
Oakwood
Oglesby
Olmsted
Olney
Onarga
Oregon
Ottawa
Owaneco
Ozark
Palatine
Pana
Paris
Park City
Pawnee
Paxton
Pearl City
Pecatonica
Pembroke Township
Penfield
Peoria
Peotone
Percy
Peru
Pinckneyville
Pittsfield
Pocahontas
Pontiac
Port Byron
Princeton
Putnam
Quincy
Ramsey
Rantoul
Red Bud
Riverton
Robinson
Rochelle
Rochester
Rock Falls
Rockford
Rock Island
Roodhouse
Roscoe
Rushville
Saint Anne
Saint Francisville
Salem
Sandwich
Savanna
Scott AFB
Secor
Sesser
Shabbona
Shawneetown
Sheffield
Shelbyville
Sheridan
Sherrard
Shiloh
Shirland
Shorewood
Smithboro
Sorento
South Beloit
South Holland
South Wilmington
Sparta
Springfield
Spring Grove
Staunton
Sterling
St Francisville
Stonefort
Stone Park
Streator
Sublette
Sullivan
Sumner
Sycamore
Tallula
Taylorville
Thomson
Tinley Park
Tolono
Topeka
Tuscola
Union
Urbana
Ursa
Utica
Vandalia
Vernon
Victoria
Vienna
Virginia
Volo
Warrenville
Warsaw
Waterloo
Watseka
Watson
Wauconda
Waverly
Wayne
Wenona
West Chicago
West York
Wheaton
Whittington
Willow Springs
Wilmington
Wolf Lake
Wood River
Woodson
Worth
Wyanet
Wyoming
Xenia
Yatesville
Yorkville
Zion
Getting Around Illinois by RV
Illinois is flat, central, and crisscrossed with interstates, which makes it some of the easiest big-rig driving in the country. I-55 traces old Route 66 from Chicago down to St. Louis, passing Springfield. I-57 runs south toward the Shawnee country and the forest. I-74 and I-72 cross the center, I-80 cuts the north near Starved Rock, and the I-90/I-94 corridors ring Chicago. The main thing to watch is tolls on several of the Chicago-area interstates, not terrain, since there are no mountain grades anywhere in the state.
Because the land is gentle, route planning here is about logistics rather than climbs. There are no steep descents or low mountain tunnels, so newer RVers can relax and focus on the driving. Distances between the major destinations are reasonable: you can reach Starved Rock from Chicago in a couple of hours, and the Shawnee country in the far south is a longer but straightforward run down I-57. Spring and summer storms can bring heavy rain, so check the forecast on travel days.
Flying in and renting? Chicago O'Hare and Midway serve the north and are closest to Starved Rock and Illinois Beach. St. Louis, just across the river in Missouri, is the nearest major airport to the southern and central parks and the Shawnee National Forest. Peoria and Springfield offer regional airports convenient to the central river country and the private full-hookup parks there. Pick the hub nearest the region you want to explore, and the flat, well-signed highways make the rest simple.
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Illinois 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 Illinois
<p>Illinois is friendly to an RV budget. State-park electric sites generally sit in the $$ range, a strong value given the scenery, from Lake Michigan beaches to the Starved Rock canyons. Private full-hookup parks land in the $$$ band, where you pay more for sewer at the site, big-rig pull-throughs, and amenities like pools and laundry. The Shawnee Forest Campground runs about $40 a night for a full-hookup site, and dispersed camping in the Shawnee National Forest is free if you are self-contained, a great way to balance a longer trip.</p><p>The practical play: use state parks for affordable, scenic electric sites, then book a private full-hookup park when you need to dump, refill, and stretch out, or when you are running a bigger rig that needs a long pull-through. Reserve directly with private parks to avoid third-party booking fees, and ask about weekly and monthly discounts for longer stays. Travel midweek or in the shoulder seasons and both the rates and the availability improve noticeably over peak summer weekends and fall-color dates.</p>
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Best Time to Visit Illinois by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
22F - 36F
Crowds: Low
Cold with snow. Most campgrounds close by mid-December (the season runs from about April 1). A few like Starved Rock and the year-round Shawnee Forest Campground stay open with limited services.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 62F
Crowds: Low
Mild and green, with the Starved Rock waterfalls running full from snowmelt and rain. Campgrounds open around April 1. Quiet and affordable, but watch for spring thunderstorms and flash floods in the southern Shawnee country.
Summer
Jun - Aug
65F - 85F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid, often mid-80s. Everything is open and lake and river parks book early for weekends. The shaded southern Shawnee hills offer mild relief from the open-prairie heat.
Fall
Sep - Oct
44F - 64F
Crowds: High
Excellent color along the rivers and through Shawnee, with crisp days and thinner crowds. Reserve fall-foliage weekends at Starved Rock early, as it is the busiest park in the state.
Explore Illinois
<p>A few things we have learned camping Illinois. First, Starved Rock is the hottest ticket in the state, so book summer weekends and especially fall-foliage dates early through the Illinois DNR portal, or you will be shut out. Second, remember most Illinois state parks are electric-only: if you need sewer at the site, plan on a private full-hookup park like MillPoint or budget time to use the on-site dump stations between hookup stays.</p><p>For the most scenic and rugged camping, head south to the Shawnee National Forest, where dispersed and first-come sites put you near Garden of the Gods and the bluff country. Go in self-contained, since the dispersed areas have no services. In summer, that shaded southern forest is also a cooler, more comfortable option than the open prairie when the humidity climbs. Watch for spring thunderstorms and flash floods down there, and avoid camping in low-lying washes when storms threaten.</p><p>Finally, lean into how easy the driving is. With flat terrain and good interstates, Illinois is a great place to build RV confidence or chain together several short hops, from the Chicago lakefront to the canyons to the southern forest. Just mind the Chicago-area tolls and book the marquee parks ahead for summer and fall.</p>
Other States in United States
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
Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Illinois
What are the best RV parks in Illinois?
It splits between scenery and hookups. For public scenery, Starved Rock State Park is the headliner, with electric, big-rig-friendly sites near 18 sandstone canyons; Illinois Beach on Lake Michigan is unusual for offering full hookups including sewer; and Rock Cut near Rockford has lakeside concrete pads. For full-hookup private parks, MillPoint RV Park on Upper Peoria Lake is built for the biggest rigs, Double J near Springfield has a pool and pull-throughs, and Shawnee Forest Campground anchors the southern forest country. Pick public for the views, private when you need sewer and big-rig room.
Do Illinois RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Most state parks are electric-only with dump stations, but Illinois has a notable exception: Illinois Beach State Park offers full hookups including sewer, which is rare for a state-operated site. For reliable full hookups, the private parks are your best bet. MillPoint RV Park, Double J Campground, and Shawnee Forest Campground all provide water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric, with big-rig pull-throughs. Bubba J's near St. Louis advertises 85-foot pull-throughs with 4-inch sewer. Always confirm whether a site has sewer at the pad or just a shared dump station when you book, since most public sites are electric-only.
How much does RV camping cost in Illinois?
Illinois is an affordable Midwest state for RVers. State-park electric sites generally land in the $$ range, a solid value for the scenery at places like Starved Rock and Illinois Beach. Private full-hookup parks run in the $$$ band, where you pay for sewer, pools, laundry, and big-rig pull-throughs. The Shawnee Forest Campground, for example, runs around $40 a night for a full-hookup site. Dispersed camping in the Shawnee National Forest is free if you are self-contained. For most trips, mix affordable state parks with a private full-hookup stop when you need to dump and refill.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Illinois?
For summer weekends and fall color, book well ahead through the Illinois DNR reservation portal. Starved Rock, the busiest park in the state, fills fast for peak weekends, and lake parks like Illinois Beach and Rock Cut are popular all summer. Private parks book direct and also fill for holiday weekends. Your flexible option is the Shawnee National Forest in the south, where most campgrounds are first-come, first-served and do not take reservations, though the private Shawnee Forest Campground takes bookings about three days ahead. Midweek and shoulder-season trips are far easier to land.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Illinois?
Fall is the standout, with excellent color along the rivers and through the Shawnee hills, crisp comfortable days, and thinner crowds than summer. Spring is lovely too, especially at Starved Rock, where the seasonal waterfalls run their fullest from snowmelt and spring rain. Summer is peak for the lakes and beaches but can be hot and humid on the open prairie, so head to the shaded southern forest for relief. Winter closes most campgrounds. If we had to pick one window, a fall-foliage weekend at Starved Rock or in Shawnee country is hard to beat.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Illinois?
Yes, and the flat terrain makes it some of the easiest big-rig driving anywhere. The private parks lead for big rigs: MillPoint RV Park has pull-throughs designed for the largest coaches, Double J near Springfield is built for big rigs, and Bubba J's near St. Louis advertises 85-foot pull-throughs with full hookups. Among state parks, Starved Rock advertises big-rig-friendly electric sites and Rock Cut's Staghorn loop has concrete pads. There are no mountain grades to worry about, so route planning is mostly about tolls on the Chicago-area interstates rather than terrain.
Are there free or first-come boondocking options in Illinois?
Yes, mainly in the Shawnee National Forest across the southern tip of the state. The forest offers dispersed and primitive camping, and most of its campgrounds are first-come, first-served with no reservations. There are no hookups or services in the dispersed areas, so go in fully self-contained with fresh water and empty tanks. Outside the national forest, free options are limited in this largely agricultural and developed state, so most boondocking happens on those southern forest lands around Garden of the Gods and the bluff country. It is the prettiest, wildest camping Illinois offers.
Which Illinois state parks are best for RVers?
Starved Rock State Park is the crown jewel: the most visited park in Illinois, with 18 sandstone canyons and seasonal waterfalls on the Illinois River, plus big-rig-friendly electric sites and year-round access. Illinois Beach State Park in Zion is special for its Lake Michigan shoreline and its rare full-hookup sites with sewer. Rock Cut State Park near Rockford offers lakeside camping and fishing with concrete pads at the Staghorn Campground. All book through the Illinois DNR portal. These three cover the canyons, the lakeshore, and the northern lakes, the best of the state's public camping for RVers.
Can I camp near Starved Rock in an RV?
Yes. Starved Rock State Park Campground in Oglesby offers big-rig-friendly sites with electric hookups, sanitary dump stations, and drinking-water spigots, with year-round access. It is the most popular park in Illinois, set among 18 sandstone canyons with seasonal waterfalls along the Illinois River, so it books up fast for summer weekends and fall color. Reserve early through the Illinois DNR portal. If the park campground is full, private parks in the Illinois River valley and the East Peoria area, like MillPoint RV Park, give you a full-hookup base within reasonable driving distance of the canyons.
What is camping in the Shawnee National Forest like?
The Shawnee National Forest covers the forested, hilly southern tip of Illinois and offers the state's wildest camping. You can choose from nine forest campgrounds, two with electric hookups, plus dispersed camping in several areas, much of it first-come. The scenery is the draw: Garden of the Gods rock formations, sandstone bluffs, and quiet hardwood forest. The newest full-hookup option, Shawnee Forest Campground, has 60 RV sites with water, sewer, and electric and stays open year-round at around $40 a night. Expect mild weather, occasional flash floods in spring, and a much more rugged feel than the prairie parks up north.
Are Illinois campgrounds open in winter?
Most are not. The typical Illinois camping season runs from about April 1 through December 15, and the bulk of state parks and private campgrounds close or drop to limited services through the cold months. The exceptions include Starved Rock, which keeps year-round access, and the private Shawnee Forest Campground in the south, which operates year-round with full hookups. If you travel Illinois in winter, plan on those limited options, confirm they are open before arriving, and prepare for snow and hard freezes with heated hoses and tank insulation, since Illinois winters get genuinely cold.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
For developed state parks and private resorts in summer and fall, reserve. Starved Rock and the lake parks fill weeks ahead for peak weekends, and showing up without a booking on a July Saturday or a fall-color weekend usually means no site. Illinois state parks use the DNR reservation portal, and private parks book direct. Your show-up option is the Shawnee National Forest in the south, where most campgrounds are first-come and free or cheap. Midweek in spring or late fall, you have a decent shot at walk-in sites at developed parks, but never count on it for the headline destinations.
Is Illinois good for a beginner RV trip?
Very much so. The terrain is flat and the state is laced with interstates, so the driving is about as forgiving as RV travel gets, with no mountain passes or steep grades. Distances between the major parks are manageable, the state parks are well-run and affordable, and private full-hookup parks near Peoria, Springfield, and St. Louis give newer RVers a comfortable base. Start with a Starved Rock weekend, practice backing into an electric site, and build confidence fast. Just book the popular parks ahead for summer and fall, and watch the tolls on the Chicago-area interstates as you travel.
What are the best RV parks in Illinois?
It splits between scenery and hookups. For public scenery, Starved Rock State Park is the headliner, with electric, big-rig-friendly sites near 18 sandstone canyons; Illinois Beach on Lake Michigan is unusual for offering full hookups including sewer; and Rock Cut near Rockford has lakeside concrete pads. For full-hookup private parks, MillPoint RV Park on Upper Peoria Lake is built for the biggest rigs, Double J near Springfield has a pool and pull-throughs, and Shawnee Forest Campground anchors the southern forest country. Pick public for the views, private when you need sewer and big-rig room.
Do Illinois RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Most state parks are electric-only with dump stations, but Illinois has a notable exception: Illinois Beach State Park offers full hookups including sewer, which is rare for a state-operated site. For reliable full hookups, the private parks are your best bet. MillPoint RV Park, Double J Campground, and Shawnee Forest Campground all provide water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric, with big-rig pull-throughs. Bubba J's near St. Louis advertises 85-foot pull-throughs with 4-inch sewer. Always confirm whether a site has sewer at the pad or just a shared dump station when you book, since most public sites are electric-only.
How much does RV camping cost in Illinois?
Illinois is an affordable Midwest state for RVers. State-park electric sites generally land in the $$ range, a solid value for the scenery at places like Starved Rock and Illinois Beach. Private full-hookup parks run in the $$$ band, where you pay for sewer, pools, laundry, and big-rig pull-throughs. The Shawnee Forest Campground, for example, runs around $40 a night for a full-hookup site. Dispersed camping in the Shawnee National Forest is free if you are self-contained. For most trips, mix affordable state parks with a private full-hookup stop when you need to dump and refill.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Illinois?
For summer weekends and fall color, book well ahead through the Illinois DNR reservation portal. Starved Rock, the busiest park in the state, fills fast for peak weekends, and lake parks like Illinois Beach and Rock Cut are popular all summer. Private parks book direct and also fill for holiday weekends. Your flexible option is the Shawnee National Forest in the south, where most campgrounds are first-come, first-served and do not take reservations, though the private Shawnee Forest Campground takes bookings about three days ahead. Midweek and shoulder-season trips are far easier to land.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Illinois?
Fall is the standout, with excellent color along the rivers and through the Shawnee hills, crisp comfortable days, and thinner crowds than summer. Spring is lovely too, especially at Starved Rock, where the seasonal waterfalls run their fullest from snowmelt and spring rain. Summer is peak for the lakes and beaches but can be hot and humid on the open prairie, so head to the shaded southern forest for relief. Winter closes most campgrounds. If we had to pick one window, a fall-foliage weekend at Starved Rock or in Shawnee country is hard to beat.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Illinois?
Yes, and the flat terrain makes it some of the easiest big-rig driving anywhere. The private parks lead for big rigs: MillPoint RV Park has pull-throughs designed for the largest coaches, Double J near Springfield is built for big rigs, and Bubba J's near St. Louis advertises 85-foot pull-throughs with full hookups. Among state parks, Starved Rock advertises big-rig-friendly electric sites and Rock Cut's Staghorn loop has concrete pads. There are no mountain grades to worry about, so route planning is mostly about tolls on the Chicago-area interstates rather than terrain.
Are there free or first-come boondocking options in Illinois?
Yes, mainly in the Shawnee National Forest across the southern tip of the state. The forest offers dispersed and primitive camping, and most of its campgrounds are first-come, first-served with no reservations. There are no hookups or services in the dispersed areas, so go in fully self-contained with fresh water and empty tanks. Outside the national forest, free options are limited in this largely agricultural and developed state, so most boondocking happens on those southern forest lands around Garden of the Gods and the bluff country. It is the prettiest, wildest camping Illinois offers.
Which Illinois state parks are best for RVers?
Starved Rock State Park is the crown jewel: the most visited park in Illinois, with 18 sandstone canyons and seasonal waterfalls on the Illinois River, plus big-rig-friendly electric sites and year-round access. Illinois Beach State Park in Zion is special for its Lake Michigan shoreline and its rare full-hookup sites with sewer. Rock Cut State Park near Rockford offers lakeside camping and fishing with concrete pads at the Staghorn Campground. All book through the Illinois DNR portal. These three cover the canyons, the lakeshore, and the northern lakes, the best of the state's public camping for RVers.
Can I camp near Starved Rock in an RV?
Yes. Starved Rock State Park Campground in Oglesby offers big-rig-friendly sites with electric hookups, sanitary dump stations, and drinking-water spigots, with year-round access. It is the most popular park in Illinois, set among 18 sandstone canyons with seasonal waterfalls along the Illinois River, so it books up fast for summer weekends and fall color. Reserve early through the Illinois DNR portal. If the park campground is full, private parks in the Illinois River valley and the East Peoria area, like MillPoint RV Park, give you a full-hookup base within reasonable driving distance of the canyons.
What is camping in the Shawnee National Forest like?
The Shawnee National Forest covers the forested, hilly southern tip of Illinois and offers the state's wildest camping. You can choose from nine forest campgrounds, two with electric hookups, plus dispersed camping in several areas, much of it first-come. The scenery is the draw: Garden of the Gods rock formations, sandstone bluffs, and quiet hardwood forest. The newest full-hookup option, Shawnee Forest Campground, has 60 RV sites with water, sewer, and electric and stays open year-round at around $40 a night. Expect mild weather, occasional flash floods in spring, and a much more rugged feel than the prairie parks up north.
Are Illinois campgrounds open in winter?
Most are not. The typical Illinois camping season runs from about April 1 through December 15, and the bulk of state parks and private campgrounds close or drop to limited services through the cold months. The exceptions include Starved Rock, which keeps year-round access, and the private Shawnee Forest Campground in the south, which operates year-round with full hookups. If you travel Illinois in winter, plan on those limited options, confirm they are open before arriving, and prepare for snow and hard freezes with heated hoses and tank insulation, since Illinois winters get genuinely cold.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
For developed state parks and private resorts in summer and fall, reserve. Starved Rock and the lake parks fill weeks ahead for peak weekends, and showing up without a booking on a July Saturday or a fall-color weekend usually means no site. Illinois state parks use the DNR reservation portal, and private parks book direct. Your show-up option is the Shawnee National Forest in the south, where most campgrounds are first-come and free or cheap. Midweek in spring or late fall, you have a decent shot at walk-in sites at developed parks, but never count on it for the headline destinations.
Is Illinois good for a beginner RV trip?
Very much so. The terrain is flat and the state is laced with interstates, so the driving is about as forgiving as RV travel gets, with no mountain passes or steep grades. Distances between the major parks are manageable, the state parks are well-run and affordable, and private full-hookup parks near Peoria, Springfield, and St. Louis give newer RVers a comfortable base. Start with a Starved Rock weekend, practice backing into an electric site, and build confidence fast. Just book the popular parks ahead for summer and fall, and watch the tolls on the Chicago-area interstates as you travel.
What is the highest-rated RV park in Illinois?
The highest-rated is Johnson Sauk Trail State Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.
All RV Parks in Illinois (656)
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RV Park





