RV Parks In Indiana
40.2672° N, 86.1349° W
Quick Overview
<p>Indiana is an easy, affordable place to point an RV, and it splits neatly into two kinds of camping. The public side is all about scenery and value: a strong <a href="https://www.in.gov/dnr/state-parks/" rel="nofollow">Indiana state-park system</a> with electric sites tucked into sandstone canyons, lakeshores, and rolling hardwood hills, plus the 202,814-acre Hoosier National Forest for free dispersed camping. The private side delivers the full hookups and big-rig room, concentrated near the metros and tourist corridors. Knowing which is which is the key to a smooth Hoosier trip.</p><p>On the public side, the headliners are genuinely good. Brown County State Park is the largest in the state, with 389 paved sites (358 with electric) set in hills that turn brilliant in October near the arts town of Nashville. Turkey Run offers 213 electric sites among sandstone ravines and hemlock groves, with some of the best hiking in Indiana. Indiana Dunes State Park puts you on the Lake Michigan shoreline with beach access and 134 sites that fit rigs up to 50-55 feet. Chain O' Lakes near Fort Wayne stands out for year-round access and full electric, water, and sewer at developed sites. All of them book through ReserveAmerica, generally up to six months ahead.</p><p>Most state parks here are electric-only, with an on-site dump station rather than sewer at the pad, so if you want true full hookups you go private. The good news is the private parks are strong. Cera Sports Park just outside Columbus runs 252 full-service sites; Eby's Pines is a family resort in Amish Country near Bristol; the Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield handles 40-foot rigs on level pads off I-70; and Muncie RV Resort sits along the White River with full-hookup pull-throughs. These are your go-to for bigger coaches and longer stays.</p><p>Reservations and hookups are the two decisions that shape an Indiana trip. State parks book six months out on ReserveAmerica with 2-night weekend and 3-night holiday minimums; the national forest is first-come and free; private parks book direct on their own sites. Hookups mean electric at most public parks and full water-sewer-electric at the private ones, so plan your dumping and fresh-water stops around that mix. Summer weekends and the mid-October fall-color stretch are the two demand peaks, and they fill the marquee parks fast.</p><p>The terrain is flat and interstate-rich, so the driving is forgiving even for newer RVers, with no mountain passes or steep grades to worry about. Distances between the major destinations are short, which makes Indiana an easy place to chain several stops together on one trip. 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 Indiana trip around your rig and the calendar.</p>
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Gear for Your Indiana RV Trip
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Getting Around Indiana by RV
Indiana is flat, central, and laced with interstates, which makes it some of the easiest big-rig driving in the country. I-65 runs the length of the state from Chicago through Indianapolis to Louisville. I-70 crosses east-west through the capital. I-69 heads northeast toward Fort Wayne, I-74 cuts the southeast, and I-94 skims the northwest near the Dunes. The one thing to watch is the I-80/90 Indiana Toll Road across the top of the state, which carries tolls.
Because the terrain is gentle, route planning here is about logistics rather than grades. There are no mountain passes, steep descents, or low-clearance mountain tunnels to sweat, so newer RVers can relax. Distances between the major destinations are short, and you can cross most of the state in a few hours, which makes Indiana a comfortable place to string several stops together on one trip.
Flying in and renting? Indianapolis is the main airport and the natural central hub, within easy reach of Brown County, Turkey Run, and the private metro resorts. Chicago, just over the line in Illinois, is the closest big hub for the northwest corner and the Indiana Dunes, and Louisville in Kentucky serves the southern part of the state. Pick the hub nearest the region you want, top off fuel before the rural stretches, and the rest is simple.
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Indiana 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 Indiana
<p>Indiana is friendly to an RV budget. State-park electric sites generally sit in the $$ range, which is a strong value given the scenery and the quality of the parks, from Lake Michigan beaches to sandstone canyons. Private full-hookup resorts land in the $$$ band, where you pay more for sewer at the site, big-rig room, and resort amenities like pools and lakes. Dispersed camping in Hoosier 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 and fall-color weekends.</p>
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Indiana by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
24F - 38F
Crowds: Low
Cold with occasional snow. Most campgrounds close or drop to reduced winter services; a few like Chain O' Lakes and the Buffalo Ridge area at Brown County stay open with limited amenities.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 65F
Crowds: Low
Campgrounds open late April with mild 50-75F days and wildflowers. Can be wet, but it is quiet and affordable before the summer humidity and crowds arrive. A good window before fall-color competition for sites.
Summer
Jun - Aug
65F - 86F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid, often into the upper 80s. Everything is open and state parks and lake sites book early for weekends. Beat the heat in the shaded southern limestone and cavern country.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42F - 64F
Crowds: High
The signature Indiana season. Mid-October to early November brings 40-65F days and famous color, especially around Brown County. Reserve fall-color weekends the day your booking window opens.
Explore Indiana
<p>A few things we have learned camping Indiana. First, the fall-color weekends in Brown County are the hottest tickets in the state, so be online at indianastateparks.reserveamerica.com the day your six-month window opens for mid-October dates, or you will be shut out. Second, remember that most Indiana state parks are electric-only: if you need sewer at the site, plan on a private park or budget time to use the on-site dump stations between hookup stays.</p><p>For free camping, Hoosier National Forest in the south-central part of the state allows no-permit dispersed sites as long as you stay at least 200 feet from trails, roads, and water. Go in fully self-contained with fresh water and empty tanks, because there are no services. In summer, beat the humidity by heading to that same southern limestone country, where the caverns and tree cover keep things cooler than the open farmland up north.</p><p>Finally, lean into how easy the driving is. With flat terrain and short distances, Indiana is a great place to build RV confidence or to chain together several short hops. Just mind the tolls on the northern I-80/90 route, watch for weekend and holiday minimum-night requirements at the state parks, and book the marquee parks early 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 Indiana
What are the best RV parks in Indiana?
It depends on whether you want public scenery or private full hookups. For state-park camping, Brown County (the largest park, with paved electric sites and famous fall color), Turkey Run (sandstone canyons and 213 electric sites), and Indiana Dunes (Lake Michigan beaches, sites to 50-55 feet) are the standouts. For full hookups and big rigs, the private parks win: Cera Sports Park near Columbus, Eby's Pines in Amish Country, the Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield, and Muncie RV Resort on the White River. We'd match the park to your rig and your route rather than chase a single best.
Do Indiana RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It splits along public versus private lines. Indiana state parks are mostly electric-only, with an on-site dump station rather than sewer at the site; Chain O' Lakes is a notable exception with electric, water, and sewer at developed sites. If you want full hookups, water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric at your pad, head to the private parks. Cera Sports Park, Eby's Pines, the Indianapolis KOA, and Muncie RV Resort all run full hookups with pull-through options. Always confirm whether a site has sewer or just a shared dump station when you book, because it varies.
How much does RV camping cost in Indiana?
Indiana is one of the more affordable Midwest states for RVers. State-park electric sites generally sit in the $$ range, a solid value for the scenery you get. Private full-hookup resorts land in the $$$ band, with more amenities and big-rig room. Dispersed camping in Hoosier National Forest is free if you are self-contained. For most trips, the math is simple: state parks for budget-friendly electric sites near the best scenery, private parks when you need full hookups or a long pull-through. Book direct at private parks to skip third-party fees and ask about weekly rates.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Indiana?
For summer weekends and fall color, as far ahead as you can. Indiana state parks book through ReserveAmerica at indianastateparks.reserveamerica.com, generally up to six months out (it varies six to twelve by park). The mid-October fall-color weekends at Brown County and the summer lake parks fill fast, so be online the day your window opens. There are 2-night minimums on weekends and 3-night minimums on holiday weekends. Private resorts book direct and also fill for peak weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season trips are far easier and you can often find sites a week or two out.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Indiana?
Fall is the headliner. From mid-October into early November, Indiana lights up with color, especially in the hills around Brown County and Nashville, with crisp 40-65F days that are perfect for hiking. Summer is peak for the lakes and beaches but can be hot and humid. Spring is quiet, green, and affordable, though it can be wet, and campgrounds open in late April. Winter closes most public camping. If you can only pick one window, aim for a mid-October weekend in the southern hills, just book it early.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Indiana?
Yes, and the flat terrain makes it easy driving. Indiana Dunes State Park handles sites up to 50-55 feet and Brown County's paved loops accommodate larger rigs, but some older state-park loops tilt small or heavily shaded, so check site length. The most reliable big-rig options are private full-hookup parks: the Indianapolis KOA has navigated 40-foot fifth wheels, and Cera Sports Park, Muncie RV Resort, and The Retreat at Hickory Hills near I-70 all offer long pull-through sites. The interstates are flat and rig-friendly, so route planning is more about tolls than mountain passes.
Are there free or first-come boondocking options in Indiana?
Yes, mainly in Hoosier National Forest in the south-central part of the state. Dispersed camping is allowed across most of the forest with no permit required, as long as you stay at least 200 feet from trails, roads, and water sources. There are no hookups or services out there, so arrive fully self-contained with fresh water and empty tanks. The forest spans 202,814 acres with limestone caverns and over 266 miles of trails. Outside the national forest, free options are limited in Indiana, so most boondocking happens on those forest lands.
Which Indiana state parks are best for RVers?
Brown County State Park is the giant: the largest park in the state, with 389 paved sites (358 electric) and the most celebrated fall color in Indiana near the arts town of Nashville. Turkey Run, with 213 electric sites among sandstone canyons and hemlock ravines, offers some of the best hiking. Indiana Dunes State Park puts you on Lake Michigan with beach access and sites that fit bigger rigs. Chain O' Lakes near Fort Wayne stands out for year-round access and full electric, water, and sewer at developed sites. All book through ReserveAmerica.
Can I camp near Indiana Dunes and Lake Michigan?
Yes. Indiana Dunes State Park has 134 RV sites with electric hookups, most fitting rigs up to 50-55 feet, set beside the towering dunes and beaches of the Lake Michigan shoreline. It sits right next to Indiana Dunes National Park, which protects 15 miles of shoreline near Chesterton in the northwest corner of the state. It is an easy big-rig drive off the I-80/90 toll road and I-94, and a popular summer base. Book early, because the combination of beach access and large sites makes it one of the most in-demand parks in Indiana.
What is fall color camping like in Brown County?
It is the marquee RV experience in Indiana. Brown County State Park sits in rolling, forested hills that turn brilliant orange and gold in mid-to-late October, and the nearby artist town of Nashville fills with leaf-peepers. The park's 389 paved sites, most with electric, book up fast for those October weekends, so reserve the day your six-month window opens. Expect crisp days in the 40s to 60s, busy trails, and a festive small-town atmosphere. It is worth the planning. For a quieter alternative, October Mountain-style forests across the state also color up, but Brown County is the classic.
Are Indiana campgrounds open in winter?
Most are not. The bulk of Indiana state parks and private campgrounds close or shift to reduced winter services from roughly November through March. A few state parks keep limited winter camping open, such as the Buffalo Ridge campground at Brown County with a single comfort station and water source, and Chain O' Lakes maintains year-round access. If you travel Indiana in winter, plan on those limited public options or year-round private parks, confirm they are open before arriving, and bring cold-weather gear like heated hoses and tank insulation for the freezing temperatures.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
For developed campgrounds in summer and fall, reserve. The popular state parks and private resorts fill weeks to months ahead for peak weekends, and showing up without a booking on a July Saturday or an October color weekend usually means no site. Indiana state parks use ReserveAmerica with roughly a six-month window and weekend minimums. Your show-up option is dispersed camping in Hoosier National Forest, which is first-come and free but offers no hookups. Midweek in spring or late fall, you have a decent shot at walk-in sites at developed parks too, but do not count on it for the headline destinations.
Is Indiana 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 easy as RV travel gets, with no mountain passes or steep grades to sweat. Distances between attractions are short, the state parks are well-run and affordable, and private full-hookup parks near Indianapolis and the metros give newer RVers a comfortable base. Start with a Brown County or Indiana Dunes weekend, practice backing into an electric site, and you will build confidence fast. Just book ahead for summer and fall, and watch the tolls on the northern I-80/90 route.
What are the best RV parks in Indiana?
It depends on whether you want public scenery or private full hookups. For state-park camping, Brown County (the largest park, with paved electric sites and famous fall color), Turkey Run (sandstone canyons and 213 electric sites), and Indiana Dunes (Lake Michigan beaches, sites to 50-55 feet) are the standouts. For full hookups and big rigs, the private parks win: Cera Sports Park near Columbus, Eby's Pines in Amish Country, the Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield, and Muncie RV Resort on the White River. We'd match the park to your rig and your route rather than chase a single best.
Do Indiana RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It splits along public versus private lines. Indiana state parks are mostly electric-only, with an on-site dump station rather than sewer at the site; Chain O' Lakes is a notable exception with electric, water, and sewer at developed sites. If you want full hookups, water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric at your pad, head to the private parks. Cera Sports Park, Eby's Pines, the Indianapolis KOA, and Muncie RV Resort all run full hookups with pull-through options. Always confirm whether a site has sewer or just a shared dump station when you book, because it varies.
How much does RV camping cost in Indiana?
Indiana is one of the more affordable Midwest states for RVers. State-park electric sites generally sit in the $$ range, a solid value for the scenery you get. Private full-hookup resorts land in the $$$ band, with more amenities and big-rig room. Dispersed camping in Hoosier National Forest is free if you are self-contained. For most trips, the math is simple: state parks for budget-friendly electric sites near the best scenery, private parks when you need full hookups or a long pull-through. Book direct at private parks to skip third-party fees and ask about weekly rates.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Indiana?
For summer weekends and fall color, as far ahead as you can. Indiana state parks book through ReserveAmerica at indianastateparks.reserveamerica.com, generally up to six months out (it varies six to twelve by park). The mid-October fall-color weekends at Brown County and the summer lake parks fill fast, so be online the day your window opens. There are 2-night minimums on weekends and 3-night minimums on holiday weekends. Private resorts book direct and also fill for peak weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season trips are far easier and you can often find sites a week or two out.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Indiana?
Fall is the headliner. From mid-October into early November, Indiana lights up with color, especially in the hills around Brown County and Nashville, with crisp 40-65F days that are perfect for hiking. Summer is peak for the lakes and beaches but can be hot and humid. Spring is quiet, green, and affordable, though it can be wet, and campgrounds open in late April. Winter closes most public camping. If you can only pick one window, aim for a mid-October weekend in the southern hills, just book it early.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Indiana?
Yes, and the flat terrain makes it easy driving. Indiana Dunes State Park handles sites up to 50-55 feet and Brown County's paved loops accommodate larger rigs, but some older state-park loops tilt small or heavily shaded, so check site length. The most reliable big-rig options are private full-hookup parks: the Indianapolis KOA has navigated 40-foot fifth wheels, and Cera Sports Park, Muncie RV Resort, and The Retreat at Hickory Hills near I-70 all offer long pull-through sites. The interstates are flat and rig-friendly, so route planning is more about tolls than mountain passes.
Are there free or first-come boondocking options in Indiana?
Yes, mainly in Hoosier National Forest in the south-central part of the state. Dispersed camping is allowed across most of the forest with no permit required, as long as you stay at least 200 feet from trails, roads, and water sources. There are no hookups or services out there, so arrive fully self-contained with fresh water and empty tanks. The forest spans 202,814 acres with limestone caverns and over 266 miles of trails. Outside the national forest, free options are limited in Indiana, so most boondocking happens on those forest lands.
Which Indiana state parks are best for RVers?
Brown County State Park is the giant: the largest park in the state, with 389 paved sites (358 electric) and the most celebrated fall color in Indiana near the arts town of Nashville. Turkey Run, with 213 electric sites among sandstone canyons and hemlock ravines, offers some of the best hiking. Indiana Dunes State Park puts you on Lake Michigan with beach access and sites that fit bigger rigs. Chain O' Lakes near Fort Wayne stands out for year-round access and full electric, water, and sewer at developed sites. All book through ReserveAmerica.
Can I camp near Indiana Dunes and Lake Michigan?
Yes. Indiana Dunes State Park has 134 RV sites with electric hookups, most fitting rigs up to 50-55 feet, set beside the towering dunes and beaches of the Lake Michigan shoreline. It sits right next to Indiana Dunes National Park, which protects 15 miles of shoreline near Chesterton in the northwest corner of the state. It is an easy big-rig drive off the I-80/90 toll road and I-94, and a popular summer base. Book early, because the combination of beach access and large sites makes it one of the most in-demand parks in Indiana.
What is fall color camping like in Brown County?
It is the marquee RV experience in Indiana. Brown County State Park sits in rolling, forested hills that turn brilliant orange and gold in mid-to-late October, and the nearby artist town of Nashville fills with leaf-peepers. The park's 389 paved sites, most with electric, book up fast for those October weekends, so reserve the day your six-month window opens. Expect crisp days in the 40s to 60s, busy trails, and a festive small-town atmosphere. It is worth the planning. For a quieter alternative, October Mountain-style forests across the state also color up, but Brown County is the classic.
Are Indiana campgrounds open in winter?
Most are not. The bulk of Indiana state parks and private campgrounds close or shift to reduced winter services from roughly November through March. A few state parks keep limited winter camping open, such as the Buffalo Ridge campground at Brown County with a single comfort station and water source, and Chain O' Lakes maintains year-round access. If you travel Indiana in winter, plan on those limited public options or year-round private parks, confirm they are open before arriving, and bring cold-weather gear like heated hoses and tank insulation for the freezing temperatures.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
For developed campgrounds in summer and fall, reserve. The popular state parks and private resorts fill weeks to months ahead for peak weekends, and showing up without a booking on a July Saturday or an October color weekend usually means no site. Indiana state parks use ReserveAmerica with roughly a six-month window and weekend minimums. Your show-up option is dispersed camping in Hoosier National Forest, which is first-come and free but offers no hookups. Midweek in spring or late fall, you have a decent shot at walk-in sites at developed parks too, but do not count on it for the headline destinations.
Is Indiana 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 easy as RV travel gets, with no mountain passes or steep grades to sweat. Distances between attractions are short, the state parks are well-run and affordable, and private full-hookup parks near Indianapolis and the metros give newer RVers a comfortable base. Start with a Brown County or Indiana Dunes weekend, practice backing into an electric site, and you will build confidence fast. Just book ahead for summer and fall, and watch the tolls on the northern I-80/90 route.
What is the highest-rated RV park in Indiana?
The highest-rated is Shades State Park with a rating of 4.8/5 stars.
All RV Parks in Indiana (490)
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RV Park






