RV Parks In Farmington, Maine
44.6706° N, 70.1512° W
Quick Overview
Farmington is the service hub of western Maine's lakes and mountains, the Franklin County seat and home of the University of Maine at Farmington, sitting on the Sandy River where Route 4, Route 27, and US-2 meet. For RVers, the town itself is a comfortable, well-stocked base, but the real draw is what is a short drive north: the Rangeley Lakes region and the Sugarloaf and Carrabassett Valley high country. This is cool-summer, big-foliage New England camping, and Farmington is where you fuel up, shop, and stage before heading into the hills.
You get a genuine public-and-private mix here. Right in town, Troll Valley Campground on Red Schoolhouse Road runs about 36 sites with RV hookups plus a lodge, store, and an 18-hole disc golf course. For the lakes, head north on Route 4: Rangeley Lake State Park has 50 sites with 8 water-and-electric hookups on the water, and Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground offers full sewer hookups on 26 RV sites with 20, 30, and 50-amp service, which makes it the pick for a bigger rig that wants full hookups. Up the Route 27 corridor toward Sugarloaf, Deer Farm Camps in Kingfield and Cathedral Pines in Stratton add more options near the mountains and Flagstaff Lake.
The thing to plan around is the short, intense season. Western Maine camping really runs from late spring through early fall, the state-park and lakeside campgrounds close once winter sets in, and blackflies make May and early June buggy near the water. The payoff is some of New England's best fall foliage and a summer full of lake fishing, paddling, and 50-plus miles of mountain-bike trails in Carrabassett Valley. Bigger rigs do fine on Routes 4, 27, and US-2, but the older lakeside loops tilt small, so match your rig to the campground. The sections below sort out public versus private, hookups and reservations, costs, and when to come.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Farmington
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All Dump Stations Near Farmington
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Westwoods Mobile Home Village | 1.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Troll Valley Camp Ground | 2.6 mi | 3.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Bluffs Campground | 11.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mt. Blue State Park | 12.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dummer's Beach | 14.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dummer's Beach Campground | 14.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Quiet Forest | 14.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mt Blue State Park Campground | 15.0 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Eagle Nest RV Park Campground | 15.5 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dude's Ranch Campground | 15.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Westwoods Mobile Home Village
1.8 miTroll Valley Camp Ground
2.6 miThe Bluffs Campground
11.6 miMt. Blue State Park
12.4 miDummer's Beach
14.0 miDummer's Beach Campground
14.0 miThe Quiet Forest
14.7 miMt Blue State Park Campground
15.0 miEagle Nest RV Park Campground
15.5 miDude's Ranch Campground
15.5 miTraveling to Farmington by RV
Farmington is an easy RV drive. From the south, the standard route is I-95 north to Auburn, then Route 4 north into Farmington, with Route 27 continuing north through Kingfield to Carrabassett Valley and Sugarloaf. US-2 runs east-west through town as well. These are good two-lane mountain roads that a 35 to 40-foot rig handles fine, though you pick up grades and curves as you climb north toward the resort and the lakes. Auburn and Lewiston sit about 35 miles south, Portland is roughly 1.5 hours, and Bangor is off to the northeast, so Farmington is well placed for a western Maine loop.
Once you are based here, almost everything is a day trip north or west. Rangeley and its chain of lakes are up Route 4, Sugarloaf and the Carrabassett Valley trail network are about 35 miles north on Route 27, and Mt Blue State Park near Weld is a short run west. Farmington itself is the place to handle the practical stuff, with a full range of stores, fuel, and restaurants in the college town, so stock up here before heading into the mountains where services thin out. Keep the big rig at camp and explore the lakes and trails in your tow vehicle.
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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 Farmington, Maine, 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 Farmington
Western Maine camping splits by ownership, and Farmington is a value base compared with the coast or the resort areas. The private parks in and around town and the lakes generally run in the $$ range, roughly the mid-$30s to upper-$40s per night in summer for hookup sites, with full-hookup lakefront spots like those at Cupsuptic Lake at the higher end. The in-town Troll Valley Campground is a budget-friendly, full-service option if you want to stay near services rather than on a lake.
The public option is the cheaper one: Rangeley Lake State Park sits at the $ level for its water-and-electric and basic sites, plus the Maine State Parks reservation fee, and it puts you right on the water. Rates peak in July, August, and the fall-foliage weekends, so a June or post-Columbus-Day stay saves money where parks are still open. Our honest take: book the state park if you can live with limited hookups and want lakeside scenery on a budget, and pay for a private full-hookup park only when you need 50-amp power and sewer for a bigger rig. Midweek stays are consistently cheaper than weekends.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Farmington by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
9F - 28F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy; the lake and state-park campgrounds are closed. Sugarloaf is a major ski destination, but RV camping in the area shuts down for the season.
Spring
Mar - May
33F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Mud season and fierce blackflies near the water in May; many campgrounds open mid-to-late May. Cool, quiet, and good value, but come prepared for bugs and chilly nights.
Summer
Jun - Aug
55F - 80F
Crowds: High
Warm days and cool nights; lakes and the Carrabassett Valley trails are busy. Book Rangeley Lake State Park and full-hookup lake sites ahead for weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
40F - 62F
Crowds: High
Spectacular foliage from late September into early October draws crowds across western Maine; book color weekends well ahead. Crisp days, cold nights, many parks open through early October.
Explore the Farmington Area
Use Farmington as your resupply point. It is the closest full-service town, about 35 miles south of Carrabassett Valley, so top off fuel, propane, and groceries here before heading up to the lakes or the mountains where stores are scarce. If you want guaranteed full hookups for a bigger rig, Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground in the Rangeley region offers 50-amp full-hookup sites, while Troll Valley keeps you right in town.
Time your trip around the season and the bugs. Blackflies are fierce near the water in May and into June, so unless you are chasing spring fishing, July onward is more comfortable. Book Rangeley Lake State Park and any fall-foliage weekend well ahead through the Maine State Parks system, since late September and early October color draws crowds across western Maine. Summer is prime for lake fishing and paddling and for the 50-plus miles of mountain-bike trails in Carrabassett Valley, and the Carrabassett River runs cold and clear for brook-trout fly fishing. Pack layers either way; even midsummer nights get cool in the mountains, and a working furnace is worth checking before a shoulder-season trip.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Farmington
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Farmington, Maine?
Right in Farmington, Troll Valley Campground on Red Schoolhouse Road is the in-town pick, with about 36 sites, RV hookups, a lodge, a store, and an 18-hole disc golf course. For lakeside camping, head north on Route 4 to Rangeley Lake State Park, a public campground with 50 sites and 8 water-and-electric hookups, or Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground, which has full sewer hookups on 26 RV sites with 50-amp service. Toward Sugarloaf on Route 27, Deer Farm Camps in Kingfield and Cathedral Pines in Stratton add more mountain-area options. Most RVers base in town or on a lake depending on hookups.
Do Farmington-area campgrounds have full hookups?
Some do, especially in the Rangeley Lakes region. Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground offers full sewer hookups on its RV sites with 20, 30, and 50-amp service, which makes it the best bet for a bigger rig that needs full service. Troll Valley Campground in Farmington has RV hookups as well. On the public side, Rangeley Lake State Park provides water and electric on 8 of its 50 sites plus a dump station, but not full sewer hookups. So if you require full hookups and 50-amp power, aim for a private lakeside park like Cupsuptic; if water and electric is enough, the state park works and puts you right on the water.
How much does RV camping cost around Farmington?
Farmington is a value base. Private parks in and around town and the lakes generally run in the mid-$30s to upper-$40s per night in summer for hookup sites, with full-hookup lakefront spots like Cupsuptic Lake at the higher end. The in-town Troll Valley Campground is a budget-friendly full-service option. The cheapest choice is the public Rangeley Lake State Park, which sits at the lower end plus the Maine State Parks reservation fee. Rates peak in July, August, and the fall-foliage weekends, so a June or late-season stay saves money. Booking midweek instead of weekends is the easiest way to cut your nightly cost.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite near Farmington?
For summer weekends and especially fall foliage, book well ahead. Rangeley Lake State Park reserves through the Maine State Parks system and its lakeside sites fill fast in July, August, and the late-September color season, so reserve in spring if your dates are fixed. The full-hookup private parks like Cupsuptic Lake also book ahead in peak season. Midweek and shoulder-season stays in June or after the foliage rush are far easier, and you can sometimes find sites a week or two out. Western Maine's camping season is short and concentrated, which makes the good weekends competitive, so plan early for anything in the lakes or mountains.
When is the best time to RV camp in Farmington?
July through early October is the sweet spot. Midsummer brings warm days, cool nights, and prime lake and trail conditions, while late September into early October delivers some of New England's best fall foliage, though that draws crowds and books up. Our advice is to avoid May and early June unless you are chasing spring fishing, because blackflies are fierce near the water then. Winter shuts the lake and state-park campgrounds down entirely, even though Sugarloaf is a major ski area. For the best balance of weather, open campgrounds, and lighter crowds, aim for July, August, or the shoulder right after the foliage peak.
Can big rigs camp around Farmington?
Yes, with some site selection. The main roads, Routes 4 and 27 and US-2, are good two-lane mountain highways that a 35 to 40-foot rig handles fine, picking up grades as you climb north toward Sugarloaf and the lakes. For full hookups and easier big-rig access, Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground offers 50-amp full-hookup sites. The older lakeside loops and Rangeley Lake State Park tilt toward smaller sites, so confirm length before booking if you are in a bigger rig. As always in the mountains, stage the rig at a campground and use your tow vehicle for the narrow lake roads and the drive up to Carrabassett Valley.
Are there public or state-park campgrounds near Farmington?
Yes. The closest is Rangeley Lake State Park, reached from Farmington by heading north on Route 4, with 50 sites including 8 with water and electric, a dump station, and a lakeside setting, all booked through the Maine State Parks reservation system. Mt Blue State Park near Weld, west of Farmington, is another public option with a campground on Webb Lake. Western Maine has a thinner public system than some regions, so private lakeside parks fill out the rest of the picture. If you want the public, lower-cost experience on the water, Rangeley Lake State Park is the go-to, but reserve early because its limited hookup sites are popular all summer.
What is there to do near Farmington in an RV?
Farmington is the gateway to western Maine's lakes and mountains. North on Route 4 is the Rangeley Lakes region, a chain of big lakes for fishing, paddling, and lakeside camping. About 35 miles north on Route 27 is Sugarloaf and Carrabassett Valley, a ski resort that becomes a summer hiking and mountain-biking hub with more than 50 miles of trails, plus brook-trout fly fishing on the Carrabassett River and hiking in the Bigelow Range and Crocker Mountain. Mt Blue State Park near Weld adds lake and hiking access west of town. Farmington itself is a pleasant college town on the Sandy River with restaurants and shops for a rest day.
Is Farmington a good base for visiting Sugarloaf and Carrabassett Valley?
It is a practical one. Sugarloaf and the Carrabassett Valley trail system are about 35 miles north of Farmington up Route 27 through Kingfield, and Farmington is the closest town with a full range of services, so many RVers stock up and even base here, then day-trip to the mountain. In summer Carrabassett Valley offers more than 50 miles of mountain-bike trails and excellent hiking in the Bigelow Range, and there are camping options closer to the mountain like Deer Farm Camps in Kingfield and Cathedral Pines in Stratton if you want to be nearer the action. For a longer stay with reliable services and shopping, Farmington is hard to beat as a base.
Are Farmington campgrounds open in winter?
No. The lake and state-park campgrounds in and around Farmington are seasonal and close once winter arrives, typically running from late spring through early or mid-October. Western Maine winters are cold and snowy, and while Sugarloaf is a major ski destination, there is no real RV camping in the area in the off-season. If you want to visit in winter you would need to look at lodging rather than camping, or find one of the rare year-round parks elsewhere in Maine and come fully prepared for cold-weather RVing. For most travelers, Farmington and the surrounding lakes and mountains are a spring-through-fall destination, with fall foliage as the grand finale.
Do I need to worry about bugs when camping near Farmington?
Yes, plan for them in spring and early summer. Western Maine near lakes and rivers gets fierce blackflies in May and into June, and mosquitoes are around through the warm months, especially near the water at dusk. By midsummer the blackflies ease off, and breezier lakeside and higher sites are more comfortable. Bring strong repellent, consider a screen room or screened awning for the campsite, and pick a site with some air movement rather than one tucked deep in still woods. By late summer and fall the bug pressure drops sharply, which is one more reason the foliage season is such a pleasant time to camp in this part of Maine.
Is fishing good around Farmington and Rangeley?
Very. The Rangeley Lakes region north of Farmington is famous for landlocked salmon and brook trout, and the chain of lakes including Rangeley, Mooselookmeguntic, and Cupsuptic draws anglers all season. Closer to the mountains, the Carrabassett River offers cold, clear water and excellent fly fishing for brook trout. Many of the campgrounds here sit right on the water, so you can fish from camp or launch a boat or kayak easily. Pick up a Maine fishing license before you go, check current regulations since some waters have special rules, and ask locally about what is biting. For a lot of RVers, the fishing is the whole reason to camp in this region.
Where should I get fuel and groceries near Farmington?
Farmington itself is the answer. As the Franklin County seat and a college town, it has the fullest range of services in the area, including grocery stores, fuel suitable for a big rig, and restaurants, and it sits about 35 miles south of Carrabassett Valley. Stock up here before heading north to Rangeley or Sugarloaf or west to Mt Blue, because services thin out quickly once you leave town and you will not want to backtrack on the mountain roads. Smaller towns like Kingfield and Rangeley can cover basic top-up needs, but plan your main resupply around Farmington to keep your trip into the lakes and mountains smooth.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Farmington, Maine?
Right in Farmington, Troll Valley Campground on Red Schoolhouse Road is the in-town pick, with about 36 sites, RV hookups, a lodge, a store, and an 18-hole disc golf course. For lakeside camping, head north on Route 4 to Rangeley Lake State Park, a public campground with 50 sites and 8 water-and-electric hookups, or Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground, which has full sewer hookups on 26 RV sites with 50-amp service. Toward Sugarloaf on Route 27, Deer Farm Camps in Kingfield and Cathedral Pines in Stratton add more mountain-area options. Most RVers base in town or on a lake depending on hookups.
Do Farmington-area campgrounds have full hookups?
Some do, especially in the Rangeley Lakes region. Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground offers full sewer hookups on its RV sites with 20, 30, and 50-amp service, which makes it the best bet for a bigger rig that needs full service. Troll Valley Campground in Farmington has RV hookups as well. On the public side, Rangeley Lake State Park provides water and electric on 8 of its 50 sites plus a dump station, but not full sewer hookups. So if you require full hookups and 50-amp power, aim for a private lakeside park like Cupsuptic; if water and electric is enough, the state park works and puts you right on the water.
How much does RV camping cost around Farmington?
Farmington is a value base. Private parks in and around town and the lakes generally run in the mid-$30s to upper-$40s per night in summer for hookup sites, with full-hookup lakefront spots like Cupsuptic Lake at the higher end. The in-town Troll Valley Campground is a budget-friendly full-service option. The cheapest choice is the public Rangeley Lake State Park, which sits at the lower end plus the Maine State Parks reservation fee. Rates peak in July, August, and the fall-foliage weekends, so a June or late-season stay saves money. Booking midweek instead of weekends is the easiest way to cut your nightly cost.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite near Farmington?
For summer weekends and especially fall foliage, book well ahead. Rangeley Lake State Park reserves through the Maine State Parks system and its lakeside sites fill fast in July, August, and the late-September color season, so reserve in spring if your dates are fixed. The full-hookup private parks like Cupsuptic Lake also book ahead in peak season. Midweek and shoulder-season stays in June or after the foliage rush are far easier, and you can sometimes find sites a week or two out. Western Maine's camping season is short and concentrated, which makes the good weekends competitive, so plan early for anything in the lakes or mountains.
When is the best time to RV camp in Farmington?
July through early October is the sweet spot. Midsummer brings warm days, cool nights, and prime lake and trail conditions, while late September into early October delivers some of New England's best fall foliage, though that draws crowds and books up. Our advice is to avoid May and early June unless you are chasing spring fishing, because blackflies are fierce near the water then. Winter shuts the lake and state-park campgrounds down entirely, even though Sugarloaf is a major ski area. For the best balance of weather, open campgrounds, and lighter crowds, aim for July, August, or the shoulder right after the foliage peak.
Can big rigs camp around Farmington?
Yes, with some site selection. The main roads, Routes 4 and 27 and US-2, are good two-lane mountain highways that a 35 to 40-foot rig handles fine, picking up grades as you climb north toward Sugarloaf and the lakes. For full hookups and easier big-rig access, Cupsuptic Lake Park and Campground offers 50-amp full-hookup sites. The older lakeside loops and Rangeley Lake State Park tilt toward smaller sites, so confirm length before booking if you are in a bigger rig. As always in the mountains, stage the rig at a campground and use your tow vehicle for the narrow lake roads and the drive up to Carrabassett Valley.
Are there public or state-park campgrounds near Farmington?
Yes. The closest is Rangeley Lake State Park, reached from Farmington by heading north on Route 4, with 50 sites including 8 with water and electric, a dump station, and a lakeside setting, all booked through the Maine State Parks reservation system. Mt Blue State Park near Weld, west of Farmington, is another public option with a campground on Webb Lake. Western Maine has a thinner public system than some regions, so private lakeside parks fill out the rest of the picture. If you want the public, lower-cost experience on the water, Rangeley Lake State Park is the go-to, but reserve early because its limited hookup sites are popular all summer.
What is there to do near Farmington in an RV?
Farmington is the gateway to western Maine's lakes and mountains. North on Route 4 is the Rangeley Lakes region, a chain of big lakes for fishing, paddling, and lakeside camping. About 35 miles north on Route 27 is Sugarloaf and Carrabassett Valley, a ski resort that becomes a summer hiking and mountain-biking hub with more than 50 miles of trails, plus brook-trout fly fishing on the Carrabassett River and hiking in the Bigelow Range and Crocker Mountain. Mt Blue State Park near Weld adds lake and hiking access west of town. Farmington itself is a pleasant college town on the Sandy River with restaurants and shops for a rest day.
Is Farmington a good base for visiting Sugarloaf and Carrabassett Valley?
It is a practical one. Sugarloaf and the Carrabassett Valley trail system are about 35 miles north of Farmington up Route 27 through Kingfield, and Farmington is the closest town with a full range of services, so many RVers stock up and even base here, then day-trip to the mountain. In summer Carrabassett Valley offers more than 50 miles of mountain-bike trails and excellent hiking in the Bigelow Range, and there are camping options closer to the mountain like Deer Farm Camps in Kingfield and Cathedral Pines in Stratton if you want to be nearer the action. For a longer stay with reliable services and shopping, Farmington is hard to beat as a base.
Are Farmington campgrounds open in winter?
No. The lake and state-park campgrounds in and around Farmington are seasonal and close once winter arrives, typically running from late spring through early or mid-October. Western Maine winters are cold and snowy, and while Sugarloaf is a major ski destination, there is no real RV camping in the area in the off-season. If you want to visit in winter you would need to look at lodging rather than camping, or find one of the rare year-round parks elsewhere in Maine and come fully prepared for cold-weather RVing. For most travelers, Farmington and the surrounding lakes and mountains are a spring-through-fall destination, with fall foliage as the grand finale.
Do I need to worry about bugs when camping near Farmington?
Yes, plan for them in spring and early summer. Western Maine near lakes and rivers gets fierce blackflies in May and into June, and mosquitoes are around through the warm months, especially near the water at dusk. By midsummer the blackflies ease off, and breezier lakeside and higher sites are more comfortable. Bring strong repellent, consider a screen room or screened awning for the campsite, and pick a site with some air movement rather than one tucked deep in still woods. By late summer and fall the bug pressure drops sharply, which is one more reason the foliage season is such a pleasant time to camp in this part of Maine.
Is fishing good around Farmington and Rangeley?
Very. The Rangeley Lakes region north of Farmington is famous for landlocked salmon and brook trout, and the chain of lakes including Rangeley, Mooselookmeguntic, and Cupsuptic draws anglers all season. Closer to the mountains, the Carrabassett River offers cold, clear water and excellent fly fishing for brook trout. Many of the campgrounds here sit right on the water, so you can fish from camp or launch a boat or kayak easily. Pick up a Maine fishing license before you go, check current regulations since some waters have special rules, and ask locally about what is biting. For a lot of RVers, the fishing is the whole reason to camp in this region.
Where should I get fuel and groceries near Farmington?
Farmington itself is the answer. As the Franklin County seat and a college town, it has the fullest range of services in the area, including grocery stores, fuel suitable for a big rig, and restaurants, and it sits about 35 miles south of Carrabassett Valley. Stock up here before heading north to Rangeley or Sugarloaf or west to Mt Blue, because services thin out quickly once you leave town and you will not want to backtrack on the mountain roads. Smaller towns like Kingfield and Rangeley can cover basic top-up needs, but plan your main resupply around Farmington to keep your trip into the lakes and mountains smooth.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Farmington?
The highest-rated station is Mount Blue State Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Farmington?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Farmington.
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