RV Parks In Freeport, Maine
43.8570° N, 70.1031° W
Quick Overview
Freeport, Maine is best known for L.L.Bean and a village full of outlet shops, but for RVers it is also a genuinely good coastal camping base. Sitting right on I-295 about 18 miles north of Portland, it gives you a rare mix of public and private campgrounds within a few miles of downtown, plus easy access to Casco Bay, state parks, and the wider midcoast. That variety is exactly what you want when you are deciding where to park the rig for a few days of shopping and Maine coast.
The headliner is Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, the large former Recompence Shore park, with full and partial hookups, big-rig pull-throughs, a dump station, and sites right on the water beside a working organic farm. For quieter full hookups, Cedar Haven Campground sits about 2.5 miles out with a private lake and a family feel, and Freeport Village Campground keeps you close to the shops. On the public side, the Town of Freeport runs the oceanfront Winslow Memorial Park, and Bradbury Mountain State Park in nearby Pownal adds an affordable no-hookup option with a dump station and a quick summit hike.
Reservations matter here. Summer weekends and the fall foliage stretch book months ahead at the oceanfront parks, so plan early or aim for the quieter June and September shoulder seasons. Getting in is simple off I-295 at Exits 20 and 22, with US-1 running through the village, though big rigs should stick to the interstate rather than the congested downtown streets. Whether you want a waterfront site, a budget state-park night, or full hookups close to the outlets, Freeport fits the trip. Big rigs do best at Wolfe's Neck or Cedar Haven, while the town and state-park sites tilt toward smaller rigs, so match the campground to your length before you book and you will settle in without a tight turn or a too-short pad.
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All Dump Stations Near Freeport
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freeport Village Campground | 1.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Cedar Haven Family Campground | 2.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping | 2.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Desert Of Maine Campground | 2.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Blueberry Pond Campground | 4.1 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Durham Leisure Campground | 5.5 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Freeport / Durham Koa Holiday | 5.6 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| White's Beach & Campground, Inc. | 5.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Meadowbrook Camping Area | 13.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Pinewood Acres Mobile Home Park | 14.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Freeport Village Campground
1.8 miCedar Haven Family Campground
2.1 miWolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping
2.5 miDesert Of Maine Campground
2.6 miBlueberry Pond Campground
4.1 miDurham Leisure Campground
5.5 miFreeport / Durham Koa Holiday
5.6 miWhite's Beach & Campground, Inc.
5.7 miMeadowbrook Camping Area
13.3 miPinewood Acres Mobile Home Park
14.8 miTraveling to Freeport by RV
Freeport sits right on I-295, the main coastal route north from Portland, so getting to the campgrounds is easy. Exits 20 and 22 drop you into town, and US-1 runs through the village center. From the interstate, Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, Cedar Haven, the town's Winslow Memorial Park, and the shops are all short drives on paved local roads. Big rigs should use I-295 and follow each park's directions to its entrance rather than threading the narrow, congested downtown in peak season.
For supplies and fly-and-rent trips, Portland is about 18 miles south with full services and the Portland Jetport. Brunswick and the midcoast are a short hop north on I-295 and US-1 if you want to day-trip up the coast. Freeport itself has groceries, fuel, and plenty of dining, so resupply is never far. Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park, the Desert of Maine, and South Freeport Harbor are all within a few miles, making the village a compact, convenient base for exploring on foot or by car.
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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 Freeport, 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 Freeport
Expect coastal-Maine prices in peak season. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Haven generally run about thirty-five to sixty dollars a night depending on hookups and the time of year, and the oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck sit at the higher end for the Casco Bay location. Reservations, holidays, and foliage weekends push rates up, so the calendar matters as much as the park you pick.
Public camping is the value play. Bradbury Mountain State Park is the budget option at a low Maine State Parks nightly rate, though it has no hookups, and the town-run Winslow Memorial Park lands in the moderate range with limited electric and water and a great oceanfront setting. To keep costs down, camp midweek, lean on the public parks when you do not need full hookups, and travel in June or September instead of the July-to-foliage peak. Combine your shopping and dining with a campground that lets you walk into the village, and you save on parking and gas too.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Freeport by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
15F - 32F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy on the Maine coast. The campgrounds are closed for the season, so winter is not an RV camping window here, even though the L.L.Bean flagship stays open around the clock downtown.
Spring
Mar - May
38F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Cool and often muddy as the coast thaws. Most parks open in mid-May, and black flies arrive late spring, but you will find open sites and lower rates before the summer rush begins.
Summer
Jun - Aug
58F - 78F
Crowds: High
Warm days, cool nights, and the prime coastal season. Oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck book months out, so reserve early and expect a busy, lively village full of shoppers and beachgoers.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42F - 62F
Crowds: High
Crisp air and foliage make September and early October a favorite, and crowds stay strong. Reserve ahead, since many campgrounds close by mid-October as nights turn cold.
Explore the Freeport Area
A few things we have learned camping Freeport. Book the oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck months ahead for summer and foliage weekends, because they go first and the town fills up fast. Use your campground as a base and walk, bike, or shuttle into the village to skip the downtown parking crunch, which gets ugly in July and August. If your dates are flexible, the June and September shoulder seasons are quieter, cheaper, and still beautiful on the coast.
Pack for cool nights even in midsummer, since the Maine coast drops into the fifties after dark, and bring bug protection in late spring when black flies are out. For a non-driving day, mix the outlets with the shoreline trails at Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park or a quick climb up Bradbury Mountain for Casco Bay views. And if you want lobster and a working harbor, drive down to South Freeport rather than eating in the busy village center. Confirm your park's open dates, since most close by mid-October.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Freeport
What are the best RV parks in Freeport, Maine?
Freeport punches above its size for camping. The standout is Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, the large former Recompence Shore park, with full and partial hookups, big-rig pull-throughs, and sites right on Casco Bay beside a working organic farm. Cedar Haven Campground, about 2.5 miles from downtown, is a quieter family park with full hookups and a private lake. For public camping, the Town of Freeport runs the oceanfront Winslow Memorial Park, and Bradbury Mountain State Park in nearby Pownal adds a no-hookup state-park option. Most travelers pick Wolfe's Neck for the coast or Cedar Haven for quiet full hookups.
Do Freeport RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Some do, and it varies by park. Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping offers full and partial hookups inland with water and 30-amp electric, plus a dump station, though its prized oceanfront sites are dry camping. Cedar Haven Campground has full-hookup sites, and Freeport Village Campground markets full hookups close to downtown. On the public side, Winslow Memorial Park has only limited electric and water on some sites and no full hookups, and Bradbury Mountain State Park has none but does have a dump station. If you need full hookups, book Wolfe's Neck or Cedar Haven and confirm sewer at your specific site.
How much does RV camping cost in Freeport, Maine?
Coastal Maine is not cheap in summer, so plan for it. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Haven generally run about thirty-five to sixty dollars a night depending on hookups and season, and oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck price at the higher end for the Casco Bay setting. Public options are friendlier on the wallet: the state park at Bradbury Mountain is the budget pick at a low nightly rate, and the town-run Winslow Park lands in the moderate range. Rates peak in July, August, and foliage season, so camp midweek or in the shoulder months to save real money.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Freeport?
For summer and fall, book months out. Freeport is a major coastal destination anchored by L.L.Bean and the outlets, so the oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck fill quickly for July and August weekends and for the fall foliage stretch into early October. Cedar Haven and Winslow Park also tighten up on summer weekends. If your dates are flexible, midweek and the June or September shoulder seasons are far easier to book and cheaper. The lower-demand state-park sites at Bradbury Mountain can sometimes be had closer in, especially midweek.
When is the best time to RV camp in Freeport, Maine?
Summer and early fall are the windows. From late June through August you get warm days, cool nights, and full village life, though it is the busiest and priciest stretch. Our favorite is September into early October, when the foliage turns, the air is crisp, and the crowds ease a little, but reserve ahead because many parks close by mid-October. Spring opens in mid-May with cooler, muddier conditions and black flies, while winter is out entirely since the campgrounds close, even though downtown stays active year-round.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Freeport?
Yes, at the right parks. Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping is the most big-rig friendly, with many pull-through sites that handle 40-foot rigs, and Cedar Haven advertises spacious sites, though you should call to confirm your length and any low-clearance approaches. The public options are tighter: Winslow Memorial Park is an older town campground better suited to small and mid-size rigs, and Bradbury Mountain State Park sites are small. If you are running long, book a private full-hookup park, and use I-295 rather than the narrower village streets to reach it.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Freeport?
There are, which is unusual for a small coastal town. The Town of Freeport operates Winslow Memorial Park, an oceanfront campground in South Freeport with limited electric and water hookups and great Casco Bay access. About ten miles away in Pownal, Bradbury Mountain State Park offers a Maine State Parks campground with no hookups but a dump station, a short summit hike, and mountain biking. Both are more affordable than the private oceanfront parks. They round out a camping landscape that also includes several private full-hookup campgrounds, giving you a real choice between public value and private amenities.
Is there a dump station in Freeport for RVs?
Yes. The private campgrounds, including Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, have dump stations for guests, and Bradbury Mountain State Park has a dump station as well. If you are camping at any of these, you can empty tanks on your way out. There is no need to hunt for a separate public dump if you are staying a night, which is the simplest plan given how busy and reservation-driven the area is. If you are just passing through on I-295 or US-1, plan to use a campground you are staying at rather than expecting a free roadside dump.
What is there to do in Freeport besides shopping?
Plenty, though L.L.Bean and the 100-plus outlet shops are the headline, with the flagship open 24 hours. Outdoors, Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park has shoreline trails along Casco Bay with osprey nesting, and Bradbury Mountain offers a quick summit hike with views. The quirky Desert of Maine, a stretch of glacial silt with tours, sits just a couple of miles out. Down at South Freeport Harbor you can take a boat tour, eat lobster, and watch the working waterfront. It is an easy place to mix coastal Maine recreation with a serious shopping day.
How do I get to Freeport campgrounds from the highway?
Access is easy off I-295, the main route up the Maine coast from Portland. Exits 20 and 22 drop you into Freeport, and US-1 runs right through the village. From the interstate, the private parks and the town and state campgrounds are all a short drive, mostly on paved local roads, though the village core gets congested in peak season. Portland is about 18 miles south with full services and the nearest airport for fly-and-rent trips. Use I-295 rather than threading a big rig through downtown, and follow your park's directions to its specific entrance.
Are Freeport campgrounds open in winter?
No, not for RV camping. Freeport sits on the cold Maine coast, and the campgrounds, including Wolfe's Neck, Cedar Haven, Winslow Park, and Bradbury Mountain, all close for the season, typically running roughly mid-May through mid-October. Winter brings snow and hard freezes that make RV camping impractical here, and water and dump facilities are shut down. The town itself stays lively year-round, and the L.L.Bean flagship famously never closes, but if you want to camp you will need to plan for the snow-free season. For winter travel, look much farther south.
Is Freeport a good base for exploring coastal Maine?
It is one of the better ones. Freeport sits right on I-295 about 18 miles north of Portland, so you can day-trip south to the city and the beaches or north up the coast toward Brunswick, Bath, and the midcoast. The mix of an oceanfront campground, a state park, and full-hookup private parks gives you options for any rig, and the village itself fills easy non-driving days with shopping, harbor tours, and trails. For a week of coastal Maine with a comfortable, walkable home base, Freeport is hard to beat, especially if you book your site early.
What are the best RV parks in Freeport, Maine?
Freeport punches above its size for camping. The standout is Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, the large former Recompence Shore park, with full and partial hookups, big-rig pull-throughs, and sites right on Casco Bay beside a working organic farm. Cedar Haven Campground, about 2.5 miles from downtown, is a quieter family park with full hookups and a private lake. For public camping, the Town of Freeport runs the oceanfront Winslow Memorial Park, and Bradbury Mountain State Park in nearby Pownal adds a no-hookup state-park option. Most travelers pick Wolfe's Neck for the coast or Cedar Haven for quiet full hookups.
Do Freeport RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Some do, and it varies by park. Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping offers full and partial hookups inland with water and 30-amp electric, plus a dump station, though its prized oceanfront sites are dry camping. Cedar Haven Campground has full-hookup sites, and Freeport Village Campground markets full hookups close to downtown. On the public side, Winslow Memorial Park has only limited electric and water on some sites and no full hookups, and Bradbury Mountain State Park has none but does have a dump station. If you need full hookups, book Wolfe's Neck or Cedar Haven and confirm sewer at your specific site.
How much does RV camping cost in Freeport, Maine?
Coastal Maine is not cheap in summer, so plan for it. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Haven generally run about thirty-five to sixty dollars a night depending on hookups and season, and oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck price at the higher end for the Casco Bay setting. Public options are friendlier on the wallet: the state park at Bradbury Mountain is the budget pick at a low nightly rate, and the town-run Winslow Park lands in the moderate range. Rates peak in July, August, and foliage season, so camp midweek or in the shoulder months to save real money.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Freeport?
For summer and fall, book months out. Freeport is a major coastal destination anchored by L.L.Bean and the outlets, so the oceanfront sites at Wolfe's Neck fill quickly for July and August weekends and for the fall foliage stretch into early October. Cedar Haven and Winslow Park also tighten up on summer weekends. If your dates are flexible, midweek and the June or September shoulder seasons are far easier to book and cheaper. The lower-demand state-park sites at Bradbury Mountain can sometimes be had closer in, especially midweek.
When is the best time to RV camp in Freeport, Maine?
Summer and early fall are the windows. From late June through August you get warm days, cool nights, and full village life, though it is the busiest and priciest stretch. Our favorite is September into early October, when the foliage turns, the air is crisp, and the crowds ease a little, but reserve ahead because many parks close by mid-October. Spring opens in mid-May with cooler, muddier conditions and black flies, while winter is out entirely since the campgrounds close, even though downtown stays active year-round.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Freeport?
Yes, at the right parks. Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping is the most big-rig friendly, with many pull-through sites that handle 40-foot rigs, and Cedar Haven advertises spacious sites, though you should call to confirm your length and any low-clearance approaches. The public options are tighter: Winslow Memorial Park is an older town campground better suited to small and mid-size rigs, and Bradbury Mountain State Park sites are small. If you are running long, book a private full-hookup park, and use I-295 rather than the narrower village streets to reach it.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Freeport?
There are, which is unusual for a small coastal town. The Town of Freeport operates Winslow Memorial Park, an oceanfront campground in South Freeport with limited electric and water hookups and great Casco Bay access. About ten miles away in Pownal, Bradbury Mountain State Park offers a Maine State Parks campground with no hookups but a dump station, a short summit hike, and mountain biking. Both are more affordable than the private oceanfront parks. They round out a camping landscape that also includes several private full-hookup campgrounds, giving you a real choice between public value and private amenities.
Is there a dump station in Freeport for RVs?
Yes. The private campgrounds, including Wolfe's Neck Oceanfront Camping, have dump stations for guests, and Bradbury Mountain State Park has a dump station as well. If you are camping at any of these, you can empty tanks on your way out. There is no need to hunt for a separate public dump if you are staying a night, which is the simplest plan given how busy and reservation-driven the area is. If you are just passing through on I-295 or US-1, plan to use a campground you are staying at rather than expecting a free roadside dump.
What is there to do in Freeport besides shopping?
Plenty, though L.L.Bean and the 100-plus outlet shops are the headline, with the flagship open 24 hours. Outdoors, Wolfe's Neck Woods State Park has shoreline trails along Casco Bay with osprey nesting, and Bradbury Mountain offers a quick summit hike with views. The quirky Desert of Maine, a stretch of glacial silt with tours, sits just a couple of miles out. Down at South Freeport Harbor you can take a boat tour, eat lobster, and watch the working waterfront. It is an easy place to mix coastal Maine recreation with a serious shopping day.
How do I get to Freeport campgrounds from the highway?
Access is easy off I-295, the main route up the Maine coast from Portland. Exits 20 and 22 drop you into Freeport, and US-1 runs right through the village. From the interstate, the private parks and the town and state campgrounds are all a short drive, mostly on paved local roads, though the village core gets congested in peak season. Portland is about 18 miles south with full services and the nearest airport for fly-and-rent trips. Use I-295 rather than threading a big rig through downtown, and follow your park's directions to its specific entrance.
Are Freeport campgrounds open in winter?
No, not for RV camping. Freeport sits on the cold Maine coast, and the campgrounds, including Wolfe's Neck, Cedar Haven, Winslow Park, and Bradbury Mountain, all close for the season, typically running roughly mid-May through mid-October. Winter brings snow and hard freezes that make RV camping impractical here, and water and dump facilities are shut down. The town itself stays lively year-round, and the L.L.Bean flagship famously never closes, but if you want to camp you will need to plan for the snow-free season. For winter travel, look much farther south.
Is Freeport a good base for exploring coastal Maine?
It is one of the better ones. Freeport sits right on I-295 about 18 miles north of Portland, so you can day-trip south to the city and the beaches or north up the coast toward Brunswick, Bath, and the midcoast. The mix of an oceanfront campground, a state park, and full-hookup private parks gives you options for any rig, and the village itself fills easy non-driving days with shopping, harbor tours, and trails. For a week of coastal Maine with a comfortable, walkable home base, Freeport is hard to beat, especially if you book your site early.
Are there free dump stations in Freeport?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Freeport.






