RV Parks In Provincetown, Massachusetts
42.0530° N, 70.1864° W
Quick Overview
<p>Provincetown sits at the very tip of Cape Cod, and getting an RV out here means committing to the run all the way up US-6 to land's end. The reward is a town surrounded on three sides by water and wrapped by the Cape Cod National Seashore, with dunes, beaches, and bike trails right where the pavement runs out. For RV travelers the camping picture is simple to learn: almost everything is private, the season is short, and summer fills fast. If you plan a few months ahead, we think it's one of the better Atlantic-coast stops you can make. </p><p>The RV parks here cluster in two spots. In Provincetown itself, Coastal Acres Campground is the closest to downtown, walkable to Commercial Street, and runs roughly 193 sites with full hookups at 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer, plus smaller 20-amp-and-water sites. It's open April 1 through November 1, which gives you real shoulder-season options on either end. Dunes' Edge Campground, run by The Trustees of Reservations, is a wooded conservation property just off US-6 with 15 RV spaces on water and 20-amp electric; it caps motorhomes at 28 feet and trailers at 24 feet, so it suits smaller rigs only. </p><p>A few minutes south in North Truro you get more room for bigger rigs. Adventure Bound Cape Cod, the long-running Horton's property, spreads across 40 acres with full-hookup sites on 30/50-amp service alongside water-and-electric sites without sewer. North of Highland Camping Area sits nearby but is tent-focused, with no hookups on standard sites and only a handful of powered full-season spots; it's best for vans and small trailers under 24 feet, and its draw is walking access to the National Seashore beaches. </p><p>If you run a true self-contained rig with a toilet and three days of tank capacity, the National Park Service permits oversand beach camping in the off-road corridor at Race Point from July 1 through Labor Day with a permit. That's the only camping inside the Seashore itself, and it needs 4x4 oversand access, so it isn't for large coaches. For everyone else, the private parks are the play. Start with the official <a href='https://www.nps.gov/caco'>Cape Cod National Seashore</a> site to map out beaches and the Province Lands Visitor Center before you book a site, then lock in a reservation at one of the private parks for the dates you actually want. The short season and the long single road in are the two things to plan around, and once you've handled those, the tip of the Cape rewards the effort. </p>
Top Rated Dump Stations in Provincetown
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All Dump Stations Near Provincetown
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunes' Edge Campground | 0.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coastal Acres Campground | 0.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Horton's Camping Resort | 4.9 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Adventure Bound Camping Resorts - Cape Cod | 5.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| North Truro Campground | 6.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Maurice’s Campground | 15.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Maurice's Campground | 15.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Atlantic Oaks RV Resort | 17.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Shady Knoll Campground | 21.0 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nickerson State Park - Area 4 | 21.6 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
Dunes' Edge Campground
0.7 miCoastal Acres Campground
0.8 miHorton's Camping Resort
4.9 miAdventure Bound Camping Resorts - Cape Cod
5.8 miNorth Truro Campground
6.3 miMaurice’s Campground
15.7 miMaurice's Campground
15.7 miAtlantic Oaks RV Resort
17.7 miShady Knoll Campground
21.0 miNickerson State Park - Area 4
21.6 miTraveling to Provincetown by RV
There's one way in by road, and it's US-6 down the Cape. After the Sagamore Bridge you've got roughly 63 miles of highway to Provincetown, and much of the Outer Cape is two lanes. In July and August that stretch backs up badly, especially on summer Saturdays when the weekly rentals turn over, so we try to drive midweek or early in the day and we top off fuel and groceries before the bridge. Big rigs handle US-6 fine, but Provincetown's town streets are narrow and packed in season; park at your campground and walk, bike, or grab the shuttle into the center. The nearest hub for full-service shopping and big-box stores is Hyannis, back down the Cape. Boston is the major metro about 115 miles away and the origin of the fast passenger ferry, which crosses to Provincetown in roughly 90 minutes if you'd rather leave the rig parked and day-trip. Note there's no ferry from Boston to Hyannis, so don't plan a route around one; if you want Hyannis, you drive. Once you're settled at a campground, you really don't need the rig again until you leave, which is the whole reason we like basing here and exploring on foot and by bike.
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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 Provincetown, Massachusetts, 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 Provincetown
<p>Provincetown is a peak-season premium market, so expect summer rates to run high and reservation minimums to apply. Coastal Acres requires a three-night minimum on advance peak bookings and drops to no minimum in the shoulder season; one off-season report had a basic 20-amp-and-water site around $52 a night, with full-hookup peak rates running well above that. The cheapest way to visit is to shift to the shoulders, roughly mid-April to late May or early September into November at Coastal Acres, when nightly rates ease and you skip the three-night rule. North of Highland is the budget-leaning option but is tent-focused with few powered sites. Race Point beach camping costs a National Park Service permit fee rather than a nightly site rate. Build in fuel for the long US-6 haul and plan to stock up in Hyannis, since on-Cape groceries near the tip carry a tourist-town markup. Booking a longer shoulder-season stay rather than a string of peak weekends is usually the single biggest way to cut your nightly average here. </p>
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Provincetown
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Best Time to Visit Provincetown by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
28F - 42F
Crowds: Medium
The campgrounds are closed and the town goes quiet. Winters are damp and windy off the Atlantic with occasional coastal storms; this is not an RV season for the tip of the Cape.
Spring
Mar - May
40F - 58F
Crowds: Medium
Coastal Acres opens April 1 and Dunes' Edge opens near Memorial Day. Cool, breezy, and uncrowded with the best shoulder rates; pack layers for chilly ocean mornings.
Summer
Jun - Aug
60F - 76F
Crowds: Medium
Peak season. Beaches, ferries, and Commercial Street are packed, US-6 backs up, and parks book out months ahead. Warm days, cool nights, and frequent sea breeze and fog.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
A favorite window. Crowds thin after Labor Day, Coastal Acres stays open to November 1, and shoulder rates return. Crisp, clear days with great light over the dunes.
Explore the Provincetown Area
<p>Book early. Peak summer weekends at the Provincetown and Truro parks fill months out, and Dunes' Edge takes reservations up to a year ahead. If you want a same-day shot, Dunes' Edge releases its unbooked sites first-come first-served, but don't count on it in August. Match your rig to the park: full-hookup big-rig sites live at Coastal Acres and Adventure Bound, while Dunes' Edge and North of Highland are for smaller setups. Bring or rent bikes; the Province Lands Bike Trail loops through the dunes with spurs to Race Point and Herring Cove, and it beats fighting for parking at the beaches. Watch the tides and the off-road corridor closures at Race Point if you're driving the beach. The Province Lands Visitor Center is open mid-May to mid-October and is worth a stop for the 360-degree dune views and current beach conditions. Pack layers; ocean fog and wind can drop the feel of a sunny day fast out here, even in July. Stock groceries and fill propane back in Hyannis before the final run up US-6, since the closer you get to the tip the thinner and pricier the services get. And give yourself buffer on arrival day, because summer traffic on the single highway in can blow up your timing by an hour or more. </p>
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Provincetown
Are there RV parks in Provincetown, MA?
Yes. Provincetown has private RV camping, and a couple more options sit just south in North Truro. Coastal Acres Campground is the closest park to downtown Provincetown, walkable to Commercial Street, with roughly 193 sites including full hookups at 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer. Dunes' Edge Campground, run by The Trustees of Reservations, sits in the woods just off US-6 with 15 RV spaces on water and 20-amp electric. A few minutes away in North Truro, Adventure Bound Cape Cod offers full-hookup sites, and North of Highland is a tent-focused area that takes small rigs. There is no traditional National Park Service campground inside Cape Cod National Seashore itself.
Which Provincetown RV parks are big-rig friendly?
For larger rigs, aim for the full-hookup sites at Coastal Acres Campground in Provincetown or Adventure Bound Cape Cod in nearby North Truro, since both offer 30/50-amp service with water and sewer that handle bigger coaches and fifth wheels. Dunes' Edge Campground is not a big-rig park; it caps motorhomes at 28 feet and trailers at 24 feet. North of Highland Camping Area is tent-focused and only takes small trailers, vans, and RVs under 24 feet. The road in is US-6, which big rigs handle fine, but Provincetown's town streets are tight, so park at your campground and walk, bike, or shuttle into the center rather than driving the rig downtown.
Does Cape Cod National Seashore have RV campgrounds?
No, the National Seashore does not run a traditional campground. The only camping inside it is permitted self-contained-vehicle camping on the beach in the off-road corridor at Race Point in Provincetown, allowed from July 1 through Labor Day. To qualify, your vehicle must be truly self-contained, meaning it has a toilet and permanently installed gray and black water tanks that hold at least three days of waste, and you need a National Park Service permit and 4x4 oversand capability. That setup is not practical for large RVs. For standard RV camping near the Seashore, you'll use the private parks in Provincetown and Truro and visit the Seashore beaches and trails by day.
When are the Provincetown area campgrounds open?
The season is short out here. Coastal Acres Campground runs the longest, open April 1 through November 1, with lower shoulder-season rates roughly mid-April to late May and again from early September to November 1. Dunes' Edge Campground opens the weekend before Memorial Day and closes the last weekend in September. Adventure Bound Cape Cod and North of Highland Camping Area generally run from late spring through early fall, with North of Highland open mid-May to mid-September. The Race Point beach camping permit window is July 1 through Labor Day. None of these parks operate in winter, so if you're chasing the Cape you'll want a spring-through-fall trip.
How do I drive an RV to Provincetown?
There's one road in. After crossing the Sagamore Bridge onto Cape Cod, you stay on US-6 east for about 63 miles to Provincetown at the very tip. Much of the Outer Cape is two lanes, so it's a straightforward but slow drive, and big rigs handle it without trouble. The catch is summer traffic; in July and August the highway backs up badly, especially on Saturdays when weekly rentals change over, and a normal two-and-a-half-hour run from Boston can double. We try to travel midweek or early morning and we fuel up and stock groceries before the bridge, since prices climb and services thin as you head out toward land's end.
What's the best time of year to bring an RV to Provincetown?
Fall is our favorite window. After Labor Day the crowds thin, US-6 traffic eases, shoulder rates kick in, and Coastal Acres stays open through November 1, so you get crisp clear days and great light over the dunes without the August crush. Late spring is the other sweet spot, with cool breezy weather, open shoulder rates, and far fewer people, though some parks don't open until near Memorial Day. Peak summer brings the warmest beach weather but also packed campgrounds that book months ahead, the worst traffic, and premium pricing. Winter is a non-starter; the parks close and the town goes quiet. Aim for May, early June, September, or October if you can.
Do Provincetown RV parks have full hookups?
Some do. Coastal Acres Campground offers full hookups with 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer on many sites, along with smaller sites that have 20-amp and water only and access to a dump station. Adventure Bound Cape Cod in North Truro also has full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp service, though some of its sites are water-and-electric without sewer. Dunes' Edge Campground does not offer full hookups; its RV sites have water and 20-amp electric, with an on-site dump station. North of Highland Camping Area has no hookups on standard sites and only a few powered full-season spots. So if you need full hookups, focus on Coastal Acres or Adventure Bound and confirm the specific site when you book.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Provincetown?
For July and August, reserve as early as you can, ideally several months out, because peak summer weekends at the Provincetown and Truro parks fill fast. Dunes' Edge Campground takes reservations up to a full year in advance, which tells you how competitive the popular weekends get. Coastal Acres requires a three-night minimum on advance peak bookings, so plan your dates accordingly. If you didn't plan ahead, Dunes' Edge releases unbooked sites on a first-come, first-served basis as late as the day before, but counting on that in August is a gamble. Shoulder season is much easier; Coastal Acres drops its minimum-stay requirement outside peak dates, so a spring or fall trip gives you more flexibility.
Can I camp on the beach at Race Point in an RV?
Only under specific rules. The National Park Service allows self-contained-vehicle camping in the off-road vehicle corridor at Race Point Beach from July 1 through Labor Day, and it requires a permit. Your vehicle must be self-contained, with a toilet and permanently installed gray and black water holding tanks rated for at least three days, and you need 4x4 oversand capability to reach the corridor. This is geared toward smaller self-contained setups and beach-capable vehicles, not large motorhomes or trailers. Outside that window and outside the corridor, beach camping is not allowed. Most RVers visit Race Point as a day beach instead, parking in the lot and walking in, then camping at one of the private parks in town.
What is there to do near Provincetown for RVers?
Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. Cape Cod National Seashore wraps the whole tip with about 40 miles of protected beach, dunes, and trails. Race Point Beach is the big draw, known for surf, seals, and whale watching offshore, with a guarded swim area in summer. The paved Province Lands Bike Trail loops through the dunes with spurs to Race Point and Herring Cove, which is the smart way to beat beach parking. In town, the Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum marks the Pilgrims' first landing in 1620 and gives you a long view over the harbor, and Commercial Street is the walkable heart of town for galleries, food, and the ferry dock. Start at the Province Lands Visitor Center for current beach conditions.
How much does it cost to camp near Provincetown?
Expect a peak-season premium. Provincetown is a high-demand market, so summer nightly rates run high and minimum-stay rules apply at the busier parks; Coastal Acres requires a three-night minimum on advance peak bookings. One off-season report put a basic 20-amp-and-water site around $52 a night, with full-hookup peak rates running well above that. The cheapest approach is to shift to the shoulders, roughly mid-April to late May or early September through November at Coastal Acres, when rates ease and the minimum-stay rule lifts. North of Highland is the budget-leaning choice but is tent-focused with few powered sites. Race Point beach camping costs a National Park Service permit fee rather than a per-night site charge. Call each park for current pricing, since rates shift by season and site type.
Is Provincetown a good winter or snowbird RV stop?
Not really, and this is an honest one. Provincetown is a warm-season destination; all of the area campgrounds close for winter, the longest-running of them only stays open through November 1, and the town quiets down dramatically once the season ends. Winters here are damp, windy, and cold off the Atlantic with the occasional coastal storm, and there's no RV infrastructure open to support a long cold-weather stay. Snowbirds chasing winter sun should keep heading south rather than stopping at the tip of the Cape. If you love this part of the coast, plan a spring, summer, or fall visit instead, when the parks are open, the beaches are usable, and the National Seashore facilities are running.
Should I take the ferry instead of driving my RV into town?
It can be a smart combo. You can't bring an RV on the ferry, but if the summer traffic on US-6 is wearing you down, a good play is to base your rig at a campground in Provincetown or Truro and use the fast passenger ferry for a day trip from Boston, which crosses in about 90 minutes and runs roughly May through mid-October. Within town itself, you'll want to leave the rig at the campground regardless, because Provincetown's streets are narrow and parking is brutal in season. Walk, bike the Province Lands trail, or use the local shuttle to get into the center. The ferry mainly helps if you're splitting time between Boston and the Cape and want to skip the gridlock one direction.
Are there RV parks in Provincetown, MA?
Yes. Provincetown has private RV camping, and a couple more options sit just south in North Truro. Coastal Acres Campground is the closest park to downtown Provincetown, walkable to Commercial Street, with roughly 193 sites including full hookups at 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer. Dunes' Edge Campground, run by The Trustees of Reservations, sits in the woods just off US-6 with 15 RV spaces on water and 20-amp electric. A few minutes away in North Truro, Adventure Bound Cape Cod offers full-hookup sites, and North of Highland is a tent-focused area that takes small rigs. There is no traditional National Park Service campground inside Cape Cod National Seashore itself.
Which Provincetown RV parks are big-rig friendly?
For larger rigs, aim for the full-hookup sites at Coastal Acres Campground in Provincetown or Adventure Bound Cape Cod in nearby North Truro, since both offer 30/50-amp service with water and sewer that handle bigger coaches and fifth wheels. Dunes' Edge Campground is not a big-rig park; it caps motorhomes at 28 feet and trailers at 24 feet. North of Highland Camping Area is tent-focused and only takes small trailers, vans, and RVs under 24 feet. The road in is US-6, which big rigs handle fine, but Provincetown's town streets are tight, so park at your campground and walk, bike, or shuttle into the center rather than driving the rig downtown.
Does Cape Cod National Seashore have RV campgrounds?
No, the National Seashore does not run a traditional campground. The only camping inside it is permitted self-contained-vehicle camping on the beach in the off-road corridor at Race Point in Provincetown, allowed from July 1 through Labor Day. To qualify, your vehicle must be truly self-contained, meaning it has a toilet and permanently installed gray and black water tanks that hold at least three days of waste, and you need a National Park Service permit and 4x4 oversand capability. That setup is not practical for large RVs. For standard RV camping near the Seashore, you'll use the private parks in Provincetown and Truro and visit the Seashore beaches and trails by day.
When are the Provincetown area campgrounds open?
The season is short out here. Coastal Acres Campground runs the longest, open April 1 through November 1, with lower shoulder-season rates roughly mid-April to late May and again from early September to November 1. Dunes' Edge Campground opens the weekend before Memorial Day and closes the last weekend in September. Adventure Bound Cape Cod and North of Highland Camping Area generally run from late spring through early fall, with North of Highland open mid-May to mid-September. The Race Point beach camping permit window is July 1 through Labor Day. None of these parks operate in winter, so if you're chasing the Cape you'll want a spring-through-fall trip.
How do I drive an RV to Provincetown?
There's one road in. After crossing the Sagamore Bridge onto Cape Cod, you stay on US-6 east for about 63 miles to Provincetown at the very tip. Much of the Outer Cape is two lanes, so it's a straightforward but slow drive, and big rigs handle it without trouble. The catch is summer traffic; in July and August the highway backs up badly, especially on Saturdays when weekly rentals change over, and a normal two-and-a-half-hour run from Boston can double. We try to travel midweek or early morning and we fuel up and stock groceries before the bridge, since prices climb and services thin as you head out toward land's end.
What's the best time of year to bring an RV to Provincetown?
Fall is our favorite window. After Labor Day the crowds thin, US-6 traffic eases, shoulder rates kick in, and Coastal Acres stays open through November 1, so you get crisp clear days and great light over the dunes without the August crush. Late spring is the other sweet spot, with cool breezy weather, open shoulder rates, and far fewer people, though some parks don't open until near Memorial Day. Peak summer brings the warmest beach weather but also packed campgrounds that book months ahead, the worst traffic, and premium pricing. Winter is a non-starter; the parks close and the town goes quiet. Aim for May, early June, September, or October if you can.
Do Provincetown RV parks have full hookups?
Some do. Coastal Acres Campground offers full hookups with 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer on many sites, along with smaller sites that have 20-amp and water only and access to a dump station. Adventure Bound Cape Cod in North Truro also has full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp service, though some of its sites are water-and-electric without sewer. Dunes' Edge Campground does not offer full hookups; its RV sites have water and 20-amp electric, with an on-site dump station. North of Highland Camping Area has no hookups on standard sites and only a few powered full-season spots. So if you need full hookups, focus on Coastal Acres or Adventure Bound and confirm the specific site when you book.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Provincetown?
For July and August, reserve as early as you can, ideally several months out, because peak summer weekends at the Provincetown and Truro parks fill fast. Dunes' Edge Campground takes reservations up to a full year in advance, which tells you how competitive the popular weekends get. Coastal Acres requires a three-night minimum on advance peak bookings, so plan your dates accordingly. If you didn't plan ahead, Dunes' Edge releases unbooked sites on a first-come, first-served basis as late as the day before, but counting on that in August is a gamble. Shoulder season is much easier; Coastal Acres drops its minimum-stay requirement outside peak dates, so a spring or fall trip gives you more flexibility.
Can I camp on the beach at Race Point in an RV?
Only under specific rules. The National Park Service allows self-contained-vehicle camping in the off-road vehicle corridor at Race Point Beach from July 1 through Labor Day, and it requires a permit. Your vehicle must be self-contained, with a toilet and permanently installed gray and black water holding tanks rated for at least three days, and you need 4x4 oversand capability to reach the corridor. This is geared toward smaller self-contained setups and beach-capable vehicles, not large motorhomes or trailers. Outside that window and outside the corridor, beach camping is not allowed. Most RVers visit Race Point as a day beach instead, parking in the lot and walking in, then camping at one of the private parks in town.
What is there to do near Provincetown for RVers?
Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. Cape Cod National Seashore wraps the whole tip with about 40 miles of protected beach, dunes, and trails. Race Point Beach is the big draw, known for surf, seals, and whale watching offshore, with a guarded swim area in summer. The paved Province Lands Bike Trail loops through the dunes with spurs to Race Point and Herring Cove, which is the smart way to beat beach parking. In town, the Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum marks the Pilgrims' first landing in 1620 and gives you a long view over the harbor, and Commercial Street is the walkable heart of town for galleries, food, and the ferry dock. Start at the Province Lands Visitor Center for current beach conditions.
How much does it cost to camp near Provincetown?
Expect a peak-season premium. Provincetown is a high-demand market, so summer nightly rates run high and minimum-stay rules apply at the busier parks; Coastal Acres requires a three-night minimum on advance peak bookings. One off-season report put a basic 20-amp-and-water site around $52 a night, with full-hookup peak rates running well above that. The cheapest approach is to shift to the shoulders, roughly mid-April to late May or early September through November at Coastal Acres, when rates ease and the minimum-stay rule lifts. North of Highland is the budget-leaning choice but is tent-focused with few powered sites. Race Point beach camping costs a National Park Service permit fee rather than a per-night site charge. Call each park for current pricing, since rates shift by season and site type.
Is Provincetown a good winter or snowbird RV stop?
Not really, and this is an honest one. Provincetown is a warm-season destination; all of the area campgrounds close for winter, the longest-running of them only stays open through November 1, and the town quiets down dramatically once the season ends. Winters here are damp, windy, and cold off the Atlantic with the occasional coastal storm, and there's no RV infrastructure open to support a long cold-weather stay. Snowbirds chasing winter sun should keep heading south rather than stopping at the tip of the Cape. If you love this part of the coast, plan a spring, summer, or fall visit instead, when the parks are open, the beaches are usable, and the National Seashore facilities are running.
Should I take the ferry instead of driving my RV into town?
It can be a smart combo. You can't bring an RV on the ferry, but if the summer traffic on US-6 is wearing you down, a good play is to base your rig at a campground in Provincetown or Truro and use the fast passenger ferry for a day trip from Boston, which crosses in about 90 minutes and runs roughly May through mid-October. Within town itself, you'll want to leave the rig at the campground regardless, because Provincetown's streets are narrow and parking is brutal in season. Walk, bike the Province Lands trail, or use the local shuttle to get into the center. The ferry mainly helps if you're splitting time between Boston and the Cape and want to skip the gridlock one direction.
Are there free dump stations in Provincetown?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Provincetown.
All Dump Stations Near Provincetown (64)
RV ParkDunes' Edge Campground
RV ParkCoastal Acres Campground
RV ParkHorton's Camping Resort
RV ParkAdventure Bound Camping Resorts - Cape Cod
RV ParkNorth Truro Campground
RV ParkMaurice’s Campground
RV ParkMaurice's Campground
RV Park





