RV Parks In Centerville, Minnesota
45.1630° N, 93.0558° W
Quick Overview
Centerville is a small city in the northern Twin Cities suburbs, and for RVers its best trait is that a genuine regional-park campground sits right in town. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park runs a campground on Main Street in Centerville, so you can wake up on a chain of quiet lakes with canoe access and miles of trails, then be at a Minnesota Twins game, a museum, or a Twin Cities brewery inside half an hour. The camping here leans public and county-run, with a full-hookup private resort a short drive north for anyone who wants sewer at the site.
The standout is the Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park Campground, operated by Anoka County Parks. It has around 57 sites: loops A, B, and D are 50-amp electric with water and a mix of back-in and pull-through spots, while loops E and F stay rustic with no hookups, and there are two camper cabins if you want to leave the rig behind. It is an in-town base with real trails and paddling out the door. About 20 minutes west in Coon Rapids, the county also runs Bunker Hills Campground inside Bunker Hills Regional Park, with roughly 72 electric-and-water sites, pull-throughs, a dump station, and the Bunker Beach Water Park, golf, and disc golf right next door.
For full hookups and resort comforts, Ham Lake Resort sits about 20 minutes north near Ham Lake. It is a private park with around 115 RV sites, most of them 50-amp, offering full hookups with electric, water, and sewer plus a dump station, WiFi, showers, a clubhouse, and boats to borrow. Big rigs do well on the electric loops at the county parks and at the private resort, though the rustic Rice Creek loops run tighter and have no power. One thing to plan for at the county parks: Anoka County requires a vehicle entry permit, about $25 for the year or $5 per day, on top of the nightly campsite fee. Whether you want a lakeside electric site in town or a full-hookup pad with sewer, Centerville puts you within minutes of both. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Centerville for the local options.
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All Dump Stations Near Centerville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rice Creek Chain Of Lakes Park Reserve | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rice Creek Campground Visitor Center | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rice Creek Campground | 1.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping World | 4.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Park Plaza Cooperative | 9.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ham Lake Campground | 10.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Bunker Hills Campground Visitor’s Center | 11.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Norquist Camp Ground | 11.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Golden Acres RV Park & Picnic Area | 12.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rolling Hills Community | 13.0 mi | 3.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
Rice Creek Chain Of Lakes Park Reserve
0.9 miRice Creek Campground Visitor Center
0.9 miRice Creek Campground
1.5 miCamping World
4.4 miPark Plaza Cooperative
9.9 miHam Lake Campground
10.3 miBunker Hills Campground Visitor’s Center
11.3 miNorquist Camp Ground
11.7 miGolden Acres RV Park & Picnic Area
12.6 miRolling Hills Community
13.0 miTraveling to Centerville by RV
Getting to Centerville with a big rig is easy. The city sits at the north edge of the Twin Cities metro where I-35 splits, so both I-35E and I-35W run within a few miles and give you a straight shot south into St. Paul and Minneapolis. MN-65 and US-10 add more big-rig-friendly options through the northern suburbs, and the county roads into Centerville itself are ordinary suburban streets with no low bridges or weight limits to worry about. If you are flying in to rent a rig, Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is about 30 miles south, an easy hub for a fly-and-drive trip.
Once you are in the area, the approaches are simple. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes sits right on Main Street in Centerville, Bunker Hills is a straightforward drive west into Coon Rapids off the main suburban arterials, and Ham Lake Resort is a short run north near MN-65. None of these require the tight, hilly forest roads you hit in more remote parts of the state. Fuel, propane, RV service, and full-size supermarkets are all close by in Blaine, Lino Lakes, and Ham Lake, so restocking and any repairs are never far. That easy logistics-plus-city-access mix is a big part of why the northern metro parks stay busy.
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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 Centerville, Minnesota, 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 Centerville
Centerville is an affordable place to camp if you lean on the county parks. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low nightly rates, though you also pay the Anoka County vehicle entry permit, about $25 for the year or $5 per day, and a small per-site reservation fee. At Rice Creek, rustic no-hookup sites run cheaper than the 50-amp electric sites, so you can trim the nightly cost by skipping power. The private option, Ham Lake Resort, sits in the moderate range for a nightly full-hookup site with electric, water, and sewer, and it is the choice when sewer at the site matters. Both public parks close for winter, so your value season is May through October. Provisioning stays reasonable thanks to the full-size supermarkets, fuel, and propane spread across the surrounding suburbs, and the free trails, paddling, and beach access at the regional parks keep day-to-day costs low once you are set up.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Centerville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
6F - 23F
Crowds: Low
Very cold and snowy; the Anoka County campgrounds close and water is shut off, so winter camping here is not realistic and you would head south for full-time parks.
Spring
Mar - May
36F - 55F
Crowds: Medium
Campgrounds open in early May and lakeside loops can be muddy at first; a quiet, cool window to grab a site before summer crowds arrive.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63F - 83F
Crowds: High
Prime metro camping season; Rice Creek and Bunker Hills fill on weekends, so book the electric loops well ahead through Anoka County Parks.
Fall
Sep - Oct
38F - 58F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days and good color into early October, when the public parks close for the season; September weekends are the sweet spot, so reserve early.
Explore the Centerville Area
Here is how we would plan Centerville. Base at Rice Creek Chain of Lakes right in town for lake-and-trail camping and quiet, then make the 20-to-30-minute drive south for a Twins or Wild game, the museums, the Mississippi riverfront, and the deep Twin Cities food and brewery scene. When you book Rice Creek, aim for the 50-amp electric loops A, B, and D if you want hookups and more room for a bigger rig; loops E and F are rustic with no power. Do not forget the Anoka County vehicle entry permit, roughly $25 for the year or $5 per day, which is separate from your campsite fee and applies at both Rice Creek and Bunker Hills. Reserve summer weekends early, because metro-area sites fill fast once the season warms up. If you want full hookups with sewer at the site, book Ham Lake Resort to the north instead. Families should look hard at Bunker Hills, since the Bunker Beach Water Park, golf, and disc golf are right in the same regional park. And plan your season carefully: the county campgrounds close and shut off water for the long, cold Minnesota winter, so this is a May-through-October destination.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Centerville
What are the best RV parks near Centerville, Minnesota?
The best pick right in town is the Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park Campground, run by Anoka County Parks on Main Street in Centerville, with around 57 sites, 50-amp electric loops, rustic loops, and camper cabins on a quiet chain of lakes. About 20 minutes west in Coon Rapids, the county also runs Bunker Hills Campground inside Bunker Hills Regional Park, with roughly 72 electric-and-water sites next to a water park, golf, and disc golf. For full hookups with sewer at the site, Ham Lake Resort sits about 20 minutes north near Ham Lake. Between the county parks and the private resort, you can camp cheaply on a lake in town or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Centerville have full hookups?
It depends on public versus private. Ham Lake Resort, about 20 minutes north, is the full-hookup option, meaning electric, water, and sewer at your site, with most of its roughly 115 RV sites wired for 50-amp service plus a dump station. The Anoka County campgrounds are different: Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills offer electric-and-water sites with an on-site dump station rather than sewer at each pad, and Rice Creek also has rustic loops with no hookups at all. So if full hookups are a must, book Ham Lake Resort. If you are happy with electric and water plus a dump station in exchange for in-town lakeside scenery and lower rates, the county parks are a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost near Centerville?
It splits by public versus private. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, both run by Anoka County Parks, are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low nightly rates, though you also pay an Anoka County vehicle entry permit, about $25 for the year or $5 per day, plus a small reservation fee. Rice Creek rustic sites without power cost less than the 50-amp electric sites. Ham Lake Resort, the private full-hookup option to the north, sits in the moderate range for a nightly site with electric, water, and sewer. Both county parks close for winter, so the value season is May through October. Overall you can camp on a lake in town cheaply or pay mid-range for full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Centerville?
For summer weekends, reserve well ahead, because this is the northern Twin Cities metro and the county campgrounds fill fast once the weather warms. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills both book through the Anoka County Parks online reservation system, and popular electric loops go first, so several weeks to a couple of months of lead time is wise for July and August weekends. Rice Creek limits reservations to seven consecutive nights. Ham Lake Resort, the private resort, also fills on summer weekends, so book direct early. On a spring or early-fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially in the rustic loops, but do not count on walking up to an electric site on a warm weekend.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Centerville?
Early summer and September are the sweet spots. Summer is the prime metro camping season, warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, and the county parks fill on weekends, so June through August is beautiful but busy. September brings crisp days, good early color, and lighter crowds before the public campgrounds close for the season in October. Spring is cool and often wet, with lakeside loops muddy at first, though the campgrounds open in early May for a quiet start. Winter is severe here, with sub-zero cold and heavy snow, and the county parks close with water shut off, so this is a May-through-October destination. For the best mix of weather and availability, target September or a summer weekday.
Can big rigs camp near Centerville?
Yes. The Anoka County campgrounds are built for modern RVs on their developed loops. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes offers 50-amp electric loops A, B, and D with a mix of back-in and pull-through sites that handle bigger rigs, though the rustic E and F loops run tighter and have no power. Bunker Hills has 30 and 50-amp electric-and-water sites with pull-throughs as well. Ham Lake Resort, the private full-hookup park to the north, is also comfortable for larger rigs with 50-amp service and sewer. The approaches are easy suburban roads with no low bridges or steep grades, unlike more remote parts of the state. Confirm your length and site type when you book, and big-rig owners will find room here.
Is there camping right in Centerville itself?
Yes, and that is the town's best feature for RVers. The Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park Campground, operated by Anoka County Parks, is located on Main Street in Centerville, so you can camp on a chain of quiet lakes without leaving the city limits. It offers around 57 sites, with 50-amp electric-and-water loops, rustic no-hookup loops, and two camper cabins, plus an on-site dump station. From there you have canoe access to the Rice Creek water trail and miles of hiking and biking paths right out your door, while the Twin Cities and their sports, museums, and dining sit just 20 to 30 minutes south. Few small towns put a real regional-park campground this close to a major metro.
Do the Anoka County parks require an entry permit?
Yes. Anoka County regional parks, including Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, require a vehicle entry permit in addition to your nightly campsite fee. An annual permit runs about $25 and is good for a year from the date of purchase, while a daily permit is around $5 per vehicle. This is separate from the campsite reservation and the small per-site reservation fee, so budget for it when you compare the county parks to a private resort. The permit covers park access for the whole system, which is worth it if you plan to visit multiple Anoka County parks during your stay. The private Ham Lake Resort does not use this permit; it charges a nightly rate only.
What is there to do near Centerville while camping?
Plenty, thanks to the mix of lakes and big-city access. Right in town, the Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Park Reserve offers connected lakes, wetlands, and forest with paved and natural trails, canoeing along the Rice Creek water trail, fishing, and wildlife. About 20 minutes west, Bunker Hills Regional Park has the Bunker Beach Water Park, a golf course, disc golf, archery, and horse stables. Just 20 to 30 minutes south, Minneapolis and St. Paul deliver major-league sports, museums, the Mississippi riverfront, theaters, and a deep restaurant and brewery scene, and the Mall of America with its indoor amusement park is about 40 minutes down. It is an easy base for blending quiet lake days with big-city outings.
Is winter RV camping possible near Centerville?
Not really. The Anoka County campgrounds, Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, close for the winter and shut off water, and the private Ham Lake Resort runs a May-through-October season as well, so there is no practical local option for cold-weather RVing. Twin Cities winters are severe, with sub-zero cold and heavy snow, which makes camping impractical even where a site might technically be open. If you are passing through in winter, plan to keep moving south or park the rig in covered storage rather than camp. For a real stay, wait for the county parks to reopen in early May, when the lakes thaw and the season gets going again.
Which campground is best for families near Centerville?
Bunker Hills Campground in Coon Rapids is the strongest family pick, because it sits inside Bunker Hills Regional Park right next to the Bunker Beach Water Park, plus a golf course, disc golf, archery, horse stables, and playgrounds, so kids have plenty to do without leaving the park. Its roughly 72 electric-and-water sites with pull-throughs handle family-size rigs well. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes in Centerville is also family-friendly, with lakes to paddle, trails to ride, and camper cabins, and it keeps you closer to town. Ham Lake Resort adds boats and a petting area with animals. For the biggest on-site attraction, though, the water park at Bunker Hills is hard to beat with kids.
How do I get to Centerville RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. Centerville sits at the north edge of the Twin Cities metro where I-35 splits, so both I-35E and I-35W run within a few miles and give a direct route south into St. Paul and Minneapolis, while MN-65 and US-10 add more big-rig-friendly options through the northern suburbs. The county roads into Centerville are ordinary suburban streets with no low bridges or weight limits. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes is right on Main Street in town, Bunker Hills is an easy drive west into Coon Rapids, and Ham Lake Resort is a short run north near MN-65. Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is about 30 miles south for fly-and-rent trips, and fuel, propane, and RV service are all close by.
Is Centerville a good base for exploring the Twin Cities by RV?
It is an excellent one. Centerville gives you a real regional-park campground on a chain of lakes right in town at Rice Creek Chain of Lakes, quiet and green, while placing you just 20 to 30 minutes from downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul on I-35. From here you can day-trip to Twins, Vikings, and Wild games, the museums, the Mississippi riverfront, and the Mall of America, then come back to paddling and trails at night. Add the county parks at Bunker Hills and the full-hookup Ham Lake Resort nearby, and you have flexible camping to match your rig and budget. For RVers who want lake camping with big-city access, Centerville is an easy recommendation.
What are the best RV parks near Centerville, Minnesota?
The best pick right in town is the Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park Campground, run by Anoka County Parks on Main Street in Centerville, with around 57 sites, 50-amp electric loops, rustic loops, and camper cabins on a quiet chain of lakes. About 20 minutes west in Coon Rapids, the county also runs Bunker Hills Campground inside Bunker Hills Regional Park, with roughly 72 electric-and-water sites next to a water park, golf, and disc golf. For full hookups with sewer at the site, Ham Lake Resort sits about 20 minutes north near Ham Lake. Between the county parks and the private resort, you can camp cheaply on a lake in town or settle into a full-hookup pad.
Do RV parks near Centerville have full hookups?
It depends on public versus private. Ham Lake Resort, about 20 minutes north, is the full-hookup option, meaning electric, water, and sewer at your site, with most of its roughly 115 RV sites wired for 50-amp service plus a dump station. The Anoka County campgrounds are different: Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills offer electric-and-water sites with an on-site dump station rather than sewer at each pad, and Rice Creek also has rustic loops with no hookups at all. So if full hookups are a must, book Ham Lake Resort. If you are happy with electric and water plus a dump station in exchange for in-town lakeside scenery and lower rates, the county parks are a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost near Centerville?
It splits by public versus private. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, both run by Anoka County Parks, are the budget picks, with electric-and-water sites at low nightly rates, though you also pay an Anoka County vehicle entry permit, about $25 for the year or $5 per day, plus a small reservation fee. Rice Creek rustic sites without power cost less than the 50-amp electric sites. Ham Lake Resort, the private full-hookup option to the north, sits in the moderate range for a nightly site with electric, water, and sewer. Both county parks close for winter, so the value season is May through October. Overall you can camp on a lake in town cheaply or pay mid-range for full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Centerville?
For summer weekends, reserve well ahead, because this is the northern Twin Cities metro and the county campgrounds fill fast once the weather warms. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills both book through the Anoka County Parks online reservation system, and popular electric loops go first, so several weeks to a couple of months of lead time is wise for July and August weekends. Rice Creek limits reservations to seven consecutive nights. Ham Lake Resort, the private resort, also fills on summer weekends, so book direct early. On a spring or early-fall weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially in the rustic loops, but do not count on walking up to an electric site on a warm weekend.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Centerville?
Early summer and September are the sweet spots. Summer is the prime metro camping season, warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, and the county parks fill on weekends, so June through August is beautiful but busy. September brings crisp days, good early color, and lighter crowds before the public campgrounds close for the season in October. Spring is cool and often wet, with lakeside loops muddy at first, though the campgrounds open in early May for a quiet start. Winter is severe here, with sub-zero cold and heavy snow, and the county parks close with water shut off, so this is a May-through-October destination. For the best mix of weather and availability, target September or a summer weekday.
Can big rigs camp near Centerville?
Yes. The Anoka County campgrounds are built for modern RVs on their developed loops. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes offers 50-amp electric loops A, B, and D with a mix of back-in and pull-through sites that handle bigger rigs, though the rustic E and F loops run tighter and have no power. Bunker Hills has 30 and 50-amp electric-and-water sites with pull-throughs as well. Ham Lake Resort, the private full-hookup park to the north, is also comfortable for larger rigs with 50-amp service and sewer. The approaches are easy suburban roads with no low bridges or steep grades, unlike more remote parts of the state. Confirm your length and site type when you book, and big-rig owners will find room here.
Is there camping right in Centerville itself?
Yes, and that is the town's best feature for RVers. The Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Regional Park Campground, operated by Anoka County Parks, is located on Main Street in Centerville, so you can camp on a chain of quiet lakes without leaving the city limits. It offers around 57 sites, with 50-amp electric-and-water loops, rustic no-hookup loops, and two camper cabins, plus an on-site dump station. From there you have canoe access to the Rice Creek water trail and miles of hiking and biking paths right out your door, while the Twin Cities and their sports, museums, and dining sit just 20 to 30 minutes south. Few small towns put a real regional-park campground this close to a major metro.
Do the Anoka County parks require an entry permit?
Yes. Anoka County regional parks, including Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, require a vehicle entry permit in addition to your nightly campsite fee. An annual permit runs about $25 and is good for a year from the date of purchase, while a daily permit is around $5 per vehicle. This is separate from the campsite reservation and the small per-site reservation fee, so budget for it when you compare the county parks to a private resort. The permit covers park access for the whole system, which is worth it if you plan to visit multiple Anoka County parks during your stay. The private Ham Lake Resort does not use this permit; it charges a nightly rate only.
What is there to do near Centerville while camping?
Plenty, thanks to the mix of lakes and big-city access. Right in town, the Rice Creek Chain of Lakes Park Reserve offers connected lakes, wetlands, and forest with paved and natural trails, canoeing along the Rice Creek water trail, fishing, and wildlife. About 20 minutes west, Bunker Hills Regional Park has the Bunker Beach Water Park, a golf course, disc golf, archery, and horse stables. Just 20 to 30 minutes south, Minneapolis and St. Paul deliver major-league sports, museums, the Mississippi riverfront, theaters, and a deep restaurant and brewery scene, and the Mall of America with its indoor amusement park is about 40 minutes down. It is an easy base for blending quiet lake days with big-city outings.
Is winter RV camping possible near Centerville?
Not really. The Anoka County campgrounds, Rice Creek Chain of Lakes and Bunker Hills, close for the winter and shut off water, and the private Ham Lake Resort runs a May-through-October season as well, so there is no practical local option for cold-weather RVing. Twin Cities winters are severe, with sub-zero cold and heavy snow, which makes camping impractical even where a site might technically be open. If you are passing through in winter, plan to keep moving south or park the rig in covered storage rather than camp. For a real stay, wait for the county parks to reopen in early May, when the lakes thaw and the season gets going again.
Which campground is best for families near Centerville?
Bunker Hills Campground in Coon Rapids is the strongest family pick, because it sits inside Bunker Hills Regional Park right next to the Bunker Beach Water Park, plus a golf course, disc golf, archery, horse stables, and playgrounds, so kids have plenty to do without leaving the park. Its roughly 72 electric-and-water sites with pull-throughs handle family-size rigs well. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes in Centerville is also family-friendly, with lakes to paddle, trails to ride, and camper cabins, and it keeps you closer to town. Ham Lake Resort adds boats and a petting area with animals. For the biggest on-site attraction, though, the water park at Bunker Hills is hard to beat with kids.
How do I get to Centerville RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. Centerville sits at the north edge of the Twin Cities metro where I-35 splits, so both I-35E and I-35W run within a few miles and give a direct route south into St. Paul and Minneapolis, while MN-65 and US-10 add more big-rig-friendly options through the northern suburbs. The county roads into Centerville are ordinary suburban streets with no low bridges or weight limits. Rice Creek Chain of Lakes is right on Main Street in town, Bunker Hills is an easy drive west into Coon Rapids, and Ham Lake Resort is a short run north near MN-65. Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is about 30 miles south for fly-and-rent trips, and fuel, propane, and RV service are all close by.
Is Centerville a good base for exploring the Twin Cities by RV?
It is an excellent one. Centerville gives you a real regional-park campground on a chain of lakes right in town at Rice Creek Chain of Lakes, quiet and green, while placing you just 20 to 30 minutes from downtown Minneapolis and St. Paul on I-35. From here you can day-trip to Twins, Vikings, and Wild games, the museums, the Mississippi riverfront, and the Mall of America, then come back to paddling and trails at night. Add the county parks at Bunker Hills and the full-hookup Ham Lake Resort nearby, and you have flexible camping to match your rig and budget. For RVers who want lake camping with big-city access, Centerville is an easy recommendation.
Are there free dump stations in Centerville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Centerville.
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