RV Dump Stations In Chambersburg, Pennsylvania
39.9376° N, 77.6611° W
Quick Overview
Chambersburg sits right in the heart of Pennsylvania's Cumberland Valley, straddling I-81 with US-30, the old Lincoln Highway, running east-west through town. For RVers it is a genuinely handy stop: full services in town, easy interstate access, and a cluster of state park and private campgrounds within a short drive that handle your dumping and water needs. We track several dump stations in and around Chambersburg, and every one is paid (a portion paid, a portion free), so plan on either a campground stay or a day-use dump fee rather than a free pull-through.
Most of that dump access is bundled into campgrounds along the US-30 corridor and out in the South Mountain range. Caledonia State Park, about 11 miles east on US-30, has sanitary dump stations and 184 sites including full hookups, while Twin Bridge Campground near I-81 folds dumping into a site along with a stocked trout stream. Cowans Gap State Park adds quieter, shaded mountain camping. If you are self-contained and just passing through on the interstate, the practical move is to stock groceries in town, top off diesel along the I-81 or US-30 corridor, and dump at whichever park you overnight at.
Getting here could not be much easier, since I-81 runs straight through town and I-76, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, is a short hop north. That makes Chambersburg an excellent base for day-tripping to Gettysburg National Military Park, about 25 miles east on US-30, without paying tourist-town camping prices. Come in the fall for the South Mountain foliage and comfortable temperatures, watch I-81 closely in winter storms, and this valley town makes a well-supplied, history-rich stop between the interstate and the battlefields.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Chambersburg
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All Dump Stations Near Chambersburg
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Twin Bridge Meadow Family Campground | 4.2 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Free |
| Caledonia State Park | 9.7 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Free |
| Keystone RV Center | 15.4 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Free |
| Ye Olde Mill Campground | 15.4 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Free |
| Longview Campground | 17.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| KOA - Gettysburg / Battlefield KOA | 19.1 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Free |
| Gettysburg Campground | 21.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| A. C. & T. Exxon Travel Center | 22.2 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Free |
| Pine Grove Furnace State Park | 22.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| KOA - Hagerstown / Antietam Battlefield KOA Campground | 23.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Twin Bridge Meadow Family Campground
4.2 miCaledonia State Park
9.7 miKeystone RV Center
15.4 miYe Olde Mill Campground
15.4 miLongview Campground
17.8 miKOA - Gettysburg / Battlefield KOA
19.1 miGettysburg Campground
21.6 miA. C. & T. Exxon Travel Center
22.2 miPine Grove Furnace State Park
22.2 miKOA - Hagerstown / Antietam Battlefield KOA Campground
23.1 miTraveling to Chambersburg by RV
Chambersburg is built around I-81, the main north-south interstate through the Cumberland Valley, so interstate access is immediate. US-30, the old Lincoln Highway, crosses east-west through town and climbs into the South Mountain range toward Caledonia State Park and Gettysburg. US-11 parallels the interstate and PA-316 handles local routes. We found no low bridges or weight restrictions worth flagging, though the US-30 mountain grades east of town run slow for a heavy rig.
For longer hauls, I-76, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, is a short distance north and connects you east toward Harrisburg and Philadelphia or west toward Pittsburgh. Diesel and gas are easy along both the I-81 and US-30 corridors, with full services in town. The main thing to plan around is winter: I-81 through the valley is a known trouble spot in snow, and the mountain sections of US-30 get slick, so watch the forecast and avoid moving your rig during active storms.
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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 Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, 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 Chambersburg
Budget for paid dumping here, because all several of the stations we track are paid (a portion paid, a portion free). At the private and state park campgrounds, dumping is simply part of a site rather than a separate charge, so your real cost is the nightly camping rate. Pennsylvania state parks like Caledonia and Cowans Gap fold dump and potable water access into standard camping fees, which run reasonable compared with the private tourist-area parks closer to Gettysburg.
To keep costs down, use Chambersburg as your base and day-trip to the battlefield rather than camping in the pricier Gettysburg tourist zone. Buy groceries and top off diesel in town along US-30, where a mid-size city keeps prices competitive, instead of at the smaller stops out in the mountains. Time your visit for fall shoulder weeks if you can, when the foliage is great and weekend campground demand eases a little compared with peak summer.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Chambersburg by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
22F - 35F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy, averaging around 31 inches of snow a year, and temps sit below freezing plenty of days. I-81 through the valley can get treacherous in a storm and the mountain sections of US-30 toward Gettysburg get slick. Most campgrounds are closed or bare-bones this time of year.
Spring
Mar - May
39F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
Variable, with trees and flowers blooming by April and the mountains greening up. Weather swings fast, so pack for both frost and shirtsleeves. Twin Bridge opens for the season and Caledonia State Park starts filling on weekends.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63F - 86F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid with occasional afternoon thunderstorms. This is peak season for the Cumberland Valley and for Gettysburg trips just up US-30, so book campground sites ahead. Festivals and the food-truck scene keep town busy.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42F - 64F
Crowds: Medium
The best window here. Foliage in the South Mountain range is genuinely worth the trip, temps are comfortable, and humidity drops off. September and October are prime for both camping and battlefield touring before the cold sets in.
Explore the Chambersburg Area
Caledonia State Park makes an excellent base camp for visiting Gettysburg, which is about 15 miles further east on US-30, so you can dump, hook up, and still day-trip to the battlefield from a quieter, cheaper valley site. Twin Bridge Campground is the closest private option to I-81 if you just need a fast, convenient overnight near the interstate, and it has pull-throughs plus a stocked trout stream on-site.
Stock up on groceries and fuel in town along US-30 before heading into the mountains, since options thin out fast once you climb into South Mountain. Chambersburg runs a fun events calendar worth timing around, including a Food Truck Festival, Apple Fest, and the winter Icefest downtown. For reference, town sits 13 miles north of the Maryland border at the Mason-Dixon Line and about 52 miles southwest of Harrisburg if you need bigger-city services or a deeper RV dealer network.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Chambersburg
How many RV dump stations are near Chambersburg, Pennsylvania?
We track several dump stations in and around Chambersburg, and right now all of them are paid rather than free (a portion paid). Most of that access is tied to campgrounds along the US-30 corridor and out at the state parks in the South Mountain range. Caledonia State Park, about 11 miles east on US-30, has sanitary dump stations for its campers, and Twin Bridge Campground near I-81 handles dumping as part of a site. If you are self-contained and passing through on I-81, plan to dump either at one of these parks or at a campground where you are overnighting, since there is no free municipal station we could confirm in town.
Are there any free dump stations in Chambersburg?
Not that we have been able to verify. All several of the stations we count around Chambersburg are paid, generally bundled into a campground stay or charged as a day-use dump fee at the state parks. Caledonia and Cowans Gap both fold dump access into their camping rates rather than offering a standalone free option. If your budget is tight, the most reliable move is to time your dump with a night at Twin Bridge or a state park rather than hunting for a freebie. Larger metros like Harrisburg, about 52 miles northeast, sometimes have more options, but do not count on a free pull-through right in Chambersburg.
Can I dump at Caledonia State Park?
Yes. Caledonia State Park sits about 11 miles east of Chambersburg on US-30, right in the South Mountain range between town and Gettysburg, and it has sanitary dump stations available to campers. The park covers 1,125 acres with 184 sites split across the Chinquapin Hill and Hosack Run campgrounds, including 18 full-hookup sites plus electric-only sites, showers, and flush toilets. It makes a solid base for RVers because you can dump, refill potable water, and still be a short drive from both Chambersburg services and the Gettysburg battlefield. Expect to pay the Pennsylvania state park camping rate, and reserve ahead in summer since it fills on weekends.
What highways lead into Chambersburg and are they RV-friendly?
Chambersburg sits right on I-81, the main north-south interstate through the Cumberland Valley, which makes it one of the easiest RV towns to reach in south-central Pennsylvania. US-30, the old Lincoln Highway, runs east-west through town and climbs into the mountains toward Gettysburg and Caledonia State Park. US-11 parallels I-81, and PA-316 handles local traffic. We found no low bridges or weight restrictions worth flagging on these routes, though the US-30 mountain grades east of town can be slow going in a heavy rig. In winter, watch I-81 closely because the valley gets snow and the interstate can turn treacherous during storms.
How far is the nearest interstate from Chambersburg?
You are already on it. I-81 runs straight through Chambersburg, so interstate access is immediate, which is a big part of why the town works so well as an RV stop. To the north you can also pick up I-76, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, for east-west travel toward Harrisburg and Philadelphia or west toward Pittsburgh. Fuel, both diesel and gas, is easy along the I-81 and US-30 corridors, and there are full services in town. Because the interstate is right here, you will not have the range anxiety you get in more rural stops, but do plan around winter weather since I-81 is a known trouble spot in snow and ice.
Where can I get propane and RV repairs in Chambersburg?
Chambersburg is a full-service town, so propane and repair options are better here than in the small rural stops nearby. Our research did not pin down specific named propane dealers or RV repair shops, but a city this size along the US-30 commercial strip reliably has hardware stores, farm and fleet outlets, and U-Haul-style locations that refill propane, plus truck and auto service that can handle chassis work on a motorhome. For anything specialized on the house side of an RV, you may end up calling toward Harrisburg, about 52 miles northeast, where the dealer network is deeper. Call ahead to confirm hours and that a shop can take your rig length before you drive over.
What is there to do around Chambersburg with an RV?
The headline draw is Gettysburg National Military Park, about 25 miles east via US-30, where you can tour the 1863 Civil War battlefield, the museum, and the monuments, easily a full day. Closer in, Caledonia State Park offers hiking, fishing, and a swimming pool in the South Mountain system just 11 miles out. Chambersburg itself runs a lively events calendar including a Food Truck Festival, Apple Fest, and the winter Icefest downtown. The surrounding Cumberland Valley is farm country with orchards and back roads that show off the foliage in fall. Between the history, the mountains, and the small-town festivals, it is an easy place to spend a few days.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Chambersburg?
Fall, hands down. September and October bring comfortable temperatures, lower humidity, and genuinely good foliage across the South Mountain range, which makes both camping and the Gettysburg trip more pleasant. Summer is the busy season and works fine if you book campgrounds ahead, but it runs warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms. Spring is pretty once things green up in April, though the weather swings hard and can still throw frost at you. Winter we would generally skip for RV travel here, since it is cold, snowy, and I-81 plus the US-30 mountain grades can get dangerous in storms, and most campgrounds are closed or offering only limited service.
Is boondocking or free camping available near Chambersburg?
Options are limited right around Chambersburg. The immediate valley is developed farm and town country without much public land for dispersed camping. State forests in the surrounding mountains may offer primitive roadside spots, but nothing formal turned up in our research close to town. The nearest reliable dispersed option we found is Green Ridge State Forest across the line in Maryland, which allows roadside camping for about 10 dollars a night. For most RVers the practical choices near Chambersburg are Twin Bridge Campground near I-81 or the state park campgrounds at Caledonia and Cowans Gap, all of which give you dump access and water along with a legal, level place to park.
What are the best campgrounds near Chambersburg for RVers?
Three stand out. Twin Bridge Campground is the closest private option to I-81, about 6 miles off the interstate and a mile from US-30, with pull-through, shaded, and field sites, 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and a stocked trout stream right on the property. Caledonia State Park, 11 miles east on US-30, has 184 sites including 18 full-hookup spots, dump stations, showers, and flush toilets across two campgrounds. Cowans Gap State Park offers spacious, shaded electric sites that suit motorhomes and sits in a quieter mountain setting. All three give you dump access, and the state parks double as good bases for exploring the South Mountain range and Gettysburg.
Is Chambersburg a good base for visiting Gettysburg?
It is one of the better ones, especially if you want to camp outside the immediate battlefield crowds. Gettysburg is about 25 miles east on US-30, a straightforward drive of well under an hour, and Caledonia State Park sits roughly halfway between the two at the 11-mile mark, which makes it a natural home base with dump stations and hookups. From a campsite near Chambersburg you can day-trip to the battlefield, the museum, and the monuments, then come back to a quieter valley for the night with full services and cheaper camping than you often find right at a major tourist site. It is a smart way to see the history without paying tourist-town premiums.
What are winter driving conditions like around Chambersburg?
Take them seriously. Chambersburg averages around 31 inches of snow a year and spends plenty of winter days below freezing, and I-81 through the Cumberland Valley is a well-known trouble spot when storms roll through. The US-30 grades climbing east into the South Mountain range toward Gettysburg and Caledonia can get slick and slow in a heavy rig. Annual rainfall runs about 41 inches, so shoulder-season travel can be wet too. If you are moving an RV through here in winter, watch the forecast closely, avoid driving during active storms, and remember most campgrounds are closed or offering limited service, so plan your dump and hookup stops around what is actually open.
Where do I buy groceries and water in Chambersburg?
Chambersburg is a proper mid-size valley town, so groceries and services are easy to find along the US-30 corridor through town, with a full range of stores rather than the thin small-town options you hit further out in the mountains. We always stock up here before heading to the state park campgrounds, since selection drops off fast once you climb into the South Mountain range. Potable water is available at the Caledonia State Park campgrounds, and being on municipal supply, in-town campgrounds have good water too. Fill your fresh tank where you can and grab supplies in town rather than counting on the smaller stops around Gettysburg or the rural stretches of US-30.
Do I need any permits to park or dump an RV around Chambersburg?
For dumping and general RV travel, no special permits are required in the Chambersburg area, and there are no unusual local ordinances we found for the town itself. RV sewage has to go to designated dump stations, and the state parks charge camping or day-use fees rather than requiring a permit. If you plan to use Pennsylvania state parks like Caledonia or Cowans Gap, you pay the standard camping rate that includes dump and water access. For overnight parking at stores or lots, policies are set by the individual business, so ask the manager rather than assume, and use the campgrounds or state parks for a reliable, legal overnight with hookups.
How many RV dump stations are near Chambersburg, Pennsylvania?
We track {{stationCount}} dump stations in and around Chambersburg, and right now all of them are paid rather than free ({{paidPct}} paid). Most of that access is tied to campgrounds along the US-30 corridor and out at the state parks in the South Mountain range. Caledonia State Park, about 11 miles east on US-30, has sanitary dump stations for its campers, and Twin Bridge Campground near I-81 handles dumping as part of a site. If you are self-contained and passing through on I-81, plan to dump either at one of these parks or at a campground where you are overnighting, since there is no free municipal station we could confirm in town.
Are there any free dump stations in Chambersburg?
Not that we have been able to verify. All {{stationCount}} of the stations we count around Chambersburg are paid, generally bundled into a campground stay or charged as a day-use dump fee at the state parks. Caledonia and Cowans Gap both fold dump access into their camping rates rather than offering a standalone free option. If your budget is tight, the most reliable move is to time your dump with a night at Twin Bridge or a state park rather than hunting for a freebie. Larger metros like Harrisburg, about 52 miles northeast, sometimes have more options, but do not count on a free pull-through right in Chambersburg.
Can I dump at Caledonia State Park?
Yes. Caledonia State Park sits about 11 miles east of Chambersburg on US-30, right in the South Mountain range between town and Gettysburg, and it has sanitary dump stations available to campers. The park covers 1,125 acres with 184 sites split across the Chinquapin Hill and Hosack Run campgrounds, including 18 full-hookup sites plus electric-only sites, showers, and flush toilets. It makes a solid base for RVers because you can dump, refill potable water, and still be a short drive from both Chambersburg services and the Gettysburg battlefield. Expect to pay the Pennsylvania state park camping rate, and reserve ahead in summer since it fills on weekends.
What highways lead into Chambersburg and are they RV-friendly?
Chambersburg sits right on I-81, the main north-south interstate through the Cumberland Valley, which makes it one of the easiest RV towns to reach in south-central Pennsylvania. US-30, the old Lincoln Highway, runs east-west through town and climbs into the mountains toward Gettysburg and Caledonia State Park. US-11 parallels I-81, and PA-316 handles local traffic. We found no low bridges or weight restrictions worth flagging on these routes, though the US-30 mountain grades east of town can be slow going in a heavy rig. In winter, watch I-81 closely because the valley gets snow and the interstate can turn treacherous during storms.
How far is the nearest interstate from Chambersburg?
You are already on it. I-81 runs straight through Chambersburg, so interstate access is immediate, which is a big part of why the town works so well as an RV stop. To the north you can also pick up I-76, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, for east-west travel toward Harrisburg and Philadelphia or west toward Pittsburgh. Fuel, both diesel and gas, is easy along the I-81 and US-30 corridors, and there are full services in town. Because the interstate is right here, you will not have the range anxiety you get in more rural stops, but do plan around winter weather since I-81 is a known trouble spot in snow and ice.
Where can I get propane and RV repairs in Chambersburg?
Chambersburg is a full-service town, so propane and repair options are better here than in the small rural stops nearby. Our research did not pin down specific named propane dealers or RV repair shops, but a city this size along the US-30 commercial strip reliably has hardware stores, farm and fleet outlets, and U-Haul-style locations that refill propane, plus truck and auto service that can handle chassis work on a motorhome. For anything specialized on the house side of an RV, you may end up calling toward Harrisburg, about 52 miles northeast, where the dealer network is deeper. Call ahead to confirm hours and that a shop can take your rig length before you drive over.
What is there to do around Chambersburg with an RV?
The headline draw is Gettysburg National Military Park, about 25 miles east via US-30, where you can tour the 1863 Civil War battlefield, the museum, and the monuments, easily a full day. Closer in, Caledonia State Park offers hiking, fishing, and a swimming pool in the South Mountain system just 11 miles out. Chambersburg itself runs a lively events calendar including a Food Truck Festival, Apple Fest, and the winter Icefest downtown. The surrounding Cumberland Valley is farm country with orchards and back roads that show off the foliage in fall. Between the history, the mountains, and the small-town festivals, it is an easy place to spend a few days.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Chambersburg?
Fall, hands down. September and October bring comfortable temperatures, lower humidity, and genuinely good foliage across the South Mountain range, which makes both camping and the Gettysburg trip more pleasant. Summer is the busy season and works fine if you book campgrounds ahead, but it runs warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms. Spring is pretty once things green up in April, though the weather swings hard and can still throw frost at you. Winter we would generally skip for RV travel here, since it is cold, snowy, and I-81 plus the US-30 mountain grades can get dangerous in storms, and most campgrounds are closed or offering only limited service.
Is boondocking or free camping available near Chambersburg?
Options are limited right around Chambersburg. The immediate valley is developed farm and town country without much public land for dispersed camping. State forests in the surrounding mountains may offer primitive roadside spots, but nothing formal turned up in our research close to town. The nearest reliable dispersed option we found is Green Ridge State Forest across the line in Maryland, which allows roadside camping for about 10 dollars a night. For most RVers the practical choices near Chambersburg are Twin Bridge Campground near I-81 or the state park campgrounds at Caledonia and Cowans Gap, all of which give you dump access and water along with a legal, level place to park.
What are the best campgrounds near Chambersburg for RVers?
Three stand out. Twin Bridge Campground is the closest private option to I-81, about 6 miles off the interstate and a mile from US-30, with pull-through, shaded, and field sites, 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and a stocked trout stream right on the property. Caledonia State Park, 11 miles east on US-30, has 184 sites including 18 full-hookup spots, dump stations, showers, and flush toilets across two campgrounds. Cowans Gap State Park offers spacious, shaded electric sites that suit motorhomes and sits in a quieter mountain setting. All three give you dump access, and the state parks double as good bases for exploring the South Mountain range and Gettysburg.
Is Chambersburg a good base for visiting Gettysburg?
It is one of the better ones, especially if you want to camp outside the immediate battlefield crowds. Gettysburg is about 25 miles east on US-30, a straightforward drive of well under an hour, and Caledonia State Park sits roughly halfway between the two at the 11-mile mark, which makes it a natural home base with dump stations and hookups. From a campsite near Chambersburg you can day-trip to the battlefield, the museum, and the monuments, then come back to a quieter valley for the night with full services and cheaper camping than you often find right at a major tourist site. It is a smart way to see the history without paying tourist-town premiums.
What are winter driving conditions like around Chambersburg?
Take them seriously. Chambersburg averages around 31 inches of snow a year and spends plenty of winter days below freezing, and I-81 through the Cumberland Valley is a well-known trouble spot when storms roll through. The US-30 grades climbing east into the South Mountain range toward Gettysburg and Caledonia can get slick and slow in a heavy rig. Annual rainfall runs about 41 inches, so shoulder-season travel can be wet too. If you are moving an RV through here in winter, watch the forecast closely, avoid driving during active storms, and remember most campgrounds are closed or offering limited service, so plan your dump and hookup stops around what is actually open.
Where do I buy groceries and water in Chambersburg?
Chambersburg is a proper mid-size valley town, so groceries and services are easy to find along the US-30 corridor through town, with a full range of stores rather than the thin small-town options you hit further out in the mountains. We always stock up here before heading to the state park campgrounds, since selection drops off fast once you climb into the South Mountain range. Potable water is available at the Caledonia State Park campgrounds, and being on municipal supply, in-town campgrounds have good water too. Fill your fresh tank where you can and grab supplies in town rather than counting on the smaller stops around Gettysburg or the rural stretches of US-30.
Do I need any permits to park or dump an RV around Chambersburg?
For dumping and general RV travel, no special permits are required in the Chambersburg area, and there are no unusual local ordinances we found for the town itself. RV sewage has to go to designated dump stations, and the state parks charge camping or day-use fees rather than requiring a permit. If you plan to use Pennsylvania state parks like Caledonia or Cowans Gap, you pay the standard camping rate that includes dump and water access. For overnight parking at stores or lots, policies are set by the individual business, so ask the manager rather than assume, and use the campgrounds or state parks for a reliable, legal overnight with hookups.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Chambersburg?
The highest-rated station is Caledonia State Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Chambersburg?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Chambersburg.






