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RV Parks In Pennsylvania

41.2033° N, 77.1945° W

Quick Overview

<p>Pennsylvania gives RVers a lot to work with: a huge, well-run state-park system with no entrance fees, a national forest you can actually boondock in, and headline attractions like Hershey and Gettysburg ringed by full-service resorts. The state splits naturally into regions, the Laurel Highlands and Allegheny country in the west, the ridge-and-valley mountains through the center, and the gentler Dutch Country and Poconos in the east, and each offers a different flavor of trip. The common thread is value, since the public lands here cost less than in much of the Northeast.</p><p>The DCNR state parks are the backbone. <a href="https://www.pa.gov/agencies/dcnr">Ricketts Glen</a> is famous for its Falls Trail past 21 named waterfalls, Ohiopyle anchors the whitewater-rich Laurel Highlands, Cook Forest protects a cathedral of old-growth white pine, and Pymatuning surrounds one of the state’s largest lakes with hundreds of sites. Most offer electric hookups and dump stations rather than full sewer, though the Bureau of State Parks has begun adding full-hookup sites at select campgrounds. Reservations run through <a href="https://pennsylvaniastateparks.reserveamerica.com/">the state reservation system</a> up to 11 months out.</p><p>For full hookups and proximity to the big attractions, private resorts take over. The Gettysburg Battlefield KOA is the go-to base for touring the Civil War battlefield, with 50-amp full-hookup sites and a National Park Service that runs no campground of its own there. Around Hershey, the official Hersheypark Camping Resort offers a shuttle to the rides and Chocolate World, and the large Thousand Trails Hershey resort handles big rigs with spacious sites. These cost more than the parks but deliver convenience and amenities.</p><p>Pennsylvania also stands out in the East for free camping. The <a href="https://www.fs.usda.gov/allegheny">Allegheny National Forest</a> in the northwest allows dispersed boondocking if you are self-contained, with the Kinzua reservoir as a scenic centerpiece. That is a rare option in such a settled part of the country, and it pairs well with the surrounding state-park electric sites for RVers who want to mix free nights with hookups. The forest roads are quiet, the Kinzua Bridge skywalk and the reservoir give you something to do between hikes, and you can easily spend several days here without ever paying for a site or fighting for a reservation, which is almost unheard of east of the Mississippi.</p><p>The honest tradeoffs are terrain and season. The central mountains mean real grades and tunnels on the PA Turnpike and I-80, so big rigs should plan routes and watch their brakes, and most state-park camping closes from late fall into spring. But time a trip for summer lakes or, better yet, October foliage in the Alleghenies, and Pennsylvania delivers some of the best-value camping in the Northeast. Staying a while and need to dump the tanks? See our companion guide to <a href="https://rvinglife.com/pennsylvania-rv-dump-stations">RV dump stations in Pennsylvania</a>.</p>

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Getting Around Pennsylvania by RV

Driving an RV across Pennsylvania is a tale of two halves. The eastern interstates, I-81 and I-83, are straightforward and gentle, but the center of the state is genuinely mountainous. The Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76) is tolled by vehicle class and threads through long tunnels and over high ridges, while I-80 climbs serious grades across the Alleghenies. On the descents, watch your engine temps and brakes, and plan fuel stops because services thin out between mountain towns. None of it is beyond a careful driver, but it is not the flat cruising of neighboring Ohio.

Once you are off the ridges, the lake country in the northwest and the Dutch Country roads in the southeast are easy for any size rig, with Hershey, Lancaster and Gettysburg all within comfortable day-trip range of one another. For fly-and-rent trips, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg and Allentown all have airports with RV rental options nearby. Plan your route around the turnpike tolls and the central grades, and Pennsylvania becomes a very manageable state to tour, with attractions and scenery packed close enough that you rarely face a long, dull transit day.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Pennsylvania trip, 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.

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RV Parks Costs in Pennsylvania

<p>Pennsylvania camps cheaply by Northeast standards, largely because the state parks charge no entrance fee. State-park electric sites generally run about 25 to 45 dollars a night, and dispersed camping in the Allegheny National Forest is free if you are self-contained, which is a genuine money-saver for RVers comfortable without hookups. That public-land value is part of what makes the state attractive for longer, multi-park trips through the mountains and lake country.</p><p>Private resorts cost more but buy convenience and full hookups. Near Hershey and Gettysburg, expect roughly 45 to 90 dollars a night in season, with theme-park-adjacent and premium sites at the top of that range. To save, travel midweek or in the spring and fall shoulders when rates ease, mix free national-forest nights between hookup stays, and look at membership and weekly rates at the larger resorts if you are settling in to tour the attractions. The one extra to budget is PA Turnpike tolls, which scale up for larger rigs.</p>

Free: 237 stations (73%)
Paid: 86 stations (27%)

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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

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Best Time to Visit Pennsylvania by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

22F - 38F

Crowds: Low

Most state-park electric loops close from late fall into spring, and the central mountains get real snow. Year-round camping is limited to a few private parks, so book ahead and prepare for freezing temperatures.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

40F - 60F

Crowds: Medium

Waterfalls run full at Ricketts Glen and the Youghiogheny peaks for rafting at Ohiopyle, making this a great early-season target. Expect mud, frequent rain and chilly mountain nights into May.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

62F - 83F

Crowds: High

Lake parks like Pymatuning, plus Hershey and Gettysburg, fill on weekends, so reserve early. Days are warm and humid with cooler mountain nights and frequent afternoon thunderstorms.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

43F - 64F

Crowds: Medium

The standout season. The Alleghenies and Cook Forest blaze with color through October, and foliage weekends book up as fast as summer. Days are crisp and the bugs are gone.

Explore Pennsylvania

<p>The key move is booking early at <a href="https://pennsylvaniastateparks.reserveamerica.com/">the state reservation system</a>. Pennsylvania opens sites 11 months out, so set a reminder and grab Ricketts Glen, Ohiopyle or Cook Forest the day your window opens for summer and fall-foliage weekends, which go fast. Remember that Pennsylvania State Parks charge no entrance fee, making a state-park site the best value around, and watch for cancellations on the reservation site as your dates approach if you miss the initial release.</p><p>For free nights, the Allegheny National Forest in the northwest allows dispersed boondocking if you are self-contained, a rare treat in the East, and it pairs nicely with nearby state-park electric sites. If your trip centers on Hershey or Gettysburg, book the dedicated resorts well ahead for summer, since they fill for the theme-park and battle-anniversary seasons. And plan your driving around the central mountains: the turnpike tunnels and I-80 grades reward a driver who checks brakes, watches temps and fuels up before climbing into ridge country with a heavy rig. A little route planning here saves a lot of white-knuckle driving later.</p>

Helpful Resources

Federal Resources

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Pennsylvania

What are the best RV parks in Pennsylvania?

It depends on what you are after. For natural beauty, the DCNR state parks are tops: Ricketts Glen with its 21 waterfalls, Ohiopyle in the whitewater-rich Laurel Highlands, Cook Forest’s old-growth pines, and Pymatuning’s big lake. For full hookups and attractions, private resorts shine, including Gettysburg Battlefield KOA for Civil War history, and Hersheypark Camping Resort and Thousand Trails Hershey for the theme parks. If you want free camping, the Allegheny National Forest in the northwest offers dispersed boondocking. Most RVers mix a state park or two with a private resort near the big attractions.

Do Pennsylvania RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Some do, and more are being added. PA State Parks have traditionally offered electric sites with shared dump stations rather than full sewer, though the Bureau of State Parks has been adding full-hookup sites at select campgrounds like Ohiopyle. For guaranteed full hookups with 50-amp service, the private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg and the Poconos are your best bet, and they are built for it. When you book a state-park site through the reservation system, check the listed amenities, since hookup levels vary by site and many remain electric-only.

How much does RV camping cost in Pennsylvania?

Pennsylvania is a good value, helped by the fact that state parks charge no entrance fee. State-park electric sites generally run about 25 to 45 dollars a night, and dispersed camping in the Allegheny National Forest is free if you are self-contained. Private full-hookup resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg cost more, typically 45 to 90 dollars a night in season, with premium and theme-park-adjacent sites at the top. Shoulder-season and midweek rates drop, and membership and weekly options at the larger resorts make longer stays more affordable.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Pennsylvania?

For summer and fall-foliage weekends, book early. Pennsylvania State Parks open reservations up to 11 months in advance at pennsylvaniastateparks.reserveamerica.com, and the headliners, Ricketts Glen, Ohiopyle and Cook Forest, fill quickly for peak weekends. Private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg also book months ahead in summer. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier and often available a week or two out. If your dates are set, reserve as soon as the window opens and watch for cancellations as the trip nears.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Pennsylvania?

Fall is hard to beat. October lights up the Alleghenies and Cook Forest with color, the air is crisp, the bugs are gone, and crowds ease midweek, though foliage weekends book up fast. Summer is prime for lakes, Hershey and Gettysburg but also the busiest and most humid stretch. Spring is excellent for waterfalls and rafting when the rivers run full, just expect mud and rain. Winter camping is limited to a few year-round private parks, so most RVers treat Pennsylvania as an April-to-October destination with a fall peak.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Pennsylvania?

Yes, with some care about where you book. The private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg and the Poconos are built for big rigs with long, full-hookup, often pull-through sites. Among state parks, newer loops at places like Pymatuning and Ohiopyle handle larger rigs, but older mountain-park campgrounds can be tight and twisty. Pennsylvania’s central ridges also mean real grades and tunnels on the PA Turnpike and I-80, so plan your routes and brakes. Read site-length details before booking a state park if you run a 40-footer.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Pennsylvania?

Yes, more than in many eastern states. The Allegheny National Forest in the northwest allows dispersed camping, which is free if you are fully self-contained, and there are first-come sites and primitive camping in some state forests. The Kinzua reservoir area is a popular base. Developed state-park and private camping is reservation-based, so do not count on walking up to a site near the big attractions on a summer weekend. For boondocking, the northwest forest country is your best bet, and always check current fire and stay-limit rules.

Where should I camp to visit Gettysburg?

The Gettysburg Battlefield KOA is the natural choice, with full hookups, 50-amp service and a location built for touring the battlefield and town. Several other private campgrounds and a few state and county options sit nearby as well. The National Park Service does not run a campground at the battlefield itself, so RVers rely on these private parks. Book ahead for summer and around the early-July battle anniversary, when the area is busiest. From a base here you can easily do the auto tour, the visitor center and the surrounding Dutch Country attractions.

Where should I camp to visit Hershey?

Two resorts dominate. Hersheypark Camping Resort is the official option, with electric and full-hookup sites and a shuttle to Hersheypark and Chocolate World, ideal if the theme park is your focus. Thousand Trails Hershey is a large nearby resort with spacious full-hookup sites, popular with members and big rigs. Both book months ahead for the summer theme-park season, so reserve early. Hershey’s central location also makes it a convenient base for day trips to Gettysburg, Lancaster’s Amish Country and the state capital at Harrisburg, all within an easy drive.

What is camping like in the Pennsylvania mountains and Laurel Highlands?

It is the scenic heart of Pennsylvania RVing. Ohiopyle State Park anchors the Laurel Highlands in the southwest, with electric and some full-hookup sites and world-class whitewater on the Youghiogheny River, plus Fallingwater nearby. To the northeast, Ricketts Glen’s Falls Trail and Cook Forest’s ancient pines draw RVers for hiking and fall color. Expect mountain weather, real grades on the access roads, and electric-rather-than-full hookups at most sites. Spring brings big water for rafting and full waterfalls, while October delivers the best color in the state.

Do Pennsylvania state parks charge an entrance fee?

No. Like Ohio, Pennsylvania does not charge a separate entrance or day-use fee at its state parks, so the only cost is your camping reservation. That makes the DCNR system an excellent value for RVers, since you are not paying to get in on top of your nightly site fee. You still pay standard camping fees through the reservation system, and a few specific facilities or programs may have charges, but day-use access and parking at Pennsylvania state parks are free, which encourages exploring multiple parks on a single trip.

Can I camp in Pennsylvania in the winter?

Only in limited places. Pennsylvania winters bring cold and mountain snow, and most state-park electric loops close from late fall into spring. A handful of private parks stay open year-round, mainly in the lower-elevation and eastern parts of the state, for cold-weather and shoulder-season camping. If you plan a winter trip, book a year-round private park ahead, prepare for freezing temperatures and tank management, and do not count on the state-park system being open. Most RVers plan Pennsylvania trips for the April-through-October window instead.

How is it to drive an RV through Pennsylvania?

Easier in the east, more demanding through the middle. The eastern interstates like I-81 and I-83 are straightforward, but the central part of the state is mountainous: the PA Turnpike (I-76) is tolled by vehicle class and runs through long tunnels and over ridges, and I-80 climbs real grades across the Alleghenies. Watch your engine temps and brakes on the descents and plan fuel stops, since services thin out in the mountains. Once you are off the ridges, the lake country and Dutch Country roads are gentle and easy for any size rig.

What are the best RV parks in Pennsylvania?

It depends on what you are after. For natural beauty, the DCNR state parks are tops: Ricketts Glen with its 21 waterfalls, Ohiopyle in the whitewater-rich Laurel Highlands, Cook Forest’s old-growth pines, and Pymatuning’s big lake. For full hookups and attractions, private resorts shine, including Gettysburg Battlefield KOA for Civil War history, and Hersheypark Camping Resort and Thousand Trails Hershey for the theme parks. If you want free camping, the Allegheny National Forest in the northwest offers dispersed boondocking. Most RVers mix a state park or two with a private resort near the big attractions.

Do Pennsylvania RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Some do, and more are being added. PA State Parks have traditionally offered electric sites with shared dump stations rather than full sewer, though the Bureau of State Parks has been adding full-hookup sites at select campgrounds like Ohiopyle. For guaranteed full hookups with 50-amp service, the private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg and the Poconos are your best bet, and they are built for it. When you book a state-park site through the reservation system, check the listed amenities, since hookup levels vary by site and many remain electric-only.

How much does RV camping cost in Pennsylvania?

Pennsylvania is a good value, helped by the fact that state parks charge no entrance fee. State-park electric sites generally run about 25 to 45 dollars a night, and dispersed camping in the Allegheny National Forest is free if you are self-contained. Private full-hookup resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg cost more, typically 45 to 90 dollars a night in season, with premium and theme-park-adjacent sites at the top. Shoulder-season and midweek rates drop, and membership and weekly options at the larger resorts make longer stays more affordable.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Pennsylvania?

For summer and fall-foliage weekends, book early. Pennsylvania State Parks open reservations up to 11 months in advance at pennsylvaniastateparks.reserveamerica.com, and the headliners, Ricketts Glen, Ohiopyle and Cook Forest, fill quickly for peak weekends. Private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg also book months ahead in summer. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier and often available a week or two out. If your dates are set, reserve as soon as the window opens and watch for cancellations as the trip nears.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Pennsylvania?

Fall is hard to beat. October lights up the Alleghenies and Cook Forest with color, the air is crisp, the bugs are gone, and crowds ease midweek, though foliage weekends book up fast. Summer is prime for lakes, Hershey and Gettysburg but also the busiest and most humid stretch. Spring is excellent for waterfalls and rafting when the rivers run full, just expect mud and rain. Winter camping is limited to a few year-round private parks, so most RVers treat Pennsylvania as an April-to-October destination with a fall peak.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Pennsylvania?

Yes, with some care about where you book. The private resorts near Hershey and Gettysburg and the Poconos are built for big rigs with long, full-hookup, often pull-through sites. Among state parks, newer loops at places like Pymatuning and Ohiopyle handle larger rigs, but older mountain-park campgrounds can be tight and twisty. Pennsylvania’s central ridges also mean real grades and tunnels on the PA Turnpike and I-80, so plan your routes and brakes. Read site-length details before booking a state park if you run a 40-footer.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Pennsylvania?

Yes, more than in many eastern states. The Allegheny National Forest in the northwest allows dispersed camping, which is free if you are fully self-contained, and there are first-come sites and primitive camping in some state forests. The Kinzua reservoir area is a popular base. Developed state-park and private camping is reservation-based, so do not count on walking up to a site near the big attractions on a summer weekend. For boondocking, the northwest forest country is your best bet, and always check current fire and stay-limit rules.

Where should I camp to visit Gettysburg?

The Gettysburg Battlefield KOA is the natural choice, with full hookups, 50-amp service and a location built for touring the battlefield and town. Several other private campgrounds and a few state and county options sit nearby as well. The National Park Service does not run a campground at the battlefield itself, so RVers rely on these private parks. Book ahead for summer and around the early-July battle anniversary, when the area is busiest. From a base here you can easily do the auto tour, the visitor center and the surrounding Dutch Country attractions.

Where should I camp to visit Hershey?

Two resorts dominate. Hersheypark Camping Resort is the official option, with electric and full-hookup sites and a shuttle to Hersheypark and Chocolate World, ideal if the theme park is your focus. Thousand Trails Hershey is a large nearby resort with spacious full-hookup sites, popular with members and big rigs. Both book months ahead for the summer theme-park season, so reserve early. Hershey’s central location also makes it a convenient base for day trips to Gettysburg, Lancaster’s Amish Country and the state capital at Harrisburg, all within an easy drive.

What is camping like in the Pennsylvania mountains and Laurel Highlands?

It is the scenic heart of Pennsylvania RVing. Ohiopyle State Park anchors the Laurel Highlands in the southwest, with electric and some full-hookup sites and world-class whitewater on the Youghiogheny River, plus Fallingwater nearby. To the northeast, Ricketts Glen’s Falls Trail and Cook Forest’s ancient pines draw RVers for hiking and fall color. Expect mountain weather, real grades on the access roads, and electric-rather-than-full hookups at most sites. Spring brings big water for rafting and full waterfalls, while October delivers the best color in the state.

Do Pennsylvania state parks charge an entrance fee?

No. Like Ohio, Pennsylvania does not charge a separate entrance or day-use fee at its state parks, so the only cost is your camping reservation. That makes the DCNR system an excellent value for RVers, since you are not paying to get in on top of your nightly site fee. You still pay standard camping fees through the reservation system, and a few specific facilities or programs may have charges, but day-use access and parking at Pennsylvania state parks are free, which encourages exploring multiple parks on a single trip.

Can I camp in Pennsylvania in the winter?

Only in limited places. Pennsylvania winters bring cold and mountain snow, and most state-park electric loops close from late fall into spring. A handful of private parks stay open year-round, mainly in the lower-elevation and eastern parts of the state, for cold-weather and shoulder-season camping. If you plan a winter trip, book a year-round private park ahead, prepare for freezing temperatures and tank management, and do not count on the state-park system being open. Most RVers plan Pennsylvania trips for the April-through-October window instead.

How is it to drive an RV through Pennsylvania?

Easier in the east, more demanding through the middle. The eastern interstates like I-81 and I-83 are straightforward, but the central part of the state is mountainous: the PA Turnpike (I-76) is tolled by vehicle class and runs through long tunnels and over ridges, and I-80 climbs real grades across the Alleghenies. Watch your engine temps and brakes on the descents and plan fuel stops, since services thin out in the mountains. Once you are off the ridges, the lake country and Dutch Country roads are gentle and easy for any size rig.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Pennsylvania?

The highest-rated is Caledonia State Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.