RV Parks In Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
33.6891° N, 78.8867° W
Quick Overview
If you are towing toward the South Carolina coast, Myrtle Beach is one of the biggest RV camping destinations on the entire East Coast, and the choice of where to park your rig is half the trip. The Grand Strand packs an enormous amount of camping into a short stretch of shoreline, from giant private oceanfront resorts to two genuinely good state parks, so almost everyone finds a fit.
On the private side, the resorts here are destinations in themselves. Ocean Lakes Family Campground is the largest campground on the East Coast, 310 acres with nearly a mile of private beach, full hookups, and a water park. Pirateland, Lakewood Camping Resort, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park are the other big oceanfront players, all with full hookups, pools, and resort amenities aimed at families who want to settle in for a week.
On the public side, Myrtle Beach State Park hides a shaded maritime forest and its own beach right inside the city, with 138 full-hookup sites and 140 electric-and-water sites. About 16 miles south, Huntington Beach State Park at Murrells Inlet adds 66 full-hookup sites, world-class birding, and Atalaya Castle. You can reserve state park sites online with a two-night minimum.
Most sites here handle 40-foot rigs, and full hookups are the norm rather than the exception. The catch is demand: summer and holiday weekends book months ahead, so the real planning question is not whether you will find a site, but how early you lock in the one you want.
How you decide usually comes down to what kind of trip you are after. If you have kids and want a week of water parks, pools, and beach without ever cranking the engine, the big private resorts earn their summer premium. If you would rather trade the lazy river for shaded sites, more elbow room, and a much lower nightly rate, the two state parks are the smarter value and the quieter night. Either way, plan around the weather: the summer heat and humidity are real, the fall shoulder season is the local secret, and winter belongs to the snowbirds chasing monthly rates on a mild stretch of coast.
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Gear for Your Trip to Myrtle Beach
All Dump Stations Near Myrtle Beach
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Myrtle Beach KOA | 0.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Myrtle Beach Koa Resort | 0.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Patricks Mobile Home Park | 1.7 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pirateland Camping Resort | 4.8 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lakewood Camping Resort | 5.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lakewood Camping Resort Inc. | 5.5 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Ocean Lakes Family Campground | 6.0 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Pirateland Family Camping Resort | 6.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hideaway RV Resort | 6.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Apache Family Campground & Pier | 7.9 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
Myrtle Beach KOA
0.7 miMyrtle Beach Koa Resort
0.7 miPatricks Mobile Home Park
1.7 miPirateland Camping Resort
4.8 miLakewood Camping Resort
5.5 miLakewood Camping Resort Inc.
5.5 miOcean Lakes Family Campground
6.0 miPirateland Family Camping Resort
6.4 miHideaway RV Resort
6.5 miApache Family Campground & Pier
7.9 miTraveling to Myrtle Beach by RV
Getting a big rig into Myrtle Beach is straightforward. The main inland approach is US-501 from Conway, a four-lane that feeds straight to the beach, while US-17 runs the full length of the Grand Strand and connects nearly every campground. In summer, the smartest move is the SC-31 Carolina Bays Parkway, which lets you bypass the worst of the US-17 beach traffic between the campgrounds and the highways.
Myrtle Beach International Airport sits right in town, which makes this an easy spot for a fly-and-rent trip or for family to join you mid-stay. Conway, just inland, is the practical service hub for groceries, propane, fuel, and RV supplies before you settle onto an oceanfront site. If you are coming from the north or south along the coast, US-17 is the scenic route; if you are crossing the state, I-95 to US-501 is the fastest big-rig path in.
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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 Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, 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 Myrtle Beach
Myrtle Beach camping prices swing more by season than almost anywhere. The South Carolina state parks are the value leaders at roughly $36 a night off-season and around $45 in season, and they include full hookups on their best loops. The big private oceanfront resorts start near $40 in the shoulder months and climb past $80 to $100-plus for prime oceanfront sites in peak summer and on holiday weekends.
The real savings live in winter. Snowbirds who book monthly rates at the private resorts pay a fraction of the per-night summer cost, which is why so many RVers base here December through February. Budget extra for the premium on oceanfront and beach-view sites, factor in a two-night minimum at the state parks, and remember that booking early not only secures a site but often locks in a better rate before peak pricing kicks in.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Myrtle Beach
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Best Time to Visit Myrtle Beach by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38F - 58F
Crowds: Low
Mild and quiet. This is snowbird season: monthly rates at the big private resorts are the best deal of the year, and the state parks stay open. Pack for cool nights and the odd cold snap.
Spring
Mar - May
54F - 75F
Crowds: Medium
Warming up fast. Spring break and golf season fill weekends, but midweek sites are still gettable. Book oceanfront resorts a couple months ahead for April and May.
Summer
Jun - Aug
73F - 90F
Crowds: High
Hot, humid, and slammed. Oceanfront full-hookup sites at Ocean Lakes and the state parks book months out for July and August. Reserve early or aim inland.
Fall
Sep - Oct
55F - 76F
Crowds: Medium
The locals secret. Warm ocean, lighter crowds, and the best value of the year. Watch the tropics, though, since hurricane season runs through November.
Explore the Myrtle Beach Area
A few things we have learned about camping the Grand Strand. First, the oceanfront and beach-view sites at the big resorts and the full-hookup loops at the state parks book first, so the day your reservation window opens for a summer trip, be online and ready. Second, snowbirds should chase the monthly rates: from December through February the private resorts discount long stays so heavily that a winter month can cost less than a peak summer week.
Third, use SC-31 to skip beach traffic, especially on summer weekends when US-17 crawls. Fourth, if you want quiet and value over water parks, the state parks are the move, but their full-hookup sites are limited, so request one specifically. Finally, watch the tropics on any August-to-October trip, keep the campground evacuation plan handy, and stay flexible if a storm is tracking toward the Carolinas.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Myrtle Beach
What are the best RV parks in Myrtle Beach?
For oceanfront resort camping, Ocean Lakes Family Campground is the giant of the Grand Strand, with nearly a mile of private beach, a water park, and full hookups. Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park are the other big oceanfront private resorts, all with full hookups and pools. If you want something quieter and more natural, Myrtle Beach State Park and Huntington Beach State Park put you in shaded maritime forest right on the sand. Pick a resort for amenities and a state park for peace and price.
Do Myrtle Beach campgrounds have full hookups?
Yes, full hookups are easy to find here. All four major private oceanfront resorts, Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park, offer full hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer, plus cable and WiFi at most. On the public side, Myrtle Beach State Park has 138 full-hookup sites alongside 140 electric-and-water sites, and Huntington Beach State Park offers 66 full-hookup sites plus 106 electric-and-water sites. If you need a sewer connection at your site, request a full-hookup loop when you book rather than assuming every site has one.
How much does RV camping cost in Myrtle Beach?
It swings hard with the season. The state parks run roughly $36 a night off-season and around $45 in season, which is the best value on the Strand. The big private oceanfront resorts start around $40 a night in the shoulder months and climb well past $80 to $100-plus for prime oceanfront sites in peak summer and on holiday weekends. Winter is where snowbirds win: monthly rates at the private resorts drop the per-night cost dramatically, so a long December-to-February stay is far cheaper than a few summer nights.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Myrtle Beach?
Further than you think. For summer weekends, July 4th, and the prime oceanfront sites, book several months out the day your reservation window opens. South Carolina State Parks take reservations through reserve.southcarolinaparks.com with a two-night minimum, and the popular full-hookup loops at Myrtle Beach State Park go fast. The private resorts also fill their best oceanfront sites months ahead for peak season. Spring and fall midweek stays are far more forgiving, and you can sometimes grab those a few weeks out.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Myrtle Beach?
Fall is our favorite. From mid-September through October the ocean is still warm, the crowds thin out, the humidity eases, and prices drop, making it the best overall value. Spring is a close second once it warms up, though golf season and spring break crowd the weekends. Summer is beautiful but hot, humid, and expensive, with sites booked solid. Winter is mild and quiet, ideal for snowbirds on monthly rates who do not mind cool nights and water that is too cold for swimming.
Can big rigs camp in Myrtle Beach?
Yes, this is big-rig country. The large private oceanfront resorts like Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, and Lakewood are built for 40-foot motorhomes and fifth wheels, with pull-through sites and full hookups. Myrtle Beach State Park and Huntington Beach State Park fit RVs up to 40 feet on many sites, with others capped around 30 feet, so check the length limit on the specific site before you book. The main approach roads, US-501 from Conway and US-17 along the coast, handle big rigs fine, and SC-31 lets you skip the worst beach traffic.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Myrtle Beach?
Not really, at least not at the beach. The Grand Strand is reservation-driven: the state parks and the big private resorts all expect you to book ahead, and true free or first-come dispersed camping does not exist right on the coast. If you are after free camping you would need to head well inland toward the Pee Dee region and national forest land, which is a long drive from the beach. For most RVers the realistic budget play here is a state park site or a winter monthly rate at a private resort, not boondocking.
Which is better, the state parks or the private resorts?
It depends on what you want. The private resorts, Ocean Lakes especially, are full-on family destinations with water parks, lazy rivers, pools, and on-site activities, all on private oceanfront. They are pricier in summer but unbeatable if you want amenities and never need to leave. The state parks, Myrtle Beach and Huntington Beach, trade the water parks for shaded maritime forest, more space, birding, and a much lower nightly rate. We lean state park for value and quiet and resort for a family beach blowout.
Can I camp right on the beach in Myrtle Beach?
You cannot park your rig on the sand, but several campgrounds put you about as close as it gets. The big private resorts, Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park, all sit directly on the oceanfront with beach access steps from many sites. Myrtle Beach State Park has its own beach and pier inside the city limits, and Huntington Beach State Park sits right on the dunes at Murrells Inlet. Oceanfront and beach-view sites carry a premium and book first, so reserve early if a short walk to the water matters to you.
What is there to do near Myrtle Beach campgrounds?
Plenty, which is why people stay a week. The 1.2-mile Boardwalk and the SkyWheel anchor the downtown beachfront, and the Strand is loaded with golf, fishing piers, mini golf, and shows. About 16 to 18 miles south, Huntington Beach State Park offers some of the best birding on the coast plus the Atalaya Castle, and neighboring Brookgreen Gardens pairs world-class sculpture gardens with a lowcountry zoo. Add the beach itself and the seafood at Murrells Inlet, and you have far more than a weekend can cover.
Are Myrtle Beach campgrounds pet friendly?
Most are, with the usual rules. The South Carolina state parks allow leashed pets in the campgrounds, though dogs are restricted on the swimming beach during peak season, so check current beach-access dates before you go. The big private resorts generally welcome pets in the RV sections, sometimes with breed or site restrictions and a limit on how many, so confirm the pet policy when you book rather than at check-in. Bring proof of vaccination, clean up after your dog, and never leave pets unattended in a hot rig on a Carolina summer day.
Do I need to worry about hurricanes when camping in Myrtle Beach?
It is worth planning around. Atlantic hurricane season runs June through November, with the highest risk from August into October, exactly when you might be camping the coast in fall. Most years pass without a direct hit, but tropical systems can force campground evacuations on short notice. Keep an eye on the National Hurricane Center forecast during a fall trip, know your campground evacuation plan, and stay flexible with your dates. Travel insurance and a willingness to leave early are smart if a named storm is tracking toward the Carolinas.
Is Myrtle Beach a good winter RV destination?
Yes, for snowbirds it is one of the better-value coastal options on the East Coast. Winters are mild, daytime highs often reach the upper 50s and 60s, and most campgrounds stay open year-round. The big draw is the monthly rate: private resorts discount heavily for long winter stays, so December through February costs a fraction of summer per night. You will not be swimming, the ocean is cold and the nights drop into the 30s, but for golf, walks on an empty beach, and an affordable base, winter Myrtle Beach is hard to beat.
What are the best RV parks in Myrtle Beach?
For oceanfront resort camping, Ocean Lakes Family Campground is the giant of the Grand Strand, with nearly a mile of private beach, a water park, and full hookups. Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park are the other big oceanfront private resorts, all with full hookups and pools. If you want something quieter and more natural, Myrtle Beach State Park and Huntington Beach State Park put you in shaded maritime forest right on the sand. Pick a resort for amenities and a state park for peace and price.
Do Myrtle Beach campgrounds have full hookups?
Yes, full hookups are easy to find here. All four major private oceanfront resorts, Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park, offer full hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer, plus cable and WiFi at most. On the public side, Myrtle Beach State Park has 138 full-hookup sites alongside 140 electric-and-water sites, and Huntington Beach State Park offers 66 full-hookup sites plus 106 electric-and-water sites. If you need a sewer connection at your site, request a full-hookup loop when you book rather than assuming every site has one.
How much does RV camping cost in Myrtle Beach?
It swings hard with the season. The state parks run roughly $36 a night off-season and around $45 in season, which is the best value on the Strand. The big private oceanfront resorts start around $40 a night in the shoulder months and climb well past $80 to $100-plus for prime oceanfront sites in peak summer and on holiday weekends. Winter is where snowbirds win: monthly rates at the private resorts drop the per-night cost dramatically, so a long December-to-February stay is far cheaper than a few summer nights.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Myrtle Beach?
Further than you think. For summer weekends, July 4th, and the prime oceanfront sites, book several months out the day your reservation window opens. South Carolina State Parks take reservations through reserve.southcarolinaparks.com with a two-night minimum, and the popular full-hookup loops at Myrtle Beach State Park go fast. The private resorts also fill their best oceanfront sites months ahead for peak season. Spring and fall midweek stays are far more forgiving, and you can sometimes grab those a few weeks out.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Myrtle Beach?
Fall is our favorite. From mid-September through October the ocean is still warm, the crowds thin out, the humidity eases, and prices drop, making it the best overall value. Spring is a close second once it warms up, though golf season and spring break crowd the weekends. Summer is beautiful but hot, humid, and expensive, with sites booked solid. Winter is mild and quiet, ideal for snowbirds on monthly rates who do not mind cool nights and water that is too cold for swimming.
Can big rigs camp in Myrtle Beach?
Yes, this is big-rig country. The large private oceanfront resorts like Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, and Lakewood are built for 40-foot motorhomes and fifth wheels, with pull-through sites and full hookups. Myrtle Beach State Park and Huntington Beach State Park fit RVs up to 40 feet on many sites, with others capped around 30 feet, so check the length limit on the specific site before you book. The main approach roads, US-501 from Conway and US-17 along the coast, handle big rigs fine, and SC-31 lets you skip the worst beach traffic.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Myrtle Beach?
Not really, at least not at the beach. The Grand Strand is reservation-driven: the state parks and the big private resorts all expect you to book ahead, and true free or first-come dispersed camping does not exist right on the coast. If you are after free camping you would need to head well inland toward the Pee Dee region and national forest land, which is a long drive from the beach. For most RVers the realistic budget play here is a state park site or a winter monthly rate at a private resort, not boondocking.
Which is better, the state parks or the private resorts?
It depends on what you want. The private resorts, Ocean Lakes especially, are full-on family destinations with water parks, lazy rivers, pools, and on-site activities, all on private oceanfront. They are pricier in summer but unbeatable if you want amenities and never need to leave. The state parks, Myrtle Beach and Huntington Beach, trade the water parks for shaded maritime forest, more space, birding, and a much lower nightly rate. We lean state park for value and quiet and resort for a family beach blowout.
Can I camp right on the beach in Myrtle Beach?
You cannot park your rig on the sand, but several campgrounds put you about as close as it gets. The big private resorts, Ocean Lakes, Pirateland, Lakewood, and Myrtle Beach Travel Park, all sit directly on the oceanfront with beach access steps from many sites. Myrtle Beach State Park has its own beach and pier inside the city limits, and Huntington Beach State Park sits right on the dunes at Murrells Inlet. Oceanfront and beach-view sites carry a premium and book first, so reserve early if a short walk to the water matters to you.
What is there to do near Myrtle Beach campgrounds?
Plenty, which is why people stay a week. The 1.2-mile Boardwalk and the SkyWheel anchor the downtown beachfront, and the Strand is loaded with golf, fishing piers, mini golf, and shows. About 16 to 18 miles south, Huntington Beach State Park offers some of the best birding on the coast plus the Atalaya Castle, and neighboring Brookgreen Gardens pairs world-class sculpture gardens with a lowcountry zoo. Add the beach itself and the seafood at Murrells Inlet, and you have far more than a weekend can cover.
Are Myrtle Beach campgrounds pet friendly?
Most are, with the usual rules. The South Carolina state parks allow leashed pets in the campgrounds, though dogs are restricted on the swimming beach during peak season, so check current beach-access dates before you go. The big private resorts generally welcome pets in the RV sections, sometimes with breed or site restrictions and a limit on how many, so confirm the pet policy when you book rather than at check-in. Bring proof of vaccination, clean up after your dog, and never leave pets unattended in a hot rig on a Carolina summer day.
Do I need to worry about hurricanes when camping in Myrtle Beach?
It is worth planning around. Atlantic hurricane season runs June through November, with the highest risk from August into October, exactly when you might be camping the coast in fall. Most years pass without a direct hit, but tropical systems can force campground evacuations on short notice. Keep an eye on the National Hurricane Center forecast during a fall trip, know your campground evacuation plan, and stay flexible with your dates. Travel insurance and a willingness to leave early are smart if a named storm is tracking toward the Carolinas.
Is Myrtle Beach a good winter RV destination?
Yes, for snowbirds it is one of the better-value coastal options on the East Coast. Winters are mild, daytime highs often reach the upper 50s and 60s, and most campgrounds stay open year-round. The big draw is the monthly rate: private resorts discount heavily for long winter stays, so December through February costs a fraction of summer per night. You will not be swimming, the ocean is cold and the nights drop into the 30s, but for golf, walks on an empty beach, and an affordable base, winter Myrtle Beach is hard to beat.
Are there free dump stations in Myrtle Beach?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Myrtle Beach.
All Dump Stations Near Myrtle Beach (49)
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