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RV Parks In Sevierville, Tennessee

35.8681° N, 83.5618° W

Quick Overview

Sevierville is one of the busiest and most RV-friendly basecamps in the eastern United States, and for good reason. It sits at the bottom of the US-441 corridor that runs up through Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg into Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the most-visited national park in the country, with Dollywood just twelve minutes away. For RVers, that means a deep bench of full-hookup, big-rig resorts, many strung along the Little Pigeon River, and an easy choice between resort comfort and quieter public camping nearby.

The private resorts are the heart of it. River Plantation RV Resort offers riverside and central pull-through sites with two pools, a hot tub, and live weekend entertainment. Ripplin' Waters RV Park has 155 shady, level sites with full 50-amp hookups right on the river. Two Rivers Landing RV Resort adds riverfront big-rig sites with on-site dining and tubing, and Cove Mountain RV Resort delivers spacious full-hookup sites with Smoky Mountain views. All four are built for big rigs and stay open year-round, which is part of why this area works in every season.

If you would rather skip the resort scene, the public options are cheaper and more natural, though no-hookup. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park campgrounds, like Elkmont and Cades Cove, sit within about twenty-five to forty minutes and book through Recreation.gov, and the Tennessee Valley Authority runs water-and-electric campgrounds at Douglas Dam on Douglas Lake nearby. The big planning rule here is to book early: this corridor fills six to twelve months ahead for summer and especially October foliage, the single busiest stretch of the year. Base at a Sevierville resort, drive a tow vehicle into the park, and you get the best of the Smokies without fighting the narrow park roads in a big rig. Match the park to your rig and your budget, plan around the traffic, and Sevierville makes an easy, full-service home for a week in the mountains.

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Traveling to Sevierville by RV

Getting to Sevierville is easy from Interstate 40. Take Exit 407 onto TN-66, which runs straight into town and connects to US-441 toward Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg. Most of the full-hookup resorts line this corridor, many right on the Little Pigeon River, on wide, paved, big-rig-friendly roads. The main thing to plan for is traffic: US-441 through Pigeon Forge is a broad parkway but can crawl on busy summer and fall days, so aim to arrive off-peak and run errands early in the morning.

Knoxville, about thirty miles back, is your hub for full groceries, fuel, propane, and RV service, and McGhee Tyson Airport handles fly-and-rent trips. Once you are based in Sevierville, the big attractions are all close: Dollywood is about twelve minutes away, the Gatlinburg park entrance roughly twenty to twenty-five minutes south. For the national park itself, leave the big rig at the resort and explore in a tow vehicle, since the mountain roads are narrow, winding, and busy through the warm months.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Full-hookup sites at the Sevierville resorts generally run about forty-five to eighty-five dollars a night, with riverfront and premium sites and peak dates at the top of that range. Expect seasonal premiums of twenty to forty percent in summer and during October foliage, when demand peaks across the whole corridor. The resorts charge for their amenities, but you are paying for pools, riverfront sites, and a location minutes from Dollywood and the Smokies.

Public camping is where you save. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park campgrounds and the TVA Douglas Lake sites run in the low tens to twenties a night, though they have no sewer and, in the park, no hookups at all. To stretch your budget, camp midweek, travel in the quiet winter or early-spring windows, or use a public campground when your rig is self-contained. Many resorts also offer lower nightly rates on weekly and monthly stays, which can pay off if you are settling in for a full Smokies vacation.

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What RVers Are Saying About Sevierville

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Best Time to Visit Sevierville by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

30F - 48F

Crowds: Low

Mild for the mountains and the quietest, cheapest season. Many Sevierville resorts stay open year-round, and December brings holiday lights and shows. Expect occasional cold snaps and the chance of snow up in the Smokies, but valley camping stays comfortable.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

45F - 68F

Crowds: High

Wildflowers peak in the national park and spring break fills the strip. Temperatures are pleasant but heavy rain is common, so pick a riverfront site with good drainage. Book ahead for spring-break and Easter weeks.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

65F - 87F

Crowds: High

Hot, humid, and packed with families headed to Dollywood and the Smokies. This is peak season at the full-hookup resorts, so reserve months out and expect top rates. River tubing and resort pools are the way to beat the heat.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

45F - 68F

Crowds: High

October foliage is the single busiest stretch of the year here. Reserve six to twelve months ahead for leaf season, when the resorts sell out and the parkway crawls. Cool, crisp days make it the prettiest time to camp.

Explore the Sevierville Area

A few things we have learned camping Sevierville. Book your full-hookup resort six to twelve months ahead for summer and October foliage, because this is one of the East's busiest RV corridors and the best riverfront sites go first. Leave the big rig parked at the resort and drive a tow vehicle into the Smokies; the park roads are narrow and the campgrounds inside have site-length limits. And time your trips on US-441 for early morning to dodge the worst of the strip traffic.

For a quieter, cheaper stay, look at the TVA Douglas Lake campgrounds or come in the mild winter, when valley camping stays comfortable and December adds holiday lights. If you want a riverfront site, pick one with good drainage, since spring brings heavy rain. Pack for heat and humidity in summer and lean on the resort pools and river tubing to cool off. And if foliage is your goal, reserve as early as the resort's calendar opens, because October sells out fast across the whole area.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Sevierville

What are the best RV parks in Sevierville, Tennessee?

Sevierville is full-hookup resort country, much of it along the Little Pigeon River on the way to Pigeon Forge. River Plantation RV Resort is a big-rig favorite with riverside and central pull-through sites, two pools, a hot tub, and live weekend entertainment. Ripplin' Waters RV Park has 155 shady, level sites with full 50-amp hookups right on the river. Two Rivers Landing RV Resort offers riverfront big-rig sites with on-site dining and tubing, and Cove Mountain RV Resort delivers spacious full-hookup sites with Smoky Mountain views. All four are built for big rigs and stay open year-round.

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

Yes, the private resorts almost all do. River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, and Cove Mountain offer full hookups with water, 50-amp electric, and sewer, plus pull-through sites for big rigs and amenities like pools and WiFi. The public options are different: the Great Smoky Mountains National Park campgrounds have no hookups at all, just restrooms and some dump stations, and the TVA campgrounds on Douglas Lake offer water and electric but not sewer at the site. So if you want true full hookups, book one of the Sevierville-area private resorts and save the no-hookup public sites for when you are self-contained.

How much does RV camping cost in Sevierville?

Full-hookup sites at the private resorts generally run about forty-five to eighty-five dollars a night, with riverfront and premium sites and peak dates at the top of that range. Expect seasonal premiums of twenty to forty percent in summer and during October foliage. Public camping is much cheaper: the national-park campgrounds and TVA Douglas Lake sites run in the low tens to twenties, though they lack hookups. To save money, camp midweek, travel in the off-peak winter or early-spring windows, or use a public campground if you do not need sewer and power. Longer stays often earn a lower nightly rate at the resorts.

How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Sevierville?

Book very early. This is one of the busiest RV corridors in the eastern United States, anchored by Dollywood and the Great Smoky Mountains, so the full-hookup resorts fill six to twelve months ahead for summer weekends and especially for October foliage. Reserve directly with the resort as soon as your dates are firm. National-park campgrounds inside the Smokies book through Recreation.gov and also go fast for peak weekends. If you are flexible, midweek and the quieter winter and early-spring windows are far easier, and you will pay less. Last-minute summer or fall weekends are tough to land here.

When is the best time to RV camp in Sevierville, Tennessee?

It depends on your tolerance for crowds. October is the most beautiful, with Smoky Mountain foliage, but it is also the single busiest and priciest stretch, so reserve far ahead. Summer is hot, humid, and packed with families, though the river tubing and resort pools help. Our value picks are late spring and the mild winter, when crowds thin and rates drop, plus December brings holiday lights and shows. Spring wildflowers in the national park are spectacular but come with heavy rain and spring-break crowds. For comfortable weather with smaller crowds, aim for early June or the first half of September.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Sevierville?

Yes, easily. The Sevierville resorts are built for big rigs, with long pull-through and premium back-in sites and full hookups at River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, and Cove Mountain. Getting there is straightforward off I-40 at Exit 407 onto TN-66 and US-441. The catch is the national park: roads inside the Great Smokies are narrow and winding, and the campground site-length limits favor smaller rigs, so big-rig owners should base at a Sevierville resort and explore the park in a tow vehicle. The US-441 strip through Pigeon Forge is wide but slow and congested in peak season.

Are there public or national-park camping options near Sevierville?

Yes, though they are no-hookup. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park has developed campgrounds like Elkmont, Cades Cove, and Smokemont within about twenty-five to forty minutes, reservable on Recreation.gov, with restrooms and some dump stations but no electric, water, or sewer at the sites. Closer to town, the Tennessee Valley Authority runs Headwater and Tailwater campgrounds at Douglas Dam on Douglas Lake, roughly twenty to thirty minutes out, with water and electric sites and a lakeside setting. Both are far cheaper than the private resorts and a good choice if your rig is self-contained and you want a quieter, more natural base.

How close is Sevierville to Dollywood and the Smoky Mountains?

Very close, which is the whole appeal. Dollywood, in neighboring Pigeon Forge, is about twelve minutes from most Sevierville resorts, and the Gatlinburg entrance to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is roughly twenty to twenty-five minutes south on US-441. That makes Sevierville an ideal base: you can stay at a full-hookup riverfront resort and reach the theme park, the national park, the shows, and the outlet shopping all within a short drive. Just plan around traffic, because US-441 through Pigeon Forge can crawl on busy summer and fall days. Leaving early in the morning helps a lot.

Are Sevierville campgrounds open in winter?

Many are. Unlike the high mountains, the Sevierville valley has mild winters, and the big private resorts like River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, and Two Rivers Landing generally stay open year-round. December is actually a draw, with holiday lights and shows across the area, and winter is the quietest, cheapest time to camp here. You may catch a cold snap or see snow up in the Smokies, but valley camping stays comfortable with full hookups. The national-park and TVA campgrounds are more seasonal, so if you are after a winter stay, the private resorts are your most reliable bet.

What is there to do in Sevierville besides the national park?

A lot, which is why families stay a week. Dollywood and its water park are the headline, just minutes away in Pigeon Forge, and the US-441 strip is packed with shows, dinner theaters, go-karts, and attractions. In town, Tanger Outlets Sevierville draws shoppers, and the Little Pigeon River is good for tubing and fishing right from several of the resorts. Douglas Lake, about a half hour out, adds boating and bass fishing. Add the hiking, waterfalls, and wildlife of the Great Smoky Mountains, plus Gatlinburg's attractions, and you have far more than a single park visit can cover.

How do I get to Sevierville RV parks from the highway?

Access is easy from Interstate 40. Take Exit 407 onto TN-66, which leads straight into Sevierville and connects to US-441 toward Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg. Most of the full-hookup resorts sit along this corridor, many on the Little Pigeon River, on wide, paved, big-rig-friendly roads. The one thing to plan for is congestion: US-441 through Pigeon Forge is a wide parkway but slows to a crawl on busy summer and fall days, so time your arrival for off-peak hours. Knoxville, about thirty miles back, has full services and McGhee Tyson Airport for fly-and-rent trips.

Is there a place to dump tanks in Sevierville?

Yes. The full-hookup private resorts all have sewer at the site or a dump station for guests, so if you are staying at River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, or Cove Mountain, you can empty tanks before you leave. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks between trips? See our guide to RV dump stations in Sevierville for the full rundown of options around town. If you are camping the no-hookup national-park or TVA sites, plan to use a campground dump station, since those sites do not have sewer hookups even where water and electric are available.

What are the best RV parks in Sevierville, Tennessee?

Sevierville is full-hookup resort country, much of it along the Little Pigeon River on the way to Pigeon Forge. River Plantation RV Resort is a big-rig favorite with riverside and central pull-through sites, two pools, a hot tub, and live weekend entertainment. Ripplin' Waters RV Park has 155 shady, level sites with full 50-amp hookups right on the river. Two Rivers Landing RV Resort offers riverfront big-rig sites with on-site dining and tubing, and Cove Mountain RV Resort delivers spacious full-hookup sites with Smoky Mountain views. All four are built for big rigs and stay open year-round.

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

Yes, the private resorts almost all do. River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, and Cove Mountain offer full hookups with water, 50-amp electric, and sewer, plus pull-through sites for big rigs and amenities like pools and WiFi. The public options are different: the Great Smoky Mountains National Park campgrounds have no hookups at all, just restrooms and some dump stations, and the TVA campgrounds on Douglas Lake offer water and electric but not sewer at the site. So if you want true full hookups, book one of the Sevierville-area private resorts and save the no-hookup public sites for when you are self-contained.

How much does RV camping cost in Sevierville?

Full-hookup sites at the private resorts generally run about forty-five to eighty-five dollars a night, with riverfront and premium sites and peak dates at the top of that range. Expect seasonal premiums of twenty to forty percent in summer and during October foliage. Public camping is much cheaper: the national-park campgrounds and TVA Douglas Lake sites run in the low tens to twenties, though they lack hookups. To save money, camp midweek, travel in the off-peak winter or early-spring windows, or use a public campground if you do not need sewer and power. Longer stays often earn a lower nightly rate at the resorts.

How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Sevierville?

Book very early. This is one of the busiest RV corridors in the eastern United States, anchored by Dollywood and the Great Smoky Mountains, so the full-hookup resorts fill six to twelve months ahead for summer weekends and especially for October foliage. Reserve directly with the resort as soon as your dates are firm. National-park campgrounds inside the Smokies book through Recreation.gov and also go fast for peak weekends. If you are flexible, midweek and the quieter winter and early-spring windows are far easier, and you will pay less. Last-minute summer or fall weekends are tough to land here.

When is the best time to RV camp in Sevierville, Tennessee?

It depends on your tolerance for crowds. October is the most beautiful, with Smoky Mountain foliage, but it is also the single busiest and priciest stretch, so reserve far ahead. Summer is hot, humid, and packed with families, though the river tubing and resort pools help. Our value picks are late spring and the mild winter, when crowds thin and rates drop, plus December brings holiday lights and shows. Spring wildflowers in the national park are spectacular but come with heavy rain and spring-break crowds. For comfortable weather with smaller crowds, aim for early June or the first half of September.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Sevierville?

Yes, easily. The Sevierville resorts are built for big rigs, with long pull-through and premium back-in sites and full hookups at River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, and Cove Mountain. Getting there is straightforward off I-40 at Exit 407 onto TN-66 and US-441. The catch is the national park: roads inside the Great Smokies are narrow and winding, and the campground site-length limits favor smaller rigs, so big-rig owners should base at a Sevierville resort and explore the park in a tow vehicle. The US-441 strip through Pigeon Forge is wide but slow and congested in peak season.

Are there public or national-park camping options near Sevierville?

Yes, though they are no-hookup. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park has developed campgrounds like Elkmont, Cades Cove, and Smokemont within about twenty-five to forty minutes, reservable on Recreation.gov, with restrooms and some dump stations but no electric, water, or sewer at the sites. Closer to town, the Tennessee Valley Authority runs Headwater and Tailwater campgrounds at Douglas Dam on Douglas Lake, roughly twenty to thirty minutes out, with water and electric sites and a lakeside setting. Both are far cheaper than the private resorts and a good choice if your rig is self-contained and you want a quieter, more natural base.

How close is Sevierville to Dollywood and the Smoky Mountains?

Very close, which is the whole appeal. Dollywood, in neighboring Pigeon Forge, is about twelve minutes from most Sevierville resorts, and the Gatlinburg entrance to Great Smoky Mountains National Park is roughly twenty to twenty-five minutes south on US-441. That makes Sevierville an ideal base: you can stay at a full-hookup riverfront resort and reach the theme park, the national park, the shows, and the outlet shopping all within a short drive. Just plan around traffic, because US-441 through Pigeon Forge can crawl on busy summer and fall days. Leaving early in the morning helps a lot.

Are Sevierville campgrounds open in winter?

Many are. Unlike the high mountains, the Sevierville valley has mild winters, and the big private resorts like River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, and Two Rivers Landing generally stay open year-round. December is actually a draw, with holiday lights and shows across the area, and winter is the quietest, cheapest time to camp here. You may catch a cold snap or see snow up in the Smokies, but valley camping stays comfortable with full hookups. The national-park and TVA campgrounds are more seasonal, so if you are after a winter stay, the private resorts are your most reliable bet.

What is there to do in Sevierville besides the national park?

A lot, which is why families stay a week. Dollywood and its water park are the headline, just minutes away in Pigeon Forge, and the US-441 strip is packed with shows, dinner theaters, go-karts, and attractions. In town, Tanger Outlets Sevierville draws shoppers, and the Little Pigeon River is good for tubing and fishing right from several of the resorts. Douglas Lake, about a half hour out, adds boating and bass fishing. Add the hiking, waterfalls, and wildlife of the Great Smoky Mountains, plus Gatlinburg's attractions, and you have far more than a single park visit can cover.

How do I get to Sevierville RV parks from the highway?

Access is easy from Interstate 40. Take Exit 407 onto TN-66, which leads straight into Sevierville and connects to US-441 toward Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg. Most of the full-hookup resorts sit along this corridor, many on the Little Pigeon River, on wide, paved, big-rig-friendly roads. The one thing to plan for is congestion: US-441 through Pigeon Forge is a wide parkway but slows to a crawl on busy summer and fall days, so time your arrival for off-peak hours. Knoxville, about thirty miles back, has full services and McGhee Tyson Airport for fly-and-rent trips.

Is there a place to dump tanks in Sevierville?

Yes. The full-hookup private resorts all have sewer at the site or a dump station for guests, so if you are staying at River Plantation, Ripplin' Waters, Two Rivers Landing, or Cove Mountain, you can empty tanks before you leave. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks between trips? See our guide to RV dump stations in Sevierville for the full rundown of options around town. If you are camping the no-hookup national-park or TVA sites, plan to use a campground dump station, since those sites do not have sewer hookups even where water and electric are available.

Are there free dump stations in Sevierville?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Sevierville.