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RV Parks In Wisconsin

43.7844° N, 88.7879° W

Quick Overview

<p>Wisconsin is a summer-camping state at heart, built around two Great Lakes, a wall of inland lakes up north, and some of the most popular state parks in the Midwest. It is also a state where the season is short and sweet, so the RVers who do best here are the ones who book early and plan around the weather. From the waterparks of the Dells to the lighthouses of Door County, there is a lot to base a trip around.</p><p>The public side is the backbone, and it is genuinely popular. The <a href="https://dnr.wisconsin.gov/topic/parks/camping">Wisconsin state park system</a> runs marquee parks like Devil's Lake near Baraboo, with its 500-foot quartzite bluffs over a clear lake, and Peninsula State Park in Door County, with more than 450 sites on the Green Bay shore. The thing to know is what these sites are: most offer electric and water at best, with no sewer at the site and a central dump station. They are scenic and affordable, but they are not full-hookup parks, and the best ones book out the instant the 11-month window opens.</p><p>That is where the private parks come in, and they cluster where the tourists go. Around Wisconsin Dells, the waterpark capital, parks like Nature's Touch and Country Roads offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp pull-throughs minutes from downtown. In Door County, HTR Door County at Egg Harbor and Hy-Land Court give you full-hookup resort camping in the heart of the peninsula. Even Milwaukee has the State Fair RV Park, the only dedicated RV facility in the city. These cost more than the state parks but deliver the full hookups and big-rig room.</p><p>Up north, the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest opens up free dispersed camping for self-contained rigs, with simple rules: park within 30 feet of a road, stay at least 150 feet from trails and 200 feet from water. It is dry camping with no services, but it is quiet, free, and surrounded by the Northwoods lakes and the Apostle Islands country on Lake Superior. It is a different, wilder Wisconsin than the busy southern tourist hubs.</p><p>Region shapes the trip. The Dells in the south-central part of the state is family and waterpark country with the most full-hookup parks. Door County in the northeast is the scenic peninsula, all lighthouses, cherries, and shoreline. The Northwoods is lakes, forests, and fishing, and Lake Superior's Apostle Islands anchor the far north with sea caves and cliffs. The Driftless region in the southwest adds bluffs and river valleys. Each corner is a distinct trip.</p><p>The practical plan for most RVers is to book a full-hookup private park near the Dells or Door County, lean on the state parks for hiking, beaches, and scenery, and aim for summer or the spectacular fall color. Below we cover the notable campgrounds, how the DNR's 11-month reservation system works, what it costs (including the non-resident surcharge), and how to time a trip around Wisconsin's short but excellent camping season.</p>

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Getting Around Wisconsin by RV

Getting around Wisconsin is about as easy as RV travel gets. The state is flat to gently rolling, with a dense interstate network: I-90 and I-94 cross from the southeast up through Madison and on toward Minnesota, I-43 runs the Lake Michigan side to Green Bay, and I-39 and I-41 fill in the middle. This is relaxed towing on good roads, with services close together through the populated south.

Two things to plan for. Door County's peninsula roads are narrower and get busy in summer, so take your time and consider day-tripping the tip in a smaller vehicle. And the Northwoods has longer gaps between fuel and groceries, so top off the tank and stock up before you head north toward the national forest and Lake Superior. For fly-and-rent trips, Milwaukee, Madison, and Green Bay are the main airports, with Green Bay closest to Door County and Minneapolis handy for the northwest. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Wisconsin.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

<p>Wisconsin state parks are the value pick, but watch the non-resident math. Standard campsite fees run roughly $15 to $35 a night for Wisconsin residents and $20 to $40 for non-residents, with electric sites and premium loops costing more. On top of that, non-resident campers pay an extra $15 per night, which adds up over a week, so out-of-state visitors should factor it in or look at the longer-stay value. Remember these are mostly electric-and-water sites with a central dump station, not full hookups.</p><p>Private RV parks and resorts are where full hookups live, and they run higher, commonly $50 to $90 plus a night near the Dells and Door County, climbing in peak summer and on fall-color weekends. Weekly and monthly rates lower the per-night cost if you settle in. The cheapest option by far is free dispersed camping in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, which costs nothing for self-contained rigs that do not need hookups. As everywhere in Wisconsin, the popular public sites book first, so reserving early is the real way to save.</p>

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Paid: 149 stations (39%)

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Best Time to Visit Wisconsin by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

12°F - 28°F

Crowds: Low

Hard Midwest winters close most campgrounds. A few stay open for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing, like Peninsula's Tennison Bay and Devil's Lake Quartzite loop; expect deep cold, snow, and limited services.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

38°F - 58°F

Crowds: Low

Cool and muddy early, with electric loops reopening around April. Quiet and good value before the crowds, though the lakes stay cold and mosquitoes build into June.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

60°F - 80°F

Crowds: High

Prime season: pleasant high-70s days, warm lakes, everything open. Devil's Lake, Door County, and the Dells fill summer weekends, so reserve the moment the 11-month window opens.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

42°F - 62°F

Crowds: High

Spectacular hardwood color in late September and October with crisp days and thinning crowds. Book color weekends early, and confirm which electric loops are still open, since many close in October.

Explore Wisconsin

<p>The single most important Wisconsin tip is to treat the 11-month booking window like an event. Devil's Lake and Peninsula are among the busiest parks in the Midwest, and their summer weekends fill within minutes of opening, so set an alarm, have your account ready on Going to Camp, and log in early. If you strike out, aim for midweek or watch for cancellations, which turn over regularly. For the full-hookup tourist hubs, book the Dells and Door County private parks early too, especially for summer and fall-color weekends.</p><p>A couple of money and comfort notes. Non-residents pay a per-night surcharge on top of the standard site fee at Wisconsin state parks, so out-of-state RVers should budget for that. Pack for cool nights even in summer, since the lake breezes drop temperatures after dark, and bring bug protection for the early-summer mosquitoes, which are serious up north. Fall color in late September and October is arguably the best time to be here, with crisp days and thinner crowds, but confirm which electric loops are still open before you go, because many close in October. If you boondock in the national forest, go in fully self-contained.</p>

Helpful Resources

Federal Resources

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Wisconsin

What are the best RV parks in Wisconsin?

For full hookups and big-rig room, the private parks lead, especially around the tourist hubs: Nature's Touch and Country Roads near Wisconsin Dells, and HTR Door County at Egg Harbor on the peninsula. For scenery on a budget, the state parks are the draw, with Devil's Lake near Baraboo and Peninsula in Door County among the most popular in the Midwest, though they offer electric and water rather than full hookups. Milwaukee even has the State Fair RV Park in the city. Match your pick to your rig size, your hookup needs, and the region you want to explore.

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

The private ones usually do, with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and sewer, often plus pull-throughs and pools. The public ones generally do not. Wisconsin state parks typically offer electric and water sites at best, with no sewer at the site and a central dump station to use on your way out. So while the state parks are scenic and affordable, you are running on your holding tanks while you are there. If full hookups matter to you, plan on a private park, which in Wisconsin cluster around the Dells, Door County, and the interstate corridors.

How much does RV camping cost in Wisconsin?

State park sites run roughly $15 to $35 a night for residents and $20 to $40 for non-residents, with electric and premium loops costing more, plus an extra $15 per night non-resident surcharge that out-of-state campers should budget for. Private RV parks and resorts run higher, commonly $50 to $90 plus a night near the Dells and Door County, climbing on peak summer and fall-color weekends. Free dispersed camping is available in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest. Weekly and monthly rates lower the per-night cost for longer stays.

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

For the popular parks, as early as you can. Wisconsin DNR takes reservations up to 11 months ahead through the Going to Camp system, and the marquee parks like Devil's Lake and Peninsula fill summer weekends within minutes of the window opening. Set an alarm, have your account and payment ready, and log in early. Private parks in the Dells and Door County also book summer and fall-color weekends well ahead. If you are flexible or traveling midweek and off-peak, you can often find sites much closer to your dates.

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

Summer and early fall are the sweet spots. From June through August you get pleasant high-70s days, warm lakes, and everything open, which is also the busiest and priciest stretch. Late September and October bring spectacular hardwood color, crisp air, and thinning crowds, arguably the best time to be here, though many electric loops start closing in October. Spring is cool, muddy, and buggy early but quiet and cheap. Winter closes most campgrounds, with only a few open for skiing and snowshoeing. For the best mix, target August or the fall-color window.

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

Yes, mainly at the private parks. The full-hookup resorts near the Dells, in Door County, and along I-94 like Stoney Creek in Osseo are built for big rigs, with long pull-throughs and full hookups. The state parks are more variable: many loops are wooded and tighter, with shorter sites and no sewer, so a 40-foot rig can be a squeeze. Always check the site length when booking a state park, and lean toward the private parks or the larger, more modern state-park loops if you are running a big motorhome or fifth wheel.

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

Yes, in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest up north. Dispersed camping there is free and first-come, with simple rules: park within 30 feet of a road, and stay at least 150 feet from trails and roads and 200 feet from any water. These are dry sites with no services, so you bring everything including water, and they suit smaller, self-contained rigs better than big motorhomes. You cannot camp just anywhere on national-forest land, so look for established dispersed areas. It is a quiet, free alternative to the busy southern tourist hubs.

Can I camp at Devil's Lake State Park in an RV?

Yes, Devil's Lake is one of the best-known RV destinations in the state, with about 400 sites across three campgrounds below its quartzite bluffs. The Northern Lights campground has 71 electric sites, including the only wooded electric loop, while other sites are non-electric, and there is a dump station rather than full hookups. The Quartzite campground stays open year-round, while Northern Lights and Ice Age typically close from October to April. It is extremely popular, so reserve the moment the 11-month window opens, especially for summer weekends and holidays.

What is camping in Door County like for RVers?

Door County is one of the most scenic RV destinations in the Midwest, a peninsula of lighthouses, cherry orchards, and Green Bay shoreline. Peninsula State Park is the public flagship, with more than 450 sites, about half with electric, all with water access and flush toilets, plus 30 miles of groomed ski trails for winter visitors. For full hookups, private parks like HTR Door County at Egg Harbor handle everything up to big rigs. The peninsula roads are narrow and busy in summer, so many RVers base at one park and explore the towns and parks by car.

Are Wisconsin campgrounds open year-round?

Most are not. Wisconsin has hard winters, and the majority of state parks and private parks close their campgrounds from roughly October or November until April or May. A handful stay open for winter recreation, such as Peninsula's Tennison Bay campground and Devil's Lake's Quartzite loop, which serve cross-country skiers and snowshoers, and the Milwaukee State Fair RV Park runs year-round. Winter camping here means deep cold, snow, and limited services, so it is only for the well-equipped. For most RVers, treat Wisconsin as a spring-through-fall destination and plan inside that window.

Do I need reservations or can I just show up?

In summer and during fall color, plan on reservations. The popular state parks and the private parks in the Dells and Door County run full on weekends, and showing up without a booking usually means no site. The good news is Wisconsin DNR lets you reserve up to 11 months ahead, so you can lock dates early, and same-day reservations are also possible when sites are open. The national-forest dispersed sites are first-come, a useful backup for self-contained rigs. If you like spontaneity, travel midweek or off-season and keep a list of fallback campgrounds.

What is there to do while RV camping in Wisconsin?

Plenty, and it changes by region. Wisconsin Dells is the waterpark capital with river boat tours and family attractions. Door County offers lighthouses, cherry orchards, art towns, and shoreline hiking. Up north, the Apostle Islands on Lake Superior have famous sea caves and sandstone cliffs, and the Northwoods lakes are prime for fishing and paddling. Devil's Lake draws hikers and climbers to its bluffs, and the Ice Age Trail crosses the state. Add in fall color, summer festivals, and lake beaches, and most campgrounds put you within easy reach of something memorable.

What are the best RV parks in Wisconsin?

For full hookups and big-rig room, the private parks lead, especially around the tourist hubs: Nature's Touch and Country Roads near Wisconsin Dells, and HTR Door County at Egg Harbor on the peninsula. For scenery on a budget, the state parks are the draw, with Devil's Lake near Baraboo and Peninsula in Door County among the most popular in the Midwest, though they offer electric and water rather than full hookups. Milwaukee even has the State Fair RV Park in the city. Match your pick to your rig size, your hookup needs, and the region you want to explore.

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

The private ones usually do, with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and sewer, often plus pull-throughs and pools. The public ones generally do not. Wisconsin state parks typically offer electric and water sites at best, with no sewer at the site and a central dump station to use on your way out. So while the state parks are scenic and affordable, you are running on your holding tanks while you are there. If full hookups matter to you, plan on a private park, which in Wisconsin cluster around the Dells, Door County, and the interstate corridors.

How much does RV camping cost in Wisconsin?

State park sites run roughly $15 to $35 a night for residents and $20 to $40 for non-residents, with electric and premium loops costing more, plus an extra $15 per night non-resident surcharge that out-of-state campers should budget for. Private RV parks and resorts run higher, commonly $50 to $90 plus a night near the Dells and Door County, climbing on peak summer and fall-color weekends. Free dispersed camping is available in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest. Weekly and monthly rates lower the per-night cost for longer stays.

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

For the popular parks, as early as you can. Wisconsin DNR takes reservations up to 11 months ahead through the Going to Camp system, and the marquee parks like Devil's Lake and Peninsula fill summer weekends within minutes of the window opening. Set an alarm, have your account and payment ready, and log in early. Private parks in the Dells and Door County also book summer and fall-color weekends well ahead. If you are flexible or traveling midweek and off-peak, you can often find sites much closer to your dates.

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

Summer and early fall are the sweet spots. From June through August you get pleasant high-70s days, warm lakes, and everything open, which is also the busiest and priciest stretch. Late September and October bring spectacular hardwood color, crisp air, and thinning crowds, arguably the best time to be here, though many electric loops start closing in October. Spring is cool, muddy, and buggy early but quiet and cheap. Winter closes most campgrounds, with only a few open for skiing and snowshoeing. For the best mix, target August or the fall-color window.

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

Yes, mainly at the private parks. The full-hookup resorts near the Dells, in Door County, and along I-94 like Stoney Creek in Osseo are built for big rigs, with long pull-throughs and full hookups. The state parks are more variable: many loops are wooded and tighter, with shorter sites and no sewer, so a 40-foot rig can be a squeeze. Always check the site length when booking a state park, and lean toward the private parks or the larger, more modern state-park loops if you are running a big motorhome or fifth wheel.

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

Yes, in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest up north. Dispersed camping there is free and first-come, with simple rules: park within 30 feet of a road, and stay at least 150 feet from trails and roads and 200 feet from any water. These are dry sites with no services, so you bring everything including water, and they suit smaller, self-contained rigs better than big motorhomes. You cannot camp just anywhere on national-forest land, so look for established dispersed areas. It is a quiet, free alternative to the busy southern tourist hubs.

Can I camp at Devil's Lake State Park in an RV?

Yes, Devil's Lake is one of the best-known RV destinations in the state, with about 400 sites across three campgrounds below its quartzite bluffs. The Northern Lights campground has 71 electric sites, including the only wooded electric loop, while other sites are non-electric, and there is a dump station rather than full hookups. The Quartzite campground stays open year-round, while Northern Lights and Ice Age typically close from October to April. It is extremely popular, so reserve the moment the 11-month window opens, especially for summer weekends and holidays.

What is camping in Door County like for RVers?

Door County is one of the most scenic RV destinations in the Midwest, a peninsula of lighthouses, cherry orchards, and Green Bay shoreline. Peninsula State Park is the public flagship, with more than 450 sites, about half with electric, all with water access and flush toilets, plus 30 miles of groomed ski trails for winter visitors. For full hookups, private parks like HTR Door County at Egg Harbor handle everything up to big rigs. The peninsula roads are narrow and busy in summer, so many RVers base at one park and explore the towns and parks by car.

Are Wisconsin campgrounds open year-round?

Most are not. Wisconsin has hard winters, and the majority of state parks and private parks close their campgrounds from roughly October or November until April or May. A handful stay open for winter recreation, such as Peninsula's Tennison Bay campground and Devil's Lake's Quartzite loop, which serve cross-country skiers and snowshoers, and the Milwaukee State Fair RV Park runs year-round. Winter camping here means deep cold, snow, and limited services, so it is only for the well-equipped. For most RVers, treat Wisconsin as a spring-through-fall destination and plan inside that window.

Do I need reservations or can I just show up?

In summer and during fall color, plan on reservations. The popular state parks and the private parks in the Dells and Door County run full on weekends, and showing up without a booking usually means no site. The good news is Wisconsin DNR lets you reserve up to 11 months ahead, so you can lock dates early, and same-day reservations are also possible when sites are open. The national-forest dispersed sites are first-come, a useful backup for self-contained rigs. If you like spontaneity, travel midweek or off-season and keep a list of fallback campgrounds.

What is there to do while RV camping in Wisconsin?

Plenty, and it changes by region. Wisconsin Dells is the waterpark capital with river boat tours and family attractions. Door County offers lighthouses, cherry orchards, art towns, and shoreline hiking. Up north, the Apostle Islands on Lake Superior have famous sea caves and sandstone cliffs, and the Northwoods lakes are prime for fishing and paddling. Devil's Lake draws hikers and climbers to its bluffs, and the Ice Age Trail crosses the state. Add in fall color, summer festivals, and lake beaches, and most campgrounds put you within easy reach of something memorable.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Wisconsin?

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