RV Parks In Brundidge, Alabama
31.7202° N, 85.8161° W
Quick Overview
Brundidge is a small, welcoming town on US-231 in Pike County, southeast Alabama, and it wears the title of Peanut Butter Capital with pride thanks to the Johnston Peanut Butter Mill that has run here since 1929. For RVers it makes an easy overnight on the Montgomery-to-Dothan run or a relaxed two-to-three day base, and there is a solid spread of full-hookup parks close by.
For full hookups, the two nearest anchors are Walnut Creek RV Park, about 8 miles north of town off US-231 with 50 amp electric plus water and sewer on spacious sites, and Pondview Acres Campground, a family-owned park right in Brundidge with 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites that fit any rig size and welcome pets. Deer Run RV Park in nearby Troy adds more full-hookup sites with pull-through options about 10 miles up the road. If you would rather trade a little convenience for scenery, Blue Springs State Park near Clio sits roughly 20 miles east with 50 amp water and electric sites, a few full-hookup pads, and a pair of swimming pools fed by a clear underground spring that holds a steady 68 degrees all year. You can reserve a state-park site online through Alabama State Parks or by phone.
Brundidge rewards RVers who like their stops affordable and low-key. Private full-hookup sites tend to run in the $30s, several parks offer weekly and monthly rates, and US-231 makes getting around with a big rig genuinely easy since it is a wide four-lane federal highway with no low bridges to worry about. Propane, groceries, fuel, and basic repair are all handy here or in Troy just up the road. Add the Peanut Butter Festival on the last Saturday of October, the We Piddle Around Theater, and the Pioneer Museum of Alabama over in Troy, and you have more to do than a quick photo stop suggests. Spring and fall are the sweet spots, with warm green days and comfortable nights, while summers turn long, hot, and muggy with daily afternoon storms, so plan on running your air conditioning if you visit in the heat.
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All Dump Stations Near Brundidge
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jerusalem Campground | 4.9 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Walnut Creek RV Park | 7.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Swindall's Campgrounds | 7.1 mi | 3.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Walnut Creek RV Park | 7.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pea River RV Resort | 8.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mobile Home | 11.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Deer Run RV Park | 16.4 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ozark / Fort Rucker Koa Journey | 17.7 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Blue Springs State Park | 18.5 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Mr D's RV Park | 19.8 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
Jerusalem Campground
4.9 miWalnut Creek RV Park
7.1 miSwindall's Campgrounds
7.1 miWalnut Creek RV Park
7.1 miPea River RV Resort
8.7 miMobile Home
11.8 miDeer Run RV Park
16.4 miOzark / Fort Rucker Koa Journey
17.7 miBlue Springs State Park
18.5 miMr D's RV Park
19.8 miTraveling to Brundidge by RV
Brundidge sits right on US-231, the wide four-lane federal highway that runs north to south through Pike County between Montgomery and Dothan, with AL-10 and AL-93 feeding in from the sides. These are open, well-graded roads with no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a 40-foot rig tows through in comfort. Most RVers arrive by running US-231 south from Montgomery or north from Dothan and I-10; if you are coming off I-65, it lies about 50 to 60 miles west near Greenville.
The town itself is small and easy to navigate, with wide streets and plenty of roadside room. Fuel up on diesel or gas at the truck-friendly stations along US-231, and refill propane and fresh water here or in Troy, about 10 miles northwest, before heading into quieter country to the south. For camping at Blue Springs State Park, book ahead through the state Alabama State Parks reservation system or by calling the park at 334-397-4875.
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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 Brundidge, Alabama, 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 Brundidge
Brundidge is an easy stop on the wallet. Private full-hookup sites in the area generally land in the $30s a night, with family-owned parks like Pondview Acres Campground on the lower end and fuller-service parks a bit higher. The real savings come from length of stay, since several parks offer weekly and monthly rates that drop your effective nightly cost well below the walk-up price if you settle in for a while.
Blue Springs State Park is cheaper per night than the private parks, though you should budget for the standard Alabama state-park camping fee, and day-use visitors pay a small park fee on top. Between low site rates, reasonable diesel and gas prices on US-231, and free or low-cost attractions like the Peanut Butter Festival and the downtown antique shops, a couple of days in Brundidge costs a fraction of what the same stay runs in a coastal resort town. It is a genuinely budget-friendly corner of southeast Alabama.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Brundidge by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
39F - 58F
Crowds: Low
Mild by RV standards with the odd cold snap. Parks stay open and quiet, and you can usually roll into any of them without a reservation, though nights can dip toward freezing so pack a heater.
Spring
Mar - May
55F - 78F
Crowds: Medium
Green, warm, and comfortable with the year's lowest bug pressure. Rates are reasonable and availability is easy outside of holiday weekends, making March through May a fine window.
Summer
Jun - Aug
70F - 91F
Crowds: Medium
Hot and muggy with daily afternoon storms. Blue Springs State Park fills on weekends for the spring-fed pools, so reserve hookup sites ahead and plan for full-power air conditioning.
Fall
Sep - Oct
52F - 76F
Crowds: Medium
The sweet spot. Settled weather, cooler nights, and the late-October Peanut Butter Festival draw visitors, so book a site around the festival weekend well in advance.
Explore the Brundidge Area
A few things we'd tell a friend heading to Brundidge. First, if your dates line up, time your visit for the last Saturday in October and the Peanut Butter Festival, the town's biggest annual moment, and book your RV site well ahead because the whole area fills up that weekend. Second, Blue Springs State Park has a limited number of hookup sites and its spring-fed pools pull crowds in summer, so reserve a spot for any warm-weather weekend rather than gambling on a walk-in.
Third, treat Brundidge and Troy as your resupply points. Fill fuel, fresh water, and propane along US-231 before heading into the quieter stretches south of town, where stations and stores get sparse. Fourth, if you are running a big coach or a long fifth-wheel combo, aim for Walnut Creek RV Park or Pondview Acres Campground, both of which take larger rigs without the tight-lot stress. Finally, do not skip the small stuff; the antique shops downtown and the Pioneer Museum of Alabama up in Troy make Brundidge feel like more than a fuel stop.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Brundidge
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Brundidge, AL?
The closest full-hookup options are Walnut Creek RV Park, about 8 miles north of Brundidge off US-231 with 50 amp electric plus water and sewer, and Pondview Acres Campground right in Brundidge at 8439 County Road 114, a family-owned park with 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites that fit any rig size. Deer Run RV Park in nearby Troy, roughly 10 miles northwest, also offers 30 and 50 amp full hookups with some pull-through sites. For a public choice, Blue Springs State Park near Clio has 50 amp water and electric sites with a handful of full-hookup pads.
Do I need reservations for RV parks around Brundidge?
For most of the year you can often roll into the private parks like Walnut Creek RV Park or Pondview Acres Campground and find an open site, but calling a day or two ahead is smart, especially around the late-October Peanut Butter Festival when the whole area gets busy. Blue Springs State Park does not require reservations but strongly recommends them for summer weekends, when its spring-fed swimming pools pull big crowds. You can reserve a Blue Springs site online through the Alabama State Parks system or by calling the park directly at 334-397-4875, with no reservation fee.
Is there public RV camping near Brundidge?
Yes. Blue Springs State Park near Clio, about 20 miles east of Brundidge, is the go-to public campground. It has 40 sites with water and electric hookups, seven of them with full sewer connections, all wired for 50 amp service and able to handle rigs up to around 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through options. The real draw is the pair of swimming pools fed by a clear underground spring that stays a steady 68 degrees all year. You will pay a nightly camping fee, and day-use visitors pay a small park fee, but it is a scenic, family-friendly alternative to the in-town private parks.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Brundidge?
Brundidge is an affordable stop by RV standards. Private full-hookup sites in the area generally run in the $30s per night, with family-owned parks like Pondview Acres Campground on the lower end and full-service parks a bit higher. Many parks offer weekly and monthly rates that drop the effective nightly cost noticeably if you settle in for a while. Blue Springs State Park is cheaper still on a nightly basis, though you should budget for the standard state-park camping fee. Between low site rates, reasonable fuel on US-231, and free or low-cost attractions in town, a few days here costs far less than a resort-town stay.
Can I park my RV overnight at a store in Brundidge?
Sometimes, but it is never a guarantee. Overnight RV parking at retail lots along US-231 in Brundidge or nearby Troy is allowed only at the individual store manager's discretion and depends on local rules and available space. If you want to try it, go inside and ask a manager rather than assuming it is fine. For anything more than a quick overnight rest you are far better off at one of the area RV parks, where a modest fee gets you hookups, a dump station, fresh water, and a level site. Walnut Creek RV Park and Pondview Acres are both easy nearby choices.
Are the RV parks near Brundidge big-rig friendly?
Generally yes. Walnut Creek RV Park sits on spacious sites about 8 miles north of town with room to maneuver a large coach or fifth wheel, and Pondview Acres Campground in Brundidge advertises that it caters to all RV sizes. Deer Run RV Park in Troy has pull-through options that make longer combinations easier. Blue Springs State Park accepts rigs up to roughly 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through sites. US-231 through the area is a wide four-lane federal highway, so getting to any of these parks with a big rig is low stress compared to a mountain town with tight roads.
What is the best time of year to RV in Brundidge?
Spring and fall are the windows. March through May brings warm green days, comfortable nights, and the lowest bug pressure of the year, while September through November offers crisp settled weather and the late-October Peanut Butter Festival, the town's signature event. Summers are long, hot, and muggy with daily afternoon thunderstorms, so you will lean hard on air conditioning if you camp in July or August. Winters are short and mild by RV standards, with only occasional cold snaps and rare hard freezes, so an off-season visit is comfortable as long as you carry a heater for the coldest nights.
Why is Brundidge called the Peanut Butter Capital?
Brundidge earned the nickname from the Johnston Peanut Butter Mill, which has run in town since 1929 and turns out millions of jars a year. The mill was a source of Depression-era nutrition, and the town leaned into the history with the annual Peanut Butter Festival held on the last Saturday of October. That free event fills the streets with a 5K run, recipe contests, old-time demonstrations, kids contests, and the building of Alabama's largest PB&J sandwich. If your travel dates line up, it is a genuinely fun small-town festival and the single best time to visit, so book your RV site well ahead because the whole area gets busy that weekend.
What highways lead into Brundidge for an RV?
Brundidge sits right on US-231, the wide four-lane federal highway that runs north to south through Pike County between Montgomery and Dothan. AL-10 and AL-93 also feed into the area. US-231 carries heavy truck traffic daily and has no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a 40-foot rig moves through comfortably. Most RVers arrive by running US-231 south from Montgomery or north from Dothan and I-10. If you are coming off I-65, it lies roughly 50 to 60 miles west near Greenville, and you would cut east on smaller state routes to reach town. Troy, with more services, is about 10 miles northwest.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and repair near Brundidge?
Yes. Brundidge covers the basics and nearby Troy, about 10 miles northwest, fills any gaps. You can refill propane bottles at local dealers and farm co-ops, top off diesel or gas at truck-friendly stations along US-231, and pick up groceries in town, with full-size supermarkets and a Walmart in Troy. Basic auto and truck repair is available locally, and for more involved RV-specific service you have shops in Troy and the larger city of Dothan to the south. It is a good idea to fuel and resupply here before heading into quieter country, where stations and stores thin out.
What else is there to do in Brundidge besides the festival?
Plenty for a relaxed one or two day stay. The We Piddle Around Theater hosts the "Come Home, It's Suppertime" storytelling show in the first two weeks of November, a beloved local tradition. Antique shops downtown make for an easy afternoon of browsing. Ten miles up the road in Troy, the Pioneer Museum of Alabama spreads 17 historical buildings and more than 16,000 artifacts across 25 wooded acres, a solid rainy-day stop. Add a day trip out to Blue Springs State Park for a swim in its steady 68-degree spring pools, and you have a comfortable, low-cost couple of days in southeast Alabama.
Can I get full sewer hookups at Blue Springs State Park?
Only at some sites. Blue Springs State Park has 40 campsites with water and electric hookups, but just seven of those include a full sewer connection at the site. All are wired for 50 amp service, and the park handles rigs up to about 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through spots. If a sewer hookup at your site is a must, request one of those seven full-hookup pads when you reserve, or plan to use the park dump station. Otherwise, the in-town private parks like Walnut Creek RV Park and Pondview Acres Campground offer full hookups including sewer at more of their sites.
How many days should I plan for a Brundidge RV stop?
One night works if you are just passing through on US-231, but two or three days lets the area breathe. Spend a day in Brundidge itself seeing the Peanut Butter Capital sights and browsing the antique shops, then use a second day for a run out to Blue Springs State Park to swim in the spring-fed pools or over to Troy for the Pioneer Museum of Alabama. If your trip lands on the last weekend of October, build the schedule around the Peanut Butter Festival. Weekly rates at several private parks make a longer stay cheaper per night, so there is little reason to rush if the weather is good.
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Brundidge, AL?
The closest full-hookup options are Walnut Creek RV Park, about 8 miles north of Brundidge off US-231 with 50 amp electric plus water and sewer, and Pondview Acres Campground right in Brundidge at 8439 County Road 114, a family-owned park with 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites that fit any rig size. Deer Run RV Park in nearby Troy, roughly 10 miles northwest, also offers 30 and 50 amp full hookups with some pull-through sites. For a public choice, Blue Springs State Park near Clio has 50 amp water and electric sites with a handful of full-hookup pads.
Do I need reservations for RV parks around Brundidge?
For most of the year you can often roll into the private parks like Walnut Creek RV Park or Pondview Acres Campground and find an open site, but calling a day or two ahead is smart, especially around the late-October Peanut Butter Festival when the whole area gets busy. Blue Springs State Park does not require reservations but strongly recommends them for summer weekends, when its spring-fed swimming pools pull big crowds. You can reserve a Blue Springs site online through the Alabama State Parks system or by calling the park directly at 334-397-4875, with no reservation fee.
Is there public RV camping near Brundidge?
Yes. Blue Springs State Park near Clio, about 20 miles east of Brundidge, is the go-to public campground. It has 40 sites with water and electric hookups, seven of them with full sewer connections, all wired for 50 amp service and able to handle rigs up to around 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through options. The real draw is the pair of swimming pools fed by a clear underground spring that stays a steady 68 degrees all year. You will pay a nightly camping fee, and day-use visitors pay a small park fee, but it is a scenic, family-friendly alternative to the in-town private parks.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Brundidge?
Brundidge is an affordable stop by RV standards. Private full-hookup sites in the area generally run in the $30s per night, with family-owned parks like Pondview Acres Campground on the lower end and full-service parks a bit higher. Many parks offer weekly and monthly rates that drop the effective nightly cost noticeably if you settle in for a while. Blue Springs State Park is cheaper still on a nightly basis, though you should budget for the standard state-park camping fee. Between low site rates, reasonable fuel on US-231, and free or low-cost attractions in town, a few days here costs far less than a resort-town stay.
Can I park my RV overnight at a store in Brundidge?
Sometimes, but it is never a guarantee. Overnight RV parking at retail lots along US-231 in Brundidge or nearby Troy is allowed only at the individual store manager's discretion and depends on local rules and available space. If you want to try it, go inside and ask a manager rather than assuming it is fine. For anything more than a quick overnight rest you are far better off at one of the area RV parks, where a modest fee gets you hookups, a dump station, fresh water, and a level site. Walnut Creek RV Park and Pondview Acres are both easy nearby choices.
Are the RV parks near Brundidge big-rig friendly?
Generally yes. Walnut Creek RV Park sits on spacious sites about 8 miles north of town with room to maneuver a large coach or fifth wheel, and Pondview Acres Campground in Brundidge advertises that it caters to all RV sizes. Deer Run RV Park in Troy has pull-through options that make longer combinations easier. Blue Springs State Park accepts rigs up to roughly 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through sites. US-231 through the area is a wide four-lane federal highway, so getting to any of these parks with a big rig is low stress compared to a mountain town with tight roads.
What is the best time of year to RV in Brundidge?
Spring and fall are the windows. March through May brings warm green days, comfortable nights, and the lowest bug pressure of the year, while September through November offers crisp settled weather and the late-October Peanut Butter Festival, the town's signature event. Summers are long, hot, and muggy with daily afternoon thunderstorms, so you will lean hard on air conditioning if you camp in July or August. Winters are short and mild by RV standards, with only occasional cold snaps and rare hard freezes, so an off-season visit is comfortable as long as you carry a heater for the coldest nights.
Why is Brundidge called the Peanut Butter Capital?
Brundidge earned the nickname from the Johnston Peanut Butter Mill, which has run in town since 1929 and turns out millions of jars a year. The mill was a source of Depression-era nutrition, and the town leaned into the history with the annual Peanut Butter Festival held on the last Saturday of October. That free event fills the streets with a 5K run, recipe contests, old-time demonstrations, kids contests, and the building of Alabama's largest PB&J sandwich. If your travel dates line up, it is a genuinely fun small-town festival and the single best time to visit, so book your RV site well ahead because the whole area gets busy that weekend.
What highways lead into Brundidge for an RV?
Brundidge sits right on US-231, the wide four-lane federal highway that runs north to south through Pike County between Montgomery and Dothan. AL-10 and AL-93 also feed into the area. US-231 carries heavy truck traffic daily and has no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a 40-foot rig moves through comfortably. Most RVers arrive by running US-231 south from Montgomery or north from Dothan and I-10. If you are coming off I-65, it lies roughly 50 to 60 miles west near Greenville, and you would cut east on smaller state routes to reach town. Troy, with more services, is about 10 miles northwest.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and repair near Brundidge?
Yes. Brundidge covers the basics and nearby Troy, about 10 miles northwest, fills any gaps. You can refill propane bottles at local dealers and farm co-ops, top off diesel or gas at truck-friendly stations along US-231, and pick up groceries in town, with full-size supermarkets and a Walmart in Troy. Basic auto and truck repair is available locally, and for more involved RV-specific service you have shops in Troy and the larger city of Dothan to the south. It is a good idea to fuel and resupply here before heading into quieter country, where stations and stores thin out.
What else is there to do in Brundidge besides the festival?
Plenty for a relaxed one or two day stay. The We Piddle Around Theater hosts the "Come Home, It's Suppertime" storytelling show in the first two weeks of November, a beloved local tradition. Antique shops downtown make for an easy afternoon of browsing. Ten miles up the road in Troy, the Pioneer Museum of Alabama spreads 17 historical buildings and more than 16,000 artifacts across 25 wooded acres, a solid rainy-day stop. Add a day trip out to Blue Springs State Park for a swim in its steady 68-degree spring pools, and you have a comfortable, low-cost couple of days in southeast Alabama.
Can I get full sewer hookups at Blue Springs State Park?
Only at some sites. Blue Springs State Park has 40 campsites with water and electric hookups, but just seven of those include a full sewer connection at the site. All are wired for 50 amp service, and the park handles rigs up to about 45 feet with both back-in and pull-through spots. If a sewer hookup at your site is a must, request one of those seven full-hookup pads when you reserve, or plan to use the park dump station. Otherwise, the in-town private parks like Walnut Creek RV Park and Pondview Acres Campground offer full hookups including sewer at more of their sites.
How many days should I plan for a Brundidge RV stop?
One night works if you are just passing through on US-231, but two or three days lets the area breathe. Spend a day in Brundidge itself seeing the Peanut Butter Capital sights and browsing the antique shops, then use a second day for a run out to Blue Springs State Park to swim in the spring-fed pools or over to Troy for the Pioneer Museum of Alabama. If your trip lands on the last weekend of October, build the schedule around the Peanut Butter Festival. Weekly rates at several private parks make a longer stay cheaper per night, so there is little reason to rush if the weather is good.
Are there free dump stations in Brundidge?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Brundidge.
All Dump Stations Near Brundidge (70)
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