RV Parks In Huntsville, Alabama
34.7304° N, 86.5859° W
Quick Overview
Huntsville, north Alabama's Rocket City, is one of the more rewarding RV bases in the Southeast, and it earns that with real variety. You can camp on a mountaintop with cool summer air and city overlooks, or on the banks of the Tennessee River next to a marina and greenway, all within a short drive of the largest space museum on the planet. The mix here spans state park, city, county, and private campgrounds, so whether you want budget scenery or a full-hookup base steps from Space Camp, the options are genuinely deep.
The signature stay is Monte Sano State Park, run by Alabama State Parks atop Monte Sano Mountain about 10 minutes above downtown. It offers roughly 89 RV sites mixing full-hookup and water-and-electric spots, two bathhouses with laundry, two dump stations, and overlook sites that catch the sunset, with the mountain air running noticeably cooler than the valley in summer; you reserve it through Alabama State Parks. Down on the water, Ditto Landing is the City of Huntsville's riverside park with shaded 30- and 50-amp sites, a big bathhouse, and harbor and greenway access, though it has no sewer hookups, so you use the on-site dump. For the most central base, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park puts about 27 hookup sites within walking distance of the Saturn V. North of the city, Sharon Johnston Park Campground offers around 50 well-spaced full-hookup county sites, and Point Mallard Campground in Decatur adds 233 full-hookup riverside sites about 25 miles southwest.
What makes Huntsville work for RVers is that it is a real city with real infrastructure wrapped around genuine outdoor and cultural draws. Big rigs do well at the private and county parks and at Monte Sano, which handles rigs up to about 65 feet, though the climb up the mountain is steep, so gear down. Reservations run the gamut: Alabama State Parks bookings for Monte Sano, direct city booking for Ditto Landing, and direct booking for the private and county options. Public choices like the state park and Ditto Landing keep costs low, while the Space and Rocket Center park trades a higher rate for unbeatable location. Whether you are here for a Space Camp week, a river weekend, or a base to explore the Tennessee Valley, Huntsville gives you room to pick your scenery. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Huntsville for the local options.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Huntsville
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Huntsville
All Dump Stations Near Huntsville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Shady Grove RV & Mobile Home Community | 2.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nasa Space Camp RV Campground | 3.7 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Space & Rocket Center RV Park | 3.7 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Varies |
| Us Army Mwr Redstone Arsenal RV Park | 4.0 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lebanon Estates | 8.4 mi | 3.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rambling Oaks | 10.7 mi | 3.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Easter Posey Recreation Area | 11.4 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Byrd's Mobile Home/ RV Park | 13.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pulaski Pike R/v Park | 13.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sharon Johnston Park Campground | 13.9 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
A Shady Grove RV & Mobile Home Community
2.8 miNasa Space Camp RV Campground
3.7 miU.S. Space & Rocket Center RV Park
3.7 miUs Army Mwr Redstone Arsenal RV Park
4.0 miLebanon Estates
8.4 miRambling Oaks
10.7 miEaster Posey Recreation Area
11.4 miByrd's Mobile Home/ RV Park
13.0 miPulaski Pike R/v Park
13.2 miSharon Johnston Park Campground
13.9 miTraveling to Huntsville by RV
Reaching Huntsville with a big rig is easy. I-565 runs straight through the metro and connects to I-65 about 20 miles west near Decatur, tying you north toward Nashville and south toward Birmingham. US-72, US-231, US-431, and Memorial Parkway fill out a grid of multi-lane roads with no low-clearance bridges, so large motorhomes and fifth-wheels move through town comfortably. The single challenging approach is the climb up Monte Sano Mountain to the state park, which is steep and winding and calls for low gear on the way up and careful braking coming down.
Once you are settled, everything you need is close. Fuel is abundant along I-565, US-72, and Memorial Parkway, and full-service RV dealers, propane suppliers, and big-box grocery and warehouse stores are spread across the metro, so provisioning and repairs are simple. If you are flying in to rent, Huntsville International Airport sits right off I-565 west of downtown. For getting around once you are camped, the main corridors keep you out of tight residential streets, and the drive between Monte Sano, downtown, and the river attractions is short and straightforward. Stock up in the city, then settle in wherever your scenery preference lands.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Huntsville
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Alabama
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Huntsville, AL
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Huntsville, 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 Huntsville
RV camping in Huntsville spans a wide value range, which is part of what makes it such a good base. The public options anchor the affordable end: Monte Sano State Park charges standard Alabama State Parks rates, well below resort pricing, and it even dumps free for campers. Ditto Landing and Sharon Johnston Park keep city and county pricing reasonable, and Point Mallard in Decatur offers a lot of full-hookup site for the money. At the premium end, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park commands a higher nightly rate, but you are paying for a location within walking distance of the Saturn V and the museum, which is worth it for a Space Camp family. Expect moderate nightly full-hookup pricing overall, with weekly and monthly rates lowering the per-night cost for longer stays. Spring and summer weekends near the attractions are the priciest and fill first, while winter and weekday stays are cheaper and wide open. Booking a full-hookup site almost always beats piecing together separate paid stops.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Huntsville
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Huntsville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
32F - 51F
Crowds: Low
Cool nights and open sites; a mild, uncrowded window if you do not mind chilly mornings.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 72F
Crowds: High
Beautiful and popular, but prime tornado season; book ahead and know your shelter plan.
Summer
Jun - Aug
68F - 90F
Crowds: High
Busy with Space Camp families; Monte Sano's mountaintop sites run cooler than the valley floor.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 74F
Crowds: High
Arguably the best season, with comfortable days and fall color; reserve popular sites early.
Explore the Huntsville Area
A few things we would tell a friend heading to Huntsville. First, pick your scenery deliberately: Monte Sano State Park gives you mountaintop cool and overlooks but a steep climb, while Ditto Landing gives you riverside shade with no sewer hookups, so match the site to how you like to camp. Book Monte Sano and the Space and Rocket Center park well ahead for spring, summer, and any Space Camp or event weekend, because the best sites go early. If you want full hookups with sewer at your pad, lean toward Sharon Johnston Park Campground or Point Mallard rather than Ditto Landing. Take tornado season seriously in spring and fall; know your campground's shelter and keep weather alerts on. If you are bringing a big rig up Monte Sano, gear down for the climb and confirm your length, since the park tops out around 65 feet. And provision in the metro before you head to the mountain, where the nearest stores are back down in the valley.
National Parks Nearby
Other Cities in Alabama
RV Tips & Articles
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Huntsville
What are the best RV parks in Huntsville, Alabama?
Huntsville offers unusual variety. Monte Sano State Park is the signature choice, with full-hookup and water-and-electric sites atop a mountain, cool summer air, and city overlooks. Ditto Landing gives you riverside camping on the Tennessee River next to a marina and greenway. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park is the most central, within walking distance of the Saturn V. North of town, Sharon Johnston Park Campground offers quiet full-hookup county sites, and Point Mallard Campground in Decatur adds 233 full-hookup riverside sites about 25 miles away. Between them you can pick mountaintop, riverside, or attraction-adjacent scenery to fit your trip.
Do Huntsville RV parks have full hookups?
Many do, though it varies by campground. Monte Sano State Park mixes full-hookup sites with water-and-electric-only sites, so specify full hookups when you book. Sharon Johnston Park Campground has mostly full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 50-amp electric, and Point Mallard Campground in Decatur offers 233 full-hookup sites. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park has hookup sites as well. The main exception is Ditto Landing, which provides 30- and 50-amp electric and water but no sewer at the sites, so you use its on-site dump station. If sewer at your pad is a priority, aim for Sharon Johnston, Point Mallard, or a full-hookup site at Monte Sano.
How much does RV camping cost in Huntsville?
It spans a wide range. Public options are the affordable anchor: Monte Sano State Park charges standard Alabama State Parks rates and dumps free for campers, while Ditto Landing and Sharon Johnston Park keep city and county pricing reasonable. Point Mallard in Decatur offers good value for full hookups. At the premium end, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park costs more, but you are paying for a walk-to-the-museum location. Expect moderate nightly full-hookup pricing overall, with weekly and monthly rates cutting the per-night cost for longer stays. Spring and summer weekends near the attractions are priciest and fill first, while winter and weekdays are cheaper and wide open.
How far ahead should I reserve an RV site in Huntsville?
For spring and summer, and especially any Space Camp or event weekend, book well ahead, because the mountaintop sites at Monte Sano State Park and the central spots at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park fill early. Monte Sano reserves through the Alabama State Parks system, and its overlook sites are the first to go. Ditto Landing and the county parks also take reservations and fill their best riverside and full-hookup sites for busy weekends. Outside the spring and summer peak, in fall and winter, you can often find a site with little notice. When in doubt, reserve online or call rather than counting on a walk-up.
When is the best time to camp in Huntsville?
Fall is arguably the sweet spot, with comfortable days, cooler nights, fall color, and fewer crowds than the busy warm months, though it carries a secondary tornado risk. Spring is beautiful and green but is peak tornado season in the Tennessee Valley, so stay weather-aware. Summer is hot and humid but busy with Space Camp and museum tourism, and Monte Sano's mountaintop sites run cooler than the valley if you want to beat the heat. Winter is the quietest season, cool and uncrowded with easy availability. For the best balance of weather, scenery, and crowd levels, target fall or the shoulder weeks of spring.
Can big rigs camp in Huntsville?
Yes, big rigs do well here. Monte Sano State Park accommodates rigs up to about 65 feet, and the private and county parks like the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park, Sharon Johnston Park, and Point Mallard are built for full-size motorhomes and fifth-wheels. The metro roads, including I-565, US-72, and Memorial Parkway, are multi-lane with no low bridges, so the approach is easy. The one thing to plan for is the climb up Monte Sano Mountain to the state park, which is steep and winding and calls for low gear. Confirm your length when booking Monte Sano, but overall Huntsville is a comfortable city for large rigs.
Is there state park RV camping in Huntsville?
Yes. Monte Sano State Park, run by Alabama State Parks atop Monte Sano Mountain about 10 minutes above downtown, is the area's signature public campground. It offers roughly 89 RV sites mixing full-hookup and water-and-electric spots, two bathhouses with laundry, two dump stations, and overlook sites with sunset views, all in cooler mountain air than the valley below. The park is open year-round and you reserve through the Alabama State Parks system. It combines scenic mountaintop camping, hiking and biking trails, and a Japanese garden with quick access to downtown, making it the best-value standout among Huntsville's campgrounds when you want nature and city close together.
Which Huntsville campground is closest to the Space and Rocket Center?
The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park is by far the closest, with about 27 hookup sites right on the museum grounds within walking distance of the Saturn V rocket. For a Space Camp family or anyone who wants to spend serious time at the museum, it is the most convenient base in the metro, trading a higher nightly rate for an unbeatable location. If you prefer more scenery and lower cost, Monte Sano State Park is only about a 10-minute drive away up the mountain, and Ditto Landing sits south of downtown on the river. But for pure proximity to the rockets, the on-site RV park wins.
Are Huntsville RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Alabama State Parks, including Monte Sano, allow leashed pets in the campground under standard state-park rules, and the city, county, and private campgrounds around Huntsville typically welcome dogs since so many camping families travel with them. Policies on the number of pets, breeds, and designated areas vary by campground, so confirm the specifics when you book. Keep your dog leashed on the mountain trails and the river greenway, clean up after it, and never leave a pet unattended at your site during the summer heat and humidity. For a pet-friendly stay you will have plenty of choices across the metro.
Can I camp on the Tennessee River in Huntsville?
Yes. Ditto Landing, the City of Huntsville's riverside park and marina, offers shaded sites right on the Tennessee River next to the harbor and the river greenway, with 30- and 50-amp electric and water; just note it has no sewer hookups, so you use the on-site dump. About 25 miles southwest in Decatur, Point Mallard Campground puts 233 full-hookup sites on the river as well. Both give you boat access, fishing, and waterfront mornings. If riverside camping is your goal, Ditto Landing is the in-town choice and Point Mallard is the full-hookup alternative a short drive away, so pick based on whether you need sewer at your site.
What is there to do around Huntsville while camping?
Plenty, and it blends space history with outdoor recreation. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center is the headline, with a National Historic Landmark Saturn V, interactive simulators, and Space Camp. Monte Sano State Park offers hiking and biking trails, overlooks, and a Japanese garden. The Huntsville Botanical Garden features a large open-air butterfly house and aquatic gardens. Ditto Landing gives you river recreation and a greenway, and downtown Huntsville has a lively food and brewery scene. You are also within day-trip range of the Tennessee River lakes and the Bankhead forest country. It is a base with enough variety to fill a week easily, mixing museums, gardens, trails, and water.
Do Huntsville RV parks stay open year-round?
The main ones do. Monte Sano State Park, Ditto Landing, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park, and Point Mallard in Decatur all operate year-round, so you can camp in any season, with winter being the quietest and most available. Some smaller county options like Sharon Johnston Park Campground run a more seasonal schedule, so confirm dates directly before an off-season trip. Huntsville's mild winters, which stay cool rather than harsh, make year-round camping practical here, unlike more northern destinations. Just keep in mind that spring and fall carry tornado risk, so whatever season you choose, stay weather-aware and know your campground's shelter plan.
Is Huntsville a good base for a north Alabama RV trip?
It is one of the best in the region. Huntsville combines easy interstate access via I-565 and I-65, a genuine RV-town infrastructure of dealers, dump stations, and supplies, and a rare range of camping scenery from mountaintop to riverside to museum-adjacent. World-class attractions led by the U.S. Space and Rocket Center anchor the city, and you can day-trip to the Tennessee River lakes, the Bankhead forest, and Nashville or Birmingham within a couple of hours. Public campgrounds keep costs low, big rigs are well accommodated, and there is enough to do for a long stay. For exploring the Tennessee Valley and north Alabama, Huntsville is the natural hub.
What are the best RV parks in Huntsville, Alabama?
Huntsville offers unusual variety. Monte Sano State Park is the signature choice, with full-hookup and water-and-electric sites atop a mountain, cool summer air, and city overlooks. Ditto Landing gives you riverside camping on the Tennessee River next to a marina and greenway. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park is the most central, within walking distance of the Saturn V. North of town, Sharon Johnston Park Campground offers quiet full-hookup county sites, and Point Mallard Campground in Decatur adds 233 full-hookup riverside sites about 25 miles away. Between them you can pick mountaintop, riverside, or attraction-adjacent scenery to fit your trip.
Do Huntsville RV parks have full hookups?
Many do, though it varies by campground. Monte Sano State Park mixes full-hookup sites with water-and-electric-only sites, so specify full hookups when you book. Sharon Johnston Park Campground has mostly full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 50-amp electric, and Point Mallard Campground in Decatur offers 233 full-hookup sites. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park has hookup sites as well. The main exception is Ditto Landing, which provides 30- and 50-amp electric and water but no sewer at the sites, so you use its on-site dump station. If sewer at your pad is a priority, aim for Sharon Johnston, Point Mallard, or a full-hookup site at Monte Sano.
How much does RV camping cost in Huntsville?
It spans a wide range. Public options are the affordable anchor: Monte Sano State Park charges standard Alabama State Parks rates and dumps free for campers, while Ditto Landing and Sharon Johnston Park keep city and county pricing reasonable. Point Mallard in Decatur offers good value for full hookups. At the premium end, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park costs more, but you are paying for a walk-to-the-museum location. Expect moderate nightly full-hookup pricing overall, with weekly and monthly rates cutting the per-night cost for longer stays. Spring and summer weekends near the attractions are priciest and fill first, while winter and weekdays are cheaper and wide open.
How far ahead should I reserve an RV site in Huntsville?
For spring and summer, and especially any Space Camp or event weekend, book well ahead, because the mountaintop sites at Monte Sano State Park and the central spots at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park fill early. Monte Sano reserves through the Alabama State Parks system, and its overlook sites are the first to go. Ditto Landing and the county parks also take reservations and fill their best riverside and full-hookup sites for busy weekends. Outside the spring and summer peak, in fall and winter, you can often find a site with little notice. When in doubt, reserve online or call rather than counting on a walk-up.
When is the best time to camp in Huntsville?
Fall is arguably the sweet spot, with comfortable days, cooler nights, fall color, and fewer crowds than the busy warm months, though it carries a secondary tornado risk. Spring is beautiful and green but is peak tornado season in the Tennessee Valley, so stay weather-aware. Summer is hot and humid but busy with Space Camp and museum tourism, and Monte Sano's mountaintop sites run cooler than the valley if you want to beat the heat. Winter is the quietest season, cool and uncrowded with easy availability. For the best balance of weather, scenery, and crowd levels, target fall or the shoulder weeks of spring.
Can big rigs camp in Huntsville?
Yes, big rigs do well here. Monte Sano State Park accommodates rigs up to about 65 feet, and the private and county parks like the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park, Sharon Johnston Park, and Point Mallard are built for full-size motorhomes and fifth-wheels. The metro roads, including I-565, US-72, and Memorial Parkway, are multi-lane with no low bridges, so the approach is easy. The one thing to plan for is the climb up Monte Sano Mountain to the state park, which is steep and winding and calls for low gear. Confirm your length when booking Monte Sano, but overall Huntsville is a comfortable city for large rigs.
Is there state park RV camping in Huntsville?
Yes. Monte Sano State Park, run by Alabama State Parks atop Monte Sano Mountain about 10 minutes above downtown, is the area's signature public campground. It offers roughly 89 RV sites mixing full-hookup and water-and-electric spots, two bathhouses with laundry, two dump stations, and overlook sites with sunset views, all in cooler mountain air than the valley below. The park is open year-round and you reserve through the Alabama State Parks system. It combines scenic mountaintop camping, hiking and biking trails, and a Japanese garden with quick access to downtown, making it the best-value standout among Huntsville's campgrounds when you want nature and city close together.
Which Huntsville campground is closest to the Space and Rocket Center?
The U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park is by far the closest, with about 27 hookup sites right on the museum grounds within walking distance of the Saturn V rocket. For a Space Camp family or anyone who wants to spend serious time at the museum, it is the most convenient base in the metro, trading a higher nightly rate for an unbeatable location. If you prefer more scenery and lower cost, Monte Sano State Park is only about a 10-minute drive away up the mountain, and Ditto Landing sits south of downtown on the river. But for pure proximity to the rockets, the on-site RV park wins.
Are Huntsville RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Alabama State Parks, including Monte Sano, allow leashed pets in the campground under standard state-park rules, and the city, county, and private campgrounds around Huntsville typically welcome dogs since so many camping families travel with them. Policies on the number of pets, breeds, and designated areas vary by campground, so confirm the specifics when you book. Keep your dog leashed on the mountain trails and the river greenway, clean up after it, and never leave a pet unattended at your site during the summer heat and humidity. For a pet-friendly stay you will have plenty of choices across the metro.
Can I camp on the Tennessee River in Huntsville?
Yes. Ditto Landing, the City of Huntsville's riverside park and marina, offers shaded sites right on the Tennessee River next to the harbor and the river greenway, with 30- and 50-amp electric and water; just note it has no sewer hookups, so you use the on-site dump. About 25 miles southwest in Decatur, Point Mallard Campground puts 233 full-hookup sites on the river as well. Both give you boat access, fishing, and waterfront mornings. If riverside camping is your goal, Ditto Landing is the in-town choice and Point Mallard is the full-hookup alternative a short drive away, so pick based on whether you need sewer at your site.
What is there to do around Huntsville while camping?
Plenty, and it blends space history with outdoor recreation. The U.S. Space and Rocket Center is the headline, with a National Historic Landmark Saturn V, interactive simulators, and Space Camp. Monte Sano State Park offers hiking and biking trails, overlooks, and a Japanese garden. The Huntsville Botanical Garden features a large open-air butterfly house and aquatic gardens. Ditto Landing gives you river recreation and a greenway, and downtown Huntsville has a lively food and brewery scene. You are also within day-trip range of the Tennessee River lakes and the Bankhead forest country. It is a base with enough variety to fill a week easily, mixing museums, gardens, trails, and water.
Do Huntsville RV parks stay open year-round?
The main ones do. Monte Sano State Park, Ditto Landing, the U.S. Space and Rocket Center RV Park, and Point Mallard in Decatur all operate year-round, so you can camp in any season, with winter being the quietest and most available. Some smaller county options like Sharon Johnston Park Campground run a more seasonal schedule, so confirm dates directly before an off-season trip. Huntsville's mild winters, which stay cool rather than harsh, make year-round camping practical here, unlike more northern destinations. Just keep in mind that spring and fall carry tornado risk, so whatever season you choose, stay weather-aware and know your campground's shelter plan.
Is Huntsville a good base for a north Alabama RV trip?
It is one of the best in the region. Huntsville combines easy interstate access via I-565 and I-65, a genuine RV-town infrastructure of dealers, dump stations, and supplies, and a rare range of camping scenery from mountaintop to riverside to museum-adjacent. World-class attractions led by the U.S. Space and Rocket Center anchor the city, and you can day-trip to the Tennessee River lakes, the Bankhead forest, and Nashville or Birmingham within a couple of hours. Public campgrounds keep costs low, big rigs are well accommodated, and there is enough to do for a long stay. For exploring the Tennessee Valley and north Alabama, Huntsville is the natural hub.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Huntsville?
The highest-rated station is Ditto Landing Marina Campground with a rating of 4.5/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Huntsville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Huntsville.
All Dump Stations Near Huntsville (103)
RV ParkSelah's Acres RV Resort
RV ParkSharon Johnston Park
RV Park with Dump StationsMountain Breeze RV Park
RV ParkCamp Macoba
RV ParkThe Red Coach Resort
RV ParkCountry Breeze RV Park
RV ParkAllen Trailer Park & Fireworks
RV Park




