RV Parks In Bisbee, Arizona
31.4481° N, 109.9284° W
Quick Overview
Bisbee is one of the most distinctive small towns in the Southwest, a former copper-mining boomtown tucked into the Mule Mountains in Arizona's far southeast corner. At about 5,500 feet, it trades the flat, baking heat of the low desert for steep, winding streets, Victorian buildings, an arts-and-cafe scene, and a climate mild enough to enjoy year-round. For RVers, that combination makes it a refreshingly different base than the sprawling snowbird resorts around Phoenix and Tucson, and it has just enough RV parks to be genuinely practical.
Right in town, Queen Mine RV Park is the headline option and the only park in Old Bisbee, a quiet hilltop spot with big views and a five-minute walk down to the historic district. For larger rigs there are roomier choices nearby: Desert Oasis RV Park, a newer big-rig park with 80-foot pull-through and 90-foot back-in sites and sweeping mountain-and-valley views, and Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley near Naco, about 8 miles south, with 50-amp full-hookup sites beside a historic golf course. All offer full hookups (water, sewer, and electric), so you can settle in comfortably for a few nights or a snowbird month.
Public camping means a short drive. The standout is Kartchner Caverns State Park about 50 miles northwest, with hookup sites, a dump station, and International Dark Sky stargazing alongside tours of its living limestone cave. Closer at hand, the Coronado National Forest in the Huachuca Mountains near Sierra Vista offers rustic, no-hookup camping in canyons famous for hiking and birding. These trade convenience for cool high country and quiet.
What keeps RVers here is everything packed into a small radius. Old Bisbee itself is a walkable day or two, with the underground Queen Mine Tour and mining museum, and the Wild West town of Tombstone sits just 24 miles north on AZ-80. Add Kartchner Caverns and the birding canyons of the Huachucas, and Bisbee earns its place as a relaxed, affordable, anytime stop in southeastern Arizona, milder in summer and quirkier in character than almost anywhere else in the state.
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All Dump Stations Near Bisbee
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bisbee Queen Mine RV Park | 1.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Van Life Campgrounds (Coming 2023) | 2.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bisbee RV Park At Turquoise Valley | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Desert Oasis Campground | 9.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sierra Vista RV Park | 18.6 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Shoot Out Arena RV Park | 19.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Stampede RV Resort | 20.2 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tombstone RV Park & Campground | 21.4 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Tombstone RV Park & Campground | 21.4 mi | 4.7 | RV Park | Varies |
| Ramsey Canyon RV Park | 22.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Bisbee Queen Mine RV Park
1.1 miVan Life Campgrounds (Coming 2023)
2.6 miBisbee RV Park At Turquoise Valley
7.5 miDesert Oasis Campground
9.0 miSierra Vista RV Park
18.6 miShoot Out Arena RV Park
19.9 miStampede RV Resort
20.2 miTombstone RV Park & Campground
21.4 miTombstone RV Park & Campground
21.4 miRamsey Canyon RV Park
22.0 miTraveling to Bisbee by RV
Bisbee sits in the southeast corner of Arizona, reached on AZ-80. Most RVers approach from Interstate 10 at Benson, then drive about 40 miles south on AZ-80 through Tombstone into Bisbee. From the west, AZ-92 links Sierra Vista to town. The climb into Old Bisbee is steep but manageable for an RV, and the southern parks near Naco sit on flatter, easier ground if you would rather skip the grade entirely.
Sierra Vista, about 25 miles northwest, is your service hub. It has full grocery stores, fuel, propane, and RV repair, so most travelers stock up there before settling in around Bisbee. The single most important driving tip once you arrive: do not take a big rig into Old Bisbee's historic core. The streets are narrow, steep, and tightly parked, built for a mining town a century ago, not for a 40-foot coach. Park at your campground and walk or shuttle into downtown. For day trips, AZ-80 north to Tombstone is an easy, scenic 24-mile run, and the drive up to Kartchner Caverns or into the Huachuca canyons is straightforward in a car or smaller vehicle. Keeping the RV planted and exploring by day-tripping is the comfortable way to do southeastern Arizona.
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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 Bisbee, Arizona, 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 Bisbee
Bisbee is one of the better values in snowbird Arizona. At the private parks, a full-hookup site runs roughly $35 to $55 a night, and several offer monthly rates that bring the daily cost down sharply for winter-long stays, an attractive option compared with the pricier resort parks near Phoenix and Tucson. Kartchner Caverns State Park sits around $30 for a hookup site, a strong deal given the Dark Sky setting and amenities, while Coronado National Forest camping is cheap or free for dispersed sites if you can go without services.
The seasonal pattern is the opposite of the rest of southern Arizona's price story only in volume, not rate: winter is the busy, in-demand season when you should book ahead, while summer is quiet and easy to reserve, sometimes at lower rates. Budget for a stocking-up run to Sierra Vista, where groceries, fuel, and propane are cheaper and more plentiful than in tiny Bisbee. If you are weighing a longer stay, the combination of monthly park rates and Bisbee's low overall cost of visiting makes it one of the more wallet-friendly winter bases in the state.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Bisbee
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Best Time to Visit Bisbee by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
35F - 58F
Crowds: High
Mild, sunny days and chilly nights make Bisbee a relaxed snowbird base. The private RV parks and Kartchner Caverns fill up, so reserve weeks to months ahead for winter stays.
Spring
Mar - May
46F - 76F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, dry, and comfortable with desert blooms and great hiking. A popular shoulder window; book the in-town parks ahead on weekends before summer arrives.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63F - 88F
Crowds: Low
The 5,500-foot elevation keeps Bisbee cooler than Phoenix or Tucson. Monsoon storms build most July and August afternoons, and campgrounds are easy to reserve.
Fall
Sep - Oct
47F - 78F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp, clear, and arguably the best season for camping here, with comfortable days and cool nights as snowbird traffic starts to pick up.
Explore the Bisbee Area
Plan around two realities: the steep historic streets and the snowbird season. Old Bisbee was built for mules and Model Ts, so its core is no place for a big rig. Set up at your campground and explore downtown on foot, which is genuinely the best way to take in the galleries, stairways, and cafes anyway. On timing, winter is peak snowbird season across southern Arizona, so if you want a December-through-March stay, reserve the private parks and Kartchner Caverns weeks to months ahead, and ask about monthly rates that make a longer stay affordable.
Stock up in Sierra Vista, the nearest full-service town, for groceries, fuel, and propane before you settle in. Take advantage of Bisbee's elevation in summer: while the low desert bakes, you get milder days here, just watch for afternoon monsoon storms in July and August. And build a loop out of your stay. Bisbee, Tombstone, and Kartchner Caverns form a natural triangle, with the birding canyons of the Huachuca Mountains a short add-on. For ideas and tour hours, the Discover Bisbee visitor site is a useful starting point before you arrive.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Bisbee
What are the best RV parks in Bisbee, AZ?
Queen Mine RV Park is the signature choice because it is the only park in Old Bisbee, perched on a hilltop with views and a five-minute walk down to the historic district. For bigger rigs, Desert Oasis RV Park offers spacious 80-foot pull-through and 90-foot back-in sites with mountain views, and Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley near Naco provides 50-amp full-hookup sites beside a historic golf course about 8 miles south. If you want public camping, Kartchner Caverns State Park to the northwest has hookup sites in a Dark Sky setting, and the Coronado National Forest offers rustic mountain camping a short drive away.
Do Bisbee RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private parks in and around Bisbee are built for RVers and offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and electric service at the site. Queen Mine RV Park provides full hookups with 30-amp service, while Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley offers 50-amp sites for larger rigs, and Desert Oasis is a newer big-rig park with full connections. The main public option, Kartchner Caverns State Park, has water and electric hookups plus an on-site dump station but not full sewer at every site. Coronado National Forest camping has no hookups at all, so plan to be self-contained up in the mountains.
How much does RV camping cost in Bisbee?
At the private parks, expect roughly $35 to $55 a night for a full-hookup site, with monthly snowbird rates available at several parks that bring the per-night cost down for longer winter stays. Kartchner Caverns State Park runs in the $30 range for a hookup site plus the park day-use considerations, a good value given the setting. Coronado National Forest camping is inexpensive or free for dispersed sites. Bisbee is generally a more affordable base than the big snowbird hubs around Phoenix and Tucson, which is part of its appeal for budget-minded RVers wintering in southern Arizona.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Bisbee?
It depends on the season. Winter is peak snowbird time across southern Arizona, so for December through March you should reserve the private parks and Kartchner Caverns several weeks to a few months ahead, especially for monthly stays or weekends. Spring is also busy. In summer, when the low-desert heat pushes most snowbirds out and Bisbee stays comparatively mild, you can often book on much shorter notice. Coronado National Forest sites are mostly first-come, first-served, so for those you simply arrive earlier in the day, particularly on weekends and holidays.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Bisbee?
Fall and spring are the sweet spots, with warm, dry days, cool nights, and comfortable hiking weather. Winter is the busy snowbird season: mild and sunny by day, chilly after dark, and the most popular time to settle in for a longer stay, though you will want reservations. Summer surprises a lot of people because Bisbee sits at 5,500 feet and stays noticeably cooler than Phoenix or Tucson, so it is a pleasant warm-season escape, just expect afternoon monsoon thunderstorms in July and August. There is really no bad time to camp here; it just depends on the experience you want.
Can big rigs camp in Bisbee?
Yes, though with some planning. Desert Oasis RV Park was built for big rigs, with 80-foot pull-through and 90-foot back-in sites, and Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley near Naco offers 50-amp full-hookup sites on flatter ground south of town. Queen Mine RV Park welcomes big rigs too, though its sites are back-in and the park sits on a hill in Old Bisbee. The thing to know is that Old Bisbee proper has steep, narrow, historic streets that are no place for a large coach, so plan to park at your campground and explore downtown on foot. The Coronado National Forest mountain roads also favor shorter rigs.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Bisbee?
Yes. The standout is Kartchner Caverns State Park, about 50 miles northwest in the Whetstone Mountains, which offers a developed campground with water and electric hookups, a dump station, and International Dark Sky stargazing, plus tours of its famous living limestone cave. Closer to town, the Coronado National Forest in the Huachuca Mountains near Sierra Vista has developed and dispersed camping in canyons like Carr and Ramsey, beloved by hikers and birders. Those forest sites are rustic with no hookups and suit smaller, self-contained rigs, but they put you in cool, high country a world away from the desert floor.
Is Bisbee a good winter snowbird destination?
It is, and it offers a different flavor than the big low-desert hubs. Bisbee's 5,500-foot elevation means mild, sunny winter days with crisp, chilly nights, rather than the warmer, dead-flat conditions of Phoenix or Yuma. Snowbirds come for the historic small-town character, the arts scene, the affordability, and the easy access to Tombstone, Kartchner Caverns, and the birding canyons. Several private parks offer monthly rates that make a multi-month stay reasonable. If you prefer a quirky, walkable mountain town with cooler nights over a sprawling desert resort park, Bisbee is an excellent winter base in southeastern Arizona.
What is there to do around Bisbee while camping?
Plenty. Old Bisbee itself is the main draw, a former copper-mining boomtown of steep streets, Victorian buildings, galleries, antique shops, and cafes, plus the guided underground Queen Mine Tour led by former miners and the Bisbee Mining and Historical Museum. Day trips are easy: Tombstone and the OK Corral are about 24 miles north, Kartchner Caverns offers cave tours, and the Huachuca Mountains near Sierra Vista deliver hiking and some of the best birding in the United States. Many RVers spend a week here without running out of things to see, splitting time between the town and the surrounding high desert.
How do I get to Bisbee with an RV?
Bisbee sits in the far southeast corner of Arizona on AZ-80. Most RVers come south from Interstate 10 at Benson, then take AZ-80 through Tombstone into Bisbee, a drive of about 40 miles from the interstate. From the west, AZ-92 connects Sierra Vista to Bisbee. The climb into Old Bisbee on AZ-80 is steep but manageable for RVs, and the southern parks near Naco sit on flatter ground. Once you arrive, leave the rig at the campground; the historic district's narrow streets are best explored on foot, and Sierra Vista about 25 miles northwest is your hub for fuel, groceries, and propane.
Are Bisbee campgrounds open year-round?
The private RV parks in Bisbee generally stay open year-round, which is a real advantage over many mountain-town campgrounds that close for winter. Because the climate is mild rather than frigid, parks like Queen Mine, Desert Oasis, and Turquoise Valley operate through all four seasons, with winter being their busiest snowbird stretch. Kartchner Caverns State Park is also open year-round. The more weather-dependent options are the higher-elevation Coronado National Forest sites in the Huachuca Mountains, which are best from spring through fall and can see snow or closures in winter. For most RVers, that means Bisbee is a flexible, anytime destination.
Can I camp near Kartchner Caverns from Bisbee?
Yes, and many RVers combine the two. Kartchner Caverns State Park is about 50 miles northwest of Bisbee in the Whetstone Mountains and has its own developed campground with roughly 62 sites, water and electric hookups, a dump station, restrooms and showers, and an on-site Discovery Center for the cave tours. It is also an International Dark Sky park, so the stargazing is superb. Reservations are recommended, particularly in the busy winter and spring months when southern Arizona fills with snowbirds. Staying there a night or two lets you tour the caverns, then move on to Bisbee or Tombstone without backtracking.
What hookups and amenities do Bisbee RV parks offer?
The private parks offer full hookups (water, sewer, and 30 or 50-amp electric) along with the usual RV-park amenities such as clean restrooms and showers, laundry, and WiFi, and several have standout features like the hilltop views and walkability of Queen Mine or the oversized, private sites at Desert Oasis. Kartchner Caverns State Park provides water and electric hookups plus a dump station, restrooms, and showers in a scenic state-park setting. The Coronado National Forest sites are the rustic end of the spectrum, with no hookups, so your amenity expectations should scale to whether you choose an in-town park, the state park, or the forest.
What are the best RV parks in Bisbee, AZ?
Queen Mine RV Park is the signature choice because it is the only park in Old Bisbee, perched on a hilltop with views and a five-minute walk down to the historic district. For bigger rigs, Desert Oasis RV Park offers spacious 80-foot pull-through and 90-foot back-in sites with mountain views, and Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley near Naco provides 50-amp full-hookup sites beside a historic golf course about 8 miles south. If you want public camping, Kartchner Caverns State Park to the northwest has hookup sites in a Dark Sky setting, and the Coronado National Forest offers rustic mountain camping a short drive away.
Do Bisbee RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private parks in and around Bisbee are built for RVers and offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and electric service at the site. Queen Mine RV Park provides full hookups with 30-amp service, while Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley offers 50-amp sites for larger rigs, and Desert Oasis is a newer big-rig park with full connections. The main public option, Kartchner Caverns State Park, has water and electric hookups plus an on-site dump station but not full sewer at every site. Coronado National Forest camping has no hookups at all, so plan to be self-contained up in the mountains.
How much does RV camping cost in Bisbee?
At the private parks, expect roughly $35 to $55 a night for a full-hookup site, with monthly snowbird rates available at several parks that bring the per-night cost down for longer winter stays. Kartchner Caverns State Park runs in the $30 range for a hookup site plus the park day-use considerations, a good value given the setting. Coronado National Forest camping is inexpensive or free for dispersed sites. Bisbee is generally a more affordable base than the big snowbird hubs around Phoenix and Tucson, which is part of its appeal for budget-minded RVers wintering in southern Arizona.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Bisbee?
It depends on the season. Winter is peak snowbird time across southern Arizona, so for December through March you should reserve the private parks and Kartchner Caverns several weeks to a few months ahead, especially for monthly stays or weekends. Spring is also busy. In summer, when the low-desert heat pushes most snowbirds out and Bisbee stays comparatively mild, you can often book on much shorter notice. Coronado National Forest sites are mostly first-come, first-served, so for those you simply arrive earlier in the day, particularly on weekends and holidays.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Bisbee?
Fall and spring are the sweet spots, with warm, dry days, cool nights, and comfortable hiking weather. Winter is the busy snowbird season: mild and sunny by day, chilly after dark, and the most popular time to settle in for a longer stay, though you will want reservations. Summer surprises a lot of people because Bisbee sits at 5,500 feet and stays noticeably cooler than Phoenix or Tucson, so it is a pleasant warm-season escape, just expect afternoon monsoon thunderstorms in July and August. There is really no bad time to camp here; it just depends on the experience you want.
Can big rigs camp in Bisbee?
Yes, though with some planning. Desert Oasis RV Park was built for big rigs, with 80-foot pull-through and 90-foot back-in sites, and Bisbee RV Park at Turquoise Valley near Naco offers 50-amp full-hookup sites on flatter ground south of town. Queen Mine RV Park welcomes big rigs too, though its sites are back-in and the park sits on a hill in Old Bisbee. The thing to know is that Old Bisbee proper has steep, narrow, historic streets that are no place for a large coach, so plan to park at your campground and explore downtown on foot. The Coronado National Forest mountain roads also favor shorter rigs.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Bisbee?
Yes. The standout is Kartchner Caverns State Park, about 50 miles northwest in the Whetstone Mountains, which offers a developed campground with water and electric hookups, a dump station, and International Dark Sky stargazing, plus tours of its famous living limestone cave. Closer to town, the Coronado National Forest in the Huachuca Mountains near Sierra Vista has developed and dispersed camping in canyons like Carr and Ramsey, beloved by hikers and birders. Those forest sites are rustic with no hookups and suit smaller, self-contained rigs, but they put you in cool, high country a world away from the desert floor.
Is Bisbee a good winter snowbird destination?
It is, and it offers a different flavor than the big low-desert hubs. Bisbee's 5,500-foot elevation means mild, sunny winter days with crisp, chilly nights, rather than the warmer, dead-flat conditions of Phoenix or Yuma. Snowbirds come for the historic small-town character, the arts scene, the affordability, and the easy access to Tombstone, Kartchner Caverns, and the birding canyons. Several private parks offer monthly rates that make a multi-month stay reasonable. If you prefer a quirky, walkable mountain town with cooler nights over a sprawling desert resort park, Bisbee is an excellent winter base in southeastern Arizona.
What is there to do around Bisbee while camping?
Plenty. Old Bisbee itself is the main draw, a former copper-mining boomtown of steep streets, Victorian buildings, galleries, antique shops, and cafes, plus the guided underground Queen Mine Tour led by former miners and the Bisbee Mining and Historical Museum. Day trips are easy: Tombstone and the OK Corral are about 24 miles north, Kartchner Caverns offers cave tours, and the Huachuca Mountains near Sierra Vista deliver hiking and some of the best birding in the United States. Many RVers spend a week here without running out of things to see, splitting time between the town and the surrounding high desert.
How do I get to Bisbee with an RV?
Bisbee sits in the far southeast corner of Arizona on AZ-80. Most RVers come south from Interstate 10 at Benson, then take AZ-80 through Tombstone into Bisbee, a drive of about 40 miles from the interstate. From the west, AZ-92 connects Sierra Vista to Bisbee. The climb into Old Bisbee on AZ-80 is steep but manageable for RVs, and the southern parks near Naco sit on flatter ground. Once you arrive, leave the rig at the campground; the historic district's narrow streets are best explored on foot, and Sierra Vista about 25 miles northwest is your hub for fuel, groceries, and propane.
Are Bisbee campgrounds open year-round?
The private RV parks in Bisbee generally stay open year-round, which is a real advantage over many mountain-town campgrounds that close for winter. Because the climate is mild rather than frigid, parks like Queen Mine, Desert Oasis, and Turquoise Valley operate through all four seasons, with winter being their busiest snowbird stretch. Kartchner Caverns State Park is also open year-round. The more weather-dependent options are the higher-elevation Coronado National Forest sites in the Huachuca Mountains, which are best from spring through fall and can see snow or closures in winter. For most RVers, that means Bisbee is a flexible, anytime destination.
Can I camp near Kartchner Caverns from Bisbee?
Yes, and many RVers combine the two. Kartchner Caverns State Park is about 50 miles northwest of Bisbee in the Whetstone Mountains and has its own developed campground with roughly 62 sites, water and electric hookups, a dump station, restrooms and showers, and an on-site Discovery Center for the cave tours. It is also an International Dark Sky park, so the stargazing is superb. Reservations are recommended, particularly in the busy winter and spring months when southern Arizona fills with snowbirds. Staying there a night or two lets you tour the caverns, then move on to Bisbee or Tombstone without backtracking.
What hookups and amenities do Bisbee RV parks offer?
The private parks offer full hookups (water, sewer, and 30 or 50-amp electric) along with the usual RV-park amenities such as clean restrooms and showers, laundry, and WiFi, and several have standout features like the hilltop views and walkability of Queen Mine or the oversized, private sites at Desert Oasis. Kartchner Caverns State Park provides water and electric hookups plus a dump station, restrooms, and showers in a scenic state-park setting. The Coronado National Forest sites are the rustic end of the spectrum, with no hookups, so your amenity expectations should scale to whether you choose an in-town park, the state park, or the forest.
Are there free dump stations in Bisbee?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Bisbee.
All Dump Stations Near Bisbee (28)
RV ParkBisbee Queen Mine RV Park
RV ParkVan Life Campgrounds (Coming 2023)
RV ParkBisbee RV Park At Turquoise Valley
RV ParkDesert Oasis Campground
RV ParkShoot Out Arena RV Park
RV ParkStampede RV Resort
RV ParkSierra Vista RV Park
RV Park with Dump Stations



