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RV Dump Stations In Diamond City, Arkansas

36.4644° N, 92.9203° W

Quick Overview

Diamond City sits at the north edge of Boone County on the south shore of Bull Shoals Lake, right where Arkansas Highway 7 dead-ends at the water in the northern Ozarks. It is a small, quiet lake town of a few hundred people, built for fishing, boating, and slow summer weekends rather than heavy through-traffic. For RVers, that means it is a destination you point the rig at on purpose, not a place you happen to pass on the way to somewhere else.

The good news on tank service is that the town has a genuine, well-run public option. Lead Hill Campground, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park at 1500 AR-7 in Diamond City, has an on-site dump station along with 75 sites, electric and water hookups, a boat launch, and a swim area. It handles rigs up to about 50 feet, so big Class A coaches and long fifth-wheels fit fine. Dumping is free for registered campers and available for a small fee, commonly around six dollars, if you are just stopping to empty tanks. The one thing to plan around is the season: the campground and its dump station run roughly April through October, then close for the northern Arkansas winter.

That seasonal close matters here. Diamond City gets real Ozark winters, with freezing nights from December into February, occasional snow and ice, and enough cold to shut down the lake water systems. If you roll through in the off-season, do not count on dumping at the lake. Your reliable backups are the private full-hookup parks around Bull Shoals and the services down in Harrison, about 25 minutes south at the junction of US-62 and US-65. Harrison is also where you will find the best propane selection, RV supplies, and repair options, so it is worth topping off there before the final climb up AR-7 into town.

Beyond the utility side, this is a beautiful base for a lake trip. Bull Shoals covers more than 71,000 acres with over 1,000 miles of shoreline, the bass and walleye fishing is excellent, and the cold White River tailwater below the dam is a world-class trout fishery. Time your visit for fall if you can: warm days, cool nights, color over the water, and the dump station still open before the seasonal shutdown.

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Traveling to Diamond City by RV

Getting to Diamond City means driving Ozark two-lanes. Arkansas Highway 7 is the main route in, and it ends right at Bull Shoals Lake at the north edge of town, so there is no through-route past it. AR-7 has grades and curves typical of the hills up here, nothing dangerous for a well-driven rig, but take the climbs slowly with a loaded trailer or a heavy motorhome. There are no low bridges or weight traps on the main approach.

There is no interstate close by. The nearest is I-44 up at Springfield, Missouri, about an hour and a half north, so you will be on US-62 and US-65 through Harrison to reach the lake area. Harrison, roughly 25 minutes south, is your last real service town: top off fuel and propane there, because stations thin out as you head up toward Diamond City and the Missouri line. For bigger RV repair or hard-to-find parts, Springfield has full dealerships. Once you are parked at Lead Hill, most of what you will do is on the water, so you can leave the rig set up and use the truck for supply runs into Harrison.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Diamond City, Arkansas, 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 Diamond City

Costs around Diamond City are reasonable, especially in the warm months. Camping at Lead Hill Campground runs roughly 22 to 54 dollars a night depending on the site and hookups, booked through recreation.gov. If you are staying there, dumping is free. If you are just passing through and need to empty tanks, expect a small dump-only fee, commonly around six dollars, which is standard for the Bull Shoals Corps of Engineers parks and still cheaper than paying for a night just to dump.

In the off-season the math shifts. With the lake dump station closed for winter, your practical option is a private full-hookup park, which generally costs more per night but gives you sewer right at the site and stays open year-round. If budget is the priority, plan your trip for April through October and lean on the Corps campground. Either way, carry a little cash for self-pay dump fees, and factor a fuel-and-propane top-off in Harrison into your trip since prices and availability are better there than at the end of the road.

Free: 6 stations (86%)
Paid: 1 station (14%)

Contact station for pricing details.

Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About Diamond City

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Best Time to Visit Diamond City by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

27°F - 46°F

Crowds: Low

Cold with snow and ice; the Corps dump station at Lead Hill is closed for the season, so rely on a full-hookup private park or dump down in the Harrison area. Watch tank valves in a hard freeze.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

46°F - 68°F

Crowds: Medium

The lake fills, the trees green up, and Lead Hill reopens around April with its dump station back online. May is the wettest month, so expect storms, but the fishing turns on.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

68°F - 90°F

Crowds: High

Hot, muggy, and busy on the water. The Lead Hill dump station is open and gets steady use, so expect a short line on Sunday checkout mornings. Dump early or late to skip the rush.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

48°F - 72°F

Crowds: Medium

Our favorite window: warm days, cool nights, and fall color over the lake. The dump station stays open through October before the seasonal close, so time a late-season trip accordingly.

Explore the Diamond City Area

A few things we have learned about handling tanks and logistics in this corner of the Ozarks. First and most important, the Lead Hill dump station runs on the Corps campground season, roughly April through October. If you are here in the colder months, do not assume you can dump at the lake, because the water systems close for the freeze. Line up a full-hookup private park or plan to dump down around Harrison instead.

Second, top off fuel and propane in Harrison before you drive up AR-7. Diamond City is a small town at the end of the road, and services get sparse as you near the state line, so arriving topped off saves you a backtrack. Third, remember AR-7 dead-ends at the water, so this is a destination trip, not a pass-through; drive the grades slow with a heavy rig. Finally, if you only need to dump and not camp, come during posted campground hours so the gate is open, and carry a few dollars cash for the self-pay dump-only fee in case the station does not take cards.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Diamond City

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Diamond City, Arkansas?

Your most reliable option is the dump station at Lead Hill Campground, the Army Corps of Engineers park right in Diamond City at 1500 AR-7 on the south shore of Bull Shoals Lake. It is free for registered campers and available for a small fee if you are just stopping to empty tanks. The catch is that it runs on the campground season, roughly April through October, so it is not a year-round option. In the off-season, plan to use a full-hookup private park or dump down around Harrison, about 25 minutes south, where services stay open through the winter.

Is the Diamond City dump station free to use?

At Lead Hill Campground it is free if you are a registered camper staying at the Corps of Engineers site. If you are not camping there and just want to empty your tanks, most Corps campgrounds ask for a small dump-only fee, commonly around six dollars, though it can vary by season and staffing. That is standard for the Bull Shoals Corps parks and still a good deal compared with paying for a night just to dump. Bring a few dollars cash in case the self-pay station does not take cards, and dump during posted campground hours so the gate is open.

Is the dump station open year-round in Diamond City?

No, and this trips up a lot of RVers. Lead Hill Campground and its dump station operate on the Corps of Engineers season, generally April through October, then close for winter. Northern Arkansas gets real freezes, snow, and ice from December into February, so the water systems shut down to prevent frozen pipes. If you are rolling through Diamond City in the colder months, do not count on dumping at the lake. Instead, book a full-hookup private park with its own sewer connection, or head to a year-round dump station in the Harrison area to the south before you continue your trip.

Can big rigs use the dump station near Diamond City?

Yes. Lead Hill Campground is built for larger RVs, with sites that handle rigs up to about 50 feet, so the dump station approach and turnaround are sized for big Class A coaches and long fifth-wheels. One thing worth noting from RVer reports is that some Corps dump approaches at Bull Shoals have a bit of slope, so a very low-slung motorhome should ease in slowly to avoid dragging the tail. Otherwise, big-rig access is not a problem here. If you are towing, you can usually pull the dump lane without unhooking, but confirm the layout when you check in with the gate attendant.

Where do I refill propane near Diamond City?

You have decent local coverage for a small lake town. AmeriGas and Titan Propane both serve Diamond City, and Anderson’s Propane of Bergman covers this northern Arkansas and southern Missouri corner. For the widest selection and the best chance of same-day service, Harrison is your hub about 25 minutes south, with several propane dealers and RV suppliers. Our advice is to top off propane in Harrison on your way up AR-7, because once you get into Diamond City and out toward the Missouri line, services get sparser and you do not want to be hunting for a fill on a Sunday. Call ahead to confirm hours in the shoulder seasons.

Are there RV services and repair near Diamond City?

For routine needs like propane, fuel, and supplies you can manage locally, but for actual RV repair you will want to look to Harrison, roughly 25 minutes south, which has the parts and service options this little lake town does not. Harrison is the regional service center, sitting at the junction of US-62 and US-65. For bigger jobs, warranty work, or hard-to-find parts, Springfield, Missouri is about an hour and a half north and has full-scale RV dealerships. Around Diamond City itself, plan on stocking up before you arrive, since the town is geared toward lake recreation rather than heavy RV infrastructure.

What are the roads like getting into Diamond City with an RV?

AR-7 is your main route in, and it dead-ends right at Bull Shoals Lake at the north edge of Diamond City, so this is a destination rather than a pass-through. It is a two-lane Ozark road with grades and curves, nothing dangerous for a well-driven rig, but you will want to take the hills slowly with a loaded trailer or a heavy motorhome. There are no low bridges or weight traps on the main approach. The nearest interstate is well away, so you will be on US and state highways through Harrison to get here. Fuel up before the final leg, because stations thin out as you near the lake.

When is the best time to visit Diamond City in an RV?

Fall, hands down, is our pick. September and October bring warm days, cool nights, fall color over the lake, and thinning crowds, plus the Corps dump station and campground are still open before the seasonal close. Spring is lovely too as the lake fills and the fishing picks up, though May is the wettest month, so pack for storms. Summer is peak season, hot, muggy, and busy on the water, which is great if you came to boat but means fuller campgrounds and a line at the dump station on checkout mornings. Winter is quiet but cold, with the lake dump station closed, so it is the trickiest time for tank service.

What is the weather like in Diamond City through the year?

This is northern Arkansas Ozark country, so you get four real seasons. Summers are hot and muggy, regularly in the low 90s with high humidity and pop-up afternoon thunderstorms. Winters are genuinely cold, with highs in the 40s, freezing nights, and around seven inches of snow a year plus occasional ice. Spring is green and wet, with May the rainiest month. Fall is the sweet spot, crisp and dry with comfortable days in the 70s. For RVers the big takeaway is that winter freezes shut down the lake dump station and can threaten your own tank valves, so plan tank service and freeze protection around the cold months.

Can I camp overnight in my RV in Diamond City?

Yes, but do it at a proper campground rather than a parking lot or a residential street. The obvious choice is Lead Hill Campground, the Corps of Engineers park right in town with 75 sites, electric and water hookups, a boat launch, and that on-site dump station, open April through October. There are also private lake parks in the broader Bull Shoals area for year-round stays and full hookups. Diamond City is a small lake community, so there is no established free town overnight parking, and the smart move is to reserve a site, especially on summer weekends when the boating crowd fills the Corps campground fast.

How much does it cost to camp or dump near Diamond City?

Camping at Lead Hill Campground runs roughly 22 to 54 dollars a night depending on the site and hookups, booked through recreation.gov. Dumping is free if you are a registered camper there, or a small fee, commonly around six dollars, if you are just stopping to empty tanks. Private full-hookup parks around Bull Shoals generally run higher per night but give you sewer at the site and stay open in the off-season. If you are watching the budget, the Corps campground is the value play in warmer months; in winter you will likely pay a bit more at a private park to get year-round hookups and dump access.

What is there to do around Diamond City while camping?

The lake is the main event. Bull Shoals covers more than 71,000 acres with over 1,000 miles of shoreline, so boating, fishing, and swimming fill most days here. Bass and walleye fishing on the lake is excellent, and just south the White River tailwater below Bull Shoals Dam is a world-class trout fishery running a cold 48 to 52 degrees year-round. For a break from the water, tour Bull Shoals Caverns, an ancient limestone cave, or visit Bull Shoals-White River State Park and its James A. Gaston Visitor Center to learn the lake’s history and ecology. Harrison to the south rounds things out with shopping, dining, and Ozark scenic drives.

Do I need reservations for the Lead Hill Corps campground?

For summer weekends, yes, we strongly recommend it. Lead Hill is a popular Corps of Engineers park on a busy recreation lake, and its lakeside electric-and-water sites book out on Friday and Saturday nights through the boating season. Reserve through recreation.gov or by phone up to six months ahead for the best sites. Spring and fall weekends are easier but still worth booking a few days out, and midweek you can often find same-week availability. If you only need to dump and not stay, you do not need a reservation, just come during open campground hours and pay the dump-only fee at the self-pay station.

Where else can I dump if Lead Hill is closed or full?

If the Lead Hill dump station is closed for the winter season or you hit it at a busy checkout time, your best backups are south toward Harrison, about 25 minutes away, where private RV parks and full-hookup campgrounds operate year-round and can handle tank service. Other Corps of Engineers campgrounds around Bull Shoals Lake also have dump stations during their open seasons, so you have options along the shoreline in warmer months. For year-round reliability, a full-hookup private park is your safest bet in the off-season. Planning a longer stay with sewer at the site? Check our guide to RV parks in Diamond City for hookup options.

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Diamond City, Arkansas?

Your most reliable option is the dump station at Lead Hill Campground, the Army Corps of Engineers park right in Diamond City at 1500 AR-7 on the south shore of Bull Shoals Lake. It is free for registered campers and available for a small fee if you are just stopping to empty tanks. The catch is that it runs on the campground season, roughly April through October, so it is not a year-round option. In the off-season, plan to use a full-hookup private park or dump down around Harrison, about 25 minutes south, where services stay open through the winter.

Is the Diamond City dump station free to use?

At Lead Hill Campground it is free if you are a registered camper staying at the Corps of Engineers site. If you are not camping there and just want to empty your tanks, most Corps campgrounds ask for a small dump-only fee, commonly around six dollars, though it can vary by season and staffing. That is standard for the Bull Shoals Corps parks and still a good deal compared with paying for a night just to dump. Bring a few dollars cash in case the self-pay station does not take cards, and dump during posted campground hours so the gate is open.

Is the dump station open year-round in Diamond City?

No, and this trips up a lot of RVers. Lead Hill Campground and its dump station operate on the Corps of Engineers season, generally April through October, then close for winter. Northern Arkansas gets real freezes, snow, and ice from December into February, so the water systems shut down to prevent frozen pipes. If you are rolling through Diamond City in the colder months, do not count on dumping at the lake. Instead, book a full-hookup private park with its own sewer connection, or head to a year-round dump station in the Harrison area to the south before you continue your trip.

Can big rigs use the dump station near Diamond City?

Yes. Lead Hill Campground is built for larger RVs, with sites that handle rigs up to about 50 feet, so the dump station approach and turnaround are sized for big Class A coaches and long fifth-wheels. One thing worth noting from RVer reports is that some Corps dump approaches at Bull Shoals have a bit of slope, so a very low-slung motorhome should ease in slowly to avoid dragging the tail. Otherwise, big-rig access is not a problem here. If you are towing, you can usually pull the dump lane without unhooking, but confirm the layout when you check in with the gate attendant.

Where do I refill propane near Diamond City?

You have decent local coverage for a small lake town. AmeriGas and Titan Propane both serve Diamond City, and Anderson’s Propane of Bergman covers this northern Arkansas and southern Missouri corner. For the widest selection and the best chance of same-day service, Harrison is your hub about 25 minutes south, with several propane dealers and RV suppliers. Our advice is to top off propane in Harrison on your way up AR-7, because once you get into Diamond City and out toward the Missouri line, services get sparser and you do not want to be hunting for a fill on a Sunday. Call ahead to confirm hours in the shoulder seasons.

Are there RV services and repair near Diamond City?

For routine needs like propane, fuel, and supplies you can manage locally, but for actual RV repair you will want to look to Harrison, roughly 25 minutes south, which has the parts and service options this little lake town does not. Harrison is the regional service center, sitting at the junction of US-62 and US-65. For bigger jobs, warranty work, or hard-to-find parts, Springfield, Missouri is about an hour and a half north and has full-scale RV dealerships. Around Diamond City itself, plan on stocking up before you arrive, since the town is geared toward lake recreation rather than heavy RV infrastructure.

What are the roads like getting into Diamond City with an RV?

AR-7 is your main route in, and it dead-ends right at Bull Shoals Lake at the north edge of Diamond City, so this is a destination rather than a pass-through. It is a two-lane Ozark road with grades and curves, nothing dangerous for a well-driven rig, but you will want to take the hills slowly with a loaded trailer or a heavy motorhome. There are no low bridges or weight traps on the main approach. The nearest interstate is well away, so you will be on US and state highways through Harrison to get here. Fuel up before the final leg, because stations thin out as you near the lake.

When is the best time to visit Diamond City in an RV?

Fall, hands down, is our pick. September and October bring warm days, cool nights, fall color over the lake, and thinning crowds, plus the Corps dump station and campground are still open before the seasonal close. Spring is lovely too as the lake fills and the fishing picks up, though May is the wettest month, so pack for storms. Summer is peak season, hot, muggy, and busy on the water, which is great if you came to boat but means fuller campgrounds and a line at the dump station on checkout mornings. Winter is quiet but cold, with the lake dump station closed, so it is the trickiest time for tank service.

What is the weather like in Diamond City through the year?

This is northern Arkansas Ozark country, so you get four real seasons. Summers are hot and muggy, regularly in the low 90s with high humidity and pop-up afternoon thunderstorms. Winters are genuinely cold, with highs in the 40s, freezing nights, and around seven inches of snow a year plus occasional ice. Spring is green and wet, with May the rainiest month. Fall is the sweet spot, crisp and dry with comfortable days in the 70s. For RVers the big takeaway is that winter freezes shut down the lake dump station and can threaten your own tank valves, so plan tank service and freeze protection around the cold months.

Can I camp overnight in my RV in Diamond City?

Yes, but do it at a proper campground rather than a parking lot or a residential street. The obvious choice is Lead Hill Campground, the Corps of Engineers park right in town with 75 sites, electric and water hookups, a boat launch, and that on-site dump station, open April through October. There are also private lake parks in the broader Bull Shoals area for year-round stays and full hookups. Diamond City is a small lake community, so there is no established free town overnight parking, and the smart move is to reserve a site, especially on summer weekends when the boating crowd fills the Corps campground fast.

How much does it cost to camp or dump near Diamond City?

Camping at Lead Hill Campground runs roughly 22 to 54 dollars a night depending on the site and hookups, booked through recreation.gov. Dumping is free if you are a registered camper there, or a small fee, commonly around six dollars, if you are just stopping to empty tanks. Private full-hookup parks around Bull Shoals generally run higher per night but give you sewer at the site and stay open in the off-season. If you are watching the budget, the Corps campground is the value play in warmer months; in winter you will likely pay a bit more at a private park to get year-round hookups and dump access.

What is there to do around Diamond City while camping?

The lake is the main event. Bull Shoals covers more than 71,000 acres with over 1,000 miles of shoreline, so boating, fishing, and swimming fill most days here. Bass and walleye fishing on the lake is excellent, and just south the White River tailwater below Bull Shoals Dam is a world-class trout fishery running a cold 48 to 52 degrees year-round. For a break from the water, tour Bull Shoals Caverns, an ancient limestone cave, or visit Bull Shoals-White River State Park and its James A. Gaston Visitor Center to learn the lake’s history and ecology. Harrison to the south rounds things out with shopping, dining, and Ozark scenic drives.

Do I need reservations for the Lead Hill Corps campground?

For summer weekends, yes, we strongly recommend it. Lead Hill is a popular Corps of Engineers park on a busy recreation lake, and its lakeside electric-and-water sites book out on Friday and Saturday nights through the boating season. Reserve through recreation.gov or by phone up to six months ahead for the best sites. Spring and fall weekends are easier but still worth booking a few days out, and midweek you can often find same-week availability. If you only need to dump and not stay, you do not need a reservation, just come during open campground hours and pay the dump-only fee at the self-pay station.

Where else can I dump if Lead Hill is closed or full?

If the Lead Hill dump station is closed for the winter season or you hit it at a busy checkout time, your best backups are south toward Harrison, about 25 minutes away, where private RV parks and full-hookup campgrounds operate year-round and can handle tank service. Other Corps of Engineers campgrounds around Bull Shoals Lake also have dump stations during their open seasons, so you have options along the shoreline in warmer months. For year-round reliability, a full-hookup private park is your safest bet in the off-season. Planning a longer stay with sewer at the site? Check our guide to RV parks in Diamond City for hookup options.

What is the highest-rated dump station in Diamond City?

The highest-rated station is Tucker Hollow with a rating of 4.6/5 stars.

Are there free dump stations in Diamond City?

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