RV Parks In Bodega Bay, California
38.3332° N, 123.0481° W
Quick Overview
Bodega Bay is a working fishing harbor on the rugged Sonoma Coast, about an hour and a half north of San Francisco, and it makes a wonderful RV base for the Northern California shore. The town wraps a small, protected harbor known for Dungeness crab, salmon, whale watching, and the windswept beauty of Bodega Head, and it sits at the southern end of 17 miles of Sonoma Coast State Park beaches. For RVers deciding where to park the rig, the choice here is between in-town full hookups and beautiful no-hookup public campgrounds right on the beach and bay.
For full hookups, Bodega Bay RV Park is the standout, with 71 sites, 55 of them full hookup, long 50-to-60-foot pull-throughs that fit big rigs and luxury coaches, plus clubhouses, hot showers, and laundry. Porto Bodega Marina & RV Park adds 18 waterfront full-hookup sites with a marina at the north end of the harbor. Those two cover travelers who want sewer, power, and an easy in-town stay close to the seafood and the docks.
The public side is plentiful but rustic. Sonoma County runs Doran Regional Park on the southern spit, with sites between the beach and the bay that are great for crabbing, and Westside Regional Park on the harbor with a boat launch. California State Parks' Bodega Dunes campground, part of Sonoma Coast State Park, offers dune-backed sites with hot showers near Bodega Head, reservable through ReserveCalifornia. None have hookups, so they suit self-contained rigs. Two planning rules matter: book months ahead for summer, since this is a top Bay Area weekend escape, and approach with a big rig from the south via Bodega Highway rather than the narrow, cliff-hugging Highway 1 from the north. Aim for the clear, sunny fall, bring crab gear, and Bodega Bay rewards you with coast, harbor, and wine country all within reach.
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Gear for Your Trip to Bodega Bay
All Dump Stations Near Bodega Bay
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porto Bodega Marina And RV Park | 0.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bodega Bay RV Park | 0.5 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Varies |
| Lawson's Landing | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Duncans Mills Camping Club | 8.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Casini Ranch Family Campground | 8.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Tomales Beach Campground | 12.9 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| River Bend Resort | 13.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Redwood Village | 13.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mirabel RV Park & Campground | 14.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Uscg Tracen Petaluma Campground & RV Area | 14.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Porto Bodega Marina And RV Park
0.2 miBodega Bay RV Park
0.5 miLawson's Landing
7.5 miDuncans Mills Camping Club
8.3 miCasini Ranch Family Campground
8.8 miTomales Beach Campground
12.9 miRiver Bend Resort
13.2 miRedwood Village
13.6 miMirabel RV Park & Campground
14.0 miUscg Tracen Petaluma Campground & RV Area
14.4 miTraveling to Bodega Bay by RV
The smart approach for an RV is from the south and inland. From US-101 at Santa Rosa or Petaluma, take the Bodega Highway west through Sebastopol to reach Bodega Bay, rather than driving Highway 1 down the coast from the north, which is narrow, winding, and cliff-hugging and genuinely stressful in a big rig. Once you are in town, Highway 1 runs through Bodega Bay and the parks are clearly signed on manageable roads, so the only tricky part is the route in. Plan that leg carefully and the rest is easy.
Santa Rosa, about thirty to forty minutes inland, has the nearest airport for fly-and-rent trips and the big-box stores for parts and bulk supplies, so stock up there before heading out to the coast, where prices run higher and stores are smaller. Bodega Bay itself has fuel, a market, and excellent fresh seafood, so day-to-day needs are covered. Once you are based here, the harbor, Bodega Head, the state-park beaches, and the inland wine country and redwoods are all within easy reach for day trips without moving the rig.
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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 Bodega Bay, California, 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 Bodega Bay
Coastal Sonoma County commands real prices. Private full-hookup sites generally run about sixty to a hundred dollars a night, with the waterfront sites at Porto Bodega Marina at the top, often well over a hundred dollars in peak season. The public campgrounds are more moderate: Sonoma County's Doran and Westside regional parks and the state park's Bodega Dunes run roughly thirty-five to fifty dollars a night, though without hookups. Summer and holiday weekends carry the highest rates and the tightest availability of the year.
To keep costs down, camp midweek, travel in the fall shoulder when the weather is often at its best and crowds thin, and use the public beachfront campgrounds when you do not need full hookups. Crabbing and fishing your own seafood also trims the food budget, which is part of Bodega Bay's appeal. Either way, book early for any summer or holiday weekend, since coastal demand from the Bay Area is high and the best full-hookup and beachfront sites go first. Stocking up inland in Santa Rosa beats the higher coastal-town grocery prices.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Bodega Bay by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
43F - 57F
Crowds: Low
Wet, windy storm-watching and gray-whale season on the Sonoma coast. The campgrounds stay open year-round, so winter is a real, if blustery, camping window with low crowds and lower rates. Bring rain gear and expect dramatic surf and quiet beaches.
Spring
Mar - May
47F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
Wildflowers bloom on Bodega Head, gray whales migrate north, and the weather mixes sun and showers. Crowds are moderate and booking is easier than summer. A lovely time for hiking the headland and watching for whales offshore.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52F - 65F
Crowds: High
Cool and often foggy, even in July, which is classic Northern California coast. It is the busiest season, so full-hookup and public sites book months ahead for weekends. Pack layers; the marine layer keeps it chilly when inland bakes.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Often the clearest, sunniest, and warmest stretch on the coast once the summer fog lifts, with thinner crowds after Labor Day. Great value and great weather for beaches, crabbing, and wine-country day trips. A favorite shoulder season here.
Explore the Bodega Bay Area
A few things we have learned camping Bodega Bay. Approach with a big rig from the south via Bodega Highway from Sebastopol, not the narrow Highway 1 from the north, which is no fun in a long rig. Book full-hookup and public sites months ahead for summer and holiday weekends, watching the ReserveCalifornia six-month window for the state park's Bodega Dunes. And bring crab gear and a California license, because the harbor and the Doran spit are excellent for Dungeness crab in season, and cooking your catch at camp is half the trip.
Pack layers year-round, since the coast is cool and often foggy even in midsummer. For the best odds of sunshine, target the fall shoulder, often the clearest, warmest stretch here; for whales and wildflowers, come in spring. Use Bodega Bay as a base to hit both the Sonoma Coast beaches and the inland wine country and redwoods on day trips. And if you want a beachfront night without hookups, the regional and state-park campgrounds put you right on the sand for less than the in-town full-hookup parks.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Bodega Bay
What are the best RV parks in Bodega Bay, California?
For full hookups, Bodega Bay RV Park is the standout, with 71 sites (55 full hookup), long 50-to-60-foot pull-throughs for big rigs, clubhouses, hot showers, and laundry. Porto Bodega Marina & RV Park offers 18 waterfront full-hookup sites with a marina at the north end of the harbor. For public camping, Sonoma County's Doran Regional Park on the southern spit and Westside Regional Park on the harbor both have RV-friendly sites, and California State Parks' Bodega Dunes campground sits in the dunes near Bodega Head. The public parks have no hookups but put you right on the beach and bay.
Do Bodega Bay RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
The private parks do. Bodega Bay RV Park has 55 full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer, and Porto Bodega Marina offers full hookups including cable on its waterfront sites. The public campgrounds do not: Doran and Westside Regional Parks and the state park's Bodega Dunes campground provide restrooms, potable water, and in some cases electrical outlets and coin showers, but no hookups at the site. So if you need full hookups, book one of the two private parks in town, and use the regional and state-park campgrounds when you want a beach-and-bay setting and are comfortable camping self-contained.
How much does RV camping cost in Bodega Bay?
Coastal Sonoma County is not cheap. Private full-hookup sites generally run about sixty to a hundred dollars a night, with the waterfront sites at Porto Bodega at the top, often well over a hundred dollars in peak season. The public campgrounds are more moderate: Sonoma County regional parks and the state park's Bodega Dunes run roughly thirty-five to fifty dollars a night, though without hookups. Summer and holiday weekends carry the highest rates and tightest availability. To save money, camp midweek, travel in the fall shoulder when the weather is often best, and use the public campgrounds if you do not need full hookups.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Bodega Bay?
Book months ahead for summer. Bodega Bay is a popular weekend escape from the San Francisco Bay Area, so the full-hookup parks and the public campgrounds fill fast for summer and holiday weekends. The California State Parks site, Bodega Dunes, books through ReserveCalifornia on a rolling six-month window, and the best coastal sites go quickly the day they open, so set a reminder. Sonoma County's Doran and Westside parks also tighten in season. If you are flexible, midweek stays and the fall shoulder, often the sunniest time here, are far easier to land and cheaper. Last-minute summer-weekend coastal camping is tough.
When is the best time to RV camp in Bodega Bay?
Many regulars say fall, roughly September into October, when the summer fog lifts and the coast turns clear, sunny, and warm with thinner crowds. Summer is the busiest season but is famously cool and foggy, classic Northern California coast, so pack layers. Spring brings wildflowers on Bodega Head and migrating gray whales, with a mix of sun and showers. Winter is wet, windy storm-watching and whale season, quiet and dramatic, and the campgrounds stay open year-round. For the best odds of sunshine, target fall; for whales and flowers, spring; for full availability planning, book whichever season far ahead.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Bodega Bay?
Yes, especially at Bodega Bay RV Park, which has long 50-to-60-foot pull-through full-hookup sites that fit luxury coaches, and Porto Bodega has big-rig waterfront sites too. The important tip is the approach: Highway 1 north of Bodega Bay is narrow, winding, and cliff-hugging, so big rigs should come from the south and inland via Bodega Highway from Sebastopol and US-101 rather than driving down the coast. In town the roads are manageable. The public campgrounds have a mix of site sizes, so reserve a longer site ahead if you are running 40 feet and confirm it has room for your rig.
Is there good crabbing and fishing in Bodega Bay?
Yes, Bodega Bay is a genuine working fishing harbor, and crabbing and fishing are a big part of the appeal. Dungeness crab is the local prize in season, and you can drop pots or crab rings off the docks, the Doran spit, or from a boat, while charters head out for rockfish, salmon, and offshore species. Westside Regional Park has a boat launch popular with anglers. Bring or rent gear, get the proper California license, and check current regulations and any closures before you go. Many RVers plan a Bodega Bay trip around the crabbing, then cook their catch right at camp, which is half the fun.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Bodega Bay?
Yes, several, all no-hookup but beautifully sited. Sonoma County Regional Parks runs Doran Regional Park on the southern spit, with 120 RV-and-tent sites between the beach and the bay, and Westside Regional Park on the harbor with a boat launch. California State Parks' Bodega Dunes campground, part of Sonoma Coast State Park, offers dune-backed sites with hot showers near Bodega Head and miles of beach, reservable through ReserveCalifornia. Sonoma Coast State Park then stretches 17 miles north with more beaches and the Wright's Beach campground. These public options are cheaper than the private parks and put you right on the coast.
What is there to do in Bodega Bay besides the beach?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Bodega Head is a dramatic headland for whale watching, hiking, and spring wildflowers, and Sonoma Coast State Park unfurls 17 miles of coves and beaches north along Highway 1. The working harbor offers fresh seafood and the nostalgic backdrop of Hitchcock's The Birds, filmed here. Inland, you are surprisingly close to Sonoma County wine country, with Russian River and Sonoma Valley tasting rooms about a half hour to forty-five minutes away, and the old-growth coast redwoods at Armstrong Redwoods near Guerneville. Add birdwatching and tide pooling, and Bodega Bay easily fills a long weekend beyond the sand.
Are Bodega Bay campgrounds open year-round?
Yes. Thanks to the mild Northern California coastal climate, the campgrounds around Bodega Bay, including the private full-hookup parks and the public Doran, Westside, and Bodega Dunes campgrounds, generally stay open year-round. Winter is wet and windy storm-watching and gray-whale season, dramatic and quiet, while summer is cool and foggy and the busiest. So there is no off-season shutdown like in colder regions; you choose your season by weather preference. Just confirm hours with your specific campground, and remember that winter storms can bring rain and wind, so a rig that handles wet weather makes a cold-season trip much more comfortable.
How do I get to Bodega Bay RV parks from the highway?
The smart approach for an RV is from the south and inland. From US-101 at Santa Rosa or Petaluma, take the Bodega Highway west through Sebastopol to reach Bodega Bay, rather than driving Highway 1 down the coast from the north, which is narrow, winding, and cliff-hugging and not fun in a big rig. Once you are in town, Highway 1 runs through Bodega Bay and the parks are clearly signed on manageable roads. Santa Rosa, about thirty to forty minutes inland, has the nearest airport and big-box services for resupply, so stock up there before heading out to the coast.
Is Bodega Bay a good base for the Sonoma Coast and wine country?
It is an excellent one. Bodega Bay anchors the southern end of Sonoma Coast State Park, so you can base at a full-hookup or beachfront campground and explore 17 miles of coves, beaches, and headlands right out the door, plus Bodega Head for whales and hiking. At the same time, you are only thirty to forty-five minutes from Sonoma County wine country, the Russian River, and the Armstrong redwoods inland, making for easy day trips that mix coast and country. With the harbor's seafood and crabbing on top, Bodega Bay gives you a rare combination of ocean, redwoods, and vineyards from a single comfortable home base.
Is there a place to dump tanks in Bodega Bay?
Yes. The private full-hookup parks, Bodega Bay RV Park and Porto Bodega Marina, have sewer at the site, so if you are staying at one you can empty tanks before you leave, and some of the public campgrounds have a dump station. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks between coast trips? See our guide to RV dump stations in Bodega Bay for the full list of options in the area. If you are camping the no-hookup regional or state-park sites like Doran or Bodega Dunes, plan to use a dump station on your way out, since those sites do not have sewer hookups at the pad.
What are the best RV parks in Bodega Bay, California?
For full hookups, Bodega Bay RV Park is the standout, with 71 sites (55 full hookup), long 50-to-60-foot pull-throughs for big rigs, clubhouses, hot showers, and laundry. Porto Bodega Marina & RV Park offers 18 waterfront full-hookup sites with a marina at the north end of the harbor. For public camping, Sonoma County's Doran Regional Park on the southern spit and Westside Regional Park on the harbor both have RV-friendly sites, and California State Parks' Bodega Dunes campground sits in the dunes near Bodega Head. The public parks have no hookups but put you right on the beach and bay.
Do Bodega Bay RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
The private parks do. Bodega Bay RV Park has 55 full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer, and Porto Bodega Marina offers full hookups including cable on its waterfront sites. The public campgrounds do not: Doran and Westside Regional Parks and the state park's Bodega Dunes campground provide restrooms, potable water, and in some cases electrical outlets and coin showers, but no hookups at the site. So if you need full hookups, book one of the two private parks in town, and use the regional and state-park campgrounds when you want a beach-and-bay setting and are comfortable camping self-contained.
How much does RV camping cost in Bodega Bay?
Coastal Sonoma County is not cheap. Private full-hookup sites generally run about sixty to a hundred dollars a night, with the waterfront sites at Porto Bodega at the top, often well over a hundred dollars in peak season. The public campgrounds are more moderate: Sonoma County regional parks and the state park's Bodega Dunes run roughly thirty-five to fifty dollars a night, though without hookups. Summer and holiday weekends carry the highest rates and tightest availability. To save money, camp midweek, travel in the fall shoulder when the weather is often best, and use the public campgrounds if you do not need full hookups.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Bodega Bay?
Book months ahead for summer. Bodega Bay is a popular weekend escape from the San Francisco Bay Area, so the full-hookup parks and the public campgrounds fill fast for summer and holiday weekends. The California State Parks site, Bodega Dunes, books through ReserveCalifornia on a rolling six-month window, and the best coastal sites go quickly the day they open, so set a reminder. Sonoma County's Doran and Westside parks also tighten in season. If you are flexible, midweek stays and the fall shoulder, often the sunniest time here, are far easier to land and cheaper. Last-minute summer-weekend coastal camping is tough.
When is the best time to RV camp in Bodega Bay?
Many regulars say fall, roughly September into October, when the summer fog lifts and the coast turns clear, sunny, and warm with thinner crowds. Summer is the busiest season but is famously cool and foggy, classic Northern California coast, so pack layers. Spring brings wildflowers on Bodega Head and migrating gray whales, with a mix of sun and showers. Winter is wet, windy storm-watching and whale season, quiet and dramatic, and the campgrounds stay open year-round. For the best odds of sunshine, target fall; for whales and flowers, spring; for full availability planning, book whichever season far ahead.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Bodega Bay?
Yes, especially at Bodega Bay RV Park, which has long 50-to-60-foot pull-through full-hookup sites that fit luxury coaches, and Porto Bodega has big-rig waterfront sites too. The important tip is the approach: Highway 1 north of Bodega Bay is narrow, winding, and cliff-hugging, so big rigs should come from the south and inland via Bodega Highway from Sebastopol and US-101 rather than driving down the coast. In town the roads are manageable. The public campgrounds have a mix of site sizes, so reserve a longer site ahead if you are running 40 feet and confirm it has room for your rig.
Is there good crabbing and fishing in Bodega Bay?
Yes, Bodega Bay is a genuine working fishing harbor, and crabbing and fishing are a big part of the appeal. Dungeness crab is the local prize in season, and you can drop pots or crab rings off the docks, the Doran spit, or from a boat, while charters head out for rockfish, salmon, and offshore species. Westside Regional Park has a boat launch popular with anglers. Bring or rent gear, get the proper California license, and check current regulations and any closures before you go. Many RVers plan a Bodega Bay trip around the crabbing, then cook their catch right at camp, which is half the fun.
Are there public or state-park camping options near Bodega Bay?
Yes, several, all no-hookup but beautifully sited. Sonoma County Regional Parks runs Doran Regional Park on the southern spit, with 120 RV-and-tent sites between the beach and the bay, and Westside Regional Park on the harbor with a boat launch. California State Parks' Bodega Dunes campground, part of Sonoma Coast State Park, offers dune-backed sites with hot showers near Bodega Head and miles of beach, reservable through ReserveCalifornia. Sonoma Coast State Park then stretches 17 miles north with more beaches and the Wright's Beach campground. These public options are cheaper than the private parks and put you right on the coast.
What is there to do in Bodega Bay besides the beach?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Bodega Head is a dramatic headland for whale watching, hiking, and spring wildflowers, and Sonoma Coast State Park unfurls 17 miles of coves and beaches north along Highway 1. The working harbor offers fresh seafood and the nostalgic backdrop of Hitchcock's The Birds, filmed here. Inland, you are surprisingly close to Sonoma County wine country, with Russian River and Sonoma Valley tasting rooms about a half hour to forty-five minutes away, and the old-growth coast redwoods at Armstrong Redwoods near Guerneville. Add birdwatching and tide pooling, and Bodega Bay easily fills a long weekend beyond the sand.
Are Bodega Bay campgrounds open year-round?
Yes. Thanks to the mild Northern California coastal climate, the campgrounds around Bodega Bay, including the private full-hookup parks and the public Doran, Westside, and Bodega Dunes campgrounds, generally stay open year-round. Winter is wet and windy storm-watching and gray-whale season, dramatic and quiet, while summer is cool and foggy and the busiest. So there is no off-season shutdown like in colder regions; you choose your season by weather preference. Just confirm hours with your specific campground, and remember that winter storms can bring rain and wind, so a rig that handles wet weather makes a cold-season trip much more comfortable.
How do I get to Bodega Bay RV parks from the highway?
The smart approach for an RV is from the south and inland. From US-101 at Santa Rosa or Petaluma, take the Bodega Highway west through Sebastopol to reach Bodega Bay, rather than driving Highway 1 down the coast from the north, which is narrow, winding, and cliff-hugging and not fun in a big rig. Once you are in town, Highway 1 runs through Bodega Bay and the parks are clearly signed on manageable roads. Santa Rosa, about thirty to forty minutes inland, has the nearest airport and big-box services for resupply, so stock up there before heading out to the coast.
Is Bodega Bay a good base for the Sonoma Coast and wine country?
It is an excellent one. Bodega Bay anchors the southern end of Sonoma Coast State Park, so you can base at a full-hookup or beachfront campground and explore 17 miles of coves, beaches, and headlands right out the door, plus Bodega Head for whales and hiking. At the same time, you are only thirty to forty-five minutes from Sonoma County wine country, the Russian River, and the Armstrong redwoods inland, making for easy day trips that mix coast and country. With the harbor's seafood and crabbing on top, Bodega Bay gives you a rare combination of ocean, redwoods, and vineyards from a single comfortable home base.
Is there a place to dump tanks in Bodega Bay?
Yes. The private full-hookup parks, Bodega Bay RV Park and Porto Bodega Marina, have sewer at the site, so if you are staying at one you can empty tanks before you leave, and some of the public campgrounds have a dump station. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks between coast trips? See our guide to RV dump stations in Bodega Bay for the full list of options in the area. If you are camping the no-hookup regional or state-park sites like Doran or Bodega Dunes, plan to use a dump station on your way out, since those sites do not have sewer hookups at the pad.
Are there free dump stations in Bodega Bay?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Bodega Bay.
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