RV Dump Stations In Cabazon, California
33.9175° N, 116.7872° W
Quick Overview
Cabazon sits right in the San Gorgonio Pass, the narrow gap between the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains where Interstate 10 threads its way between the Los Angeles basin and the Coachella Valley. It is an unincorporated Riverside County community between Banning and Beaumont, best known to travelers for the giant Cabazon Dinosaurs and the Desert Hills Premium Outlets right off the freeway. For tank management, the honest picture is that our directory lists several station mapped directly in Cabazon, so most RVers plan their dumping around nearby facilities in the pass rather than counting on something in town.
The reliable public option is Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont, a Riverside County regional park with a year-round RV dump station for a nominal fee of around ten dollars, just a few miles west on I-10. A short hop away you also have Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort near Beaumont, with roughly 140 mostly full-hookup sites and a dump station, and the Banning Stagecoach KOA, which adds sewer hookups, propane, a pool and WiFi. For a more rustic stay, Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley offers primitive county sites with fire pits and restrooms. One thing to know up front: Morongo Casino, long a popular free overnight stop, discontinued RV overnighting in April 2025, so plan on a developed campground instead.
The big driving consideration here is wind. The pass acts like a wind tunnel, which is why thousands of turbines line the hills, and sustained gusts can push a high-profile RV around on I-10, so check advisories before you cross. Weather is otherwise kind: summers are hot and arid with August highs near 90, while winters are cool and rarely freezing, and spring is the sweet spot for touring. From Cabazon you are minutes from Palm Springs and its Aerial Tramway, and about 45 miles from Joshua Tree National Park. Staying a while? See the best RV parks in Cabazon for hookups and reservations, and treat Banning or Beaumont as your combined fuel, propane, water and grocery run before heading deeper into the desert.
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Gear for Your Trip to Cabazon
All Dump Stations Near Cabazon
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morongo Casino Resort and Spa | 0.6 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pine Ranch RV Park | 5.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| KOA - Banning Stagecoach KOA Campground | 5.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Noble Creek Park | 11.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hemet Valley RV | 14.6 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Free |
| Happy Traveler RV Park | 15.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mountain Valley RV Park | 16.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Reflection Lake RV Park & Campground | 16.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Golden Village Palms RV Resort | 17.4 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sands RV Resort & Golf | 17.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Morongo Casino Resort and Spa
0.6 miPine Ranch RV Park
5.2 miKOA - Banning Stagecoach KOA Campground
5.2 miNoble Creek Park
11.8 miHemet Valley RV
14.6 miHappy Traveler RV Park
15.7 miMountain Valley RV Park
16.7 miReflection Lake RV Park & Campground
16.7 miGolden Village Palms RV Resort
17.4 miSands RV Resort & Golf
17.4 miTraveling to Cabazon by RV
Getting to Cabazon is simple: Interstate 10 runs straight through town with an interchange at Main Street and Apache Trail, and it is the main corridor between Greater Los Angeles and the Coachella Valley. I-10 is fully RV-legal and easy to drive, with the one real caveat being wind. The San Gorgonio Pass is famous for strong, sustained gusts, so watch Caltrans conditions and wind advisories, slow down, and be ready to wait out severe blows at a rest area rather than fighting them at speed in a high-profile rig.
Use the Banning and Beaumont interchanges, a few miles west, as your service stops for fuel, diesel, propane, groceries and RV repair, since Cabazon itself is small. From Banning, State Route 243 climbs south toward Idyllwild in the San Jacinto Mountains, but it is steep, narrow and switchbacked and not recommended for large motorhomes or trailers; day-trip it in a tow vehicle instead. Book RV parks ahead in spring and on holiday weekends, when the pass-area parks near Palm Springs fill quickly. For public land and camping details, check the official Riverside County Regional Parks pages before you roll in.
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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 Cabazon, 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 Cabazon
Costs around Cabazon stay reasonable for Southern California. Dumping at Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont runs a nominal fee of about ten dollars, and private parks such as Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort and the Banning Stagecoach KOA include dumping for guests while typically charging non-guests a modest fee. Overnight rates at the private Interstate 10 corridor parks are competitively priced for the region, and if you want to save, Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley offers cheaper, more rustic county camping with basic amenities. Because a portion of the stations in our directory here are paid rather than free, budget a small dump fee into each stop.
Your bigger variable expenses are fuel and, in summer, running the air conditioning and generator against the desert heat. Fill up in Banning or Beaumont, where prices tend to beat the Palm Springs resort towns, and you will find the San Gorgonio Pass one of the more affordable places to stage an RV trip into the Coachella Valley and out to Joshua Tree.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Cabazon by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
42F - 59F
Crowds: Medium
Cool, partly cloudy and rarely freezing, with January highs near 59F. February is the wettest month at about 3 inches. Comfortable winter desert travel, but the pass still gets windy.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 74F
Crowds: High
The sweet spot. March through May brings mild highs from the mid-60s to mid-70s, wildflowers in the hills and pleasant days for touring Palm Springs and Joshua Tree before the heat builds.
Summer
Jun - Aug
65F - 90F
Crowds: Low
Hot, arid and mostly clear, with August the warmest month near 90F and occasional spikes into the upper 90s. Pre-cool the rig, mind tank and tire temps, and travel early in the day.
Fall
Sep - Oct
58F - 85F
Crowds: Medium
Hot early then easing through October and November into ideal touring weather, with warm days and cool nights. A great, quieter time to base near the pass.
Explore the Cabazon Area
Check wind advisories before you cross the pass. This is one of the windiest stretches of Interstate 10 in California, and gusts can genuinely push a trailer or high-profile motorhome around. If the wind is howling, there is no shame in parking and waiting it out. Dump your tanks at Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont, the dependable year-round public option nearby, and top off fresh water there or at your RV park before heading east into the drier desert.
Stock fuel, propane and groceries in Banning or Beaumont; services thin out fast once you leave the pass. Do not take a big rig up State Route 243 to Idyllwild, and skip counting on Morongo Casino for an overnight since it ended RV parking in April 2025. Time your visit for spring or fall if you can, when the weather is mild and the desert side trips to Palm Springs and Joshua Tree are most comfortable. And even in a quick fuel stop, swing by the Cabazon Dinosaurs or grab a date shake at Hadley Fruit Orchards; both are classic pass-area stops the kids remember.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Cabazon
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Cabazon, California?
Our directory lists several station mapped directly in Cabazon, so most travelers plan around nearby facilities in the San Gorgonio Pass. The reliable public option is Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont, a Riverside County regional park with a year-round RV dump station for a nominal fee of around ten dollars. A few miles west on Interstate 10, private parks such as Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort and the Banning Stagecoach KOA have dump stations too, included for guests and usually open to non-guests for a modest fee. Because Cabazon itself is a small unincorporated community, we point RVers toward Beaumont and Banning, only minutes away, for dependable tank service.
Can I park my RV overnight in Cabazon?
Not on the street. Cabazon is unincorporated Riverside County, and overnight RV parking on public streets is not allowed. For years the Morongo Casino was the go-to free overnight stop, but it discontinued RV overnighting in April 2025, so that option is gone. Your practical bases now are developed campgrounds and RV parks a short hop west on Interstate 10, including the Banning Stagecoach KOA, Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort near Beaumont and the rustic county sites at Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley. Plan on one of these developed stops rather than counting on a roadside pull-off or a casino lot in the pass.
Is the San Gorgonio Pass windy for RVs?
Very. The San Gorgonio Pass, the narrow gap between the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains that carries Interstate 10 past Cabazon, acts like a wind tunnel. That is why thousands of wind turbines line the hills here. Sustained high winds and strong gusts are common year-round and can shove a high-profile RV or trailer around, especially through the tightest part of the pass. Before you cross, check current wind advisories and the Caltrans conditions, slow down, keep a firm two-hand grip on the wheel, and if gusts get severe, wait it out at a rest area or park rather than fighting the wind at highway speed.
What highways run through Cabazon for RV travel?
Interstate 10 runs directly through Cabazon, with a convenient interchange at Main Street and Apache Trail, and it is the main corridor between the Greater Los Angeles area and the Coachella Valley. I-10 is fully RV-legal and easy to drive apart from the wind. From nearby Banning, State Route 243 climbs south into the mountains toward Idyllwild, and State Route 79 runs through the Beaumont area, but SR-243 is steep, narrow and switchbacked and is not recommended for large motorhomes or trailers. For most RVers, stick to I-10 through the pass and use the Banning and Beaumont interchanges for fuel, services and campgrounds.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Cabazon?
Spring is the sweet spot. From March through May the highs sit in the mild mid-60s to mid-70s, the desert is comfortable, and it is a great window for day trips to Palm Springs and Joshua Tree before summer heat builds. Fall is a close second, easing from hot early-October days into ideal touring weather by November. Winter is cool and pleasant, rarely dropping below freezing, though the pass stays windy and February is the wettest month. Summer is hot and arid, with August highs near 90 and occasional spikes into the upper 90s, so if you travel then, pre-cool the rig and drive early.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Cabazon?
Yes, just a few minutes west on Interstate 10. Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort near Beaumont runs about 140 mostly full-hookup sites with a dump station, and the Banning Stagecoach KOA offers sewer hookups, propane, a pool and WiFi. Both put you close to Cabazon while giving you proper hookups and reliable services. For a more rustic experience, Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley is a Riverside County park with primitive sites, fire pits and restrooms. Staying a while? See the best RV parks in Cabazon for hookups and reservations, and book ahead in spring and on holiday weekends when the pass-area parks fill up.
What is there to do in Cabazon for RVers?
Cabazon punches above its size for a quick stop. The Cabazon Dinosaurs, home to the 65-foot Mr. Rex and the 150-foot Dinny the Apatosaurus, are a famous Interstate 10 roadside landmark with a gift shop and a Dino Dig for kids. Desert Hills Premium Outlets draws shoppers with around 180 designer stores, and Hadley Fruit Orchards has served date shakes and dried fruit since the 1930s. Just beyond town, the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway climbs San Jacinto Peak, and Joshua Tree National Park is about 45 miles east for boulder scrambling and dark-sky camping. It is an easy base for a day or two in the pass.
Is there potable water and propane near Cabazon?
Yes, mostly in the neighboring towns rather than in Cabazon proper. Potable water is available at the area RV parks and at Noble Creek Regional Park, so fill your fresh tank before heading into the drier desert stretches east. For propane, the Banning Stagecoach KOA sells it on site, and fuel and propane suppliers line Interstate 10 in Banning and Beaumont, only a few miles west. Because Cabazon itself is a small community with limited services, treat a stop in Banning or Beaumont as your combined fuel, propane, water and grocery run before you push on toward the Coachella Valley or up into the mountains.
Does Morongo Casino still allow RV overnight parking?
No. For years Morongo Casino, Resort and Spa in Cabazon was a popular free overnight stop where you checked in with security for a parking pass, but it discontinued RV overnighting in April 2025. Do not plan on it as a place to sleep in your rig. You can still visit the casino, pool complex and restaurants, but for overnight stays you will need a developed campground or RV park. The Banning Stagecoach KOA and Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort are both close by on Interstate 10, and Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley offers a more rustic county-park option a short drive away.
How hot does it get in Cabazon in summer?
Hot. Summers in Cabazon are arid and mostly clear, with August the warmest month averaging highs around 90 degrees and lows near 65. Temperatures can spike into the upper 90s and occasionally past 100 during heat waves, though the elevation of the pass keeps it a touch cooler than the desert floor down in the Coachella Valley. If you travel in summer, pre-cool the rig in the morning, run the fridge and freezer hard before midday, watch your tire pressure and temperatures on the hot pavement, and carry plenty of drinking water. Many RVers simply time their pass-area visits for spring or fall instead.
Is Cabazon a good base for visiting Palm Springs and Joshua Tree?
It is a handy one. Cabazon sits right on Interstate 10 in the San Gorgonio Pass, the gateway between Los Angeles and the Coachella Valley, so you are close to a lot. Palm Springs and its Aerial Tramway are about 20 miles east, the wider Coachella Valley resort towns are an easy drive, and Joshua Tree National Park is roughly 45 miles east for hiking and dark-sky camping. Basing at an RV park near Beaumont or Banning gives you hookups and services while keeping these destinations within a short daily drive, which makes the pass a practical hub for exploring the desert without paying peak Palm Springs campground rates.
Are the roads to nearby mountain camping RV friendly?
Not always, so choose carefully. Interstate 10 through the pass is easy for any rig apart from the wind, and the Banning and Beaumont interchanges are simple to navigate. However, State Route 243 climbing south from Banning up to Idyllwild in the San Jacinto Mountains is steep, narrow and full of switchbacks, and it is not recommended for large motorhomes or trailers. Forest Service dispersed camping exists in the surrounding mountains, but many access roads are rough and unsuited to big rigs. For mountain scenery, most RVers day-trip up in a tow vehicle and keep the rig parked at a developed park down in the pass.
What does it cost to dump and camp near Cabazon?
It stays reasonable for Southern California. Dumping at Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont runs a nominal fee of about ten dollars, and private parks such as Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort and the Banning Stagecoach KOA include dumping for guests and typically charge non-guests a modest fee. Overnight rates at the private I-10 corridor parks are competitively priced for the region, while Bogart Regional Park offers cheaper, more rustic county camping. Because a portion of the stations in our directory here are paid rather than free, budget a small dump fee into each stop, and treat the pass as one of the more affordable staging areas near Palm Springs.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Cabazon, California?
Our directory lists {{stationCount}} station mapped directly in Cabazon, so most travelers plan around nearby facilities in the San Gorgonio Pass. The reliable public option is Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont, a Riverside County regional park with a year-round RV dump station for a nominal fee of around ten dollars. A few miles west on Interstate 10, private parks such as Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort and the Banning Stagecoach KOA have dump stations too, included for guests and usually open to non-guests for a modest fee. Because Cabazon itself is a small unincorporated community, we point RVers toward Beaumont and Banning, only minutes away, for dependable tank service.
Can I park my RV overnight in Cabazon?
Not on the street. Cabazon is unincorporated Riverside County, and overnight RV parking on public streets is not allowed. For years the Morongo Casino was the go-to free overnight stop, but it discontinued RV overnighting in April 2025, so that option is gone. Your practical bases now are developed campgrounds and RV parks a short hop west on Interstate 10, including the Banning Stagecoach KOA, Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort near Beaumont and the rustic county sites at Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley. Plan on one of these developed stops rather than counting on a roadside pull-off or a casino lot in the pass.
Is the San Gorgonio Pass windy for RVs?
Very. The San Gorgonio Pass, the narrow gap between the San Bernardino and San Jacinto mountains that carries Interstate 10 past Cabazon, acts like a wind tunnel. That is why thousands of wind turbines line the hills here. Sustained high winds and strong gusts are common year-round and can shove a high-profile RV or trailer around, especially through the tightest part of the pass. Before you cross, check current wind advisories and the Caltrans conditions, slow down, keep a firm two-hand grip on the wheel, and if gusts get severe, wait it out at a rest area or park rather than fighting the wind at highway speed.
What highways run through Cabazon for RV travel?
Interstate 10 runs directly through Cabazon, with a convenient interchange at Main Street and Apache Trail, and it is the main corridor between the Greater Los Angeles area and the Coachella Valley. I-10 is fully RV-legal and easy to drive apart from the wind. From nearby Banning, State Route 243 climbs south into the mountains toward Idyllwild, and State Route 79 runs through the Beaumont area, but SR-243 is steep, narrow and switchbacked and is not recommended for large motorhomes or trailers. For most RVers, stick to I-10 through the pass and use the Banning and Beaumont interchanges for fuel, services and campgrounds.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Cabazon?
Spring is the sweet spot. From March through May the highs sit in the mild mid-60s to mid-70s, the desert is comfortable, and it is a great window for day trips to Palm Springs and Joshua Tree before summer heat builds. Fall is a close second, easing from hot early-October days into ideal touring weather by November. Winter is cool and pleasant, rarely dropping below freezing, though the pass stays windy and February is the wettest month. Summer is hot and arid, with August highs near 90 and occasional spikes into the upper 90s, so if you travel then, pre-cool the rig and drive early.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Cabazon?
Yes, just a few minutes west on Interstate 10. Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort near Beaumont runs about 140 mostly full-hookup sites with a dump station, and the Banning Stagecoach KOA offers sewer hookups, propane, a pool and WiFi. Both put you close to Cabazon while giving you proper hookups and reliable services. For a more rustic experience, Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley is a Riverside County park with primitive sites, fire pits and restrooms. Staying a while? See the best RV parks in Cabazon for hookups and reservations, and book ahead in spring and on holiday weekends when the pass-area parks fill up.
What is there to do in Cabazon for RVers?
Cabazon punches above its size for a quick stop. The Cabazon Dinosaurs, home to the 65-foot Mr. Rex and the 150-foot Dinny the Apatosaurus, are a famous Interstate 10 roadside landmark with a gift shop and a Dino Dig for kids. Desert Hills Premium Outlets draws shoppers with around 180 designer stores, and Hadley Fruit Orchards has served date shakes and dried fruit since the 1930s. Just beyond town, the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway climbs San Jacinto Peak, and Joshua Tree National Park is about 45 miles east for boulder scrambling and dark-sky camping. It is an easy base for a day or two in the pass.
Is there potable water and propane near Cabazon?
Yes, mostly in the neighboring towns rather than in Cabazon proper. Potable water is available at the area RV parks and at Noble Creek Regional Park, so fill your fresh tank before heading into the drier desert stretches east. For propane, the Banning Stagecoach KOA sells it on site, and fuel and propane suppliers line Interstate 10 in Banning and Beaumont, only a few miles west. Because Cabazon itself is a small community with limited services, treat a stop in Banning or Beaumont as your combined fuel, propane, water and grocery run before you push on toward the Coachella Valley or up into the mountains.
Does Morongo Casino still allow RV overnight parking?
No. For years Morongo Casino, Resort and Spa in Cabazon was a popular free overnight stop where you checked in with security for a parking pass, but it discontinued RV overnighting in April 2025. Do not plan on it as a place to sleep in your rig. You can still visit the casino, pool complex and restaurants, but for overnight stays you will need a developed campground or RV park. The Banning Stagecoach KOA and Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort are both close by on Interstate 10, and Bogart Regional Park in Cherry Valley offers a more rustic county-park option a short drive away.
How hot does it get in Cabazon in summer?
Hot. Summers in Cabazon are arid and mostly clear, with August the warmest month averaging highs around 90 degrees and lows near 65. Temperatures can spike into the upper 90s and occasionally past 100 during heat waves, though the elevation of the pass keeps it a touch cooler than the desert floor down in the Coachella Valley. If you travel in summer, pre-cool the rig in the morning, run the fridge and freezer hard before midday, watch your tire pressure and temperatures on the hot pavement, and carry plenty of drinking water. Many RVers simply time their pass-area visits for spring or fall instead.
Is Cabazon a good base for visiting Palm Springs and Joshua Tree?
It is a handy one. Cabazon sits right on Interstate 10 in the San Gorgonio Pass, the gateway between Los Angeles and the Coachella Valley, so you are close to a lot. Palm Springs and its Aerial Tramway are about 20 miles east, the wider Coachella Valley resort towns are an easy drive, and Joshua Tree National Park is roughly 45 miles east for hiking and dark-sky camping. Basing at an RV park near Beaumont or Banning gives you hookups and services while keeping these destinations within a short daily drive, which makes the pass a practical hub for exploring the desert without paying peak Palm Springs campground rates.
Are the roads to nearby mountain camping RV friendly?
Not always, so choose carefully. Interstate 10 through the pass is easy for any rig apart from the wind, and the Banning and Beaumont interchanges are simple to navigate. However, State Route 243 climbing south from Banning up to Idyllwild in the San Jacinto Mountains is steep, narrow and full of switchbacks, and it is not recommended for large motorhomes or trailers. Forest Service dispersed camping exists in the surrounding mountains, but many access roads are rough and unsuited to big rigs. For mountain scenery, most RVers day-trip up in a tow vehicle and keep the rig parked at a developed park down in the pass.
What does it cost to dump and camp near Cabazon?
It stays reasonable for Southern California. Dumping at Noble Creek Regional Park in Beaumont runs a nominal fee of about ten dollars, and private parks such as Cherry Valley Lakes RV Resort and the Banning Stagecoach KOA include dumping for guests and typically charge non-guests a modest fee. Overnight rates at the private I-10 corridor parks are competitively priced for the region, while Bogart Regional Park offers cheaper, more rustic county camping. Because {{paidPct}} of the stations in our directory here are paid rather than free, budget a small dump fee into each stop, and treat the pass as one of the more affordable staging areas near Palm Springs.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Cabazon?
The highest-rated station is Silent Valley Club with a rating of 4.5/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Cabazon?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Cabazon.
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