RV Parks In Mount Shasta, California
41.3102° N, 122.3123° W
Quick Overview
Few places put a 14,000-foot volcano this close to your campsite. Mount Shasta City sits at the foot of its namesake peak on I-5 in far Northern California, surrounded by the vast Shasta-Trinity National Forest, a calm reflection-perfect lake, waterfalls, and granite spires. It is one of the most scenic RV bases in the state and a wonderfully flexible one, because you can choose between full-hookup parks with mountain and lake views or dirt-cheap, gorgeous national-forest camping just up the road.
The signature stay is Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort, about three miles from town on the lake, with full-hookup pull-through RV sites, a dump station, laundry, swimming, and those postcard Mt. Shasta reflections off the water. It runs roughly April through November. For year-round full hookups, the Mount Shasta KOA Holiday sits at about 3,500 feet near the base of the mountain and stays open all winter for skiers. Beyond the private parks, the Shasta-Trinity National Forest opens up dozens of campgrounds, from McBride Springs on the Everitt Memorial Highway up the mountain to the Fowlers Camp area near the three McCloud River waterfalls, plus Castle Crags State Park beneath its dramatic granite spires about 15 miles south.
The trade-off is the usual mountain one: hookups and amenities versus price and wildness. Lake Siskiyou and the KOA give you full hookups and big rigs are welcome at both, while the national-forest and state-park campgrounds are cheaper, more scenic, and have no hookups, often with length limits that favor smaller and mid-size rigs. Summer is the peak season, when the lake, the mountain, and the waterfalls draw crowds, so reserve popular sites a few weeks ahead; the forest also holds plenty of first-come and dispersed options for the self-contained. Getting here is easy, since I-5 runs right past town, though the long grades nearby warrant care in heat or snow. Pack layers even in July, because at this elevation the warm days give way to genuinely cool nights.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Mount Shasta
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All Dump Stations Near Mount Shasta
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chateau Shasta Mobile Home And RV Park | 0.7 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mount Shasta City KOA | 0.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Abrams Lake Mobile Estates | 2.9 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Friendly RV Park | 7.0 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Railroad Park RV Resort | 8.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Cedar Pines RV Resort | 9.3 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Trailer Lane Campground | 9.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| McCloud RV Resort | 10.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mccloud RV Resort | 10.1 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Friday's RV Retreat And Fly Fishing Ranch | 13.0 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
Chateau Shasta Mobile Home And RV Park
0.7 miMount Shasta City KOA
0.8 miAbrams Lake Mobile Estates
2.9 miFriendly RV Park
7.0 miRailroad Park RV Resort
8.6 miCedar Pines RV Resort
9.3 miTrailer Lane Campground
9.8 miMcCloud RV Resort
10.0 miMccloud RV Resort
10.1 miFriday's RV Retreat And Fly Fishing Ranch
13.0 miTraveling to Mount Shasta by RV
Mount Shasta is one of the easier mountain RV destinations to reach because I-5 runs right past Mount Shasta City and nearby Castle Crags. Redding is about 60 miles south, Weed about 10 miles north, and Medford, Oregon, roughly 75 miles north. That interstate access makes the town a natural stop on a West Coast road trip and a simple base to settle into, with fuel, groceries, and gear shops in town. The main routing cautions are the long climbs on I-5 itself: the grade near Castle Crags to the south and the Siskiyou Summit up toward Oregon can tax an engine in summer heat and demand chains in winter snow.
Within the area, the Everitt Memorial Highway climbs from town up the flank of Mount Shasta to trailheads and enormous views. It is paved, but the upper switchbacks are steep and tight, so drive them in the tow vehicle rather than hauling a long rig to the top. CA-89 heads southeast toward McCloud, the waterfalls, and eventually Lassen. Lake Siskiyou is a short three-mile drive from town. In winter, snow is a real factor on the mountain roads and even on I-5 over the summits, so carry chains and check conditions if you are visiting for the ski park.
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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 Mount Shasta, 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 Mount Shasta
Mount Shasta camping spans a wide price range, which is part of its appeal. The private full-hookup parks, Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the Mount Shasta KOA, sit in the moderate band for the region, a fair price for hookups, amenities, and either lakefront or year-round convenience. Lake Siskiyou s premium is the setting and the lake access; the KOA s is staying open in winter when little else does.
The budget options are public and plentiful. National-forest campgrounds in the Shasta-Trinity, like McBride Springs and the McCloud River sites, charge low nightly fees for no-hookup sites in beautiful settings, and dispersed camping on the forest is free for the self-contained, subject to fire and stay-limit rules. Castle Crags State Park is similarly affordable. Summer weekends and holidays are the peak-demand, peak-price window at the lake and the popular forest spots, so reserve a few weeks ahead, while shoulder-season and midweek stays are cheaper and quieter. If you can boondock, the national forest makes Mount Shasta one of the most affordable scenic mountain bases in California.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Mount Shasta by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
26F - 44F
Crowds: Low
Snow and cold; most forest and lake campgrounds close. The KOA stays open for Mt. Shasta Ski Park visitors; carry chains.
Spring
Mar - May
34F - 60F
Crowds: Low
Variable and snowmelt-driven; lower campgrounds open as it warms and waterfalls run full. Higher routes stay snowy.
Summer
Jun - Aug
50F - 85F
Crowds: High
Warm dry days, cool nights; main season for the lake, mountain, and waterfalls. Reserve popular sites a few weeks ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
38F - 68F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days, turning color, fewer crowds, excellent hiking. Higher forest campgrounds begin closing for the season.
Explore the Mount Shasta Area
The key decision here is hookups versus wildness, and the good news is you can have either within minutes of town. For the iconic experience, Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort delivers full hookups and those mirror-image Mt. Shasta reflections off the lake, but it is seasonal, roughly April through November. If you need a winter base or year-round full hookups, the Mount Shasta KOA is your spot and stays open for Mt. Shasta Ski Park visitors. For cheap, scenic camping, the surrounding Shasta-Trinity National Forest has dozens of campgrounds and abundant dispersed sites, mostly without hookups, ideal for self-contained rigs.
A few practical notes. Elevation matters: even in mid-summer the warm 80-degree days drop into cool nights, so pack layers and a good sleeping setup regardless of the forecast. In dry months, check current fire restrictions before you build a campfire, as they are common across Northern California forests. Drive the Everitt Memorial Highway up the mountain for the views and trailheads, but take the tow vehicle to the upper switchbacks rather than a long rig. And do not skip the lesser-known gems: the three accessible McCloud River waterfalls southeast of town, the granite spires and trails of Castle Crags, and the cold, clear Sacramento River headwaters spring right in town are all worth a stop.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Mount Shasta
What are the best RV parks in Mount Shasta, CA?
The signature pick is Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort, about three miles from town on the lake, with full-hookup pull-through sites, swimming, paddling, and famous Mt. Shasta reflection views, open roughly April through November. For year-round full hookups, the Mount Shasta KOA Holiday sits near the base of the mountain at about 3,500 feet and stays open all winter for skiers. Beyond the private parks, the Shasta-Trinity National Forest offers dozens of cheaper, no-hookup campgrounds like McBride Springs and the McCloud River sites, and Castle Crags State Park camps beneath dramatic granite spires. The best choice depends on whether you want lakefront full hookups, a year-round base, or budget forest camping.
Do Mount Shasta RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at the two private parks. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort offers full hookups with 30/50-amp service, water, sewer, a dump station, and pull-through sites, and the Mount Shasta KOA Holiday provides full hookups year-round. The public options are different: the Shasta-Trinity National Forest campgrounds and Castle Crags State Park generally have no hookups, offering vault or basic toilets, sometimes piped water, and a dump station in a few locations. So if full hookups including sewer are essential, book Lake Siskiyou in season or the KOA year-round; if you are comfortable dry camping, the national forest opens up far cheaper and very scenic options just minutes from town and the mountain.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Mount Shasta?
For summer weekends and holidays, reserve a few weeks ahead at Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the popular national-forest campgrounds, which fill with lake, mountain, and waterfall visitors. The KOA is generally easier and stays open year-round. National-forest reservable sites go through Recreation.gov, and Castle Crags State Park books through ReserveCalifornia. The big advantage here is the forest: with dozens of campgrounds plus dispersed camping, a self-contained rig can almost always find a spot even on a busy weekend. Spring and fall are quieter and easier to book, while winter narrows your choices to the year-round KOA. Plan ahead for peak summer; otherwise the area absorbs demand well.
When is the best time to camp in Mount Shasta?
Summer is the prime season, with warm, dry days in the 80s, cool nights, and full access to the lake, the mountain trails, and the waterfalls, though it is also the busiest. Fall is excellent for hiking, with crisp days, turning color, and thinner crowds, as the higher forest campgrounds begin to close. Spring is variable and driven by snowmelt, with lower campgrounds opening as it warms and the waterfalls running full, while the upper mountain stays snowy. Winter brings snow and cold, closing most campgrounds except the year-round KOA, which serves the Mt. Shasta Ski Park. For most RVers, July through October is the sweet spot.
Can big rigs camp in Mount Shasta?
Yes, at the private parks. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the Mount Shasta KOA both have full-hookup pull-through sites that accommodate big rigs. The public campgrounds are more limited: national-forest sites like McBride Springs are small and best for smaller RVs, and many forest and state-park campgrounds have length limits, so check before booking a long rig. Getting to the area is easy since I-5 runs right past town, but watch the long grades near Castle Crags and over the Siskiyou Summit, especially in summer heat or winter snow. Do not take a long rig up the steep upper switchbacks of the Everitt Memorial Highway; explore the mountain road in the tow vehicle.
Is there national forest or dispersed camping near Mount Shasta?
Yes, abundantly. Mount Shasta City is surrounded by the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, which hosts dozens of developed campgrounds and extensive dispersed camping. Developed sites like McBride Springs on the Everitt Memorial Highway and the Fowlers Camp area near the McCloud River waterfalls offer low-cost, no-hookup camping in beautiful forest settings. Self-contained rigs can also disperse camp for free on forest roads, following Leave No Trace and the forest s stay-limit and fire rules. This makes Mount Shasta one of the more affordable scenic mountain bases in California for boondockers. Always check current fire restrictions, which are common in dry Northern California summers, and carry out everything you bring in.
What is there to do in Mount Shasta while camping?
The mountain itself is the centerpiece, with climbing routes, the scenic Everitt Memorial Highway to high trailheads, and endless hiking. Lake Siskiyou offers swimming, paddling, and mirror-image views of the peak, while the three McCloud River waterfalls southeast of town are linked by an easy riverside trail. Castle Crags State Park to the south has dramatic granite spires and trails above the Sacramento River, whose cold headwaters spring bubbles up right in town. There is fishing, mountain biking, and in winter the Mt. Shasta Ski Park. The region also has a distinctive spiritual and arts scene in town. Between the lake, the mountain, and the forest, a week fills easily.
Is the Mount Shasta KOA open year-round?
Yes. The Mount Shasta KOA Holiday, set at about 3,500 feet near the base of the mountain, stays open year-round, which makes it the go-to full-hookup option in winter when Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the national-forest campgrounds have closed. In the cold months it primarily serves visitors heading to the Mt. Shasta Ski Park and those passing through on I-5. If you camp here in winter, be prepared for snow and freezing temperatures with a properly winterized rig, tank precautions, and good heating, and carry chains for the mountain roads and the I-5 summits. In summer it is a convenient, full-service base close to town, the lake, and the trailheads.
How cold does it get camping in Mount Shasta?
Cooler than the daytime temperatures suggest, because of the elevation. Mount Shasta City sits around 3,500 feet and the campgrounds range higher, so even warm summer days in the 80s give way to nights commonly in the 40s and 50s. Spring and fall nights can dip near or below freezing, and winter brings hard freezes and snow. For RVers that means packing layers and warm bedding even in July, being ready to run the furnace on cool mornings, and, in the shoulder and winter seasons, taking freeze precautions for your water and tanks. The cool nights are part of the appeal, you sleep comfortably without air conditioning, but they catch unprepared warm-weather campers off guard.
Are pets allowed at Mount Shasta campgrounds?
Generally yes. The private parks, Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the Mount Shasta KOA, are typically pet-friendly, each with its own rules on pet numbers and leashing, so confirm when you book. The Shasta-Trinity National Forest allows leashed pets in campgrounds and on most trails, which makes the forest options dog-friendly, though some California State Park trails, including parts of Castle Crags, restrict pets, so check park rules. The cool mountain climate is comfortable for dogs much of the year, but bring water on hikes given the dry air and elevation, watch for wildlife, and never leave a pet in a parked rig without ventilation. Keep dogs leashed near water and trailheads for their safety.
How do I get to Mount Shasta with an RV?
Easily, because Interstate 5 runs right past Mount Shasta City and nearby Castle Crags, making it one of the more accessible mountain destinations on the West Coast. Redding is about 60 miles south, Weed about 10 miles north, and Medford, Oregon, roughly 75 miles north. The main cautions are the long climbs on I-5 itself: the grade near Castle Crags to the south and the Siskiyou Summit toward Oregon can strain an engine in summer heat and require chains in winter snow, so take them steadily and watch your temperatures. Once you are in town, the local roads to Lake Siskiyou and the forest campgrounds are straightforward, though the upper Everitt Memorial Highway is best left to the tow vehicle.
Can I camp on Lake Siskiyou near Mount Shasta?
Yes, and it is the area s most popular RV experience. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort sits right on the lake about three miles from town, with full-hookup RV sites, pull-throughs, tent sites, and cabins, plus a dump station, laundry, and swimming. The lake is a calm, family-friendly, no-wake reservoir famous for its mirror reflections of Mount Shasta, ideal for paddling, swimming, and fishing. The resort runs roughly April through November, so it is a seasonal option, and summer weekends book up, so reserve a few weeks ahead. Waking up to the peak reflected in the water with full hookups at your site is about as good as Northern California mountain camping gets, which is why it fills early.
What are the best RV parks in Mount Shasta, CA?
The signature pick is Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort, about three miles from town on the lake, with full-hookup pull-through sites, swimming, paddling, and famous Mt. Shasta reflection views, open roughly April through November. For year-round full hookups, the Mount Shasta KOA Holiday sits near the base of the mountain at about 3,500 feet and stays open all winter for skiers. Beyond the private parks, the Shasta-Trinity National Forest offers dozens of cheaper, no-hookup campgrounds like McBride Springs and the McCloud River sites, and Castle Crags State Park camps beneath dramatic granite spires. The best choice depends on whether you want lakefront full hookups, a year-round base, or budget forest camping.
Do Mount Shasta RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at the two private parks. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort offers full hookups with 30/50-amp service, water, sewer, a dump station, and pull-through sites, and the Mount Shasta KOA Holiday provides full hookups year-round. The public options are different: the Shasta-Trinity National Forest campgrounds and Castle Crags State Park generally have no hookups, offering vault or basic toilets, sometimes piped water, and a dump station in a few locations. So if full hookups including sewer are essential, book Lake Siskiyou in season or the KOA year-round; if you are comfortable dry camping, the national forest opens up far cheaper and very scenic options just minutes from town and the mountain.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Mount Shasta?
For summer weekends and holidays, reserve a few weeks ahead at Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the popular national-forest campgrounds, which fill with lake, mountain, and waterfall visitors. The KOA is generally easier and stays open year-round. National-forest reservable sites go through Recreation.gov, and Castle Crags State Park books through ReserveCalifornia. The big advantage here is the forest: with dozens of campgrounds plus dispersed camping, a self-contained rig can almost always find a spot even on a busy weekend. Spring and fall are quieter and easier to book, while winter narrows your choices to the year-round KOA. Plan ahead for peak summer; otherwise the area absorbs demand well.
When is the best time to camp in Mount Shasta?
Summer is the prime season, with warm, dry days in the 80s, cool nights, and full access to the lake, the mountain trails, and the waterfalls, though it is also the busiest. Fall is excellent for hiking, with crisp days, turning color, and thinner crowds, as the higher forest campgrounds begin to close. Spring is variable and driven by snowmelt, with lower campgrounds opening as it warms and the waterfalls running full, while the upper mountain stays snowy. Winter brings snow and cold, closing most campgrounds except the year-round KOA, which serves the Mt. Shasta Ski Park. For most RVers, July through October is the sweet spot.
Can big rigs camp in Mount Shasta?
Yes, at the private parks. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the Mount Shasta KOA both have full-hookup pull-through sites that accommodate big rigs. The public campgrounds are more limited: national-forest sites like McBride Springs are small and best for smaller RVs, and many forest and state-park campgrounds have length limits, so check before booking a long rig. Getting to the area is easy since I-5 runs right past town, but watch the long grades near Castle Crags and over the Siskiyou Summit, especially in summer heat or winter snow. Do not take a long rig up the steep upper switchbacks of the Everitt Memorial Highway; explore the mountain road in the tow vehicle.
Is there national forest or dispersed camping near Mount Shasta?
Yes, abundantly. Mount Shasta City is surrounded by the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, which hosts dozens of developed campgrounds and extensive dispersed camping. Developed sites like McBride Springs on the Everitt Memorial Highway and the Fowlers Camp area near the McCloud River waterfalls offer low-cost, no-hookup camping in beautiful forest settings. Self-contained rigs can also disperse camp for free on forest roads, following Leave No Trace and the forest s stay-limit and fire rules. This makes Mount Shasta one of the more affordable scenic mountain bases in California for boondockers. Always check current fire restrictions, which are common in dry Northern California summers, and carry out everything you bring in.
What is there to do in Mount Shasta while camping?
The mountain itself is the centerpiece, with climbing routes, the scenic Everitt Memorial Highway to high trailheads, and endless hiking. Lake Siskiyou offers swimming, paddling, and mirror-image views of the peak, while the three McCloud River waterfalls southeast of town are linked by an easy riverside trail. Castle Crags State Park to the south has dramatic granite spires and trails above the Sacramento River, whose cold headwaters spring bubbles up right in town. There is fishing, mountain biking, and in winter the Mt. Shasta Ski Park. The region also has a distinctive spiritual and arts scene in town. Between the lake, the mountain, and the forest, a week fills easily.
Is the Mount Shasta KOA open year-round?
Yes. The Mount Shasta KOA Holiday, set at about 3,500 feet near the base of the mountain, stays open year-round, which makes it the go-to full-hookup option in winter when Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the national-forest campgrounds have closed. In the cold months it primarily serves visitors heading to the Mt. Shasta Ski Park and those passing through on I-5. If you camp here in winter, be prepared for snow and freezing temperatures with a properly winterized rig, tank precautions, and good heating, and carry chains for the mountain roads and the I-5 summits. In summer it is a convenient, full-service base close to town, the lake, and the trailheads.
How cold does it get camping in Mount Shasta?
Cooler than the daytime temperatures suggest, because of the elevation. Mount Shasta City sits around 3,500 feet and the campgrounds range higher, so even warm summer days in the 80s give way to nights commonly in the 40s and 50s. Spring and fall nights can dip near or below freezing, and winter brings hard freezes and snow. For RVers that means packing layers and warm bedding even in July, being ready to run the furnace on cool mornings, and, in the shoulder and winter seasons, taking freeze precautions for your water and tanks. The cool nights are part of the appeal, you sleep comfortably without air conditioning, but they catch unprepared warm-weather campers off guard.
Are pets allowed at Mount Shasta campgrounds?
Generally yes. The private parks, Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort and the Mount Shasta KOA, are typically pet-friendly, each with its own rules on pet numbers and leashing, so confirm when you book. The Shasta-Trinity National Forest allows leashed pets in campgrounds and on most trails, which makes the forest options dog-friendly, though some California State Park trails, including parts of Castle Crags, restrict pets, so check park rules. The cool mountain climate is comfortable for dogs much of the year, but bring water on hikes given the dry air and elevation, watch for wildlife, and never leave a pet in a parked rig without ventilation. Keep dogs leashed near water and trailheads for their safety.
How do I get to Mount Shasta with an RV?
Easily, because Interstate 5 runs right past Mount Shasta City and nearby Castle Crags, making it one of the more accessible mountain destinations on the West Coast. Redding is about 60 miles south, Weed about 10 miles north, and Medford, Oregon, roughly 75 miles north. The main cautions are the long climbs on I-5 itself: the grade near Castle Crags to the south and the Siskiyou Summit toward Oregon can strain an engine in summer heat and require chains in winter snow, so take them steadily and watch your temperatures. Once you are in town, the local roads to Lake Siskiyou and the forest campgrounds are straightforward, though the upper Everitt Memorial Highway is best left to the tow vehicle.
Can I camp on Lake Siskiyou near Mount Shasta?
Yes, and it is the area s most popular RV experience. Lake Siskiyou Camp Resort sits right on the lake about three miles from town, with full-hookup RV sites, pull-throughs, tent sites, and cabins, plus a dump station, laundry, and swimming. The lake is a calm, family-friendly, no-wake reservoir famous for its mirror reflections of Mount Shasta, ideal for paddling, swimming, and fishing. The resort runs roughly April through November, so it is a seasonal option, and summer weekends book up, so reserve a few weeks ahead. Waking up to the peak reflected in the water with full hookups at your site is about as good as Northern California mountain camping gets, which is why it fills early.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Mount Shasta?
The highest-rated station is KOA - Mount Shasta City KOA Campground with a rating of 4.1/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Mount Shasta?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Mount Shasta.
All Dump Stations Near Mount Shasta (38)
RV ParkChateau Shasta Mobile Home And RV Park
RV ParkMount Shasta City KOA
RV ParkAbrams Lake Mobile Estates
RV Park with Dump StationsFriendly RV Park
RV ParkRailroad Park RV Resort
RV ParkCedar Pines RV Resort
RV ParkTrailer Lane Campground
RV Park



