RV Parks In San Dimas, California
34.1067° N, 117.8067° W
Quick Overview
San Dimas is one of the more pleasant surprises for RVers in greater Los Angeles. Tucked at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains about 45 minutes east of downtown LA, it offers something rare for the region: a big, full-hookup, lakeside RV resort with easy freeway access to the whole metro. For trip planning, the choice here is straightforward. The headline option is a large private resort on Puddingstone Lake, and the alternatives are cooler public camping up in the national forest or a county park with hookups to the south.
The main event is Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort and Campground, formerly East Shore RV Park, which sits inside the 2,000-acre Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park, a public Los Angeles County park. It has 504 large paved full-hookup sites, including pull-throughs, plus two pools, mountain views, and direct access to Puddingstone Lake and miles of lakeside trail. For public alternatives, the Angeles National Forest offers rustic, cooler camping in the San Gabriel Mountains a short drive up, and Prado Regional Park to the south in Chino has water-and-electric hookup sites on its own lake. You can read about the surrounding county parkland through LA County Parks.
Thanks to the mild Southern California climate, San Dimas is a year-round destination, but the shoulder seasons shine. Fall and spring bring warm days, pleasant evenings, and lighter crowds than the summer peak, when valley heat and the adjacent Raging Waters water park pack the weekends. Winter is mild and quiet. Big rigs are well served here: Bonelli Bluffs is built for them, and San Dimas sits at the crossroads of the I-210, I-10, SR-57, and SR-71, so freeway access is excellent once you dodge rush hour. Whether you want a lakeside family base or a comfortable launch pad for LA sightseeing, San Dimas delivers it with full hookups.
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All Dump Stations Near San Dimas
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground | 1.6 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground | 1.8 mi | 4.4 | RV Park | Varies |
| Fairplex RV Park | 2.5 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fairplex RV Park | 2.7 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Tropic Parks Llc | 3.4 mi | 3.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Caravan Mobile Home Park | 6.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camp Williams Resort | 8.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Spring Camp Campground | 12.3 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Glenn Camp Campground | 12.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coldbrook Campground | 12.9 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground
1.6 miBonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground
1.8 miFairplex RV Park
2.5 miFairplex RV Park
2.7 miTropic Parks Llc
3.4 miCaravan Mobile Home Park
6.2 miCamp Williams Resort
8.7 miSpring Camp Campground
12.3 miGlenn Camp Campground
12.5 miColdbrook Campground
12.9 miTraveling to San Dimas by RV
Getting to San Dimas with an RV is about as easy as it gets in Southern California. The town sits at the junction of several major freeways: the I-210 and I-10 run east-west, and the SR-57 and SR-71 connect north-south, so you can approach from almost any direction on interstate-grade roads with no tight mountain grades to reach Bonelli Bluffs. The catch, as everywhere in greater LA, is traffic, so time your moves to avoid weekday rush hours. Ontario International Airport is about 15 miles away if you’re flying in to a rental, and downtown LA is roughly 30 miles west.
San Dimas is full suburbia, so services are everywhere: grocery stores, fuel, propane, and RV repair are all close, and you can provision easily before or during your stay. After a stretch dry camping up in the Angeles National Forest, you’ll want to empty the tanks; see our guide to RV dump stations in San Dimas. From a Bonelli Bluffs base, the lake and Raging Waters are on site, the San Gabriel Mountains are minutes up the road for cooler air, and the rest of the LA region is within comfortable day-trip range.
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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 San Dimas, 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 San Dimas
San Dimas sits in the expensive Los Angeles market, so its headline resort is priced accordingly. Bonelli Bluffs generally runs in the rough range of $60 to over $90 a night depending on season, site type, and whether you land a lake view, with summer and holiday weekends at the top of that range. The upside is what you get: a full-hookup, big-rig-friendly paved site on a lake with pools and trails, 45 minutes from downtown LA. Weekly and monthly rates are available and bring the effective nightly cost down meaningfully, so ask about them if you’re staying more than a few days.
The public options are easier on the wallet. Prado Regional Park to the south offers hookup sites at county-park rates, and the Angeles National Forest campgrounds are cheapest of all, though without hookups. Factor in that an LA-area base saves you nothing on the attractions themselves, theme-park tickets and city parking add up fast, so a comfortable, well-located campsite is worth the spend for the convenience. Overall, plan a higher nightly budget here than for inland or rural California, and let weekday timing and longer-stay rates do the cost-cutting.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About San Dimas
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Best Time to Visit San Dimas by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
45F - 68F
Crowds: Medium
Mild and pleasant with cool nights and the occasional rain. A comfortable, quieter time to camp, with calm lake days and softer rates.
Spring
Mar - May
52F - 77F
Crowds: High
Warm and green with foothill wildflowers, great weather before the summer heat. Weekends get busy as Southern Californians head outdoors.
Summer
Jun - Aug
64F - 92F
Crowds: High
Hot in the valley and the busiest season, with Raging Waters and Puddingstone Lake packed. Book weekends well ahead and expect warm nights.
Fall
Sep - Oct
56F - 82F
Crowds: Medium
Warm days easing into pleasant evenings, one of the best windows once the summer crowds thin out. Lake activities run well into October.
Explore the San Dimas Area
A few things that make a San Dimas stay better. First, lean on Bonelli Bluffs as a base, since it’s one of the few full-hookup, big-rig-friendly resorts this close to Los Angeles; you can park the rig and day-trip across the whole region without repositioning. Second, beat the summer valley heat by heading up into the Angeles National Forest, where the higher elevation runs noticeably cooler, even just for an afternoon drive or hike. Third, take advantage of the lake right at camp for fishing, paddling, and the lakeside trails.
On logistics, book summer and holiday weekends at Bonelli Bluffs well ahead, because it fills with Southern California families, while weekdays and the cooler months are far easier. Ask about weekly and monthly rates if you’re staying a while, since the nightly rate in the LA market is not cheap. Time any freeway repositioning around rush hour at the busy I-210, I-10, SR-57, and SR-71 crossroads. And if you’re visiting LA attractions, remember Disneyland, Pasadena, and downtown are all within day-trip distance from this one base.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in San Dimas
What are the best RV parks in San Dimas, CA?
San Dimas has one standout, and it is a big one. Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort and Campground, formerly East Shore RV Park, sits inside the 2,000-acre Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park on Puddingstone Lake, with 504 large paved full-hookup sites, two pools, and mountain views just 45 minutes east of Los Angeles. It is one of the few full-hookup, big-rig-friendly resorts this close to the city. For public alternatives, the Angeles National Forest offers cooler mountain camping a short drive up, and Prado Regional Park to the south has hookup sites, but Bonelli Bluffs is the main event.
Do San Dimas RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, at the main resort. Bonelli Bluffs offers 504 full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30 and 50-amp electric, including pull-throughs, all on large paved pads, which is exactly what you want for a comfortable stay near LA in the summer heat. Prado Regional Park, the public county campground to the south in Chino, provides water and electric hookups. The Angeles National Forest campgrounds up in the San Gabriel Mountains are the exception, with no hookups, just vault toilets, so if you camp up there you will be dry camping. For full hookups, stay at Bonelli Bluffs.
How much does RV camping cost in San Dimas?
As a full-hookup resort in the expensive LA market, Bonelli Bluffs runs higher than rural California, generally in the rough range of $60 to $90-plus a night depending on the season, site type, and whether you get a lake view, with summer and holiday weekends at the top end. It offers weekly and monthly rates that bring the effective nightly cost down for longer stays. The public options are cheaper: Prado Regional Park and the Angeles National Forest campgrounds run lower, with the forest sites cheapest of all, though they have no hookups. Weekday and off-season rates are easier on the budget.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in San Dimas?
For Bonelli Bluffs, book summer and holiday weekends well ahead, since it is a popular destination for Southern California families and a convenient LA base for travelers, and the best lakeside sites go early. Weekdays and the cooler months are much easier and can often be reserved closer to your dates. If you are aiming for the Angeles National Forest, some sites reserve on Recreation.gov while others are first-come, so arrive early on summer weekends. Prado Regional Park books through San Bernardino County. In general, treat any warm-weather weekend near LA as a reservation race.
When is the best time to go RV camping in San Dimas?
San Dimas is a year-round destination thanks to the mild Southern California climate, but the shoulder seasons are the sweet spot. Fall and spring bring warm days, pleasant evenings, and lighter crowds than the summer peak, when the valley heat and Raging Waters draw big weekend numbers. Winter is mild and quiet, a comfortable time to camp if you do not mind cooler nights and the occasional rain. Summer is hot in the valley, so if you visit then, plan to use the lake and escape up into the cooler San Gabriel Mountains on the hottest afternoons.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in San Dimas?
Yes, and this is one of the better big-rig spots near Los Angeles. Bonelli Bluffs is built for large rigs, with 504 big paved sites including pull-throughs and full hookups, so a 40-foot motorhome or fifth-wheel fits comfortably. Freeway access is excellent too: San Dimas sits at the crossroads of the I-210, I-10, SR-57, and SR-71, so getting a big rig in and out is easy, though you will want to dodge LA rush hour. The one place to avoid with a big rig is the Angeles National Forest, where mountain roads and sites are tight and not suited to large rigs.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near San Dimas?
Not in the valley, but some up in the mountains. San Dimas itself is dense Southern California suburbia with strict overnight-parking rules and no free RV camping, and Bonelli Bluffs and the regional parks are all reservation-based. Up in the Angeles National Forest, however, some campgrounds are first-come, first-served and there is limited dispersed camping on national-forest land for self-contained rigs, subject to fire restrictions and an Adventure Pass in places. Those mountain options have no hookups and tight access, so they suit smaller, self-sufficient rigs. For a comfortable stay near LA, plan on a reservation at Bonelli Bluffs.
What public campgrounds are near San Dimas?
A few, at different elevations. The land around the main resort, Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park, is a public LA County park, though its camping is run by the Bonelli Bluffs concessionaire. To the south in Chino, Prado Regional Park is a San Bernardino County campground with water and electric hookup sites on a lake. Up in the San Gabriel Mountains, the Angeles National Forest has campgrounds such as Crystal Lake that offer cooler, scenic camping without hookups, some reservable on Recreation.gov and some first-come. Together they give you a range from full-hookup lakeside to rustic mountain sites within a short drive.
Is San Dimas a good base for visiting Los Angeles and Disneyland?
It is a strong choice. San Dimas sits about 45 minutes east of downtown LA at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, right at the junction of several freeways, so you can base in a full-hookup site at Bonelli Bluffs and day-trip across the region. Disneyland is roughly an hour south, Pasadena and the Rose Bowl are close, and downtown LA, the beaches, and the mountains are all reachable. You trade a beach or downtown address for a quieter, lakeside spot with big-rig-friendly hookups, which many RVers prefer when visiting an expensive, traffic-heavy metro like Los Angeles.
What is there to do around San Dimas while camping?
Plenty, starting right at camp. Puddingstone Lake offers fishing, boating, and jet-skiing, with lakeside trails for walking and biking, and Raging Waters, one of California's largest water parks, sits within Bonelli Regional Park next door. The San Gabriel Mountains and Angeles National Forest are a short drive up for hiking, scenic drives, and cooler air on hot days. Old Town San Dimas, on historic Route 66, has a Western-themed main street with shops and restaurants. And because you are 45 minutes from LA, the region's theme parks, museums, and beaches are all within day-trip range.
How do I reserve a site at Bonelli Bluffs?
Bonelli Bluffs takes reservations directly, through its website or by phone, rather than a national booking portal. Because it is a large, popular resort close to Los Angeles, summer and holiday weekends fill early, so reserve ahead if your dates are fixed, and ask about the lakeside sites if you want a view. The resort offers nightly, weekly, and monthly rates, so mention your length of stay to get the best pricing. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready; with 504 sites including pull-throughs, they can usually fit big rigs, but the best spots go to those who book early.
What is the weather like for RV camping in San Dimas?
San Dimas has a classic Southern California inland-valley climate: hot, dry summers and mild winters with very little rain. Summer highs often reach the 90s in the valley, which is why the lake and the cooler mountains are such welcome escapes, while nights stay comfortable. Winters are mild, with highs in the 60s and cool nights, and most of the year's modest rainfall comes between late fall and early spring. Spring and fall are warm and pleasant. The dry, temperate climate makes San Dimas a genuine year-round RV destination, with only midsummer heat as a real consideration.
Should I stay at Bonelli Bluffs or up in the mountains near San Dimas?
It depends on your rig and your goals. Bonelli Bluffs gives you full hookups, big paved sites, two pools, a lake at your doorstep, and easy freeway access to all of greater LA, which makes it the obvious base for sightseeing or a family trip with a larger rig. Camping up in the Angeles National Forest trades all of that for cooler temperatures, pine-shaded quiet, and scenery, but with no hookups, tight roads, and small sites better suited to compact, self-contained rigs. Many visitors base at Bonelli Bluffs and simply day-trip into the mountains when the valley heat climbs.
What are the best RV parks in San Dimas, CA?
San Dimas has one standout, and it is a big one. Bonelli Bluffs RV Resort and Campground, formerly East Shore RV Park, sits inside the 2,000-acre Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park on Puddingstone Lake, with 504 large paved full-hookup sites, two pools, and mountain views just 45 minutes east of Los Angeles. It is one of the few full-hookup, big-rig-friendly resorts this close to the city. For public alternatives, the Angeles National Forest offers cooler mountain camping a short drive up, and Prado Regional Park to the south has hookup sites, but Bonelli Bluffs is the main event.
Do San Dimas RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, at the main resort. Bonelli Bluffs offers 504 full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30 and 50-amp electric, including pull-throughs, all on large paved pads, which is exactly what you want for a comfortable stay near LA in the summer heat. Prado Regional Park, the public county campground to the south in Chino, provides water and electric hookups. The Angeles National Forest campgrounds up in the San Gabriel Mountains are the exception, with no hookups, just vault toilets, so if you camp up there you will be dry camping. For full hookups, stay at Bonelli Bluffs.
How much does RV camping cost in San Dimas?
As a full-hookup resort in the expensive LA market, Bonelli Bluffs runs higher than rural California, generally in the rough range of $60 to $90-plus a night depending on the season, site type, and whether you get a lake view, with summer and holiday weekends at the top end. It offers weekly and monthly rates that bring the effective nightly cost down for longer stays. The public options are cheaper: Prado Regional Park and the Angeles National Forest campgrounds run lower, with the forest sites cheapest of all, though they have no hookups. Weekday and off-season rates are easier on the budget.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in San Dimas?
For Bonelli Bluffs, book summer and holiday weekends well ahead, since it is a popular destination for Southern California families and a convenient LA base for travelers, and the best lakeside sites go early. Weekdays and the cooler months are much easier and can often be reserved closer to your dates. If you are aiming for the Angeles National Forest, some sites reserve on Recreation.gov while others are first-come, so arrive early on summer weekends. Prado Regional Park books through San Bernardino County. In general, treat any warm-weather weekend near LA as a reservation race.
When is the best time to go RV camping in San Dimas?
San Dimas is a year-round destination thanks to the mild Southern California climate, but the shoulder seasons are the sweet spot. Fall and spring bring warm days, pleasant evenings, and lighter crowds than the summer peak, when the valley heat and Raging Waters draw big weekend numbers. Winter is mild and quiet, a comfortable time to camp if you do not mind cooler nights and the occasional rain. Summer is hot in the valley, so if you visit then, plan to use the lake and escape up into the cooler San Gabriel Mountains on the hottest afternoons.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in San Dimas?
Yes, and this is one of the better big-rig spots near Los Angeles. Bonelli Bluffs is built for large rigs, with 504 big paved sites including pull-throughs and full hookups, so a 40-foot motorhome or fifth-wheel fits comfortably. Freeway access is excellent too: San Dimas sits at the crossroads of the I-210, I-10, SR-57, and SR-71, so getting a big rig in and out is easy, though you will want to dodge LA rush hour. The one place to avoid with a big rig is the Angeles National Forest, where mountain roads and sites are tight and not suited to large rigs.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near San Dimas?
Not in the valley, but some up in the mountains. San Dimas itself is dense Southern California suburbia with strict overnight-parking rules and no free RV camping, and Bonelli Bluffs and the regional parks are all reservation-based. Up in the Angeles National Forest, however, some campgrounds are first-come, first-served and there is limited dispersed camping on national-forest land for self-contained rigs, subject to fire restrictions and an Adventure Pass in places. Those mountain options have no hookups and tight access, so they suit smaller, self-sufficient rigs. For a comfortable stay near LA, plan on a reservation at Bonelli Bluffs.
What public campgrounds are near San Dimas?
A few, at different elevations. The land around the main resort, Frank G. Bonelli Regional Park, is a public LA County park, though its camping is run by the Bonelli Bluffs concessionaire. To the south in Chino, Prado Regional Park is a San Bernardino County campground with water and electric hookup sites on a lake. Up in the San Gabriel Mountains, the Angeles National Forest has campgrounds such as Crystal Lake that offer cooler, scenic camping without hookups, some reservable on Recreation.gov and some first-come. Together they give you a range from full-hookup lakeside to rustic mountain sites within a short drive.
Is San Dimas a good base for visiting Los Angeles and Disneyland?
It is a strong choice. San Dimas sits about 45 minutes east of downtown LA at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, right at the junction of several freeways, so you can base in a full-hookup site at Bonelli Bluffs and day-trip across the region. Disneyland is roughly an hour south, Pasadena and the Rose Bowl are close, and downtown LA, the beaches, and the mountains are all reachable. You trade a beach or downtown address for a quieter, lakeside spot with big-rig-friendly hookups, which many RVers prefer when visiting an expensive, traffic-heavy metro like Los Angeles.
What is there to do around San Dimas while camping?
Plenty, starting right at camp. Puddingstone Lake offers fishing, boating, and jet-skiing, with lakeside trails for walking and biking, and Raging Waters, one of California's largest water parks, sits within Bonelli Regional Park next door. The San Gabriel Mountains and Angeles National Forest are a short drive up for hiking, scenic drives, and cooler air on hot days. Old Town San Dimas, on historic Route 66, has a Western-themed main street with shops and restaurants. And because you are 45 minutes from LA, the region's theme parks, museums, and beaches are all within day-trip range.
How do I reserve a site at Bonelli Bluffs?
Bonelli Bluffs takes reservations directly, through its website or by phone, rather than a national booking portal. Because it is a large, popular resort close to Los Angeles, summer and holiday weekends fill early, so reserve ahead if your dates are fixed, and ask about the lakeside sites if you want a view. The resort offers nightly, weekly, and monthly rates, so mention your length of stay to get the best pricing. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready; with 504 sites including pull-throughs, they can usually fit big rigs, but the best spots go to those who book early.
What is the weather like for RV camping in San Dimas?
San Dimas has a classic Southern California inland-valley climate: hot, dry summers and mild winters with very little rain. Summer highs often reach the 90s in the valley, which is why the lake and the cooler mountains are such welcome escapes, while nights stay comfortable. Winters are mild, with highs in the 60s and cool nights, and most of the year's modest rainfall comes between late fall and early spring. Spring and fall are warm and pleasant. The dry, temperate climate makes San Dimas a genuine year-round RV destination, with only midsummer heat as a real consideration.
Should I stay at Bonelli Bluffs or up in the mountains near San Dimas?
It depends on your rig and your goals. Bonelli Bluffs gives you full hookups, big paved sites, two pools, a lake at your doorstep, and easy freeway access to all of greater LA, which makes it the obvious base for sightseeing or a family trip with a larger rig. Camping up in the Angeles National Forest trades all of that for cooler temperatures, pine-shaded quiet, and scenery, but with no hookups, tight roads, and small sites better suited to compact, self-contained rigs. Many visitors base at Bonelli Bluffs and simply day-trip into the mountains when the valley heat climbs.
Are there free dump stations in San Dimas?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near San Dimas.
All Dump Stations Near San Dimas (148)
RV Park with Dump StationsBonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground
RV Park with Dump StationsBonelli Bluffs RV Resort & Campground
RV ParkFairplex RV Park
RV Park with Dump StationsFairplex RV Park
RV ParkTropic Parks Llc
RV ParkCaravan Mobile Home Park
RV ParkCamp Williams Resort
RV Park



