RV Parks In San Leandro, California
37.7249° N, 122.1561° W
Quick Overview
Let's be straight with you up front: San Leandro is a dense East Bay suburb on I-880 between Oakland and Hayward, and there's no RV park inside the city limits. What San Leandro gives you is location. From here you're minutes from Oakland, a short BART ride from San Francisco, and right next to some of the best regional-park camping in the Bay Area. So we treat this as a jumping-off point and point you to the real campgrounds in the hills and along the shore within easy reach.
The closest actual RV campground is the Anthony Chabot Family Campground, run by the East Bay Regional Park District up in the hills over Lake Chabot, only about 35 minutes from downtown Oakland and the Oakland airport. It has a dozen RV sites with full hookups (water, sewer, and 30 amp), plus tent and no-hookup sites and an on-site dump station. The catch is size: pads average 30 feet and the longest is 39, so it fits mid-size rigs well but 40 ft-plus coaches are tight. Farther out, Del Valle Regional Park near Livermore has 21 full-hookup RV sites wrapped around a swimming-and-fishing reservoir, about 45 minutes east.
On the private side, the big draw is the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica, sitting on a bluff over the Pacific with 150 full-hookup sites, a pool, and 30/50 amp service for rigs up to about 45 feet, roughly 45 minutes west. Down the Peninsula in Redwood City, Trailer Villa RV Park offers full hookups on 30 and 50 amp sites for reaching Silicon Valley. So the pattern here is clear: public regional parks give you scenery and value but shorter pads and 30 amp, while the private resorts handle bigger rigs with 50 amp and full amenities at Bay Area prices. Pick based on your rig size and whether you want hills and a lake or an ocean bluff.
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Gear for Your Trip to San Leandro
All Dump Stations Near San Leandro
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trailer Haven Mobile Home & RV Park | 0.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| El Venado Campground | 3.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sandev Mobile Home Park | 3.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| RV Park | 4.5 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fern Dell Group Campsite | 5.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Oakland Pal Camp | 6.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Candlestick RV Park | 12.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dairy Glen Group Campground | 12.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Campground 62 | 13.6 mi | 3.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dumbarton Quarry Campground On The Bay | 13.7 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
Trailer Haven Mobile Home & RV Park
0.8 miEl Venado Campground
3.0 miSandev Mobile Home Park
3.2 miRV Park
4.5 miFern Dell Group Campsite
5.4 miOakland Pal Camp
6.4 miCandlestick RV Park
12.4 miDairy Glen Group Campground
12.6 miCampground 62
13.6 miDumbarton Quarry Campground On The Bay
13.7 miTraveling to San Leandro by RV
San Leandro sits squarely on I-880, the Nimitz Freeway, which is the East Bay's big-rig spine running north to Oakland and south through Hayward, Fremont, and on toward San Jose. Come in on I-880 rather than I-580: the MacArthur Freeway stretch of I-580 through Oakland and San Leandro is a no-trucks route, so heavy rigs are steered onto I-880 anyway. From the north, I-80 and the Bay Bridge feed into the MacArthur Maze interchange just above town.
To reach Anthony Chabot you'll climb into the hills on smaller roads above Castro Valley, so take it slow with a big rig on the grades. Del Valle sits at the end of a winding two-lane road south of Livermore off I-580, scenic but tight, so mind your length. If you're flying in to rent, Oakland International Airport is about 15 minutes away on I-880 and is the natural hub for a Bay Area RV trip. Once you're parked, use BART and the regional parks instead of driving the rig into San Francisco or downtown Oakland, where parking a motorhome is a headache.
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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 Leandro, 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 Leandro
Bay Area camping isn't cheap, but the public parks are a genuine bargain next to the private resorts. At Anthony Chabot, an RV site with full hookups runs about $45 a night, and a no-hookup site is around $35, which is the sweet spot ($$) for the region. Del Valle's full-hookup RV sites are about $50 a night, also solid value given the lakeside setting. Both are East Bay Regional Park District rates, and you'll pay a small day-use parking fee at some park entrances on top.
The private resorts are where the numbers jump. Trailer Villa in Redwood City runs roughly $75 a night on 30 amp and $90 on 50 amp, and the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica sits at the higher end, around $90 and up for its ocean-bluff full-hookup sites ($$$ to $$$$). To keep costs down, favor the regional parks, dump and refill where you already have a paid site rather than paying the $20 non-camper dump fee, and buy propane by the gallon in town. Snowbirds looking for months-long stays should look outside this urban corridor; the Bay Area is built for shorter trips.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit San Leandro by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
44F - 56F
Crowds: Low
Cool and wet, the Bay Area's rainy season. Campgrounds stay open year-round and Anthony Chabot and Del Valle are quiet, so you can often grab a full-hookup site on short notice. Hard freezes are rare. Hill roads and trails get muddy between storms, but the East Bay hills turn brilliant green, making it a scenic, low-crowd time to camp.
Spring
Mar - May
48F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
The prettiest season, with green hills and wildflowers before the summer sun browns everything. Rain tapers through May. Weekends start filling, so book Anthony Chabot around the 12-week window. Great time for Lake Chabot hiking and fishing. Mild temps mean comfortable camping without the summer resort premium at the private parks.
Summer
Jun - Aug
55F - 78F
Crowds: High
Peak season and dry, warm days cooled by the coastal marine layer. Anthony Chabot and Del Valle book up for summer weekends, so reserve exactly 12 weeks ahead at 8am. Private Bay Area resorts fill and charge top rates. Fire risk climbs in the East Bay hills, so heed any posted restrictions at the regional-park campgrounds.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 72F
Crowds: Medium
Often the best weather of the year: warm, clear, settled days and cool nights. Crowds ease after Labor Day, so midweek full-hookup sites open up at both regional parks. Fire season lingers into fall in the dry hills, so stay aware of conditions. A great window for lake outings and city day trips by BART before the winter rains arrive.
Explore the San Leandro Area
Here's how we'd play San Leandro. Since there's no in-town RV park, decide first what kind of trip you want: hills and a lake, or an ocean bluff. For the lake, book Anthony Chabot, and do it early. East Bay Regional Park sites open for reservation exactly 12 weeks out, so get on ReserveAmerica at 8am on your window date for any summer weekend or they'll be gone. Keep your rig under about 39 feet for the Chabot pads; anything bigger is happier at the private resorts.
Second, don't drive the motorhome into the city. Park it at camp, hop on BART from San Leandro or Bay Fair, and let the train take you into San Francisco or Oakland. It saves you the parking nightmare and the bridge tolls. Third, time your visit for late spring through fall when the weather's dry, though spring gets you the greenest hills. Watch for summer and fall fire restrictions in the East Bay hills, and expect the coastal marine layer to keep things cool near the shoreline. Resupply is easy with full-size supermarkets all over San Leandro and Hayward, so stock up before you head up to camp.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in San Leandro
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near San Leandro, CA?
San Leandro itself is a dense East Bay suburb with no RV park inside the city, so the best options sit in the surrounding Bay Area. The closest real campground is Anthony Chabot Family Campground, a public East Bay Regional Park District site in the hills over Lake Chabot with full-hookup RV sites about 35 minutes from Oakland. Del Valle Regional Park near Livermore adds 21 full-hookup lakeside sites. On the private side, the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica offers ocean-bluff full hookups, and Trailer Villa in Redwood City covers the Peninsula. Pick the regional parks for value and scenery, the private resorts for bigger rigs and amenities.
Do campgrounds near San Leandro have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, several do, though the public and private options differ. Anthony Chabot has 12 RV sites with full hookups on 30 amp service (water, sewer, and electric), and Del Valle Regional Park has 21 full-hookup RV sites, also on 30 amp. If you need 50 amp for a big rig running two air conditioners, look to the private resorts: the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica and Trailer Villa in Redwood City both offer 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites. The regional parks also have tent and no-hookup sites and on-site dump stations, so you have flexibility depending on your rig and budget.
How much does RV camping cost near San Leandro?
Public regional parks are the value play here. An RV full-hookup site at Anthony Chabot runs about $45 a night, a no-hookup site around $35, and Del Valle's full-hookup RV sites are about $50. Those are East Bay Regional Park District rates and a genuine bargain for the Bay Area. Private resorts cost more: Trailer Villa in Redwood City is roughly $75 on 30 amp and $90 on 50 amp, and the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica sits around $90 and up for ocean-bluff sites. Expect big-city pricing overall, and budget a small day-use parking fee at some regional-park entrances.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near San Leandro?
For the East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds, reservations open exactly 12 weeks in advance and must be made at least 48 hours (two business days) ahead. Summer weekends at Anthony Chabot and Del Valle go fast, so get on ReserveAmerica at 8am on the morning your 12-week window opens if you want a full-hookup site. Midweek and off-season are far easier and you can often book on shorter notice. The private Bay Area resorts also fill in summer, so reserve those weeks ahead too. Spring and fall weekdays are the most forgiving times to find last-minute availability.
When is the best time to go RV camping near San Leandro?
Late spring through fall gives you the most reliable dry weather, and fall is often the nicest of all, with warm clear days, cool nights, and thinner crowds after Labor Day. Spring is the prettiest, when the East Bay hills turn green and wildflowers bloom before the summer sun browns them. Summer is peak season, warm but cooled by the coastal marine layer, and campgrounds book up, so plan ahead. Winter is quiet and wet but campgrounds stay open year-round, so you can often grab a full-hookup site on short notice between storms if you don't mind some rain.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp near San Leandro?
It depends where you stay. Anthony Chabot's pads average 30 feet with a longest of 39, so it suits mid-size rigs and travel trailers well but is tight for 40 ft-plus motorhomes. If you're running a big coach, the private resorts are the better bet: the San Francisco RV Resort takes motorhomes up to about 45 feet with 50 amp service, and Trailer Villa in Redwood City has 50 amp full-hookup sites too. Del Valle can handle a range of sizes but sits at the end of a winding road, so mind your length on the approach. Run big rigs down I-880, not the truck-restricted I-580 through Oakland.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) RV options near San Leandro?
Honestly, no. This is a dense urban East Bay corridor, and there's no free dispersed camping or boondocking in or right around San Leandro. Overnight RV parking on city streets is restricted, and Bay Area camping is developed and reservation-based. The most budget-friendly move is to book a public East Bay Regional Park District site at Anthony Chabot or Del Valle, which are the cheapest legal options in the area. If you want free public-land boondocking, you'll need to head well outside the Bay Area toward the Central Valley, Sierra foothills, or the coast north or south of the metro.
What is Anthony Chabot Family Campground like?
Anthony Chabot is the closest real RV campground to San Leandro, run by the East Bay Regional Park District up in the hills overlooking Lake Chabot, about 35 minutes from downtown Oakland and the Oakland airport. It has 12 full-hookup RV sites (water, sewer, 30 amp), plus dozens of tent and no-hookup sites, hot showers, flush toilets, and an on-site dump station. Pads average 30 feet, longest 39, so it's mid-size-rig friendly. The gates lock from 10pm to 8am, so plan arrivals. It's a genuinely woodsy escape with hiking and lake access just minutes from the urban East Bay, and a strong value at about $45 a night with hookups.
Can I fish and boat at Lake Chabot near the campground?
Yes, and it's one of the best reasons to camp at Anthony Chabot. Lake Chabot is a 315-acre stocked reservoir open year-round for fishing and boating, and it's a popular Bay Area spot, good for first-time young anglers. The marina rents kayaks and boats, runs the Chabot Queen tour boat seasonally, and has a cafe with bait and tackle. Miles of hiking, biking, and running trails wind through the hills and along the shoreline. The campground overlooks the lake, so you can walk or bike down to the water. No private gas motors are allowed, which keeps the lake quiet and pleasant.
Should I bring my RV into San Francisco or Oakland from San Leandro?
We wouldn't. San Francisco and Oakland are tough places to drive and park a motorhome, with narrow streets, hills, low garages, and bridge tolls. The smart play is to leave your rig hooked up at camp and take BART, which runs from San Leandro and Bay Fair stations straight into both cities without you touching the wheel. You get downtown Oakland's Jack London Square, San Francisco's waterfront and neighborhoods, ballgames, and dining, all without the parking headache. San Leandro's central East Bay location is exactly why it works as a base: the whole metro is a short train ride away.
What is there to do near San Leandro besides the campgrounds?
Plenty. Lake Chabot Regional Park next to the Anthony Chabot campground has fishing, boating, kayak rentals, and trails. In town, the San Leandro Marina offers Bay-front walking on the San Francisco Bay Trail and good birding. Beyond that, the entire Bay Area is at hand: Oakland's Jack London Square, museums, and sports; San Francisco a short BART ride away; and Del Valle near Livermore for lake swimming and boating. Pacifica's beaches sit near the San Francisco RV Resort if you camp on the coast. Between regional parks, the shoreline, and two major cities, you won't run short of options from a San Leandro base.
Are there public state or regional parks versus private RV resorts near San Leandro?
Both, and the split matters for your trip. The public options are East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds: Anthony Chabot in the hills over Lake Chabot and Del Valle near Livermore, both with full-hookup RV sites, scenery, and lower rates on 30 amp service. The private options are full-service resorts: the San Francisco RV Resort on the Pacifica coast and Trailer Villa in Redwood City, both with 30 and 50 amp hookups, pools or extra amenities, and higher Bay Area pricing. The public parks win on value and setting; the private resorts win for big rigs needing 50 amp and full amenities. Match the choice to your rig and priorities.
Are pets allowed at campgrounds near San Leandro?
Generally yes, with rules. At Anthony Chabot and other East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds, dogs are allowed but must be leashed and attended at all times, and there are limits on how many and where they can go on trails. The private resorts like the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica are pet friendly too, with their own leash and cleanup rules. Always confirm current pet policies and any fees when you book, since they can change seasonally. Bring proof of vaccination just in case, pick up after your dog, and never leave pets unattended in a hot rig, especially on warmer inland days near Del Valle.
Do the campgrounds near San Leandro have dump stations?
Yes. Anthony Chabot Family Campground has an on-site RV sewage disposal station, which is free to use if you're camping there and about $20 per use for non-campers. Del Valle Regional Park also has camper dump facilities. If you're staying at a full-hookup site at either park or at the private resorts like the San Francisco RV Resort or Trailer Villa, you can dump right at your site, so you may not need a separate station at all. For a full rundown of tank-dumping options around town, check our companion guide to RV dump stations in San Leandro before you roll out.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near San Leandro, CA?
San Leandro itself is a dense East Bay suburb with no RV park inside the city, so the best options sit in the surrounding Bay Area. The closest real campground is Anthony Chabot Family Campground, a public East Bay Regional Park District site in the hills over Lake Chabot with full-hookup RV sites about 35 minutes from Oakland. Del Valle Regional Park near Livermore adds 21 full-hookup lakeside sites. On the private side, the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica offers ocean-bluff full hookups, and Trailer Villa in Redwood City covers the Peninsula. Pick the regional parks for value and scenery, the private resorts for bigger rigs and amenities.
Do campgrounds near San Leandro have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, several do, though the public and private options differ. Anthony Chabot has 12 RV sites with full hookups on 30 amp service (water, sewer, and electric), and Del Valle Regional Park has 21 full-hookup RV sites, also on 30 amp. If you need 50 amp for a big rig running two air conditioners, look to the private resorts: the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica and Trailer Villa in Redwood City both offer 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites. The regional parks also have tent and no-hookup sites and on-site dump stations, so you have flexibility depending on your rig and budget.
How much does RV camping cost near San Leandro?
Public regional parks are the value play here. An RV full-hookup site at Anthony Chabot runs about $45 a night, a no-hookup site around $35, and Del Valle's full-hookup RV sites are about $50. Those are East Bay Regional Park District rates and a genuine bargain for the Bay Area. Private resorts cost more: Trailer Villa in Redwood City is roughly $75 on 30 amp and $90 on 50 amp, and the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica sits around $90 and up for ocean-bluff sites. Expect big-city pricing overall, and budget a small day-use parking fee at some regional-park entrances.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near San Leandro?
For the East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds, reservations open exactly 12 weeks in advance and must be made at least 48 hours (two business days) ahead. Summer weekends at Anthony Chabot and Del Valle go fast, so get on ReserveAmerica at 8am on the morning your 12-week window opens if you want a full-hookup site. Midweek and off-season are far easier and you can often book on shorter notice. The private Bay Area resorts also fill in summer, so reserve those weeks ahead too. Spring and fall weekdays are the most forgiving times to find last-minute availability.
When is the best time to go RV camping near San Leandro?
Late spring through fall gives you the most reliable dry weather, and fall is often the nicest of all, with warm clear days, cool nights, and thinner crowds after Labor Day. Spring is the prettiest, when the East Bay hills turn green and wildflowers bloom before the summer sun browns them. Summer is peak season, warm but cooled by the coastal marine layer, and campgrounds book up, so plan ahead. Winter is quiet and wet but campgrounds stay open year-round, so you can often grab a full-hookup site on short notice between storms if you don't mind some rain.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp near San Leandro?
It depends where you stay. Anthony Chabot's pads average 30 feet with a longest of 39, so it suits mid-size rigs and travel trailers well but is tight for 40 ft-plus motorhomes. If you're running a big coach, the private resorts are the better bet: the San Francisco RV Resort takes motorhomes up to about 45 feet with 50 amp service, and Trailer Villa in Redwood City has 50 amp full-hookup sites too. Del Valle can handle a range of sizes but sits at the end of a winding road, so mind your length on the approach. Run big rigs down I-880, not the truck-restricted I-580 through Oakland.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) RV options near San Leandro?
Honestly, no. This is a dense urban East Bay corridor, and there's no free dispersed camping or boondocking in or right around San Leandro. Overnight RV parking on city streets is restricted, and Bay Area camping is developed and reservation-based. The most budget-friendly move is to book a public East Bay Regional Park District site at Anthony Chabot or Del Valle, which are the cheapest legal options in the area. If you want free public-land boondocking, you'll need to head well outside the Bay Area toward the Central Valley, Sierra foothills, or the coast north or south of the metro.
What is Anthony Chabot Family Campground like?
Anthony Chabot is the closest real RV campground to San Leandro, run by the East Bay Regional Park District up in the hills overlooking Lake Chabot, about 35 minutes from downtown Oakland and the Oakland airport. It has 12 full-hookup RV sites (water, sewer, 30 amp), plus dozens of tent and no-hookup sites, hot showers, flush toilets, and an on-site dump station. Pads average 30 feet, longest 39, so it's mid-size-rig friendly. The gates lock from 10pm to 8am, so plan arrivals. It's a genuinely woodsy escape with hiking and lake access just minutes from the urban East Bay, and a strong value at about $45 a night with hookups.
Can I fish and boat at Lake Chabot near the campground?
Yes, and it's one of the best reasons to camp at Anthony Chabot. Lake Chabot is a 315-acre stocked reservoir open year-round for fishing and boating, and it's a popular Bay Area spot, good for first-time young anglers. The marina rents kayaks and boats, runs the Chabot Queen tour boat seasonally, and has a cafe with bait and tackle. Miles of hiking, biking, and running trails wind through the hills and along the shoreline. The campground overlooks the lake, so you can walk or bike down to the water. No private gas motors are allowed, which keeps the lake quiet and pleasant.
Should I bring my RV into San Francisco or Oakland from San Leandro?
We wouldn't. San Francisco and Oakland are tough places to drive and park a motorhome, with narrow streets, hills, low garages, and bridge tolls. The smart play is to leave your rig hooked up at camp and take BART, which runs from San Leandro and Bay Fair stations straight into both cities without you touching the wheel. You get downtown Oakland's Jack London Square, San Francisco's waterfront and neighborhoods, ballgames, and dining, all without the parking headache. San Leandro's central East Bay location is exactly why it works as a base: the whole metro is a short train ride away.
What is there to do near San Leandro besides the campgrounds?
Plenty. Lake Chabot Regional Park next to the Anthony Chabot campground has fishing, boating, kayak rentals, and trails. In town, the San Leandro Marina offers Bay-front walking on the San Francisco Bay Trail and good birding. Beyond that, the entire Bay Area is at hand: Oakland's Jack London Square, museums, and sports; San Francisco a short BART ride away; and Del Valle near Livermore for lake swimming and boating. Pacifica's beaches sit near the San Francisco RV Resort if you camp on the coast. Between regional parks, the shoreline, and two major cities, you won't run short of options from a San Leandro base.
Are there public state or regional parks versus private RV resorts near San Leandro?
Both, and the split matters for your trip. The public options are East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds: Anthony Chabot in the hills over Lake Chabot and Del Valle near Livermore, both with full-hookup RV sites, scenery, and lower rates on 30 amp service. The private options are full-service resorts: the San Francisco RV Resort on the Pacifica coast and Trailer Villa in Redwood City, both with 30 and 50 amp hookups, pools or extra amenities, and higher Bay Area pricing. The public parks win on value and setting; the private resorts win for big rigs needing 50 amp and full amenities. Match the choice to your rig and priorities.
Are pets allowed at campgrounds near San Leandro?
Generally yes, with rules. At Anthony Chabot and other East Bay Regional Park District campgrounds, dogs are allowed but must be leashed and attended at all times, and there are limits on how many and where they can go on trails. The private resorts like the San Francisco RV Resort in Pacifica are pet friendly too, with their own leash and cleanup rules. Always confirm current pet policies and any fees when you book, since they can change seasonally. Bring proof of vaccination just in case, pick up after your dog, and never leave pets unattended in a hot rig, especially on warmer inland days near Del Valle.
Do the campgrounds near San Leandro have dump stations?
Yes. Anthony Chabot Family Campground has an on-site RV sewage disposal station, which is free to use if you're camping there and about $20 per use for non-campers. Del Valle Regional Park also has camper dump facilities. If you're staying at a full-hookup site at either park or at the private resorts like the San Francisco RV Resort or Trailer Villa, you can dump right at your site, so you may not need a separate station at all. For a full rundown of tank-dumping options around town, check our companion guide to RV dump stations in San Leandro before you roll out.
All Dump Stations Near San Leandro (107)
RV Park with Dump StationsTrailer Haven Mobile Home & RV Park
RV ParkSandev Mobile Home Park
RV ParkEl Venado Campground
RV ParkFern Dell Group Campsite
RV ParkRV Park
RV ParkOakland Pal Camp
RV ParkDairy Glen Group Campground
RV Park



