RV Parks In Soledad, California
36.4247° N, 121.3263° W
Quick Overview
Soledad sits right in the middle of the Salinas Valley in Monterey County, on US-101 about 25 miles south of Salinas, and it makes a practical base for two very different RV trips: the wine country along the River Road corridor and the rock spires of Pinnacles National Park just to the east. We like this stretch because you can park a big rig at a full-service valley resort and still be a short drive from a national park campground, farm stands, and the Soledad Mission. Let us set expectations, though: Soledad itself is a small farm town, so most of the good RV camping is spread along the valley and up at Pinnacles, not on Main Street.
The standout public option is the Pinnacles Campground inside Pinnacles National Park, on the east side off CA-25. It has 134 sites, 36 of them with 30-amp electric, plus flush toilets, hot showers, a summer pool, a camp store, and a dump station near the entrance. There are no water or sewer hookups at the individual sites and generators are not allowed, so plan your tanks. One catch worth knowing: the west entrance near Soledad does not connect through to the campground by road, so RVs reach it from CA-25 out of Hollister or King City.
For full hookups and big-rig comfort, the private parks win. Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield, a few miles south on US-101, is a big-rig resort with roughly 110 full-hookup, 30 and 50-amp pull-through sites that take rigs up to 100 feet, plus a pool, spa, and laundry. North toward Salinas, the private Salinas/Monterey KOA offers full-hookup sites within reach of Monterey Bay. Monterey County also runs Laguna Seca Recreation Area up near the raceway, a public campground with electric sites. Reservations matter: Pinnacles books six months out on Recreation.gov, and the resorts fill on wine-country weekends. Below we cover getting here, seasons, costs, and how to build a trip around the valley and the park.
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All Dump Stations Near Soledad
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forestry Department | 0.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Santa Elena Mobile Home Park | 0.2 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nielsen's Trailer Park | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Yanks RV Resort | 7.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Loop C Campground | 10.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pinnacles Campground | 10.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pinnacles Campground Store | 11.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pinnacles Campground Dump Station | 11.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| San Lorenzo Park Campground | 17.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| San Lorenzo County Park | 18.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Forestry Department
0.0 miSanta Elena Mobile Home Park
0.2 miNielsen's Trailer Park
0.6 miYanks RV Resort
7.0 miLoop C Campground
10.8 miPinnacles Campground
10.9 miPinnacles Campground Store
11.1 miPinnacles Campground Dump Station
11.1 miSan Lorenzo Park Campground
17.9 miSan Lorenzo County Park
18.1 miTraveling to Soledad by RV
Soledad is easy to reach because US-101 runs right past it, the main north-south route through the Salinas Valley. From the Bay Area you come down US-101 through Gilroy and Salinas; from Southern California you climb up through Paso Robles and King City. The highway is flat and big-rig friendly here, and fuel, groceries, and propane are available in Soledad, Greenfield, and Salinas. To reach the Pinnacles National Park campground, do not try the CA-146 west entrance road from Soledad, which is narrow and does not connect through the park. Instead use CA-25 from Hollister to the north or King City to the south, both of which handle RVs of any size. For park details and current conditions, check the National Park Service Pinnacles site before you go. Monterey and the coast are about 45 minutes west over the valley, and San Jose is roughly 80 miles north. The nearest commercial airports are Monterey and San Jose.
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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 Soledad, 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 Soledad
Camping costs here span a wide range. The public Pinnacles Campground runs in the mid-$30s per night for a standard site and a bit more for the 36 electric sites, and holders of the America the Beautiful senior or access pass save on the park entrance fee. Laguna Seca Recreation Area, the Monterey County park, charges modest nightly rates for its electric sites. On the private side you pay more for full hookups and resort amenities: Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield typically runs in the $50s to $70s per night depending on season, with weekly and monthly rates that make it a good value for longer stays, and the Salinas/Monterey KOA lands in a similar range.
Wine-country and holiday weekends push both prices and availability, so book ahead. Budget for the Pinnacles park entrance fee on top of camping, and expect fuel and groceries in this part of California to run above the national average. Overall, plan on paying more than an inland desert trip but less than a spot on the Monterey coast right on the water.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Soledad
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Best Time to Visit Soledad by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38°F - 60°F
Crowds: Medium
Mild valley days and chilly nights, with nights near freezing inside Pinnacles; most of the year rain falls now. A fine, quiet season for hiking the park before the heat.
Spring
Mar - May
45°F - 70°F
Crowds: High
Wildflowers peak at Pinnacles in March and April and condor viewing is good; comfortable, popular weekends, so reserve the park campground and resorts early.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52°F - 88°F
Crowds: Medium
Warm valley days with cool, marine-influenced nights, but the interior of Pinnacles regularly tops 100°F; hike at dawn, carry water, and lean on the coast to cool off.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48°F - 80°F
Crowds: Medium
Harvest season along the River Road wine trail, with warm, dry days gradually cooling. One of the best stretches to combine the valley, the wineries, and the park.
Explore the Soledad Area
Here is how we would play Soledad. If you want full hookups and room for a big rig, book Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield and use it as your valley base; it is quiet, flat, and minutes from the River Road wineries. If your priority is Pinnacles itself, reserve the national park campground early, because the 36 electric sites go fast and summer is brutally hot inside the park. Go for the caves and condors in the cooler months. Do not underestimate the heat: the valley floor is pleasant, but the interior of Pinnacles regularly tops 100°F in July and August, so hike at dawn and carry plenty of water.
Bring a flashlight for the talus caves, and check the park site for bat-season cave closures before you count on them. Stock up on groceries and propane in Soledad or Salinas, since the park has only a small store. If you are chasing wine country, the tasting rooms along River Road and CA-146 make an easy day loop from any valley park, and the Soledad Mission is a quick, low-cost stop worth an hour. When the valley heat climbs, remember Monterey Bay is only about 45 minutes west and runs 20 degrees cooler.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Soledad
What are the best RV parks near Soledad, California?
The best base for full hookups is Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield, a few miles south of Soledad on US-101, a private big-rig resort with roughly 110 full-hookup, 30 and 50-amp pull-through sites, a pool, and laundry. North toward Salinas, the private Salinas/Monterey KOA has full-hookup sites within reach of Monterey Bay. For a national park stay, the public Pinnacles Campground inside Pinnacles National Park has 134 sites, 36 with 30-amp electric, reached from the east side off CA-25. Monterey County also runs Laguna Seca Recreation Area, a public campground with electric sites. Which you pick depends on whether you want resort hookups, a park setting, or a coast day-trip base.
Do RV parks near Soledad have full hookups with water, electric, and sewer?
Yes, the private resorts do. Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield offers full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer on 30 and 50-amp service, big enough for rigs up to 100 feet, and the Salinas/Monterey KOA has similar full-hookup sites. The public options are more limited: Pinnacles Campground has 36 sites with 30-amp electric only, with no water or sewer at the individual sites, though it has a dump station near the entrance and a shared water supply. Laguna Seca Recreation Area, the county park, offers electric hookups. If full hookups matter to you, base at one of the private resorts and day-trip the park and coast.
How much does RV camping cost near Soledad?
Costs cover a wide range. The public Pinnacles Campground runs in the mid-$30s per night for a standard site and a little more for the 36 electric sites, plus a park entrance fee, with senior and access pass discounts on the entrance. Laguna Seca Recreation Area charges modest nightly county rates. On the private side, Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield typically runs in the $50s to $70s per night depending on season, and the Salinas/Monterey KOA is similar, both with weekly and monthly rates for longer stays. Wine-country and holiday weekends push prices up, so reserve ahead. Fuel and groceries in this part of California generally run above the national average, so budget for that too.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Soledad?
It depends on where you stay. Pinnacles Campground releases reservations exactly six months in advance on Recreation.gov, and the 36 electric sites and spring wildflower weekends book up fast, so set a reminder and grab them the day they open. The private resorts, Yanks and the Salinas/Monterey KOA, take direct bookings and fill on wine-country, holiday, and race weekends, so one to three months ahead is smart for those dates, especially in spring and fall. Midweek and in the cooler off-season you can often find space with just a few days notice. For any spring visit to see the wildflowers and condors, treat it like a peak booking.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Soledad?
For Pinnacles, the cooler months from October through April are ideal, since the park interior turns brutally hot in summer. Spring, roughly March into April, is the showcase season, with wildflowers, active condors, and comfortable hiking, though it is also the busiest. Fall brings warm, dry days and the wine-country harvest, a great time to combine tasting rooms with the park. Winter is mild in the valley with chilly nights and the year's rain, but quiet and pleasant for hiking. Summer is fine on the valley floor and the coast but too hot for midday hiking inside Pinnacles, so plan dawn starts and afternoons by Monterey Bay.
Can big rigs 35 to 40 feet or longer camp near Soledad?
Yes, and comfortably. Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield is built for big rigs, with pull-through full-hookup sites that take RVs up to 100 feet, easy access straight off flat US-101, and 30 and 50-amp service. The Salinas/Monterey KOA also handles large motorhomes and fifth wheels. Inside Pinnacles National Park the campground can take RVs, but the sites are smaller and there are length considerations, so check the specific site before booking and reach it from CA-25 on the east side rather than the narrow west entrance road. For a big rig, the smart plan is a valley resort as your base with day trips to the park and coast.
Is there free or dispersed camping near Soledad?
Not really in the immediate valley. Soledad sits in a corridor of farms and vineyards, so the camping is at developed parks rather than dispersed sites, and there is no convenient BLM boondocking right around town. If you want free dispersed camping you would head farther into the coastal ranges or south toward the Los Padres National Forest, which is a longer drive. For most RVers, the practical approach near Soledad is to reserve a spot at the national park campground, the county recreation area, or one of the private resorts. If self-contained boondocking is your goal, plan to search the broader Central Coast rather than the Salinas Valley floor.
Is there a dump station near Soledad?
Yes. The private resorts, Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield and the Salinas/Monterey KOA, offer full hookups and dump facilities for guests. Inside Pinnacles National Park, the campground has a dump station near the entrance, though it requires a key from the camp store. Laguna Seca Recreation Area, the Monterey County park, also has facilities for its campers. Because the valley towns of Soledad, Greenfield, and Salinas all sit right on US-101 with fuel and services, dumping and refilling water on a travel day is straightforward. Plan to service your tanks whenever you pass through town, since the national park itself keeps only a small store and shared facilities.
Can I camp at Pinnacles National Park in an RV?
Yes. Pinnacles Campground, on the east side of the park off CA-25, has 134 sites in total, including 36 with 30-amp electric, plus flush toilets, hot showers, a summer swimming pool, a camp store, and a dump station near the entrance. There are no water or sewer hookups at the individual sites, and generators are not allowed at any time, so arrive with full fresh water and a plan for your tanks. Reservations open six months in advance on Recreation.gov and go quickly for the electric sites and spring weekends. Remember to approach from CA-25 out of Hollister or King City, because the west entrance near Soledad does not connect through by road.
How do I get my RV to Pinnacles from Soledad?
This trips up a lot of first-time visitors. Pinnacles National Park has two entrances that do not connect to each other by road inside the park. The west entrance, on CA-146 just east of Soledad, is narrow and leads only to trailheads, with no campground and no through-road. The campground and the RV-friendly access are on the east side, reached from CA-25, about 32 miles south of Hollister or 29 miles northeast of King City. So even though Soledad is only about five miles from the park as the crow flies, driving an RV to the campground means looping around to the east side, which takes roughly an hour and a half. Plan your route accordingly.
What is there to do near Soledad while camping?
Plenty for a small valley town. Pinnacles National Park is the headliner, with volcanic spires, talus caves you can explore with a flashlight, 34 trails, and the endangered California condor soaring overhead. In town, the restored Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad is a quick historic stop. The River Road Wine Trail runs along the Santa Lucia foothills west of US-101, a relaxed day loop of Monterey County tasting rooms. Salinas to the north has Steinbeck history and farm country, and Monterey Bay, with Cannery Row and the aquarium, is only about 45 minutes west when you want the coast. It is an easy hub for mixing a national park, wine, and the ocean.
What is the weather like for RV camping near Soledad?
Soledad has a Mediterranean climate, but the twist is elevation and distance from the coast. On the valley floor, summers are warm, around the mid-80s, with cool, marine-influenced nights, while the interior of Pinnacles regularly tops 100°F in July and August. Winters are mild, with days in the 60s and chilly nights that can dip near freezing inside the park, and most of the roughly 17 inches of annual rain falls December through February. Spring brings wildflowers and comfortable hiking; fall is warm, dry, and quieter. Pack layers for the big day-to-night swings, plan hikes for morning in summer, and remember the coast runs far cooler than the valley.
Is Soledad a good base for Monterey wine country and the coast?
Yes, it is one of the better-value bases in the region. From a valley resort like Yanks in Greenfield, the River Road and Santa Lucia Highlands wineries are right on your doorstep, and you avoid the higher coastal campground prices. Monterey, Carmel, Pacific Grove, and the aquarium are about 45 minutes west over the hills, close enough for easy day trips without paying to park a rig on the water. You also get quick access to Pinnacles National Park to the east. So if you want to sample Monterey County wine, spend days on the coast, and hike a national park from one flat, full-hookup base, Soledad and the surrounding Salinas Valley work well.
What are the best RV parks near Soledad, California?
The best base for full hookups is Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield, a few miles south of Soledad on US-101, a private big-rig resort with roughly 110 full-hookup, 30 and 50-amp pull-through sites, a pool, and laundry. North toward Salinas, the private Salinas/Monterey KOA has full-hookup sites within reach of Monterey Bay. For a national park stay, the public Pinnacles Campground inside Pinnacles National Park has 134 sites, 36 with 30-amp electric, reached from the east side off CA-25. Monterey County also runs Laguna Seca Recreation Area, a public campground with electric sites. Which you pick depends on whether you want resort hookups, a park setting, or a coast day-trip base.
Do RV parks near Soledad have full hookups with water, electric, and sewer?
Yes, the private resorts do. Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield offers full-hookup sites with water, electric, and sewer on 30 and 50-amp service, big enough for rigs up to 100 feet, and the Salinas/Monterey KOA has similar full-hookup sites. The public options are more limited: Pinnacles Campground has 36 sites with 30-amp electric only, with no water or sewer at the individual sites, though it has a dump station near the entrance and a shared water supply. Laguna Seca Recreation Area, the county park, offers electric hookups. If full hookups matter to you, base at one of the private resorts and day-trip the park and coast.
How much does RV camping cost near Soledad?
Costs cover a wide range. The public Pinnacles Campground runs in the mid-$30s per night for a standard site and a little more for the 36 electric sites, plus a park entrance fee, with senior and access pass discounts on the entrance. Laguna Seca Recreation Area charges modest nightly county rates. On the private side, Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield typically runs in the $50s to $70s per night depending on season, and the Salinas/Monterey KOA is similar, both with weekly and monthly rates for longer stays. Wine-country and holiday weekends push prices up, so reserve ahead. Fuel and groceries in this part of California generally run above the national average, so budget for that too.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Soledad?
It depends on where you stay. Pinnacles Campground releases reservations exactly six months in advance on Recreation.gov, and the 36 electric sites and spring wildflower weekends book up fast, so set a reminder and grab them the day they open. The private resorts, Yanks and the Salinas/Monterey KOA, take direct bookings and fill on wine-country, holiday, and race weekends, so one to three months ahead is smart for those dates, especially in spring and fall. Midweek and in the cooler off-season you can often find space with just a few days notice. For any spring visit to see the wildflowers and condors, treat it like a peak booking.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Soledad?
For Pinnacles, the cooler months from October through April are ideal, since the park interior turns brutally hot in summer. Spring, roughly March into April, is the showcase season, with wildflowers, active condors, and comfortable hiking, though it is also the busiest. Fall brings warm, dry days and the wine-country harvest, a great time to combine tasting rooms with the park. Winter is mild in the valley with chilly nights and the year's rain, but quiet and pleasant for hiking. Summer is fine on the valley floor and the coast but too hot for midday hiking inside Pinnacles, so plan dawn starts and afternoons by Monterey Bay.
Can big rigs 35 to 40 feet or longer camp near Soledad?
Yes, and comfortably. Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield is built for big rigs, with pull-through full-hookup sites that take RVs up to 100 feet, easy access straight off flat US-101, and 30 and 50-amp service. The Salinas/Monterey KOA also handles large motorhomes and fifth wheels. Inside Pinnacles National Park the campground can take RVs, but the sites are smaller and there are length considerations, so check the specific site before booking and reach it from CA-25 on the east side rather than the narrow west entrance road. For a big rig, the smart plan is a valley resort as your base with day trips to the park and coast.
Is there free or dispersed camping near Soledad?
Not really in the immediate valley. Soledad sits in a corridor of farms and vineyards, so the camping is at developed parks rather than dispersed sites, and there is no convenient BLM boondocking right around town. If you want free dispersed camping you would head farther into the coastal ranges or south toward the Los Padres National Forest, which is a longer drive. For most RVers, the practical approach near Soledad is to reserve a spot at the national park campground, the county recreation area, or one of the private resorts. If self-contained boondocking is your goal, plan to search the broader Central Coast rather than the Salinas Valley floor.
Is there a dump station near Soledad?
Yes. The private resorts, Yanks RV Resort in Greenfield and the Salinas/Monterey KOA, offer full hookups and dump facilities for guests. Inside Pinnacles National Park, the campground has a dump station near the entrance, though it requires a key from the camp store. Laguna Seca Recreation Area, the Monterey County park, also has facilities for its campers. Because the valley towns of Soledad, Greenfield, and Salinas all sit right on US-101 with fuel and services, dumping and refilling water on a travel day is straightforward. Plan to service your tanks whenever you pass through town, since the national park itself keeps only a small store and shared facilities.
Can I camp at Pinnacles National Park in an RV?
Yes. Pinnacles Campground, on the east side of the park off CA-25, has 134 sites in total, including 36 with 30-amp electric, plus flush toilets, hot showers, a summer swimming pool, a camp store, and a dump station near the entrance. There are no water or sewer hookups at the individual sites, and generators are not allowed at any time, so arrive with full fresh water and a plan for your tanks. Reservations open six months in advance on Recreation.gov and go quickly for the electric sites and spring weekends. Remember to approach from CA-25 out of Hollister or King City, because the west entrance near Soledad does not connect through by road.
How do I get my RV to Pinnacles from Soledad?
This trips up a lot of first-time visitors. Pinnacles National Park has two entrances that do not connect to each other by road inside the park. The west entrance, on CA-146 just east of Soledad, is narrow and leads only to trailheads, with no campground and no through-road. The campground and the RV-friendly access are on the east side, reached from CA-25, about 32 miles south of Hollister or 29 miles northeast of King City. So even though Soledad is only about five miles from the park as the crow flies, driving an RV to the campground means looping around to the east side, which takes roughly an hour and a half. Plan your route accordingly.
What is there to do near Soledad while camping?
Plenty for a small valley town. Pinnacles National Park is the headliner, with volcanic spires, talus caves you can explore with a flashlight, 34 trails, and the endangered California condor soaring overhead. In town, the restored Mission Nuestra Señora de la Soledad is a quick historic stop. The River Road Wine Trail runs along the Santa Lucia foothills west of US-101, a relaxed day loop of Monterey County tasting rooms. Salinas to the north has Steinbeck history and farm country, and Monterey Bay, with Cannery Row and the aquarium, is only about 45 minutes west when you want the coast. It is an easy hub for mixing a national park, wine, and the ocean.
What is the weather like for RV camping near Soledad?
Soledad has a Mediterranean climate, but the twist is elevation and distance from the coast. On the valley floor, summers are warm, around the mid-80s, with cool, marine-influenced nights, while the interior of Pinnacles regularly tops 100°F in July and August. Winters are mild, with days in the 60s and chilly nights that can dip near freezing inside the park, and most of the roughly 17 inches of annual rain falls December through February. Spring brings wildflowers and comfortable hiking; fall is warm, dry, and quieter. Pack layers for the big day-to-night swings, plan hikes for morning in summer, and remember the coast runs far cooler than the valley.
Is Soledad a good base for Monterey wine country and the coast?
Yes, it is one of the better-value bases in the region. From a valley resort like Yanks in Greenfield, the River Road and Santa Lucia Highlands wineries are right on your doorstep, and you avoid the higher coastal campground prices. Monterey, Carmel, Pacific Grove, and the aquarium are about 45 minutes west over the hills, close enough for easy day trips without paying to park a rig on the water. You also get quick access to Pinnacles National Park to the east. So if you want to sample Monterey County wine, spend days on the coast, and hike a national park from one flat, full-hookup base, Soledad and the surrounding Salinas Valley work well.
Are there free dump stations in Soledad?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Soledad.






