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RV Dump Stations In Glenwood Springs, Colorado

39.5505° N, 107.3248° W

Quick Overview

Glenwood Springs is a mountain resort town on I-70 where the Colorado River meets the Roaring Fork, famous for its hot springs and its dramatic canyon, and it sits at about 5,760 feet. For emptying your tanks, the picture is simple: this is private-park country along the river. There is no public dump-station scene, because all the public land around town is White River National Forest, where the campgrounds have vault toilets, no hookups, and no waste disposal at all. So the plan is to book a full-hookup private park and dump where you are parked, or use a park's on-site dump station.

On the private side, your full-hookup options run along the river. Glenwood Canyon Resort has about 90 RV sites riverside in the canyon with 30 and 50 amp service, sewer, and an on-site dump station; Ami's Acres Campground, family owned since 1972, has 44 full-hookup sites with extra-long pull-throughs minutes from downtown; and The Hideout at Glenwood Springs offers full hookups on a creekside setting bordering the national forest, though it is back-in only. About 17 miles west near Silt, the Colorado River KOA Holiday at I-70 Exit 97 has full hookups and big-rig pull-throughs. On the public side, the surrounding White River National Forest offers developed and dispersed boondocking, but with no dump anywhere, you camp self-contained and empty tanks at a private park afterward.

Below we cover where to dump, where to fill fresh water, how to handle the no-hookup forest sites, how to deal with freezing nights at this elevation, and how to route a big rig through Glenwood Canyon. The short version is that the full-hookup river parks make tank chores easy, but they book months ahead for summer, so reserve early and plan your dump and water stops around them.

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Traveling to Glenwood Springs by RV

Getting an RV to Glenwood Springs means I-70, which threads east-west through Glenwood Canyon with a low truck speed limit, while CO-82 climbs south up the Roaring Fork Valley toward Aspen. The town sits between Grand Junction, about 90 miles west, and the Vail and Eagle area, about 60 miles east, with Eagle County Airport (EGE) the nearest. The full-hookup river parks line this corridor: Glenwood Canyon Resort in the canyon itself, Ami's Acres and The Hideout near downtown, and the Colorado River KOA about 17 miles west near Silt at Exit 97. The big-rig parks have pull-throughs that handle 40-foot rigs, though The Hideout is back-in only with some sites near 26 feet, so check length there. Watch the mountain grades and weather over the passes, and remember Glenwood Canyon on I-70 can close for rockfall, fire, or snow, so check CDOT before a tight schedule. Handle propane, fuel, and groceries in town before heading into the forest, where services disappear.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Glenwood Springs, Colorado, 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 Glenwood Springs

Dumping itself is a small cost in Glenwood Springs; the campsite is the main expense, and rates here run higher than an average town because this is a hot springs resort destination. Full-hookup stays at Glenwood Canyon Resort and the riverside KOA sit in the upper price band as resort-style parks, while Ami's Acres and The Hideout are a bit more moderate, and all of them include dump access in the nightly rate. Non-guest dump fees, where a park offers them, generally run in the ten to twenty dollar range, so call ahead. The White River National Forest is the budget camping option, with cheap developed sites and free dispersed boondocking, but it has no dump at all, so factor in a paid dump stop at a private river park when you camp out there. Summer weekends carry the highest demand and the parks book months ahead.

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Best Time to Visit Glenwood Springs by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

15F - 39F

Crowds: Low

Cold with snow at this 5,760-foot elevation, and hard freezes are normal. The forest campgrounds are closed, so only the year-round private parks operate, and their sewer lines or dump stations can be the one place to empty tanks. Carry RV antifreeze, keep your sewer hose drained, and dump midday when temperatures rise above freezing.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

33F - 60F

Crowds: Low

Variable and still chilly, with freezing nights well into May at elevation. The private river parks reopen and White River National Forest campgrounds open from mid-May as snow clears. High water makes for big rafting, and dumping is easy once the parks are back online, though pack for cold mornings.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

54F - 88F

Crowds: High

Hot springs and rafting season, and the riverside private parks book months ahead, especially weekends. This is the only time the forest campgrounds are reliably open, but none of them have dump stations, so plan your tank stops around the full-hookup private parks along the Colorado River.

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Fall

Sep - Oct

36F - 66F

Crowds: Medium

Aspen color and crisp nights, the best shoulder value of the year. Forest campgrounds begin closing as the weather turns, so the full-hookup private parks become the dependable dump option again. Nights drop below freezing by late fall, so watch your hose and dump in the warmer afternoon.

Explore the Glenwood Springs Area

  • The full-hookup river parks (Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, The Hideout, Colorado River KOA) have sewer, so guests dump at their sites; Glenwood Canyon Resort also has an on-site dump station.
  • White River National Forest sites have no hookups and no dump; arrive self-contained and dump at a private river park afterward.
  • Reserve the riverside private parks months ahead for summer weekends; midweek and shoulder season are far easier.
  • At 5,760 feet, nights freeze in spring, fall, and winter; carry RV antifreeze, drain your sewer hose, and dump in the warmer afternoon.
  • Approach on I-70 through Glenwood Canyon (low truck speed limit) or CO-82 from the Aspen side; check CDOT for canyon closures.
  • The Colorado River KOA near Silt, 17 miles west, is your full-hookup fallback when the in-town parks fill.
  • Fill fresh water and stock propane in town before boondocking in the forest, where there is no water or service.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Glenwood Springs

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Glenwood Springs, Colorado?

Your most reliable options are the full-hookup private parks along the Colorado River. Glenwood Canyon Resort sits riverside in Glenwood Canyon with 30 and 50 amp full hookups and an on-site dump station, Ami's Acres Campground just minutes from downtown has 44 full-hookup sites with sewer, and The Hideout at Glenwood Springs offers full hookups on a creekside setting. About 17 miles west toward Silt, the Colorado River KOA Holiday at I-70 Exit 97 has full hookups too. The surrounding White River National Forest campgrounds have no hookups and no dump, so for tank chores you want one of these private parks where you simply empty at your site.

Is there a free or public dump station in Glenwood Springs?

Free standalone dump stations are scarce here. The public-land camping around Glenwood Springs is all in the White River National Forest, and those developed and dispersed sites have vault toilets, no hookups, and no dump facilities, so they cannot help you empty tanks. That leaves the private full-hookup parks as the practical answer, where dumping is included if you are staying and sometimes available to non-guests for a fee if you call ahead. Because this is a mountain resort town built on hot springs rather than a place with public RV infrastructure, plan to dump at a private river park rather than hunting for a free roadside station.

Can I dump while camping in the White River National Forest?

No, the forest campgrounds have no dump stations. White River National Forest offers developed campgrounds and free dispersed boondocking around Glenwood Springs, but every one of them has vault toilets, no hookups, and no waste disposal, and many have length limits that keep big rigs out. You camp self-contained out there, so arrive with empty tanks and full fresh water, then dump afterward at a full-hookup private park like Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, or The Hideout. Never dump on the ground or into a vault toilet in the forest, which is illegal and damages the watershed feeding the Colorado River. Plan your tank strategy around the lack of any forest dump.

Which parks have full hookups with sewer in Glenwood Springs?

Several private parks do. Glenwood Canyon Resort has roughly 90 RV sites riverside in the canyon with 30 and 50 amp full hookups, sewer, and an on-site dump station, plus big-rig pull-throughs. Ami's Acres Campground, family owned since 1972, has 44 full-hookup sites with extra-long pull-throughs minutes from downtown. The Hideout at Glenwood Springs has 42 full-hookup RV sites in a creekside setting bordering the national forest, though access is back-in only. The Colorado River KOA Holiday near Silt, about 17 miles west, has full hookups with long pull-throughs as well. With sewer at the site, you dump right where you are parked.

Can big rigs reach the dump stations in Glenwood Springs?

Yes, with a little route awareness. The main approach is I-70, which threads through Glenwood Canyon east of town with a low truck speed limit, while CO-82 climbs south up the Roaring Fork Valley toward Aspen. Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, and the KOA all have big-rig full-hookup pull-throughs that handle 40-foot rigs easily. The Hideout is the exception, being back-in only with some sites capped near 26 feet, so check your length when booking there. Watch the grades and mountain weather over the passes, and remember Glenwood Canyon on I-70 can close for rockfall, fire, or snow, so check CDOT before a tight schedule.

Where can I fill fresh water near Glenwood Springs?

Fill at the full-hookup private parks. Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, The Hideout, and the Colorado River KOA all have potable water at their sites, so top off your fresh tank there before heading anywhere without hookups. This matters most if you are camping in the White River National Forest, where developed and dispersed sites have no water at all and you must bring your own. Downtown Glenwood Springs has full groceries and services, so combine a water fill with supplies and a dump stop. At this elevation the dry mountain air and active days of rafting and hiking mean you go through water quickly, so keep the tank topped.

Where do I get propane and RV services in Glenwood Springs?

Propane, fuel, groceries, and RV supplies are all available in Glenwood Springs, which is a well-serviced resort town and the commercial hub for this stretch of I-70 between Grand Junction and the Vail area. The full-hookup parks can point you to the nearest propane dealer. Stock up before heading into the White River National Forest to boondock, where there are no services at all. Propane matters here year-round because the elevation brings cold nights even in summer and hard freezes in winter, so you will run the furnace more than in a low desert town. Combine propane, fuel, water, and a dump stop into one trip through town to save driving in the canyon.

Do I need to worry about freezing at the dump stations?

Yes, in the colder months. Glenwood Springs sits at about 5,760 feet, so nights drop below freezing well into spring and again in fall, and winter brings hard freezes. The forest campgrounds close for the season, leaving only the year-round private parks operating, and that is where you dump. Carry RV antifreeze for your tanks and pipes, keep your sewer hose drained between uses so it does not freeze solid, and dump in the warmer afternoon rather than a frozen morning. Summer is the only stretch with reliably mild nights. The hot springs stay open all winter, so cold-weather RVing here is popular despite the freeze, just plan your tank chores around the temperatures.

Should I dump before camping in Glenwood Canyon or the forest?

Yes, start with empty tanks. If you are camping at a no-hookup forest site or boondocking on White River National Forest land, you are fully self-contained with no dump available out there, so arrive empty and with full fresh water. Even the scenic riverside spots in Glenwood Canyon, if they are forest sites, have no waste facilities. Dump and refill afterward at a full-hookup private park such as Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, or The Hideout, all minutes from the canyon and downtown. If instead you are staying at one of those private parks with sewer, you simply dump at your site. Plan around the fact that public land here offers zero dump infrastructure.

How much does it cost to dump in Glenwood Springs?

If you are staying at a full-hookup private park or using a park's on-site dump station as a guest, dumping is included in your nightly rate. Glenwood Canyon Resort and the riverside KOA sit in the higher price band as resort-style parks, while Ami's Acres and The Hideout run a bit more moderate, and the private parks here cost more than an average campground because this is a hot springs resort destination. Non-guest dump fees, where a park offers them, typically run in the ten to twenty dollar range, so call ahead. The forest is the cheap camping option, but it has no dump, so budget a paid dump stop at a private river park when you boondock.

When is Glenwood Springs busiest for RV dumping and services?

Summer is the clear peak, from June through August, driven by the hot springs and Colorado River rafting season. The riverside private parks book months ahead, especially weekends, so their dump stations and full-hookup sites are in heavy demand and you should reserve early. Fall brings a moderate second wave for aspen color with better value, though forest sites start closing. Spring is quiet as parks reopen and snow clears from the forest by mid-May, and winter is the slowest, with only year-round parks operating but the hot springs still open. Plan dump and water stops in advance for any summer weekend rather than assuming open space.

Are there RV parks near Glenwood Springs if the in-town ones are full?

Yes. The Colorado River KOA Holiday sits at I-70 Exit 97 near Silt, about 17 miles west of Glenwood Springs, on a riverside 7-acre property with full hookups, long big-rig pull-throughs, and a pool, making it a solid fallback when the in-town parks fill for a summer weekend. It is an easy I-70 hop back to the hot springs and downtown. East of town the options thin out quickly into the canyon and toward the high passes, so west toward Silt and Rifle is your better bet for overflow. For a fuller rundown of where to stay around town, see our companion guide to RV parks in Glenwood Springs.

What is the best dumping plan for a Glenwood Springs trip?

Base where you have full hookups and dump at your site. For the hot springs and downtown, book Glenwood Canyon Resort riverside in the canyon, Ami's Acres minutes from town, or The Hideout on the creek, all with full hookups and sewer. If those fill, the Colorado River KOA near Silt is your full-hookup fallback 17 miles west. If you boondock in the White River National Forest, arrive self-contained and dump afterward at one of those private parks, since the forest has no dump. Stock propane, fuel, water, and groceries in town, watch for freezing nights in spring, fall, and winter, and reserve early for any summer weekend. Check CDOT for Glenwood Canyon closures before you roll.

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Glenwood Springs, Colorado?

Your most reliable options are the full-hookup private parks along the Colorado River. Glenwood Canyon Resort sits riverside in Glenwood Canyon with 30 and 50 amp full hookups and an on-site dump station, Ami's Acres Campground just minutes from downtown has 44 full-hookup sites with sewer, and The Hideout at Glenwood Springs offers full hookups on a creekside setting. About 17 miles west toward Silt, the Colorado River KOA Holiday at I-70 Exit 97 has full hookups too. The surrounding White River National Forest campgrounds have no hookups and no dump, so for tank chores you want one of these private parks where you simply empty at your site.

Is there a free or public dump station in Glenwood Springs?

Free standalone dump stations are scarce here. The public-land camping around Glenwood Springs is all in the White River National Forest, and those developed and dispersed sites have vault toilets, no hookups, and no dump facilities, so they cannot help you empty tanks. That leaves the private full-hookup parks as the practical answer, where dumping is included if you are staying and sometimes available to non-guests for a fee if you call ahead. Because this is a mountain resort town built on hot springs rather than a place with public RV infrastructure, plan to dump at a private river park rather than hunting for a free roadside station.

Can I dump while camping in the White River National Forest?

No, the forest campgrounds have no dump stations. White River National Forest offers developed campgrounds and free dispersed boondocking around Glenwood Springs, but every one of them has vault toilets, no hookups, and no waste disposal, and many have length limits that keep big rigs out. You camp self-contained out there, so arrive with empty tanks and full fresh water, then dump afterward at a full-hookup private park like Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, or The Hideout. Never dump on the ground or into a vault toilet in the forest, which is illegal and damages the watershed feeding the Colorado River. Plan your tank strategy around the lack of any forest dump.

Which parks have full hookups with sewer in Glenwood Springs?

Several private parks do. Glenwood Canyon Resort has roughly 90 RV sites riverside in the canyon with 30 and 50 amp full hookups, sewer, and an on-site dump station, plus big-rig pull-throughs. Ami's Acres Campground, family owned since 1972, has 44 full-hookup sites with extra-long pull-throughs minutes from downtown. The Hideout at Glenwood Springs has 42 full-hookup RV sites in a creekside setting bordering the national forest, though access is back-in only. The Colorado River KOA Holiday near Silt, about 17 miles west, has full hookups with long pull-throughs as well. With sewer at the site, you dump right where you are parked.

Can big rigs reach the dump stations in Glenwood Springs?

Yes, with a little route awareness. The main approach is I-70, which threads through Glenwood Canyon east of town with a low truck speed limit, while CO-82 climbs south up the Roaring Fork Valley toward Aspen. Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, and the KOA all have big-rig full-hookup pull-throughs that handle 40-foot rigs easily. The Hideout is the exception, being back-in only with some sites capped near 26 feet, so check your length when booking there. Watch the grades and mountain weather over the passes, and remember Glenwood Canyon on I-70 can close for rockfall, fire, or snow, so check CDOT before a tight schedule.

Where can I fill fresh water near Glenwood Springs?

Fill at the full-hookup private parks. Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, The Hideout, and the Colorado River KOA all have potable water at their sites, so top off your fresh tank there before heading anywhere without hookups. This matters most if you are camping in the White River National Forest, where developed and dispersed sites have no water at all and you must bring your own. Downtown Glenwood Springs has full groceries and services, so combine a water fill with supplies and a dump stop. At this elevation the dry mountain air and active days of rafting and hiking mean you go through water quickly, so keep the tank topped.

Where do I get propane and RV services in Glenwood Springs?

Propane, fuel, groceries, and RV supplies are all available in Glenwood Springs, which is a well-serviced resort town and the commercial hub for this stretch of I-70 between Grand Junction and the Vail area. The full-hookup parks can point you to the nearest propane dealer. Stock up before heading into the White River National Forest to boondock, where there are no services at all. Propane matters here year-round because the elevation brings cold nights even in summer and hard freezes in winter, so you will run the furnace more than in a low desert town. Combine propane, fuel, water, and a dump stop into one trip through town to save driving in the canyon.

Do I need to worry about freezing at the dump stations?

Yes, in the colder months. Glenwood Springs sits at about 5,760 feet, so nights drop below freezing well into spring and again in fall, and winter brings hard freezes. The forest campgrounds close for the season, leaving only the year-round private parks operating, and that is where you dump. Carry RV antifreeze for your tanks and pipes, keep your sewer hose drained between uses so it does not freeze solid, and dump in the warmer afternoon rather than a frozen morning. Summer is the only stretch with reliably mild nights. The hot springs stay open all winter, so cold-weather RVing here is popular despite the freeze, just plan your tank chores around the temperatures.

Should I dump before camping in Glenwood Canyon or the forest?

Yes, start with empty tanks. If you are camping at a no-hookup forest site or boondocking on White River National Forest land, you are fully self-contained with no dump available out there, so arrive empty and with full fresh water. Even the scenic riverside spots in Glenwood Canyon, if they are forest sites, have no waste facilities. Dump and refill afterward at a full-hookup private park such as Glenwood Canyon Resort, Ami's Acres, or The Hideout, all minutes from the canyon and downtown. If instead you are staying at one of those private parks with sewer, you simply dump at your site. Plan around the fact that public land here offers zero dump infrastructure.

How much does it cost to dump in Glenwood Springs?

If you are staying at a full-hookup private park or using a park's on-site dump station as a guest, dumping is included in your nightly rate. Glenwood Canyon Resort and the riverside KOA sit in the higher price band as resort-style parks, while Ami's Acres and The Hideout run a bit more moderate, and the private parks here cost more than an average campground because this is a hot springs resort destination. Non-guest dump fees, where a park offers them, typically run in the ten to twenty dollar range, so call ahead. The forest is the cheap camping option, but it has no dump, so budget a paid dump stop at a private river park when you boondock.

When is Glenwood Springs busiest for RV dumping and services?

Summer is the clear peak, from June through August, driven by the hot springs and Colorado River rafting season. The riverside private parks book months ahead, especially weekends, so their dump stations and full-hookup sites are in heavy demand and you should reserve early. Fall brings a moderate second wave for aspen color with better value, though forest sites start closing. Spring is quiet as parks reopen and snow clears from the forest by mid-May, and winter is the slowest, with only year-round parks operating but the hot springs still open. Plan dump and water stops in advance for any summer weekend rather than assuming open space.

Are there RV parks near Glenwood Springs if the in-town ones are full?

Yes. The Colorado River KOA Holiday sits at I-70 Exit 97 near Silt, about 17 miles west of Glenwood Springs, on a riverside 7-acre property with full hookups, long big-rig pull-throughs, and a pool, making it a solid fallback when the in-town parks fill for a summer weekend. It is an easy I-70 hop back to the hot springs and downtown. East of town the options thin out quickly into the canyon and toward the high passes, so west toward Silt and Rifle is your better bet for overflow. For a fuller rundown of where to stay around town, see our companion guide to RV parks in Glenwood Springs.

What is the best dumping plan for a Glenwood Springs trip?

Base where you have full hookups and dump at your site. For the hot springs and downtown, book Glenwood Canyon Resort riverside in the canyon, Ami's Acres minutes from town, or The Hideout on the creek, all with full hookups and sewer. If those fill, the Colorado River KOA near Silt is your full-hookup fallback 17 miles west. If you boondock in the White River National Forest, arrive self-contained and dump afterward at one of those private parks, since the forest has no dump. Stock propane, fuel, water, and groceries in town, watch for freezing nights in spring, fall, and winter, and reserve early for any summer weekend. Check CDOT for Glenwood Canyon closures before you roll.