RV Parks In Clayton, Delaware
39.2907° N, 75.6344° W
Quick Overview
Clayton sits in central Delaware just west of Smyrna, a small Kent County town within easy reach of the state capital at Dover and the tidal marshes of Delaware Bay. It's flat, farm-country RVing here, which makes towing a big rig into the area about as easy as it gets on the East Coast, and it puts you in the middle of the state with the beaches, the bay, and Wilmington all inside a short drive. For RVers, the camping around Clayton splits into a genuine public state-park option close to town and a family-style private resort a bit farther south, so you can pick lakeside quiet or a full-hookup pad with pools.
The closest real camping is Killens Pond State Park, about 13 miles south near Felton, run by Delaware State Parks. It's a year-round campground of 59 wooded sites with water and electric hookups, a handful of full-hookup sites, free hot showers, and a central dump station, wrapped around a 66-acre millpond with boat rentals, disc golf, trails, and a seasonal summer waterpark. You reserve through the Delaware State Parks system on ReserveAmerica, and it's smart to book summer and fall weekends months ahead. This is our pick for anyone who wants a quiet, tree-shaded base near Clayton at a low nightly rate.
For full hookups and resort comforts, the Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford, roughly 25 miles south, is the family choice, with full-hookup RV sites on 30 and 50-amp service, water, sewer, pools, a water play area, mini golf, and organized activities, plus cabins if you're traveling with folks who don't have a rig. You book those private sites direct. Big rigs do fine at the private resort and on the wide state highways, and the state-park loops handle mid-size RVs comfortably, though as always you'll want to confirm your length and site type when you reserve. Whether you want an electric site by the millpond or a full-hookup family resort with a pool, the Clayton area covers the range. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Clayton.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Clayton
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Gear for Your Trip to Clayton
All Dump Stations Near Clayton
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clayton Court Mobile Home Comm | 0.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Parkview RV Center | 2.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Maples Mobile Home Park | 5.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Forest Grove Mobile Home Park | 8.7 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Firefly | 9.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Villagebrook Trailer Park | 12.3 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Southwood Acres | 12.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Whispering Pines Trailer Park | 15.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dover Afb Famcamp | 15.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pine Springs Mobile Home Park | 16.0 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
Clayton Court Mobile Home Comm
0.5 miParkview RV Center
2.3 miTwin Maples Mobile Home Park
5.1 miForest Grove Mobile Home Park
8.7 miCamping Firefly
9.4 miVillagebrook Trailer Park
12.3 miSouthwood Acres
12.9 miWhispering Pines Trailer Park
15.1 miDover Afb Famcamp
15.5 miPine Springs Mobile Home Park
16.0 miTraveling to Clayton by RV
Getting to the Clayton area with a big rig is straightforward, which is part of the appeal. Central Delaware is flat, and the two main north-south routes, US-13 (the DuPont Highway) and the SR-1 toll road, are wide, fast, and big-rig-friendly, running Wilmington and I-95 in the north down through Dover and on toward the beaches. Clayton itself sits on SR-300 and SR-6 just west of Smyrna, an easy hop off US-13. From I-95 near Wilmington it's roughly 40 miles south to the Clayton and Smyrna area, and Dover is about 20 miles farther down the highway.
Once you're in the area, the drive to the campgrounds is simple. Killens Pond is a clear shot south on US-13 to Felton, and the Milford resort is farther down the same corridor, all on flat, open roads with no mountain grades or tight switchbacks to worry about. Fuel, propane, and groceries are easy to find along US-13 through Smyrna and Dover, and RV service is available in the Dover metro and up toward Wilmington. If you're flying in to rent, both Philadelphia and Baltimore airports are within about a 90-minute drive, which makes central Delaware a practical fly-and-drive base for exploring the mid-Atlantic coast.
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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 Clayton, Delaware, 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 Clayton
The Clayton area is an affordable place to camp, especially if you lean on the state park. Killens Pond State Park is the budget pick, with water-and-electric sites at low nightly state-park rates and a few full-hookup sites for a little more, and because it's open year-round you can stretch a trip into the shoulder seasons when rates and crowds both drop. Delaware state parks are known for clean bathhouses and free hot showers, so you get real value for the price. The private Milford Jellystone resort runs higher, sitting in the moderate-to-premium range for a nightly full-hookup site, with the top rates on summer weekends when the pools and activities are in full swing. Weekly and seasonal discounts at the private resort can lower the effective nightly cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply by the millpond in spring or fall, or pay mid-range to premium for full hookups and family amenities in peak summer, and grocery and fuel prices along the US-13 corridor stay reasonable.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Clayton
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Best Time to Visit Clayton by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
28F - 45F
Crowds: Low
Cold and quiet across central Delaware; Killens Pond stays open year-round while the private family resorts close, so plan a winter-ready site and watch for freezing nights.
Spring
Mar - May
44F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Mild and green, a great shoulder window; sites are easier to get midweek before the summer waterpark crowd arrives at Killens Pond.
Summer
Jun - Aug
66F - 86F
Crowds: High
Warm, humid, and busiest, with the Killens Pond waterpark open and beach day-trips in play; reserve state-park sites months ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
45F - 68F
Crowds: High
Crisp and comfortable with terrific birding at Bombay Hook as migration peaks; book fall weekends early at Killens Pond.
Explore the Clayton Area
Here's how we'd plan the Clayton area. Base at Killens Pond State Park for a real central-Delaware camping spot with millpond quiet and shade, then use it as a hub to day-trip 20 miles south to Dover for the state capital sights, the Air Mobility Command Museum, and Dover Motor Speedway, and about 10 miles east to Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge for its 12-mile wildlife drive and observation towers. Reserve your Killens Pond site months ahead for summer and fall weekends through the Delaware State Parks system, because the waterpark and cooler-weather color pull crowds and the good sites go first. If you want full hookups, pools, and a family-resort feel, book the Milford Jellystone resort direct instead, and plan a beach day since the Delaware Bay and ocean beaches are within an easy drive. Time a fall trip to Bombay Hook for the shorebird and snow-goose migration, one of the mid-Atlantic's best birding shows. And since this is flat, open country, it's forgiving for newer big-rig drivers who want to build confidence without mountain roads.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Clayton
What are the best RV parks near Clayton, Delaware?
The camping near Clayton splits between a public state park and a private family resort. Killens Pond State Park, about 13 miles south near Felton and run by Delaware State Parks, is the closest real option, with 59 wooded sites offering water and electric hookups, a few full-hookup sites, free hot showers, and a dump station around a 66-acre millpond with a summer waterpark. For full hookups and pools, the Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford, roughly 25 miles south, is the family pick with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites and cabins. Between the state park and the resort, you can camp cheaply by the water or settle into a full-hookup pad with amenities.
Do RV parks near Clayton have full hookups?
Yes, though it depends where you stay. The Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 30 and 50-amp service and deluxe sites. Killens Pond State Park is a bit different: most of its 59 sites have water and electric hookups rather than full sewer at each pad, though it does have a handful of full-hookup sites plus a central dump station and free hot showers. So if full hookups are a must, book the Milford resort or ask for one of the full-hookup sites at Killens Pond. If you're fine with water-and-electric and a dump station on the way out, the state park is a great, affordable choice.
How much does RV camping cost near Clayton, Delaware?
It comes down to public versus private. Killens Pond State Park is the budget option, with water-and-electric sites at low nightly Delaware state-park rates and a few full-hookup sites for a little more, and its year-round season lets you camp in the cheaper, quieter shoulder months. Delaware state parks are known for clean bathhouses and free hot showers, so the value is strong. The private Milford Jellystone resort runs higher, sitting in the moderate-to-premium range for a nightly full-hookup site, with peak rates on summer weekends when the pools and activities are busy. Weekly and seasonal discounts at the private resort can lower the effective cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply by the millpond or pay more for full hookups and family amenities.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Clayton?
For Killens Pond State Park, reserve early. The Delaware State Parks system on ReserveAmerica lets you book up to a year in advance, and summer weekends and fall color weekends fill fast because of the waterpark and comfortable weather, so a couple of months of lead time is wise for those. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and can often be had on short notice. The private Milford Jellystone resort also fills on summer weekends and holiday periods, so book those direct well ahead. If your trip is flexible or falls on a spring or fall weekday, you can usually find a site with little notice at the state park, which is one of the perks of camping here outside the peak windows.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Clayton, Delaware?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots. Spring is mild and green, a quieter window before the summer crowds, with comfortable days in the 60s. Fall is crisp and among the best times to camp, and it lines up with peak bird migration at nearby Bombay Hook, one of the mid-Atlantic's top birding shows. Summer is the busiest season, warm and humid, with the Killens Pond waterpark open and beaches within easy reach, so campgrounds fill on weekends and you'll want reservations. Winter is cold and quiet; Killens Pond stays open year-round while the private resorts wind down, so plan a winter-ready rig and watch for freezing nights. For the best mix of weather and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Clayton, Delaware?
Yes, and this is friendly territory for them. Central Delaware is flat, and the main routes, US-13 and the SR-1 toll road, are wide and big-rig-friendly with no mountain grades or tight switchbacks. The Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford handles big rigs well with 50-amp full-hookup sites and an easy approach. Killens Pond State Park accommodates mid-size and many larger RVs across its loops, though as with any state park you'll want to confirm your length and site type when you reserve, since a few wooded sites are tighter. Because the roads here are flat and open, the Clayton area is also forgiving for newer big-rig drivers who want to build confidence without wrestling mountain roads.
Is there state park camping near Clayton?
Yes. Killens Pond State Park, run by Delaware State Parks about 13 miles south near Felton, is the standout public campground in the Clayton area. It offers 59 wooded sites with water and electric hookups, a handful of full-hookup sites, a central dump station, clean bathhouses with free hot showers, and potable water stations, all wrapped around a 66-acre millpond. The park adds boat rentals, disc golf, trails, and a seasonal summer waterpark, and it stays open year-round. You reserve through the Delaware State Parks system on ReserveAmerica, up to a year ahead, and it's smart to book summer and fall weekends early. For most RVers wanting an affordable, tree-shaded base near Clayton, Killens Pond is the practical public choice.
Are RV parks near Clayton pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Killens Pond State Park allows leashed pets under standard Delaware State Parks rules, and the trails and shoreline around the millpond give dogs plenty of room to walk. The private Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford also welcomes pets, as most private resorts do. Policies on the number of pets, breed, and designated pet areas can vary, especially at the family-focused resort, so it's worth confirming the specifics when you book. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed inside the campground, pick up after them, and never leave them unattended at your site in Delaware's summer heat and humidity, which can climb quickly. With a little planning, the Clayton area is an easy place to camp with dogs.
What is there to do around Clayton while camping?
Plenty for a central-Delaware base. Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge, about 10 miles east near Smyrna, protects 16,000 acres of tidal salt marsh with a 12-mile wildlife drive, observation towers, and some of the best migratory bird watching on the mid-Atlantic flyway. Dover, roughly 20 miles south, is the state capital, with Legislative Hall, the First State Heritage Park, the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover Air Force Base, and Dover Motor Speedway. Killens Pond itself has a summer waterpark, boat rentals, disc golf, and trails. And the Delaware Bay and Atlantic beaches are within an easy drive for a day at the shore. It's a genuinely central spot for mixing marsh, history, and beach days.
Can I camp near Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge?
Yes. Bombay Hook doesn't have its own campground, but Killens Pond State Park makes an excellent base, sitting about 25 miles south with the refuge an easy morning drive away. Bombay Hook, near Smyrna and just east of Clayton, is a 16,000-acre tidal salt marsh on Delaware Bay with a 12-mile auto-tour wildlife drive, seven walking trails, and three observation towers, and it's one of the premier birding destinations on the Atlantic flyway. Time a fall or spring visit for peak shorebird and waterfowl migration, when snow geese and shorebirds gather by the thousands. Set up at Killens Pond, and you can run out to the refuge at dawn for the best light and bird activity, then head back to camp.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clayton, Delaware?
Yes, but your options narrow. Killens Pond State Park is a year-round facility, which makes it the reliable cold-weather choice near Clayton, and off-season rates and crowds both drop, so you'll often have quiet, shaded sites to yourself. The private Milford Jellystone resort is seasonal and generally winds down for the winter, so it's not a cold-months option. Central Delaware winters are cold, with lows around freezing, so if you camp then, come prepared to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around the occasional winter storm. If you want reliable hookups and services through winter, Killens Pond is your spot; for the full-hookup family resort, wait for the spring reopening.
How do I get to the Clayton area RV parks in a big rig?
It's about as easy as East Coast RVing gets. Central Delaware is flat, and the two main north-south routes, US-13 (the DuPont Highway) and the SR-1 toll road, are wide and big-rig-friendly, connecting I-95 near Wilmington in the north down through Dover toward the beaches. Clayton sits on SR-300 and SR-6 just west of Smyrna, an easy hop off US-13. Killens Pond is a clear shot south on US-13 to Felton, and the Milford resort is farther down the same corridor, all on flat, open roads with no grades or tight turns. Fuel, propane, and groceries line US-13 through Smyrna and Dover, and RV service is available in the Dover metro and up toward Wilmington.
Is Clayton a good base for exploring central Delaware by RV?
It's an excellent one. Clayton and neighboring Smyrna sit right in the middle of the state, so from a base at Killens Pond you can reach Dover and the state-capital sights, the marshes of Bombay Hook, and the Delaware Bay and Atlantic beaches all within a short drive, plus Wilmington and I-95 to the north. The flat, open roads and the wide US-13 and SR-1 corridors make getting around simple with any size rig. Camp affordably by the millpond at Killens Pond, or settle into the full-hookup comforts of the Milford Jellystone resort, and you've got a central, low-stress base for mixing history, birding, and beach days across Delaware's midsection. For RVers who want the whole small state within reach, Clayton delivers.
What are the best RV parks near Clayton, Delaware?
The camping near Clayton splits between a public state park and a private family resort. Killens Pond State Park, about 13 miles south near Felton and run by Delaware State Parks, is the closest real option, with 59 wooded sites offering water and electric hookups, a few full-hookup sites, free hot showers, and a dump station around a 66-acre millpond with a summer waterpark. For full hookups and pools, the Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford, roughly 25 miles south, is the family pick with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites and cabins. Between the state park and the resort, you can camp cheaply by the water or settle into a full-hookup pad with amenities.
Do RV parks near Clayton have full hookups?
Yes, though it depends where you stay. The Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 30 and 50-amp service and deluxe sites. Killens Pond State Park is a bit different: most of its 59 sites have water and electric hookups rather than full sewer at each pad, though it does have a handful of full-hookup sites plus a central dump station and free hot showers. So if full hookups are a must, book the Milford resort or ask for one of the full-hookup sites at Killens Pond. If you're fine with water-and-electric and a dump station on the way out, the state park is a great, affordable choice.
How much does RV camping cost near Clayton, Delaware?
It comes down to public versus private. Killens Pond State Park is the budget option, with water-and-electric sites at low nightly Delaware state-park rates and a few full-hookup sites for a little more, and its year-round season lets you camp in the cheaper, quieter shoulder months. Delaware state parks are known for clean bathhouses and free hot showers, so the value is strong. The private Milford Jellystone resort runs higher, sitting in the moderate-to-premium range for a nightly full-hookup site, with peak rates on summer weekends when the pools and activities are busy. Weekly and seasonal discounts at the private resort can lower the effective cost for longer stays. Overall you can camp cheaply by the millpond or pay more for full hookups and family amenities.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Clayton?
For Killens Pond State Park, reserve early. The Delaware State Parks system on ReserveAmerica lets you book up to a year in advance, and summer weekends and fall color weekends fill fast because of the waterpark and comfortable weather, so a couple of months of lead time is wise for those. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and can often be had on short notice. The private Milford Jellystone resort also fills on summer weekends and holiday periods, so book those direct well ahead. If your trip is flexible or falls on a spring or fall weekday, you can usually find a site with little notice at the state park, which is one of the perks of camping here outside the peak windows.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Clayton, Delaware?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots. Spring is mild and green, a quieter window before the summer crowds, with comfortable days in the 60s. Fall is crisp and among the best times to camp, and it lines up with peak bird migration at nearby Bombay Hook, one of the mid-Atlantic's top birding shows. Summer is the busiest season, warm and humid, with the Killens Pond waterpark open and beaches within easy reach, so campgrounds fill on weekends and you'll want reservations. Winter is cold and quiet; Killens Pond stays open year-round while the private resorts wind down, so plan a winter-ready rig and watch for freezing nights. For the best mix of weather and availability, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs camp near Clayton, Delaware?
Yes, and this is friendly territory for them. Central Delaware is flat, and the main routes, US-13 and the SR-1 toll road, are wide and big-rig-friendly with no mountain grades or tight switchbacks. The Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford handles big rigs well with 50-amp full-hookup sites and an easy approach. Killens Pond State Park accommodates mid-size and many larger RVs across its loops, though as with any state park you'll want to confirm your length and site type when you reserve, since a few wooded sites are tighter. Because the roads here are flat and open, the Clayton area is also forgiving for newer big-rig drivers who want to build confidence without wrestling mountain roads.
Is there state park camping near Clayton?
Yes. Killens Pond State Park, run by Delaware State Parks about 13 miles south near Felton, is the standout public campground in the Clayton area. It offers 59 wooded sites with water and electric hookups, a handful of full-hookup sites, a central dump station, clean bathhouses with free hot showers, and potable water stations, all wrapped around a 66-acre millpond. The park adds boat rentals, disc golf, trails, and a seasonal summer waterpark, and it stays open year-round. You reserve through the Delaware State Parks system on ReserveAmerica, up to a year ahead, and it's smart to book summer and fall weekends early. For most RVers wanting an affordable, tree-shaded base near Clayton, Killens Pond is the practical public choice.
Are RV parks near Clayton pet-friendly?
Generally yes. Killens Pond State Park allows leashed pets under standard Delaware State Parks rules, and the trails and shoreline around the millpond give dogs plenty of room to walk. The private Delaware Beaches Jellystone Park Camp-Resort in Milford also welcomes pets, as most private resorts do. Policies on the number of pets, breed, and designated pet areas can vary, especially at the family-focused resort, so it's worth confirming the specifics when you book. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed inside the campground, pick up after them, and never leave them unattended at your site in Delaware's summer heat and humidity, which can climb quickly. With a little planning, the Clayton area is an easy place to camp with dogs.
What is there to do around Clayton while camping?
Plenty for a central-Delaware base. Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge, about 10 miles east near Smyrna, protects 16,000 acres of tidal salt marsh with a 12-mile wildlife drive, observation towers, and some of the best migratory bird watching on the mid-Atlantic flyway. Dover, roughly 20 miles south, is the state capital, with Legislative Hall, the First State Heritage Park, the Air Mobility Command Museum at Dover Air Force Base, and Dover Motor Speedway. Killens Pond itself has a summer waterpark, boat rentals, disc golf, and trails. And the Delaware Bay and Atlantic beaches are within an easy drive for a day at the shore. It's a genuinely central spot for mixing marsh, history, and beach days.
Can I camp near Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge?
Yes. Bombay Hook doesn't have its own campground, but Killens Pond State Park makes an excellent base, sitting about 25 miles south with the refuge an easy morning drive away. Bombay Hook, near Smyrna and just east of Clayton, is a 16,000-acre tidal salt marsh on Delaware Bay with a 12-mile auto-tour wildlife drive, seven walking trails, and three observation towers, and it's one of the premier birding destinations on the Atlantic flyway. Time a fall or spring visit for peak shorebird and waterfowl migration, when snow geese and shorebirds gather by the thousands. Set up at Killens Pond, and you can run out to the refuge at dawn for the best light and bird activity, then head back to camp.
Is winter RV camping possible near Clayton, Delaware?
Yes, but your options narrow. Killens Pond State Park is a year-round facility, which makes it the reliable cold-weather choice near Clayton, and off-season rates and crowds both drop, so you'll often have quiet, shaded sites to yourself. The private Milford Jellystone resort is seasonal and generally winds down for the winter, so it's not a cold-months option. Central Delaware winters are cold, with lows around freezing, so if you camp then, come prepared to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose and plan travel around the occasional winter storm. If you want reliable hookups and services through winter, Killens Pond is your spot; for the full-hookup family resort, wait for the spring reopening.
How do I get to the Clayton area RV parks in a big rig?
It's about as easy as East Coast RVing gets. Central Delaware is flat, and the two main north-south routes, US-13 (the DuPont Highway) and the SR-1 toll road, are wide and big-rig-friendly, connecting I-95 near Wilmington in the north down through Dover toward the beaches. Clayton sits on SR-300 and SR-6 just west of Smyrna, an easy hop off US-13. Killens Pond is a clear shot south on US-13 to Felton, and the Milford resort is farther down the same corridor, all on flat, open roads with no grades or tight turns. Fuel, propane, and groceries line US-13 through Smyrna and Dover, and RV service is available in the Dover metro and up toward Wilmington.
Is Clayton a good base for exploring central Delaware by RV?
It's an excellent one. Clayton and neighboring Smyrna sit right in the middle of the state, so from a base at Killens Pond you can reach Dover and the state-capital sights, the marshes of Bombay Hook, and the Delaware Bay and Atlantic beaches all within a short drive, plus Wilmington and I-95 to the north. The flat, open roads and the wide US-13 and SR-1 corridors make getting around simple with any size rig. Camp affordably by the millpond at Killens Pond, or settle into the full-hookup comforts of the Milford Jellystone resort, and you've got a central, low-stress base for mixing history, birding, and beach days across Delaware's midsection. For RVers who want the whole small state within reach, Clayton delivers.
Are there free dump stations in Clayton?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Clayton.
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