RV Parks In Carrabelle, Florida
29.8533° N, 84.6643° W
Quick Overview
Carrabelle is a small fishing town on Florida's Forgotten Coast, the quiet stretch of the Panhandle that skipped the high-rises and chain resorts. For RVers that is exactly the draw: you can park a rig right on the Gulf of Mexico, fish off a private pier, and watch dolphins and pelicans instead of fighting beach traffic. It is Old Florida, low-key and friendly, and it has become a favorite winter base for snowbirds who want sand and warmth without the crowds.
The signature park is Ho-Hum RV Park, four miles east in Lanark Village, with full-hookup sites, many of them directly on the water, 50 and 30-amp service, a 250-foot fishing pier and a half-mile of natural walking beach. Big rigs fit on the pull-through sites, and the amenities include laundry, WiFi, cable and propane. In town, Carrabelle Beach RV Resort offers more full-hookup sites along with cabins, cottages and an ocean-view loft for guests who want a roof option too.
For a public, wilder beach, St. George Island State Park is about 20 minutes west, with a campground and nine miles of undeveloped, sugar-white sand that has been ranked the number-one beach in America. Between the private Gulf-front parks and that state-park beach, the camping here is all about the water. So whether you want full hookups with a pier out front or a rustic dune-backed site, the Forgotten Coast delivers. There are no high-rise condos or traffic-choked beach roads here, just small towns, oyster boats and miles of empty sand.
Below we cover the campgrounds, how to reserve them, seasonal timing, costs and the fishing, beaches and small-town stops that make people linger. We also point out the practical stuff, like the high-season minimum stays, the long booking windows for the state park, and how to plan around hurricane season. Staying a while and need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Carrabelle.
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All Dump Stations Near Carrabelle
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carrabelle Beach RV Resort | 2.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ho-hum RV Park | 3.5 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Saint George Island State Campground | 10.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rock Landing Campground | 10.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coastline RV Resort | 12.4 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coastline RV Campground | 12.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| St. George Island State Park | 12.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| RV Us 685 | 13.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bayshore Trailer Park | 15.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Myron B. Hodge City Park & Campground | 16.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Carrabelle Beach RV Resort
2.2 miHo-hum RV Park
3.5 miSaint George Island State Campground
10.6 miRock Landing Campground
10.7 miCoastline RV Resort
12.4 miCoastline RV Campground
12.7 miSt. George Island State Park
12.8 miRV Us 685
13.7 miBayshore Trailer Park
15.4 miMyron B. Hodge City Park & Campground
16.9 miTraveling to Carrabelle by RV
Getting to Carrabelle is easy on US Highway 98, the flat coastal route that traces the Forgotten Coast. It is a comfortable big-rig road with none of the mountain grades or tight turns you find elsewhere, just a straight, scenic run along the Gulf. From the east you come down through the Big Bend; from the west, Apalachicola sits 30 minutes away and makes a great oyster-and-history day trip. The whole drive hugs the water, so the journey is part of the appeal.
The nearest airport is in Tallahassee, about an hour northeast, which is your hub for a fly-and-rent trip or for restocking at bigger stores. St. George Island is a 20-minute drive west across a long causeway bridge, an easy run even in a tow vehicle. Once you are parked at a Gulf-front site, you may barely move the rig at all; the fishing, beach and sunsets are right there, and day trips to Apalachicola, the lighthouse and the island are all short, level drives.
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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 Carrabelle, Florida, 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 Carrabelle
Camping costs in Carrabelle reflect the waterfront premium. The private Gulf-front parks, Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, generally run in the $50 to $80-plus range per night for full-hookup sites, with the water-facing spots commanding the top of that range and the highest demand in the winter snowbird and spring seasons. Both offer weekly and monthly rates that meaningfully lower the per-night cost, which is how most long-stay snowbirds book.
St. George Island State Park is the value alternative, with electric-and-water campsites priced like standard Florida state-park sites, well below the private waterfront rates, though you trade sewer hookups for a dump station and the beach is wilder. Factor in the three-night minimums at the private parks in high season and prepaid reservations. If budget matters, the state park or a monthly private rate in shoulder season stretches your dollar the furthest.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Carrabelle
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Best Time to Visit Carrabelle by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
45F - 63F
Crowds: High
Peak snowbird season; mild, dry days draw long-stay RVers. Book Gulf-front sites months ahead. Cold fronts bring brief chilly spells.
Spring
Mar - May
58F - 78F
Crowds: High
Beautiful beach and fishing weather and very busy. Reserve early for spring break onward; the water is warming and the bugs are mild.
Summer
Jun - Aug
74F - 90F
Crowds: Medium
Hot and humid with afternoon thunderstorms and warm Gulf water. Hurricane season runs June through November, so watch forecasts.
Fall
Sep - Oct
60F - 79F
Crowds: Medium
Warm water lingers and crowds thin, making early fall a sweet spot, though hurricane season runs into November. Great fishing.
Explore the Carrabelle Area
Some local knowledge for camping the Forgotten Coast. The Gulf-front sites at Ho-Hum are the prize and the first to go, so book months ahead for winter and spring; the back rows are nice but the waterfront is why you came. Plan around the three-night minimum the private parks run in high season, which keeps things relaxed but means no quick one-night stops in peak months. For the state-park beach, reserve St. George Island as early as the 11-month window allows to land a good site.
This is hurricane country from June through November, so watch the forecasts and have a plan to move if a storm threatens; the locals take it seriously and so should you. Bring fishing gear, because the pier, surf and flats are loaded, and a Florida saltwater license is required. Pack bug protection for the warm months, when no-see-ums come out at dusk. And slow down: the pace here is the point, so leave time for sunsets and a slow drive into Apalachicola.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Carrabelle
What are the best RV parks in Carrabelle, FL?
The standout is Ho-Hum RV Park, four miles east in Lanark Village, with full-hookup sites many of which sit directly on the Gulf, a 250-foot fishing pier and a half-mile private beach. It is the classic Forgotten Coast waterfront park. Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, closer to town, offers more full-hookup sites along with cabins, cottages and an ocean-view loft if you want a roof option for guests. For a public, wilder beach experience, St. George Island State Park about 20 minutes west has a campground behind nine miles of undeveloped, top-ranked sand. Pick the private parks for hookups and a pier, the state park for the beach.
Do Carrabelle RV parks have full hookups?
The private parks do. Ho-Hum RV Park and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort both offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer and 30 or 50-amp electric at the site, plus extras like laundry, WiFi, cable and propane at Ho-Hum. That is what makes them comfortable for long snowbird stays. The public option, St. George Island State Park, has campsites with electric and water but uses a central dump station rather than sewer at each pad, which is standard for Florida state parks. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site, book one of the private Gulf-front parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Carrabelle?
The private Gulf-front parks generally run $50 to $80-plus a night for full-hookup sites, with the water-facing spots at the top of the range and the highest demand in winter and spring. Both Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort offer weekly and monthly rates that lower the per-night cost a lot, which is how most snowbirds book a long stay. St. George Island State Park is the budget alternative, priced like a standard Florida state-park site, well below the private waterfront rates, though with electric and water rather than full hookups. Shoulder-season and monthly rates stretch your dollar the furthest.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Carrabelle?
Early, especially for the waterfront. The Gulf-front sites at Ho-Hum are the first to sell out, so book months ahead for the winter snowbird season and spring. The private parks also run three-night minimums in high season, so plan your dates accordingly. St. George Island State Park books on Florida's 11-month rolling window, and the best beach sites go the day they open, so set a reminder if you want one. Summer and early fall are a bit easier, but a popular Forgotten Coast waterfront site is never something to count on as a walk-up during the busy months.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Carrabelle?
Winter and spring are the prime seasons. Winter brings mild, dry days that make Carrabelle a classic snowbird destination, with the warmest welcome and the busiest parks, so book ahead. Spring adds warming Gulf water, excellent fishing and beautiful beach weather, and it is very popular too. Fall is an underrated sweet spot once the heat eases, with warm water and thinner crowds, though hurricane season runs into November. Summer is hot, humid and stormy with the highest hurricane risk, but the water is bathtub-warm. For the best mix of weather and value, target late fall or early spring.
Can big rigs camp in Carrabelle?
Yes. Ho-Hum RV Park and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort both have pull-through full-hookup sites that accommodate big rigs, which is part of why they draw long-stay snowbirds in large fifth-wheels and motorhomes. Getting there is easy too, since US Highway 98 is a flat, straight coastal road with no mountain grades or tight turns to worry about. At St. George Island State Park the sites vary in length, so confirm your rig fits when you book. Overall the Forgotten Coast is one of the more big-rig-friendly stretches of Florida, with level roads and roomy waterfront parks.
Are there beachfront RV sites in Carrabelle?
Yes, and they are the main attraction. Ho-Hum RV Park has full-hookup sites right on the Gulf, close enough that the water is, as locals say, an oyster shell's throw away, with a 250-foot fishing pier and a half-mile private walking beach. Carrabelle Beach RV Resort also sits along the shore. These waterfront sites are the most sought-after and book up first, so reserve months ahead. Waking up to sunrise over the Gulf, fishing off the pier and watching dolphins go by from your own site is the whole reason RVers come to this part of the Forgotten Coast.
Is the fishing good around Carrabelle?
Excellent, and it is a major reason RVers stay. Carrabelle sits where rivers meet the Gulf, so you have surf fishing off the beaches, pier fishing right at Ho-Hum, inshore flats for redfish and trout, and offshore runs for grouper, snapper and more out of the local marinas. Dog Island and the passes add structure that holds fish. You will need a Florida saltwater fishing license, easy to get online. Many campers bring a small boat or kayak, and charter captains run out of Carrabelle and nearby Apalachicola if you want a guided offshore day. Bring your gear; you will use it.
What is there to do near Carrabelle besides the beach?
More than the small size suggests. St. George Island State Park, 20 minutes west, has nine miles of pristine beach, hiking and a lighthouse. In town you can climb the 1895 Crooked River Lighthouse, visit the Camp Gordon Johnston WWII Museum about the amphibious training base, and see the famous World's Smallest Police Station. Boat-access-only Dog Island offshore offers remote beaches and great shelling. Thirty minutes west, historic Apalachicola serves oysters and old-Florida charm. Add birdwatching, paddling the rivers and tidal creeks, and simply slowing down for sunsets, and a week here fills without ever feeling rushed.
Are Carrabelle RV parks open year-round?
Yes. Unlike northern campgrounds, the private parks here, Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, stay open all year, and their busy season is actually winter when snowbirds arrive for the mild Gulf weather. St. George Island State Park is also open year-round. The slower, hotter months are summer, when afternoon storms and hurricane season keep some travelers away, though the warm water still draws beachgoers. Because the parks run all year, you can plan a stay in any season, but reserve well ahead for the busy winter and spring stretch and watch tropical forecasts if you come in summer or fall.
Should I choose a private park or St. George Island State Park?
It comes down to hookups versus wildness. The private parks, Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, give you full hookups with sewer at the site, a pier, laundry and other amenities, plus Gulf-front sites, which is ideal for long, comfortable snowbird stays at a higher price. St. George Island State Park trades sewer hookups and amenities for one of the best, least-developed beaches in America, more nature and a lower nightly rate. If you want comfort, a pier and a long stay, go private; if you want a wild beach and are happy with electric and water, the state park is special and worth booking early.
Is Carrabelle a good snowbird destination?
It is one of the Panhandle's quiet snowbird gems. The winters are mild, the Gulf-front parks offer monthly rates, and the pace is slow and friendly without the crowds and prices of busier Florida coasts. Snowbirds settle in at Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort for the season to fish, walk the beach and enjoy the warmth, and the community is welcoming to long-stay RVers. The trade-off is that services are limited in a town this small, so you will drive to Apalachicola or Tallahassee for bigger stores. Book your winter spot months in advance, because the waterfront monthly sites are in high demand.
Do I need to worry about hurricanes camping in Carrabelle?
You should stay aware, yes. The Forgotten Coast is on the Gulf, and hurricane season runs June through November, with the peak risk in late summer and early fall. The locals take storms seriously, and so should visiting RVers: watch the National Hurricane Center forecasts, know your evacuation route up US Highway 98 and inland toward Tallahassee, and be ready to move the rig if a system threatens. The upside is that the riskiest months overlap with the slower, hotter season, while the busy winter and spring snowbird months sit largely outside hurricane season. Plan around it and you will camp here safely.
What are the best RV parks in Carrabelle, FL?
The standout is Ho-Hum RV Park, four miles east in Lanark Village, with full-hookup sites many of which sit directly on the Gulf, a 250-foot fishing pier and a half-mile private beach. It is the classic Forgotten Coast waterfront park. Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, closer to town, offers more full-hookup sites along with cabins, cottages and an ocean-view loft if you want a roof option for guests. For a public, wilder beach experience, St. George Island State Park about 20 minutes west has a campground behind nine miles of undeveloped, top-ranked sand. Pick the private parks for hookups and a pier, the state park for the beach.
Do Carrabelle RV parks have full hookups?
The private parks do. Ho-Hum RV Park and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort both offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer and 30 or 50-amp electric at the site, plus extras like laundry, WiFi, cable and propane at Ho-Hum. That is what makes them comfortable for long snowbird stays. The public option, St. George Island State Park, has campsites with electric and water but uses a central dump station rather than sewer at each pad, which is standard for Florida state parks. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site, book one of the private Gulf-front parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Carrabelle?
The private Gulf-front parks generally run $50 to $80-plus a night for full-hookup sites, with the water-facing spots at the top of the range and the highest demand in winter and spring. Both Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort offer weekly and monthly rates that lower the per-night cost a lot, which is how most snowbirds book a long stay. St. George Island State Park is the budget alternative, priced like a standard Florida state-park site, well below the private waterfront rates, though with electric and water rather than full hookups. Shoulder-season and monthly rates stretch your dollar the furthest.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Carrabelle?
Early, especially for the waterfront. The Gulf-front sites at Ho-Hum are the first to sell out, so book months ahead for the winter snowbird season and spring. The private parks also run three-night minimums in high season, so plan your dates accordingly. St. George Island State Park books on Florida's 11-month rolling window, and the best beach sites go the day they open, so set a reminder if you want one. Summer and early fall are a bit easier, but a popular Forgotten Coast waterfront site is never something to count on as a walk-up during the busy months.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Carrabelle?
Winter and spring are the prime seasons. Winter brings mild, dry days that make Carrabelle a classic snowbird destination, with the warmest welcome and the busiest parks, so book ahead. Spring adds warming Gulf water, excellent fishing and beautiful beach weather, and it is very popular too. Fall is an underrated sweet spot once the heat eases, with warm water and thinner crowds, though hurricane season runs into November. Summer is hot, humid and stormy with the highest hurricane risk, but the water is bathtub-warm. For the best mix of weather and value, target late fall or early spring.
Can big rigs camp in Carrabelle?
Yes. Ho-Hum RV Park and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort both have pull-through full-hookup sites that accommodate big rigs, which is part of why they draw long-stay snowbirds in large fifth-wheels and motorhomes. Getting there is easy too, since US Highway 98 is a flat, straight coastal road with no mountain grades or tight turns to worry about. At St. George Island State Park the sites vary in length, so confirm your rig fits when you book. Overall the Forgotten Coast is one of the more big-rig-friendly stretches of Florida, with level roads and roomy waterfront parks.
Are there beachfront RV sites in Carrabelle?
Yes, and they are the main attraction. Ho-Hum RV Park has full-hookup sites right on the Gulf, close enough that the water is, as locals say, an oyster shell's throw away, with a 250-foot fishing pier and a half-mile private walking beach. Carrabelle Beach RV Resort also sits along the shore. These waterfront sites are the most sought-after and book up first, so reserve months ahead. Waking up to sunrise over the Gulf, fishing off the pier and watching dolphins go by from your own site is the whole reason RVers come to this part of the Forgotten Coast.
Is the fishing good around Carrabelle?
Excellent, and it is a major reason RVers stay. Carrabelle sits where rivers meet the Gulf, so you have surf fishing off the beaches, pier fishing right at Ho-Hum, inshore flats for redfish and trout, and offshore runs for grouper, snapper and more out of the local marinas. Dog Island and the passes add structure that holds fish. You will need a Florida saltwater fishing license, easy to get online. Many campers bring a small boat or kayak, and charter captains run out of Carrabelle and nearby Apalachicola if you want a guided offshore day. Bring your gear; you will use it.
What is there to do near Carrabelle besides the beach?
More than the small size suggests. St. George Island State Park, 20 minutes west, has nine miles of pristine beach, hiking and a lighthouse. In town you can climb the 1895 Crooked River Lighthouse, visit the Camp Gordon Johnston WWII Museum about the amphibious training base, and see the famous World's Smallest Police Station. Boat-access-only Dog Island offshore offers remote beaches and great shelling. Thirty minutes west, historic Apalachicola serves oysters and old-Florida charm. Add birdwatching, paddling the rivers and tidal creeks, and simply slowing down for sunsets, and a week here fills without ever feeling rushed.
Are Carrabelle RV parks open year-round?
Yes. Unlike northern campgrounds, the private parks here, Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, stay open all year, and their busy season is actually winter when snowbirds arrive for the mild Gulf weather. St. George Island State Park is also open year-round. The slower, hotter months are summer, when afternoon storms and hurricane season keep some travelers away, though the warm water still draws beachgoers. Because the parks run all year, you can plan a stay in any season, but reserve well ahead for the busy winter and spring stretch and watch tropical forecasts if you come in summer or fall.
Should I choose a private park or St. George Island State Park?
It comes down to hookups versus wildness. The private parks, Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort, give you full hookups with sewer at the site, a pier, laundry and other amenities, plus Gulf-front sites, which is ideal for long, comfortable snowbird stays at a higher price. St. George Island State Park trades sewer hookups and amenities for one of the best, least-developed beaches in America, more nature and a lower nightly rate. If you want comfort, a pier and a long stay, go private; if you want a wild beach and are happy with electric and water, the state park is special and worth booking early.
Is Carrabelle a good snowbird destination?
It is one of the Panhandle's quiet snowbird gems. The winters are mild, the Gulf-front parks offer monthly rates, and the pace is slow and friendly without the crowds and prices of busier Florida coasts. Snowbirds settle in at Ho-Hum and Carrabelle Beach RV Resort for the season to fish, walk the beach and enjoy the warmth, and the community is welcoming to long-stay RVers. The trade-off is that services are limited in a town this small, so you will drive to Apalachicola or Tallahassee for bigger stores. Book your winter spot months in advance, because the waterfront monthly sites are in high demand.
Do I need to worry about hurricanes camping in Carrabelle?
You should stay aware, yes. The Forgotten Coast is on the Gulf, and hurricane season runs June through November, with the peak risk in late summer and early fall. The locals take storms seriously, and so should visiting RVers: watch the National Hurricane Center forecasts, know your evacuation route up US Highway 98 and inland toward Tallahassee, and be ready to move the rig if a system threatens. The upside is that the riskiest months overlap with the slower, hotter season, while the busy winter and spring snowbird months sit largely outside hurricane season. Plan around it and you will camp here safely.
Are there free dump stations in Carrabelle?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Carrabelle.
All Dump Stations Near Carrabelle (48)
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