RV Parks In Cocoa, Florida
28.3861° N, 80.7420° W
Quick Overview
Cocoa sits right in the middle of Florida’s Space Coast, and that location is its whole appeal for RVers. You’re between the Atlantic beaches and Orlando, a short hop from Kennedy Space Center, and in prime position to watch rocket launches arc over the Indian River Lagoon. For trip planning, the choice here is between private snowbird resorts with full resort amenities and a pair of genuinely good Brevard County public campgrounds that deliver hookups at county-park prices. Either way, you get warm winters and a front-row seat to the space program.
The private parks anchor the snowbird scene. Sonrise Palms RV Park offers 83 full-hookup lots centrally placed between Kennedy Space Center and Disney, about 12 miles from Cocoa Beach, and Space Coast RV Resort in neighboring Rockledge layers on resort amenities and 50-amp service. On the public side, Brevard County runs two standouts: Manatee Hammock, on the Indian River Lagoon up in Titusville with a pool and a celebrated rocket-launch view, and the large Wickham Park in Melbourne, with 133 sites, full sewer hookups, and free weekly movies. You can reserve the county sites through Brevard County Parks.
Season follows the Florida coastal rhythm. The dry season from late fall through spring brings warm, comfortable days, peak snowbird crowds, and the best beach and launch-watching weather, with winter the busiest and priciest stretch. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms and hurricane risk, so it’s cheap and quiet but the least comfortable. Spring is the underrated shoulder, with warm, dry days, fewer crowds than the winter peak, and reliably good launch-watching weather. Big rigs do well at the resorts and Wickham Park thanks to easy I-95 and SR-528 access, while the barrier-island beach roads stay tighter. Whether you come to chase a launch, work on a tan, or day-trip to Orlando, Cocoa makes a flexible, full-hookup home base.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Cocoa
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All Dump Stations Near Cocoa
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joy RV Park | 3.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sonrise Palms RV Park | 3.9 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Ksc Campground | 6.2 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Space Coast RV Resort | 6.3 mi | 3.9 | RV Park | Free |
| Sea Shell RV Park | 8.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Carver's Cove RV Resort | 8.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Manatee Hammock Campground | 8.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Great Outdoors RV Resort | 10.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Whispering Pines | 12.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mayberry’s RV Community | 12.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Joy RV Park
3.9 miSonrise Palms RV Park
3.9 miKsc Campground
6.2 miSpace Coast RV Resort
6.3 miSea Shell RV Park
8.2 miCarver's Cove RV Resort
8.2 miManatee Hammock Campground
8.5 miGreat Outdoors RV Resort
10.3 miWhispering Pines
12.4 miMayberry’s RV Community
12.6 miTraveling to Cocoa by RV
Getting to Cocoa with an RV is easy. Interstate 95 runs north-south just west of town, and SR-528, the Beachline, shoots west to Orlando and east toward the beaches and Port Canaveral, both interstate-grade routes that big rigs handle comfortably. US-1 parallels the Indian River through town for local trips, and SR-520 crosses to Cocoa Beach. Stay on these corridors and off the narrow barrier-island beach streets with anything large. Melbourne Orlando International Airport is about 30 minutes south and Orlando International roughly 50 minutes west if you’re flying in to a rental.
Cocoa and the surrounding Brevard County metro are fully serviced, so groceries, fuel, propane, and RV repair are all close, and you can provision easily. Stock up off US-1 or I-95 rather than on the island. Staying a while and need to empty the tanks between hookup stops or after a county-park stay? See our guide to RV dump stations in Cocoa. From a Cocoa base, Kennedy Space Center, the beaches, Cocoa Village, the lagoon, and even the Orlando theme parks are all comfortable day trips.
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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 Cocoa, 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 Cocoa
The Space Coast costs more than inland Florida but is fair for a coastal snowbird market, and the price swings hard by season. Private full-hookup resorts generally run in the rough range of $50 to $85 a night in peak winter, and most push monthly and seasonal packages that lower the effective nightly cost for the long stays snowbirds favor, so ask about seasonal pricing if you’re settling in. The big savings come in summer, when demand collapses in the heat and private parks discount steeply, sometimes to half the winter rate.
The Brevard County public campgrounds are the year-round value. Manatee Hammock and Wickham Park run roughly $30 to $45 a night for hookup sites, well below the private resorts, with the bonus of launch views at Manatee Hammock and full sewer at Wickham. Build a little into your budget for Kennedy Space Center admission and any Orlando theme-park tickets, which will dwarf your camping cost, so saving on the site frees up money for the attractions. Overall, plan a moderate budget here and let your travel dates and park choice do the work.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Cocoa by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
54F - 74F
Crowds: High
Mild, dry snowbird high season from December through April, with warm days and the busiest, priciest camping. Book ahead, and even further out around major rocket launches.
Spring
Mar - May
63F - 82F
Crowds: High
Warm and dry with excellent beach and launch-watching weather. Snowbirds begin heading north in late spring, so sites open up by May.
Summer
Jun - Aug
73F - 90F
Crowds: Low
Hot, humid, and stormy with daily afternoon thunderstorms and hurricane season. The cheapest and quietest time, but strong air conditioning is essential.
Fall
Sep - Oct
70F - 84F
Crowds: Medium
September and October are the peak hurricane months and quietest for camping, then the weather dries out and snowbirds return in November.
Explore the Cocoa Area
A few things that make a Cocoa trip special. First, check the launch schedule before you book and, if you can, grab a riverside site like Manatee Hammock for a front-row rocket view; even a routine launch is unforgettable from a camp chair across the lagoon. Second, use Cocoa’s central spot to your advantage, splitting days between Kennedy Space Center, the beaches at Cocoa Beach, and a quick run to Orlando on SR-528. Third, get out on the Indian River Lagoon, one of the most biodiverse estuaries in North America, for fishing, kayaking, and manatee and dolphin sightings.
On logistics, book the winter snowbird season months ahead, because the resorts fill from December through April, and reserve even earlier if you’re timing a major launch, which tightens availability area-wide. The Brevard County parks are the budget play with hookups, but their launch-view and full-sewer sites go fast, so book early. Summer is genuinely cheap but hot, humid, and stormy, so carry a good surge protector for the daily lightning and make sure your air conditioning is up to the job. And provision inland, where parking beats the barrier island.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Cocoa
What are the best RV parks in Cocoa, FL?
Cocoa sits in the middle of Florida's Space Coast, so its best RV parks pair full hookups with easy access to rocket launches, beaches, and Orlando. Sonrise Palms RV Park is a popular choice, with 83 full-hookup lots placed between Kennedy Space Center and Disney. Space Coast RV Resort in nearby Rockledge adds resort amenities and 50-amp service. For public camping with hookups at lower rates, Brevard County runs two standouts: Manatee Hammock on the Indian River Lagoon up in Titusville, famous for launch views, and the large Wickham Park in Melbourne with full hookups.
Do Cocoa RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, most do. The private parks like Sonrise Palms and Space Coast RV Resort offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and sewer, which is what snowbirds want for a long, comfortable winter stay in the Florida heat. On the public side, Brevard County's Wickham Park provides full water, electric, and sewer hookups, while Manatee Hammock offers water and electric with a dump station. So whether you want a private resort or a budget-friendly county park, full or near-full hookups are easy to find around Cocoa. Confirm sewer at the site when booking the county parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Cocoa?
The Space Coast runs higher than rural Florida but is reasonable for a coastal snowbird market. Private full-hookup resorts generally fall in the rough range of $50 to $85 a night in peak winter, with monthly and seasonal packages that bring the effective nightly cost down for long stays, which is how most snowbirds book. The Brevard County public campgrounds, Manatee Hammock and Wickham Park, are a relative bargain at roughly $30 to $45 a night for hookup sites. Summer rates drop sharply at the private parks as demand collapses in the heat, so flexible dates can cut your cost substantially.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Cocoa?
For the winter snowbird season, book months ahead, since the popular resorts fill from December through April and many guests rebook year to year. Major rocket launches add another layer, tightening availability area-wide on launch dates, so if you are timing a visit to a launch, reserve early. The Brevard County parks take reservations through the county and the launch-view sites at Manatee Hammock go fast. Outside winter and big launches, summer and early fall are much easier and can often be booked close to your dates as the snowbirds head north.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Cocoa?
Winter and spring are ideal for weather, with warm, dry days perfect for the beaches, Kennedy Space Center, and launch watching, which is also why they are the busiest and priciest. Winter is peak snowbird season. Fall is quieter once the worst hurricane risk passes in late October, and offers better availability. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms, so it is the cheapest and least crowded but the least comfortable. For most RVers the sweet spot is the dry season from late fall through spring, ideally timed to catch a rocket launch.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Cocoa?
Yes. The private resorts like Sonrise Palms and Space Coast RV Resort are built for big rigs with full hookups and roomy sites, and Brevard County's Wickham Park handles larger rigs well too. Access is easy: I-95 runs north-south just west of Cocoa and SR-528, the Beachline, connects to Orlando, both interstate-grade routes. The tighter spots are the barrier-island beach roads and, to a degree, the hammock loops at Manatee Hammock, so check site length there. Overall this is comfortable big-rig territory with good highways and plenty of full-hookup, big-rig-ready sites.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Cocoa?
Not really within the metro. This is developed coastal Brevard County with strict overnight-parking rules, no public dispersed camping nearby, and reservation-based campgrounds. The county parks and private resorts all take bookings rather than first-come walk-ins, especially in season. If you need a free overnight while passing through, plan a highway-corridor stop well outside the area rather than anything in town or at the beach. For an actual Space Coast stay, budget for a private resort or a county-park hookup site, both of which are reasonably priced outside peak winter.
What public campgrounds are near Cocoa?
Brevard County runs two excellent ones. Manatee Hammock, about 25 minutes north in Titusville, sits on the Indian River Lagoon among hammock pines and palms, with a pool, shuffleboard, and a celebrated front-row view of rocket launches, offering water and electric sites. Wickham Park in Melbourne, to the south, is a large campground with 133 sites, full water, electric, and sewer hookups, an amphitheater, and free weekly movies. Both book through Brevard County Parks and cost well below the private resorts. They are the smart choice for hookups on a budget, with the bonus of launch views from the riverside park.
Can I watch a rocket launch from my campsite near Cocoa?
Yes, and it is one of the best reasons to camp here. Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center launch frequently, and the flat, open Space Coast gives wide views across the Indian River Lagoon and from the beaches. Riverside campgrounds like Manatee Hammock in Titusville are famous for their launch sightlines, and many RVers specifically time visits to a scheduled launch. Check the launch schedule before you book, pick a site with a clear eastern view, and be flexible, since launches often slip a day or two. Even a routine launch is an unforgettable thing to watch from your camp chair.
What is there to do around Cocoa while camping?
The Space Coast packs in a lot. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, about 30 minutes north, offers rockets, the shuttle Atlantis, and tours of the launch facilities, and rocket launches themselves are a recurring highlight. Cocoa Beach, roughly 20 minutes east, is the classic surf beach with a famous pier, while historic Cocoa Village offers walkable shops, restaurants, and riverfront parks. The Indian River Lagoon is superb for fishing, kayaking, and spotting manatees and dolphins. And because Orlando is under an hour away on SR-528, the theme parks are an easy day trip from a Cocoa base.
How do I reserve a Brevard County campsite near Cocoa?
Brevard County Parks handles camping reservations for Manatee Hammock and Wickham Park through the county parks system, online or by phone. Reservations open in advance, and the launch-view sites at Manatee Hammock and the full-hookup sites at Wickham Park are the most sought-after, so book early for winter and any scheduled rocket launch. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready, since site types vary, Wickham Park offers full sewer while Manatee Hammock is water and electric. These county sites are an affordable, well-located alternative to the private snowbird resorts that fill the Space Coast in winter.
What is the weather like for RV camping in Cocoa?
Cocoa has a warm, humid subtropical climate with a clear wet and dry split. The dry season from roughly November through April brings mild, comfortable days with highs in the 70s to low 80s and little rain, which is prime camping, beach, and launch-watching weather and the reason snowbirds flock here. The wet season from May through October is hot and humid with highs near 90, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and Atlantic hurricane season peaking in September and October. Plan around the dry season if you can, and watch tropical forecasts if you camp in late summer or fall.
Is Cocoa a good base for visiting Orlando and the beaches?
It is a strong, flexible base. Cocoa sits between the Atlantic beaches and Orlando, with Cocoa Beach about 20 minutes east and the Orlando theme parks under an hour west on SR-528, the Beachline. That lets you split a trip between Space Coast highlights, Kennedy Space Center, launches, the lagoon, and the surf, and day trips to Disney and Universal, all from one full-hookup site. You trade an in-park Orlando location for a quieter, often cheaper coastal spot with its own major attractions. For RVers who want both the coast and the parks, Cocoa is an ideal middle ground.
What are the best RV parks in Cocoa, FL?
Cocoa sits in the middle of Florida's Space Coast, so its best RV parks pair full hookups with easy access to rocket launches, beaches, and Orlando. Sonrise Palms RV Park is a popular choice, with 83 full-hookup lots placed between Kennedy Space Center and Disney. Space Coast RV Resort in nearby Rockledge adds resort amenities and 50-amp service. For public camping with hookups at lower rates, Brevard County runs two standouts: Manatee Hammock on the Indian River Lagoon up in Titusville, famous for launch views, and the large Wickham Park in Melbourne with full hookups.
Do Cocoa RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, most do. The private parks like Sonrise Palms and Space Coast RV Resort offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, and sewer, which is what snowbirds want for a long, comfortable winter stay in the Florida heat. On the public side, Brevard County's Wickham Park provides full water, electric, and sewer hookups, while Manatee Hammock offers water and electric with a dump station. So whether you want a private resort or a budget-friendly county park, full or near-full hookups are easy to find around Cocoa. Confirm sewer at the site when booking the county parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Cocoa?
The Space Coast runs higher than rural Florida but is reasonable for a coastal snowbird market. Private full-hookup resorts generally fall in the rough range of $50 to $85 a night in peak winter, with monthly and seasonal packages that bring the effective nightly cost down for long stays, which is how most snowbirds book. The Brevard County public campgrounds, Manatee Hammock and Wickham Park, are a relative bargain at roughly $30 to $45 a night for hookup sites. Summer rates drop sharply at the private parks as demand collapses in the heat, so flexible dates can cut your cost substantially.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Cocoa?
For the winter snowbird season, book months ahead, since the popular resorts fill from December through April and many guests rebook year to year. Major rocket launches add another layer, tightening availability area-wide on launch dates, so if you are timing a visit to a launch, reserve early. The Brevard County parks take reservations through the county and the launch-view sites at Manatee Hammock go fast. Outside winter and big launches, summer and early fall are much easier and can often be booked close to your dates as the snowbirds head north.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Cocoa?
Winter and spring are ideal for weather, with warm, dry days perfect for the beaches, Kennedy Space Center, and launch watching, which is also why they are the busiest and priciest. Winter is peak snowbird season. Fall is quieter once the worst hurricane risk passes in late October, and offers better availability. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms, so it is the cheapest and least crowded but the least comfortable. For most RVers the sweet spot is the dry season from late fall through spring, ideally timed to catch a rocket launch.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Cocoa?
Yes. The private resorts like Sonrise Palms and Space Coast RV Resort are built for big rigs with full hookups and roomy sites, and Brevard County's Wickham Park handles larger rigs well too. Access is easy: I-95 runs north-south just west of Cocoa and SR-528, the Beachline, connects to Orlando, both interstate-grade routes. The tighter spots are the barrier-island beach roads and, to a degree, the hammock loops at Manatee Hammock, so check site length there. Overall this is comfortable big-rig territory with good highways and plenty of full-hookup, big-rig-ready sites.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Cocoa?
Not really within the metro. This is developed coastal Brevard County with strict overnight-parking rules, no public dispersed camping nearby, and reservation-based campgrounds. The county parks and private resorts all take bookings rather than first-come walk-ins, especially in season. If you need a free overnight while passing through, plan a highway-corridor stop well outside the area rather than anything in town or at the beach. For an actual Space Coast stay, budget for a private resort or a county-park hookup site, both of which are reasonably priced outside peak winter.
What public campgrounds are near Cocoa?
Brevard County runs two excellent ones. Manatee Hammock, about 25 minutes north in Titusville, sits on the Indian River Lagoon among hammock pines and palms, with a pool, shuffleboard, and a celebrated front-row view of rocket launches, offering water and electric sites. Wickham Park in Melbourne, to the south, is a large campground with 133 sites, full water, electric, and sewer hookups, an amphitheater, and free weekly movies. Both book through Brevard County Parks and cost well below the private resorts. They are the smart choice for hookups on a budget, with the bonus of launch views from the riverside park.
Can I watch a rocket launch from my campsite near Cocoa?
Yes, and it is one of the best reasons to camp here. Cape Canaveral and Kennedy Space Center launch frequently, and the flat, open Space Coast gives wide views across the Indian River Lagoon and from the beaches. Riverside campgrounds like Manatee Hammock in Titusville are famous for their launch sightlines, and many RVers specifically time visits to a scheduled launch. Check the launch schedule before you book, pick a site with a clear eastern view, and be flexible, since launches often slip a day or two. Even a routine launch is an unforgettable thing to watch from your camp chair.
What is there to do around Cocoa while camping?
The Space Coast packs in a lot. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, about 30 minutes north, offers rockets, the shuttle Atlantis, and tours of the launch facilities, and rocket launches themselves are a recurring highlight. Cocoa Beach, roughly 20 minutes east, is the classic surf beach with a famous pier, while historic Cocoa Village offers walkable shops, restaurants, and riverfront parks. The Indian River Lagoon is superb for fishing, kayaking, and spotting manatees and dolphins. And because Orlando is under an hour away on SR-528, the theme parks are an easy day trip from a Cocoa base.
How do I reserve a Brevard County campsite near Cocoa?
Brevard County Parks handles camping reservations for Manatee Hammock and Wickham Park through the county parks system, online or by phone. Reservations open in advance, and the launch-view sites at Manatee Hammock and the full-hookup sites at Wickham Park are the most sought-after, so book early for winter and any scheduled rocket launch. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready, since site types vary, Wickham Park offers full sewer while Manatee Hammock is water and electric. These county sites are an affordable, well-located alternative to the private snowbird resorts that fill the Space Coast in winter.
What is the weather like for RV camping in Cocoa?
Cocoa has a warm, humid subtropical climate with a clear wet and dry split. The dry season from roughly November through April brings mild, comfortable days with highs in the 70s to low 80s and little rain, which is prime camping, beach, and launch-watching weather and the reason snowbirds flock here. The wet season from May through October is hot and humid with highs near 90, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and Atlantic hurricane season peaking in September and October. Plan around the dry season if you can, and watch tropical forecasts if you camp in late summer or fall.
Is Cocoa a good base for visiting Orlando and the beaches?
It is a strong, flexible base. Cocoa sits between the Atlantic beaches and Orlando, with Cocoa Beach about 20 minutes east and the Orlando theme parks under an hour west on SR-528, the Beachline. That lets you split a trip between Space Coast highlights, Kennedy Space Center, launches, the lagoon, and the surf, and day trips to Disney and Universal, all from one full-hookup site. You trade an in-park Orlando location for a quieter, often cheaper coastal spot with its own major attractions. For RVers who want both the coast and the parks, Cocoa is an ideal middle ground.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Cocoa?
The highest-rated station is Space Coast RV Resort with a rating of 3.9/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Cocoa?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Cocoa.








