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RV Dump Stations In Crawfordville, Florida

30.1760° N, 84.3752° W

Quick Overview

Crawfordville is the Wakulla County seat on US-319 south of Tallahassee, set near the Gulf coast and the vast Apalachicola National Forest, and the dump plan here is the small-town one: use the area campgrounds and lean on Tallahassee 18 miles north for full services. Crawfordville itself does not run a public dump station, but you are near a county campground and an easy drive from a full-service city.

The closest base is Newport Campground, a Wakulla County facility on the St. Marks River, across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, with hookups available. For more options and full RV supplies, Tallahassee 18 miles north has private campgrounds, propane, fuel, and grocery stores. The Apalachicola National Forest surrounds the area with over 500,000 acres of dispersed camping but no dump facilities, so you must dump back at a campground afterward. You can explore the refuge and its historic lighthouse through the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, just south of town.

Below we cover where to dump, where to fill fresh water, how to handle forest boondocking without services, and how the mild winters and stormy summers shape your tank chores. The short version: base at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site, dump at the station, and run into Tallahassee for propane, groceries, and supplies. Reserve ahead for the pleasant spring and fall weekends when the springs, refuge, and rail trail draw crowds, watch for alligators in the springs and rivers, and plan summer dumping around the heat, the daily storms, and hurricane season along the coast.

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Traveling to Crawfordville by RV

Getting an RV to Crawfordville is easy on the main roads. The town sits on US-319, with US-98 and SR-363 also serving the area, and I-10 is about 20 miles north at Tallahassee, with US-319 connecting directly to the city. No notable low-bridge or weight restrictions turned up on these routes, so a big rig handles the routing without trouble. The practical point is that the area is rural and coastal, so services and turnouts thin out fast once you head into the Apalachicola National Forest on smaller roads or down toward the St. Marks coast and refuge. For overnight parking, the practical route is to book Newport Campground on the St. Marks River, a Tallahassee-area site, or a forest dispersed spot, since the small county seat has no formal RV street parking. Florida allows overnight parking at highway rest areas within posted limits for road-weary travelers, though rest stops are not for dumping. Plan fuel and supply stops in Crawfordville or Tallahassee before venturing onto the smaller forest and coastal roads where the next station may be miles away.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Dumping near Crawfordville is a small cost, and the campsite is the main expense. At Newport Campground, the Wakulla County facility on the St. Marks River, dumping comes with your hookup stay. Private campgrounds around Tallahassee 18 miles north bundle dumping into your nightly rate when you have hookups, and state and county parks in the Big Bend region charge non-campers a small fee, usually in the five to ten dollar range, for their dump stations. The Apalachicola forest dispersed camping is cheap or free but has no dump facilities, so factor in dumping at a campground afterward. Crawfordville itself has no public dump, so do not plan on a free roadside option. To save money, dump on your way out of a paid stay, top off fresh water while hooked up, and combine propane, fuel, and grocery runs into one trip to Tallahassee. Spring and fall are the busy, higher-demand windows near the springs and coast, so reserve early; summer trades hot, stormy weather for the quietest and cheapest sites.

Free: 3 stations (75%)
Paid: 1 station (25%)

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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About Crawfordville

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Best Time to Visit Crawfordville by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

42F - 63F

Crowds: Medium

Mild and one of the more comfortable times to camp in the Panhandle, with cool nights occasionally dipping toward the 40s. Dumping is easy in the dry, bug-free air, and Newport Campground on the St. Marks River makes a quiet base. Apalachicola National Forest dispersed camping is pleasant in the cooler season but has no dump facilities. Top off and dump before a cold front, and use Tallahassee 18 miles north for full services when you need them during the slower winter weeks.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

57F - 79F

Crowds: High

Pleasant and one of the best stretches of the year, with warm days, manageable humidity, and the Wakulla Springs boat tours in full swing. Dumping is comfortable before the summer heat, and the area campgrounds and Tallahassee services run year-round. Book ahead on spring weekends, since the springs and the St. Marks refuge draw crowds. Top off fresh water for the warming afternoons, and enjoy the St. Marks Rail Trail and the coast before the humidity and afternoon thunderstorms build into summer.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

73F - 91F

Crowds: Low

Hot and very humid Panhandle summer with daily afternoon thunderstorms and hurricane season running June through November. This is the quietest, cheapest time, so sites open up. Dump in the cooler morning, carry extra water in the heat, and watch the tropical forecast before any extended coastal stay near St. Marks. Alligators are active in the springs and rivers, so keep your distance. The Apalachicola forest dispersed camping is buggy and steamy now, so plan tank chores and outdoor time around the storms and heat.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

60F - 81F

Crowds: Medium

Warm early fall with hurricane season running through November, so stay weather-aware. Conditions ease and crowds thin after summer, making dumping easy before any winter demand rebuilds. Newport Campground and the Tallahassee-area services run year-round, so you have reliable options. Reserve ahead for fall weekends near the springs and refuge. Top off water and dump on a clear-weather window rather than during a passing tropical system, and enjoy the cooling evenings on the St. Marks Rail Trail and the Gulf coast as the season turns.

Explore the Crawfordville Area

  • Newport Campground on the St. Marks River, across from the wildlife refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, is the closest base with hookups.
  • The Apalachicola National Forest has 500,000+ acres of dispersed camping but no dump facilities, so arrive with capacity and dump at a campground afterward.
  • Use Tallahassee 18 miles north on US-319 for full groceries, propane, RV repair, and supplies the small county seat cannot provide.
  • Reserve ahead for spring and fall weekends, when Wakulla Springs, the St. Marks refuge, and the rail trail draw the most visitors.
  • Alligators are active in the springs and rivers, so keep your distance, never feed them, and watch kids and pets near the water.
  • Dump in the cooler morning during the hot, humid summer, and watch the tropical forecast during hurricane season (June through November).
  • The St. Marks Rail Trail runs 16 paved miles from Tallahassee to the coast, a great biking break between dump and travel days.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Crawfordville

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Crawfordville, Florida?

Crawfordville is the Wakulla County seat on US-319 south of Tallahassee, near the Gulf coast and the vast Apalachicola National Forest, and your dump options are tied to the area campgrounds rather than a public station in town. Newport Campground, a county facility on the St. Marks River across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, has hookups available and is the closest base. For more options and full RV services, Tallahassee is just 18 miles north with private campgrounds and supply stores. The Apalachicola National Forest surrounds the area with over 500,000 acres of dispersed camping, but that has no dump facilities. The plan is to base at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site, dump at the station, and use Tallahassee for anything the small county seat cannot provide.

Can I dump at Newport Campground near Crawfordville?

Newport Campground is the closest option, a Wakulla County campground on the St. Marks River, across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, with hookups available. As a county campground with hookups, it is your nearest reliable base for tank chores in the Crawfordville area, set in a scenic riverside spot that doubles as a launch point for exploring the refuge and the springs. Confirm current hookup and dump details and reserve through Wakulla County when planning a stay, especially for the pleasant spring and fall weekends when the area draws visitors to the springs and the coast. Because it sits right on the St. Marks River near the wildlife refuge, it makes a quiet, nature-focused base compared with staying up in busier Tallahassee 18 miles north.

Are there free dump stations near Crawfordville?

Free standalone dump stations are scarce in this rural Panhandle area, and small Crawfordville does not run a public one. The Apalachicola National Forest, which surrounds the area with over 500,000 acres, offers extensive dispersed camping but no formal dump facilities, so you cannot count on a free station out there. Your practical route is to fold dumping into a paid stay at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site. Florida allows rest-area overnight parking along the highways, but rest stops are not for dumping. State and county parks in the broader region have dump stations for a small fee. The honest plan is to dump as part of a campground stay rather than expecting a free roadside facility, and top off before you head into the forest or down toward the coast where services thin out.

Where do I fill fresh water near Crawfordville?

Fill fresh water at the campgrounds. Newport Campground on the St. Marks River has hookups with water, and the Tallahassee-area campgrounds do too. Crawfordville is a small county seat with basic grocery and fuel, so do not count on an elaborate public fill point in town, though it has the essentials. For serious provisioning, Tallahassee is just 18 miles north with full shopping. The smart move is to top off your fresh tank whenever you are hooked up at a campground, since services thin out fast once you head into the Apalachicola National Forest or down toward the St. Marks coast. In the hot, humid Panhandle summer you will go through water faster, so keep the tank topped before any extended stay, and carry extra for the heat when you are out hiking or paddling.

Where can I get propane near Crawfordville?

Handle propane in Crawfordville along US-319 where the town's fuel and basic services cluster, or run up to Tallahassee 18 miles north for the fuller range of dealers and RV supplies. Crawfordville is a small county seat with the essentials, so plan your propane stops around the available stations and the Tallahassee trip rather than expecting a dealer on every corner. Combine a propane top-off with fuel, groceries, and any RV-repair needs when you make the run to Tallahassee, since that covers everything the small town cannot. Florida's mild winters keep furnace use low, but you will want propane for cooking, the water heater, and the occasional cold front that dips toward the 40s on winter nights. Keep your supply topped before heading into the Apalachicola forest where services are scarce.

What are the overnight RV parking rules near Crawfordville?

Crawfordville is a small county seat, and the practical and legal route for overnighting is to book a campground rather than improvising on local streets. Newport Campground on the St. Marks River and the Tallahassee-area sites give you a place to park, sleep, and dump at your spot. The surrounding Apalachicola National Forest allows dispersed camping for those equipped for it, but that is boondocking without services, not a place to dump tanks. Florida allows overnight parking at highway rest areas within posted limits for road-weary travelers, which can work for a quick overnight on a longer haul, though rest stops are not for dumping. For anything beyond a brief highway rest, plan on an established campground or a forest dispersed site, and handle tank chores back at a campground with proper facilities.

Can I camp and dump in the Apalachicola National Forest?

You can camp in the Apalachicola National Forest, which surrounds the Crawfordville area with over 500,000 acres of pine forests, creeks, and lakes, offering extensive dispersed camping plus developed recreation sites. But dispersed camping comes without sewer hookups or dump facilities, so you cannot count on a station out in the forest. If you boondock there, arrive with capacity in your tanks and plan to dump afterward at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site, never on the ground, which is illegal and harmful to the creeks and lakes. Treat the forest as a place to hike, paddle, fish, and explore, and handle your tank chores back at a campground with proper facilities. For a developed base with hookups instead, Newport Campground on the St. Marks River is the closest reliable choice near the forest.

Are there campgrounds with dump stations near Crawfordville?

Yes. Newport Campground, a Wakulla County facility on the St. Marks River about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs and across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, has hookups available and is the closest base. For more choices and full services, Tallahassee 18 miles north has private campgrounds with dump stations, and the broader Big Bend region has state and county parks with stations for a small fee. The Apalachicola National Forest has dispersed camping but no formal dump facilities. So for reliable dumping, Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site are your best bets, and Newport doubles as a quiet, nature-focused base near the refuge and the springs. Reserve ahead for the pleasant spring and fall weekends when the springs, the coast, and the rail trail draw the most visitors to the area.

Should I winterize before camping near Crawfordville?

Full winterizing is rarely needed in Crawfordville, since Panhandle winters are mild with highs around 63F and lows near 42F, making the cooler months pleasant for camping. That said, cold fronts can push nights down toward freezing on occasion, so protect exposed hoses and do your dump-and-fill during the warmer daytime hours if a hard front is passing. The far bigger seasonal factors here are heat, humidity, summer storms, and alligators in the springs and rivers, not deep cold. Plan your tank chores around the summer storms more than the temperature, dumping in the cooler morning and watching the tropical forecast during hurricane season. If you are continuing far north into colder states, then full winterizing becomes a real consideration based on where you are headed next, but for a Crawfordville stay it is rarely the concern.

Are there RV road restrictions around Crawfordville?

Crawfordville sits on US-319, with US-98 and SR-363 also serving the area, and these are good roads for RVs. I-10 is about 20 miles north at Tallahassee, and US-319 connects directly to the city, so a big rig handles the routing without trouble. No notable low-bridge or weight restrictions turned up on the main routes. The practical point is that the area is rural and coastal, so services and turnouts thin out fast once you head into the Apalachicola National Forest on smaller roads or down toward the St. Marks coast and refuge. For normal travel, US-319 and US-98 are easy and direct. Plan fuel and supply stops in Crawfordville or Tallahassee before venturing onto the smaller forest and coastal roads where services are scarce and the next station may be miles away.

What is there to do around Crawfordville between dump stops?

Crawfordville is a great base for Big Bend nature. Wakulla Springs State Park, about 10 miles away, is one of the world's largest and deepest freshwater springs, with a 185-foot vent, glass-bottom and wildlife boat tours, swimming, a historic lodge, and manatees and alligators. The St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge about 15 miles south is a vast Gulf estuary with the historic St. Marks Lighthouse, one of the oldest in the Southeast, plus birding, hiking, fishing, and kayaking. The Apalachicola National Forest west of town offers over 500,000 acres of paddling, hiking, and fishing, and the St. Marks Historic Railroad Trail runs 16 paved miles from Tallahassee to the coast for biking and walking. So between springs, refuge, forest, and rail trail, the area gives you plenty to do between travel and dump days.

How far is Tallahassee and why does it matter for RVers?

Tallahassee is just 18 miles north of Crawfordville via US-319, with I-10 nearby, and it matters because the city is the service hub for this rural stretch of the Panhandle. Crawfordville is a small county seat with basic groceries and fuel, while Tallahassee adds full grocery stores, propane dealers, RV-friendly fuel, RV repair, supply shops, private campgrounds, and the FSU and FAMU attractions. The short, easy drive means you can base at Newport Campground or another quiet site near the springs and refuge, then run into Tallahassee for anything the small town cannot provide. Treating the two as a pair, with Tallahassee for services and Crawfordville for a nature-focused base near the coast and forest, makes for an efficient stop. Stock up in Tallahassee before heading into the Apalachicola forest where services are scarce.

When is the best time to RV around Crawfordville?

Spring and fall are the best, with warm, pleasant days, manageable humidity, and the springs, refuge, and rail trail in full swing. Spring brings comfortable weather before the summer heat and good crowds at Wakulla Springs, while fall eases after summer with thinning crowds, though hurricane season runs through November so stay weather-aware. Winter is mild and one of the more comfortable times, quieter and good for dumping in the bug-free air, with occasional cold fronts. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms, active alligators, and hurricane season, making it the quietest and cheapest but least comfortable time. Whatever the timing, base at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site for reliable dumping, reserve ahead for spring and fall weekends, and plan summer tank chores around the heat and the daily storms.

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Crawfordville, Florida?

Crawfordville is the Wakulla County seat on US-319 south of Tallahassee, near the Gulf coast and the vast Apalachicola National Forest, and your dump options are tied to the area campgrounds rather than a public station in town. Newport Campground, a county facility on the St. Marks River across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, has hookups available and is the closest base. For more options and full RV services, Tallahassee is just 18 miles north with private campgrounds and supply stores. The Apalachicola National Forest surrounds the area with over 500,000 acres of dispersed camping, but that has no dump facilities. The plan is to base at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site, dump at the station, and use Tallahassee for anything the small county seat cannot provide.

Can I dump at Newport Campground near Crawfordville?

Newport Campground is the closest option, a Wakulla County campground on the St. Marks River, across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge and about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs, with hookups available. As a county campground with hookups, it is your nearest reliable base for tank chores in the Crawfordville area, set in a scenic riverside spot that doubles as a launch point for exploring the refuge and the springs. Confirm current hookup and dump details and reserve through Wakulla County when planning a stay, especially for the pleasant spring and fall weekends when the area draws visitors to the springs and the coast. Because it sits right on the St. Marks River near the wildlife refuge, it makes a quiet, nature-focused base compared with staying up in busier Tallahassee 18 miles north.

Are there free dump stations near Crawfordville?

Free standalone dump stations are scarce in this rural Panhandle area, and small Crawfordville does not run a public one. The Apalachicola National Forest, which surrounds the area with over 500,000 acres, offers extensive dispersed camping but no formal dump facilities, so you cannot count on a free station out there. Your practical route is to fold dumping into a paid stay at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site. Florida allows rest-area overnight parking along the highways, but rest stops are not for dumping. State and county parks in the broader region have dump stations for a small fee. The honest plan is to dump as part of a campground stay rather than expecting a free roadside facility, and top off before you head into the forest or down toward the coast where services thin out.

Where do I fill fresh water near Crawfordville?

Fill fresh water at the campgrounds. Newport Campground on the St. Marks River has hookups with water, and the Tallahassee-area campgrounds do too. Crawfordville is a small county seat with basic grocery and fuel, so do not count on an elaborate public fill point in town, though it has the essentials. For serious provisioning, Tallahassee is just 18 miles north with full shopping. The smart move is to top off your fresh tank whenever you are hooked up at a campground, since services thin out fast once you head into the Apalachicola National Forest or down toward the St. Marks coast. In the hot, humid Panhandle summer you will go through water faster, so keep the tank topped before any extended stay, and carry extra for the heat when you are out hiking or paddling.

Where can I get propane near Crawfordville?

Handle propane in Crawfordville along US-319 where the town's fuel and basic services cluster, or run up to Tallahassee 18 miles north for the fuller range of dealers and RV supplies. Crawfordville is a small county seat with the essentials, so plan your propane stops around the available stations and the Tallahassee trip rather than expecting a dealer on every corner. Combine a propane top-off with fuel, groceries, and any RV-repair needs when you make the run to Tallahassee, since that covers everything the small town cannot. Florida's mild winters keep furnace use low, but you will want propane for cooking, the water heater, and the occasional cold front that dips toward the 40s on winter nights. Keep your supply topped before heading into the Apalachicola forest where services are scarce.

What are the overnight RV parking rules near Crawfordville?

Crawfordville is a small county seat, and the practical and legal route for overnighting is to book a campground rather than improvising on local streets. Newport Campground on the St. Marks River and the Tallahassee-area sites give you a place to park, sleep, and dump at your spot. The surrounding Apalachicola National Forest allows dispersed camping for those equipped for it, but that is boondocking without services, not a place to dump tanks. Florida allows overnight parking at highway rest areas within posted limits for road-weary travelers, which can work for a quick overnight on a longer haul, though rest stops are not for dumping. For anything beyond a brief highway rest, plan on an established campground or a forest dispersed site, and handle tank chores back at a campground with proper facilities.

Can I camp and dump in the Apalachicola National Forest?

You can camp in the Apalachicola National Forest, which surrounds the Crawfordville area with over 500,000 acres of pine forests, creeks, and lakes, offering extensive dispersed camping plus developed recreation sites. But dispersed camping comes without sewer hookups or dump facilities, so you cannot count on a station out in the forest. If you boondock there, arrive with capacity in your tanks and plan to dump afterward at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site, never on the ground, which is illegal and harmful to the creeks and lakes. Treat the forest as a place to hike, paddle, fish, and explore, and handle your tank chores back at a campground with proper facilities. For a developed base with hookups instead, Newport Campground on the St. Marks River is the closest reliable choice near the forest.

Are there campgrounds with dump stations near Crawfordville?

Yes. Newport Campground, a Wakulla County facility on the St. Marks River about 10 miles from Wakulla Springs and across from the St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge, has hookups available and is the closest base. For more choices and full services, Tallahassee 18 miles north has private campgrounds with dump stations, and the broader Big Bend region has state and county parks with stations for a small fee. The Apalachicola National Forest has dispersed camping but no formal dump facilities. So for reliable dumping, Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site are your best bets, and Newport doubles as a quiet, nature-focused base near the refuge and the springs. Reserve ahead for the pleasant spring and fall weekends when the springs, the coast, and the rail trail draw the most visitors to the area.

Should I winterize before camping near Crawfordville?

Full winterizing is rarely needed in Crawfordville, since Panhandle winters are mild with highs around 63F and lows near 42F, making the cooler months pleasant for camping. That said, cold fronts can push nights down toward freezing on occasion, so protect exposed hoses and do your dump-and-fill during the warmer daytime hours if a hard front is passing. The far bigger seasonal factors here are heat, humidity, summer storms, and alligators in the springs and rivers, not deep cold. Plan your tank chores around the summer storms more than the temperature, dumping in the cooler morning and watching the tropical forecast during hurricane season. If you are continuing far north into colder states, then full winterizing becomes a real consideration based on where you are headed next, but for a Crawfordville stay it is rarely the concern.

Are there RV road restrictions around Crawfordville?

Crawfordville sits on US-319, with US-98 and SR-363 also serving the area, and these are good roads for RVs. I-10 is about 20 miles north at Tallahassee, and US-319 connects directly to the city, so a big rig handles the routing without trouble. No notable low-bridge or weight restrictions turned up on the main routes. The practical point is that the area is rural and coastal, so services and turnouts thin out fast once you head into the Apalachicola National Forest on smaller roads or down toward the St. Marks coast and refuge. For normal travel, US-319 and US-98 are easy and direct. Plan fuel and supply stops in Crawfordville or Tallahassee before venturing onto the smaller forest and coastal roads where services are scarce and the next station may be miles away.

What is there to do around Crawfordville between dump stops?

Crawfordville is a great base for Big Bend nature. Wakulla Springs State Park, about 10 miles away, is one of the world's largest and deepest freshwater springs, with a 185-foot vent, glass-bottom and wildlife boat tours, swimming, a historic lodge, and manatees and alligators. The St. Marks National Wildlife Refuge about 15 miles south is a vast Gulf estuary with the historic St. Marks Lighthouse, one of the oldest in the Southeast, plus birding, hiking, fishing, and kayaking. The Apalachicola National Forest west of town offers over 500,000 acres of paddling, hiking, and fishing, and the St. Marks Historic Railroad Trail runs 16 paved miles from Tallahassee to the coast for biking and walking. So between springs, refuge, forest, and rail trail, the area gives you plenty to do between travel and dump days.

How far is Tallahassee and why does it matter for RVers?

Tallahassee is just 18 miles north of Crawfordville via US-319, with I-10 nearby, and it matters because the city is the service hub for this rural stretch of the Panhandle. Crawfordville is a small county seat with basic groceries and fuel, while Tallahassee adds full grocery stores, propane dealers, RV-friendly fuel, RV repair, supply shops, private campgrounds, and the FSU and FAMU attractions. The short, easy drive means you can base at Newport Campground or another quiet site near the springs and refuge, then run into Tallahassee for anything the small town cannot provide. Treating the two as a pair, with Tallahassee for services and Crawfordville for a nature-focused base near the coast and forest, makes for an efficient stop. Stock up in Tallahassee before heading into the Apalachicola forest where services are scarce.

When is the best time to RV around Crawfordville?

Spring and fall are the best, with warm, pleasant days, manageable humidity, and the springs, refuge, and rail trail in full swing. Spring brings comfortable weather before the summer heat and good crowds at Wakulla Springs, while fall eases after summer with thinning crowds, though hurricane season runs through November so stay weather-aware. Winter is mild and one of the more comfortable times, quieter and good for dumping in the bug-free air, with occasional cold fronts. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms, active alligators, and hurricane season, making it the quietest and cheapest but least comfortable time. Whatever the timing, base at Newport Campground or a Tallahassee-area site for reliable dumping, reserve ahead for spring and fall weekends, and plan summer tank chores around the heat and the daily storms.

Are there free dump stations in Crawfordville?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Crawfordville.