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RV Parks In Fort Myers, Florida

26.6217° N, 81.8406° W

Quick Overview

Fort Myers is one of the great snowbird capitals of the RV world, and it earns the title every winter. Tucked along the Caloosahatchee River and the Gulf in Southwest Florida, Lee County is packed with full-hookup resorts built for long, sunny winter stays, plus a couple of excellent public parks for travelers who want nature over a clubhouse.

The private side is what Fort Myers is known for. Resorts like Cypress Trail, with its big 35 by 90 concrete sites, along with Woodsmoke, Cypress Woods, and Encore Pioneer Village in North Fort Myers, offer full hookups, pools, pickleball, and the snowbird social scene that keeps folks coming back to the same site every January. These resorts book months to a year ahead for the winter season, and many of the best sites are held by returning regulars.

For lower prices and real Florida nature, the public parks are the move. Koreshan State Park in nearby Estero preserves an 1890s settlement on the Estero River with shaded electric sites and great paddling, and Caloosahatchee Regional Park up in Alva offers riverside electric sites with hiking and biking. Both have water and electric with a dump station rather than sewer at each site.

The honest trade-off here is season and price. Winter is glorious, dry, and in the 70s, which is exactly why it is the busiest and priciest stretch and demands booking far ahead. Summer flips the script: hot, humid, stormy, and cheap, with open sites and hurricane season to watch. Either way, the area is flat, easy big-rig country with the airport right in town, and the beaches of Sanibel and Fort Myers Beach are a short drive that is best done in your tow vehicle. Whether you come for a full winter in a resort or a few nights at a state park on your way around the Gulf, Fort Myers makes a comfortable, well-serviced base with more to do than you can fit into one stay.

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Traveling to Fort Myers by RV

Getting a big rig into Fort Myers is about as easy as Florida gets. I-75 runs north to south through Lee County as the main big-rig spine, with US-41, the Tamiami Trail, as the principal surface route and connectors like Daniels Parkway and SR-82 filling in. The terrain is flat and the roads are wide, so driving a large rig here is low-stress.

Southwest Florida International Airport (RSW) sits right in Fort Myers, making this one of the easiest snowbird destinations in the state for guests flying in to join you, or for a fly-and-rent trip. When you head out to the barrier islands, use a tow vehicle or day car for the bridges to Sanibel and Fort Myers Beach rather than the motorhome, since parking is tight out there. Check current park status and any storm-related closures on official sites like Visit Fort Myers and the state and county park pages, especially if you are traveling in hurricane season.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Public camping is the value play. Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park run roughly 30 to 45 dollars a night with electric and water, a fraction of resort pricing, though both book up fast for winter. Reservation systems add small service fees.

Private snowbird resorts are the premium, commonly 70 to 120 dollars or more a night for transient winter stays, with the biggest concrete big-rig sites at the top end. The real value at these resorts is the seasonal monthly rate that most winter visitors use, which drops the per-night cost well below the nightly figure and includes the full run of amenities. January through March is peak pricing by a wide margin. Roll in during summer and rates fall dramatically, often by half, because demand collapses in the heat and storm season. Decide whether you are buying winter sunshine or a summer bargain, and book accordingly.

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What RVers Are Saying About Fort Myers

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Best Time to Visit Fort Myers by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

54F - 75F

Crowds: High

Prime snowbird season with dry, sunny 75F days. Koreshan State Park and the private resorts book months to a year ahead for January through March, so reserve as early as you possibly can.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

62F - 84F

Crowds: High

Warm and still busy through March with snowbirds and spring breakers. It is the last reliably dry stretch before the summer rains start, and sites stay tight into April.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

75F - 92F

Crowds: Low

Hot, humid, and stormy, with daily afternoon thunderstorms and hurricane season underway. Rates are at their lowest and sites are open, but keep an eye on the tropics.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

70F - 86F

Crowds: Low

September and October are peak hurricane months and quiet, then snowbirds begin returning in November. Early fall offers shoulder deals if you accept the storm risk.

Explore the Fort Myers Area

If you want Koreshan State Park in winter, book the morning the 11-month reservation window opens, because the good dates vanish within minutes. For a private resort in season, reserve six to twelve months ahead, since the best ones are largely held by returning snowbirds who rebook a year out. Plan early or plan to take what is left.

Summer is the bargain season, with private-resort rates often cut in half, but you are camping through heat, daily afternoon storms, and hurricane season from June through November, so watch the tropics and keep a move plan. Sanibel shelling is best at low tide and right after a winter cold front pushes shells ashore, and the island bridges are far easier in a tow vehicle than the rig. For nature breaks, Six Mile Cypress Slough Preserve and the Ding Darling refuge on Sanibel are quiet, easy outings between beach days.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Fort Myers

What are the best RV parks in Fort Myers, FL?

For full-hookup snowbird resorts, Cypress Trail RV Resort stands out with big 35 by 90 concrete sites and a large clubhouse, while Woodsmoke Camping Resort, Cypress Woods, and Encore Pioneer Village in North Fort Myers all offer amenity-rich winter living with pools and activities. If you want public land and lower prices, Koreshan State Park in nearby Estero has electric sites on the Estero River, and Caloosahatchee Regional Park up in Alva sits on the river with hiking and paddling. Choose a private resort for the snowbird community and concrete big-rig pads, or a public park for nature and value.

Do Fort Myers RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

The private resorts do, and that is their whole appeal. Cypress Trail, Woodsmoke, Cypress Woods, and Encore Pioneer Village all offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer at the site, usually on level concrete pads built for long winter stays. The public parks are a notch simpler: Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park provide water and electric sites with a dump station rather than sewer at each site. If you are settling in for the season and want sewer and strong power, book a private resort; if you want nature and a lower price, the public parks deliver with a dump-station routine.

How much does RV camping cost in Fort Myers?

Public camping is the value option, with Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park running roughly 30 to 45 dollars a night with electric and water. Private snowbird resorts are far pricier in winter, commonly 70 to 120 dollars or more a night for transient stays, though the seasonal monthly rate that most winter visitors use brings the per-night cost down considerably. January through March is the peak pricing window of the year by a wide margin. Come in summer and rates fall dramatically across the private resorts, often by half, since demand evaporates in the heat and storm season.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Fort Myers?

For the winter snowbird season, book as early as humanly possible. Koreshan State Park opens an 11-month reservation window and the best winter dates are gone within minutes of release, so set a reminder and book at opening. Private resorts fill months ahead for January through March, and the most popular ones are largely held by returning snowbirds who rebook a year in advance. There is very little availability on short notice in winter. Summer is the opposite, with open sites nearly everywhere and easy walk-up booking, if you are willing to camp through the heat and storms.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Fort Myers?

November through April is the prime season, with warm, dry, sunny days in the 70s and low humidity, which is exactly why it is the busiest and most expensive window and demands early reservations. March adds spring break crowds on top of the snowbirds. Summer, from June into October, is hot and humid with daily thunderstorms and active hurricane season, so it is cheap and quiet but weather-dependent. If you want the postcard Southwest Florida experience, aim for winter and book far ahead; if you want bargains and can handle storms, summer works for the flexible and heat-tolerant.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Fort Myers?

Yes, this is excellent big-rig country. The private resorts are built around large, level concrete pads designed for big fifth wheels and diesel pushers, with Cypress Trail advertising 35 by 90 foot sites and several others offering big-rig concrete pads and pull-throughs. The flat terrain and wide roads of Lee County make driving a big rig easy, and Southwest Florida International Airport is close for guests flying in. On the public side, Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park accommodate larger rigs at some sites, though you should confirm length when booking. Just plan to use a tow vehicle for the narrow island bridges.

Are there public or state park camping options near Fort Myers?

Yes, two good ones. Koreshan State Park in Estero, about 20 minutes south, preserves an 1890s utopian settlement on the Estero River and offers shaded electric campsites plus kayaking and canoeing, a genuine slice of old Florida. Caloosahatchee Regional Park, run by Lee County up in Alva, sits on the river with electric sites, hiking, mountain biking, and paddling. Both are far cheaper than the private resorts and far more natural, but both book up fast for winter, so reserve early. They are the antidote if the big snowbird resorts feel too much like a parking lot for your taste.

Are Fort Myers RV resorts all 55-plus?

Many are, but not all. Fort Myers built much of its RV identity on snowbird and active-adult living, so a good share of the private resorts are 55-plus or heavily skew that way, like several of the Encore and active-adult communities. That said, there are all-ages parks and family-friendly resorts in the area too, and both public parks, Koreshan and Caloosahatchee, welcome any age. If you are traveling younger or with kids, just check each private resort’s age policy before booking, because the 55-plus rule is enforced where it applies, and confirm the amenities suit your group, since many are built around an older clientele.

Can I camp in Fort Myers during the summer?

You can, and it is cheap and uncrowded, but you trade weather for the savings. Summer in Southwest Florida is hot and very humid, with highs in the 90s, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and an active Atlantic hurricane season from June through November. A full-hookup site with strong 50-amp power keeps your air conditioning running, which is essential here in summer. Many snowbird resorts cut their rates by half or more, so it is a real bargain for the flexible. Just monitor the tropics closely, have a plan to move if a storm threatens, and avoid low-lying sites during heavy rain.

What is there to do around Fort Myers for RVers?

Plenty, which is why snowbirds stay all winter. The Sanibel and Captiva islands offer world-famous shelling beaches and the Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge, while Fort Myers Beach brings classic Gulf sand. In town, the Edison and Ford Winter Estates are a must-see, and Six Mile Cypress Slough Preserve and the Calusa Nature Center add easy nature outings. Koreshan State Park lets you paddle the Estero River, and the Caloosahatchee River and Gulf are loaded with fishing and boating. Add baseball spring training nearby in March and you have a full winter of things to do.

How did recent hurricanes affect camping around Fort Myers?

Southwest Florida took a hard hit from Hurricane Ian in 2022, and the recovery across Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, and Sanibel has been substantial, with beaches, parks, and most RV resorts back in operation. Still, it is smart to confirm directly with any park that it is fully open and that nearby attractions and beaches you care about are running before you book, since rebuilding has been uneven in spots. The state and county parks publish current status on their official sites. Travel insurance and flexible reservations are worth considering here given the area’s exposure to storms, especially if you are booking the summer or fall season.

Should I pay nightly or take a seasonal site in Fort Myers?

It depends on your plan. If you are passing through or staying a week or two, nightly rates at a resort or a public park keep things simple and flexible. If you are settling in for the winter the way most Fort Myers snowbirds do, the seasonal monthly rate at a private resort is far cheaper per night and gets you the full community of pools, pickleball, and activities that make these resorts worth it. For travelers, we usually suggest a public park or a nightly resort stay for shorter visits, and a seasonal booking only if you truly intend to park for the season, since the best monthly sites are reserved a year out.

Are Fort Myers campgrounds pet friendly?

Most are. The private snowbird resorts generally welcome pets, often with dog parks and pet areas, since so many full-time winter visitors travel with dogs, though some 55-plus communities have breed or number limits, so check the policy. Koreshan State Park allows pets in the campground and many areas but not in all park facilities, which is typical for Florida state parks. Watch the heat and humidity closely in the warmer months, never leave a pet in the rig without reliable air conditioning, and be mindful of alligators near fresh water and warm pavement on paws. With a little care, this is an easy area to travel with a dog.

What are the best RV parks in Fort Myers, FL?

For full-hookup snowbird resorts, Cypress Trail RV Resort stands out with big 35 by 90 concrete sites and a large clubhouse, while Woodsmoke Camping Resort, Cypress Woods, and Encore Pioneer Village in North Fort Myers all offer amenity-rich winter living with pools and activities. If you want public land and lower prices, Koreshan State Park in nearby Estero has electric sites on the Estero River, and Caloosahatchee Regional Park up in Alva sits on the river with hiking and paddling. Choose a private resort for the snowbird community and concrete big-rig pads, or a public park for nature and value.

Do Fort Myers RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

The private resorts do, and that is their whole appeal. Cypress Trail, Woodsmoke, Cypress Woods, and Encore Pioneer Village all offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer at the site, usually on level concrete pads built for long winter stays. The public parks are a notch simpler: Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park provide water and electric sites with a dump station rather than sewer at each site. If you are settling in for the season and want sewer and strong power, book a private resort; if you want nature and a lower price, the public parks deliver with a dump-station routine.

How much does RV camping cost in Fort Myers?

Public camping is the value option, with Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park running roughly 30 to 45 dollars a night with electric and water. Private snowbird resorts are far pricier in winter, commonly 70 to 120 dollars or more a night for transient stays, though the seasonal monthly rate that most winter visitors use brings the per-night cost down considerably. January through March is the peak pricing window of the year by a wide margin. Come in summer and rates fall dramatically across the private resorts, often by half, since demand evaporates in the heat and storm season.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Fort Myers?

For the winter snowbird season, book as early as humanly possible. Koreshan State Park opens an 11-month reservation window and the best winter dates are gone within minutes of release, so set a reminder and book at opening. Private resorts fill months ahead for January through March, and the most popular ones are largely held by returning snowbirds who rebook a year in advance. There is very little availability on short notice in winter. Summer is the opposite, with open sites nearly everywhere and easy walk-up booking, if you are willing to camp through the heat and storms.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Fort Myers?

November through April is the prime season, with warm, dry, sunny days in the 70s and low humidity, which is exactly why it is the busiest and most expensive window and demands early reservations. March adds spring break crowds on top of the snowbirds. Summer, from June into October, is hot and humid with daily thunderstorms and active hurricane season, so it is cheap and quiet but weather-dependent. If you want the postcard Southwest Florida experience, aim for winter and book far ahead; if you want bargains and can handle storms, summer works for the flexible and heat-tolerant.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Fort Myers?

Yes, this is excellent big-rig country. The private resorts are built around large, level concrete pads designed for big fifth wheels and diesel pushers, with Cypress Trail advertising 35 by 90 foot sites and several others offering big-rig concrete pads and pull-throughs. The flat terrain and wide roads of Lee County make driving a big rig easy, and Southwest Florida International Airport is close for guests flying in. On the public side, Koreshan State Park and Caloosahatchee Regional Park accommodate larger rigs at some sites, though you should confirm length when booking. Just plan to use a tow vehicle for the narrow island bridges.

Are there public or state park camping options near Fort Myers?

Yes, two good ones. Koreshan State Park in Estero, about 20 minutes south, preserves an 1890s utopian settlement on the Estero River and offers shaded electric campsites plus kayaking and canoeing, a genuine slice of old Florida. Caloosahatchee Regional Park, run by Lee County up in Alva, sits on the river with electric sites, hiking, mountain biking, and paddling. Both are far cheaper than the private resorts and far more natural, but both book up fast for winter, so reserve early. They are the antidote if the big snowbird resorts feel too much like a parking lot for your taste.

Are Fort Myers RV resorts all 55-plus?

Many are, but not all. Fort Myers built much of its RV identity on snowbird and active-adult living, so a good share of the private resorts are 55-plus or heavily skew that way, like several of the Encore and active-adult communities. That said, there are all-ages parks and family-friendly resorts in the area too, and both public parks, Koreshan and Caloosahatchee, welcome any age. If you are traveling younger or with kids, just check each private resort’s age policy before booking, because the 55-plus rule is enforced where it applies, and confirm the amenities suit your group, since many are built around an older clientele.

Can I camp in Fort Myers during the summer?

You can, and it is cheap and uncrowded, but you trade weather for the savings. Summer in Southwest Florida is hot and very humid, with highs in the 90s, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and an active Atlantic hurricane season from June through November. A full-hookup site with strong 50-amp power keeps your air conditioning running, which is essential here in summer. Many snowbird resorts cut their rates by half or more, so it is a real bargain for the flexible. Just monitor the tropics closely, have a plan to move if a storm threatens, and avoid low-lying sites during heavy rain.

What is there to do around Fort Myers for RVers?

Plenty, which is why snowbirds stay all winter. The Sanibel and Captiva islands offer world-famous shelling beaches and the Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge, while Fort Myers Beach brings classic Gulf sand. In town, the Edison and Ford Winter Estates are a must-see, and Six Mile Cypress Slough Preserve and the Calusa Nature Center add easy nature outings. Koreshan State Park lets you paddle the Estero River, and the Caloosahatchee River and Gulf are loaded with fishing and boating. Add baseball spring training nearby in March and you have a full winter of things to do.

How did recent hurricanes affect camping around Fort Myers?

Southwest Florida took a hard hit from Hurricane Ian in 2022, and the recovery across Fort Myers, Fort Myers Beach, and Sanibel has been substantial, with beaches, parks, and most RV resorts back in operation. Still, it is smart to confirm directly with any park that it is fully open and that nearby attractions and beaches you care about are running before you book, since rebuilding has been uneven in spots. The state and county parks publish current status on their official sites. Travel insurance and flexible reservations are worth considering here given the area’s exposure to storms, especially if you are booking the summer or fall season.

Should I pay nightly or take a seasonal site in Fort Myers?

It depends on your plan. If you are passing through or staying a week or two, nightly rates at a resort or a public park keep things simple and flexible. If you are settling in for the winter the way most Fort Myers snowbirds do, the seasonal monthly rate at a private resort is far cheaper per night and gets you the full community of pools, pickleball, and activities that make these resorts worth it. For travelers, we usually suggest a public park or a nightly resort stay for shorter visits, and a seasonal booking only if you truly intend to park for the season, since the best monthly sites are reserved a year out.

Are Fort Myers campgrounds pet friendly?

Most are. The private snowbird resorts generally welcome pets, often with dog parks and pet areas, since so many full-time winter visitors travel with dogs, though some 55-plus communities have breed or number limits, so check the policy. Koreshan State Park allows pets in the campground and many areas but not in all park facilities, which is typical for Florida state parks. Watch the heat and humidity closely in the warmer months, never leave a pet in the rig without reliable air conditioning, and be mindful of alligators near fresh water and warm pavement on paws. With a little care, this is an easy area to travel with a dog.

Are there free dump stations in Fort Myers?

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