RV Parks In LaBelle, Florida
26.7617° N, 81.4384° W
Quick Overview
LaBelle is old Florida the way snowbirds wish more of the state still looked: a quiet river town on the Caloosahatchee, surrounded by orange groves and cattle ranches, an easy drive inland from the Fort Myers coast. For RVers chasing a warm, affordable winter without the crowds and prices of the Gulf beaches, it's become a favorite, with a surprising cluster of full-hookup resorts strung along the river and the Okeechobee Waterway running right through the heart of it.
The private resorts are the main event here, and they lean toward the long-stay snowbird and motorcoach crowd. Whisper Creek RV Resort, a gated 55+ park a mile north of town, offers wide, deep full-hookup lots with 50-amp service, cable, a fitness center, and a dog park. The Glades RV Resort sprawls across 500 riverfront acres with its own 9-hole golf course, marina, and boat ramp on the Caloosahatchee. Riverbend is the upscale gated motorcoach resort along the river, and Aqua Isles is the relaxed, value-friendly choice for extended stays, handling rigs up to about 50 feet.
For something more natural and a lot cheaper, the public option is excellent: Ortona South Campground, run by the Army Corps of Engineers at the Ortona Lock, sits right on the Okeechobee Waterway with waterfront electric-and-water sites and big-rig pull-throughs, all bookable on Recreation.gov. You'll watch boats lock through on their way across the state and have some of the best fishing access around. So the trade-off is clear: a full-amenity riverfront resort with golf and a marina, a quiet 55+ snowbird park, or an affordable waterfront Corps campground. Add in genuinely warm, dry winters, real bass and crappie fishing, and a slow river-town pace, and LaBelle makes a relaxed base for a week or a whole season away from the coastal bustle. For travelers who did the crowded coast once and decided they'd rather wake up to herons on the river than traffic on the beach road, LaBelle is the kind of place you come back to year after year.
Top Rated Dump Stations in LaBelle
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Gear for Your Trip to LaBelle
All Dump Stations Near LaBelle
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labelle Woods RV Resort | 0.6 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Whisper Creek RV Resort | 1.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Grandma's Grove RV Resort | 2.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Riverbend Motorcoach Resort | 6.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Olde Florida Motorcoach Resort | 8.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Meadowlark Shores RV Park | 9.1 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Glades RV Resort | 12.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| W.p. Franklin Campground | 16.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sabal Palm RV Resort | 16.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Palm & Pines RV Park | 16.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Labelle Woods RV Resort
0.6 miWhisper Creek RV Resort
1.8 miGrandma's Grove RV Resort
2.8 miRiverbend Motorcoach Resort
6.7 miOlde Florida Motorcoach Resort
8.3 miMeadowlark Shores RV Park
9.1 miThe Glades RV Resort
12.9 miW.p. Franklin Campground
16.0 miSabal Palm RV Resort
16.2 miPalm & Pines RV Park
16.3 miTraveling to LaBelle by RV
LaBelle is easy to reach and easy to drive in a big rig. State Road 80 runs right along the Caloosahatchee between Fort Myers to the west and Lake Okeechobee to the east, passing through town on flat, open terrain with no tight spots, and most of the resorts sit just off it. Interstate 75 is about thirty miles west, so you're close to the main north-south artery without being on top of the traffic. SR-29 crosses north-south through town toward Immokalee and the Everglades country.
The town covers the basics for travelers, with grocery stores, restaurants, fuel and propane, and a hospital, while Fort Myers about thirty miles west adds big-box shopping, RV dealers and repair, and Southwest Florida International Airport for flying in or meeting family. The Gulf beaches at Fort Myers and Sanibel are an easy day trip, and Lake Okeechobee is roughly thirty miles east for big-water fishing. Because this is the agricultural interior rather than the coast, the pace and prices are gentler, but services are still close at hand. Fuel and groceries are readily available in and around LaBelle, so there's no need to stock up the way you would in truly remote country.
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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 LaBelle, 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 LaBelle
LaBelle is one of the better winter values in southwest Florida, which is much of its appeal versus the pricey coast. The private full-hookup resorts vary widely: the upscale riverfront and motorcoach parks like The Glades and Riverbend sit at the higher end, while value-oriented snowbird parks like Aqua Isles and Whisper Creek are more moderate. Nightly rates in peak winter often run roughly $45 to $70, but the real savings come from monthly snowbird rates, which bring the per-night cost down substantially for a season-long stay and undercut comparable coastal parks by a wide margin.
The standout budget pick is the public Ortona South Campground, where Army Corps of Engineers waterfront electric-and-water sites cost a fraction of the private resorts, and holders of the federal America the Beautiful senior or access pass get an additional discount, making it one of the cheapest waterfront camping options in the region. Summer rates everywhere drop sharply once the snowbirds leave. Fuel and groceries in the agricultural interior are reasonably priced, and the slower river-town economy means fewer of the tourist markups you'll find closer to the Gulf beaches, so day-to-day costs stay low.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit LaBelle by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
52F - 76F
Crowds: High
Prime snowbird season with warm, dry, sunny days and comfortable nights. Resorts and the Corps campground fill, so reserve monthly sites far ahead. The Swamp Cabbage Festival livens up town.
Spring
Mar - May
60F - 85F
Crowds: Medium
Warm and dry early, heating up by late spring as snowbirds depart. Excellent bass fishing and easy availability make it a good shoulder-season value before summer storms arrive.
Summer
Jun - Aug
73F - 92F
Crowds: Low
Hot, humid, and rainy with daily afternoon thunderstorms and plenty of bugs. The snowbirds are gone and rates are at their lowest; bring strong AC and a screen room.
Fall
Sep - Oct
66F - 85F
Crowds: Low
Warm and still quiet before the winter rush, with good value and the fishing picking back up. Keep an eye on the tropics, since this is hurricane season in Florida.
Explore the LaBelle Area
If you want a LaBelle winter, plan it early. The snowbird season runs roughly December through March, and the best monthly sites at the popular resorts and the waterfront Corps campground get reserved months in advance, so don't expect to roll in mid-season and find a prime full-hookup spot open. The flip side is summer, when the snowbirds head north, the resorts empty out, and rates drop sharply, though you'll be trading for heat, humidity, daily storms, and bugs.
Make the river the center of your stay. The Caloosahatchee and the Okeechobee Waterway are great for boating, paddling, and fishing, with bass, crappie, and bluegill in good numbers, plus manatees that move through in the cooler months, so a Florida fishing license and a check of current regulations are worth sorting out early. Ortona South is the spot for anglers who want waterfront access on a budget. Save time for the slow pleasures too: historic downtown LaBelle, the local honey for which the area is known, riverfront parks, and the Swamp Cabbage Festival if you're here in winter. And whenever you visit outside the peak dry months, bring a screen room and good bug protection, because the interior gets buggy fast after rain.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in LaBelle
What are the best RV parks in LaBelle, Florida?
For full amenities, The Glades RV Resort is a standout, with 500 riverfront acres, a 9-hole golf course, marina, and boat ramp on the Caloosahatchee. Whisper Creek RV Resort is a gated 55+ park with wide full-hookup lots, a fitness center, and a dog park, while Riverbend is the upscale motorcoach resort along the river and Aqua Isles is the relaxed, value-friendly choice for extended snowbird stays. For budget waterfront camping, the public Ortona South Campground, run by the Army Corps of Engineers at the Ortona Lock, puts you right on the Okeechobee Waterway with electric-and-water sites for far less. Most visitors choose based on whether they want resort amenities or affordable waterfront simplicity.
Do LaBelle RV parks have full hookups with sewer?
Yes, the private resorts do. The Glades, Whisper Creek, Riverbend, and Aqua Isles all offer full hookups with electric, water, and sewer, plus 50-amp service at most sites, which suits the long winter stays common here. The public Ortona South Campground is electric-and-water only, as is typical for Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds, so you'd use its dump station rather than a sewer hookup at your site. If having sewer at your site matters for a season-long stay, base at one of the private resorts; if you'd rather have waterfront access on the Okeechobee Waterway for a fraction of the cost and don't mind dumping on the way out, Ortona South is the value choice.
How much does RV camping cost in LaBelle?
It's one of the better winter values in southwest Florida. Private full-hookup resorts vary, with upscale riverfront and motorcoach parks like The Glades and Riverbend at the higher end and value snowbird parks like Aqua Isles and Whisper Creek more moderate; peak-winter nightly rates often run roughly $45 to $70. The real savings come from monthly snowbird rates, which lower the per-night cost substantially and undercut comparable coastal parks by a wide margin. The big budget pick is the public Ortona South Campground, where Corps of Engineers waterfront sites cost a fraction of the resorts, with an added discount for federal senior or access pass holders. Summer rates everywhere drop sharply once the snowbirds head north.
Why is LaBelle popular with snowbirds?
LaBelle offers the warm, dry Florida winter that snowbirds want, but inland and away from the crowds and high prices of the Gulf coast. The town sits in the agricultural interior along the Caloosahatchee, so it's quieter and more affordable than coastal hubs, with a cluster of resorts geared specifically to long winter stays, including a 55+ community and several with riverfront access, golf, and marinas. Monthly rates make a season here genuinely economical, and the Okeechobee Waterway brings excellent fishing and boating right to the doorstep. You still get full services in town and easy access to Fort Myers, its airport, and the beaches about thirty miles west, so you trade coastal density for a slower river-town pace without giving up convenience.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in LaBelle?
For the winter snowbird season from December through March, reserve as early as you can, ideally by summer, because the best monthly sites at the popular private resorts and the waterfront Ortona South Corps campground fill months in advance. The Corps campground is booked through Recreation.gov, which opens a reservation window ahead of time, and prime winter dates there go quickly. Outside the peak season, availability is far easier: summer is wide open and cheap as the snowbirds head north, and the fall and late-spring shoulders are usually bookable a few weeks out. If your heart is set on a specific riverfront or 55+ resort for the winter, treat it like a popular reservation and lock it in well ahead.
Can big rigs camp in LaBelle?
Yes, comfortably at most parks. The motorcoach and riverfront resorts like Riverbend and The Glades are built for large, high-end rigs, and Whisper Creek offers wide, deep full-hookup lots with 50-amp service. Aqua Isles handles rigs up to about 50 feet, so only the very largest setups need to confirm fit there. The public Ortona South Campground has many big-rig-friendly pull-through sites, which is a bonus for a Corps campground. Access is easy throughout, since State Road 80 runs flat and open along the river with no tight turns or low bridges, and Interstate 75 is a straightforward thirty miles west. Between the resort infrastructure and the easy roads, LaBelle is a relaxed big-rig destination for a long winter stay.
What fishing is available around LaBelle?
LaBelle sits on the Caloosahatchee River, part of the Okeechobee Waterway, which gives anglers excellent access to largemouth bass, crappie, bluegill, and catfish, and big Lake Okeechobee, one of the country's premier bass lakes, is only about thirty miles east. The waterfront Ortona South Campground is a favorite base for anglers because you can fish right from the area around the lock. You'll need a valid Florida fishing license, available online or locally, and should review current freshwater regulations and limits before heading out. Winter and spring are prime for bass as the fish move shallow, and the mild climate keeps the fishing productive much of the year. Boat ramps are available at The Glades and at public access points along the river, and guides operate on Okeechobee for those who want help.
What is the Ortona South Campground like?
Ortona South is an Army Corps of Engineers campground at the Ortona Lock on the Okeechobee Waterway, a few miles east of LaBelle, and it's one of the best public camping values in the area. It offers waterfront electric-and-water sites, many of them big-rig-friendly pull-throughs, at prices well below the private resorts, with an additional discount for holders of the federal senior or access pass. Campers enjoy watching boats lock through on their cross-Florida journey, excellent fishing access, and a quiet, natural riverside setting. Because it's both cheap and scenic, it books up months ahead for the winter season through Recreation.gov, so reserve early if you want a peak-season stay. In summer it's far easier to get a site, though you'll contend with heat and bugs.
When is the best time to go RV camping in LaBelle?
Winter, from December through March, is the prime season, with warm, dry, sunny days and comfortable nights that are ideal for camping, fishing, and boating, which is exactly why it's the busy snowbird window and why you must book ahead. Late fall and early spring are excellent shoulder seasons, with warm weather, good fishing, easier availability, and lower prices, though fall overlaps hurricane season so keep an eye on the tropics. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy, with daily afternoon thunderstorms and heavy bug pressure, so it's the cheapest and emptiest time but the least comfortable. For the best balance of weather and value, target November or April, just on the edges of the peak snowbird rush.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in LaBelle?
If you stay at any of the private full-hookup resorts like The Glades, Whisper Creek, Riverbend, or Aqua Isles, you'll have sewer at your site and won't need a separate dump. Campers at the public Ortona South Campground use the campground's dump station, since those waterfront sites are electric-and-water only. For travelers passing through, some fuel stations and county facilities in the LaBelle and Caloosahatchee corridor offer dump services, and the larger Fort Myers area to the west has more options. Because LaBelle is a real town with full services rather than a remote outpost, finding a place to empty your tanks is straightforward. For a fuller breakdown of local dump options, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in LaBelle, which covers the public and pay choices nearby.
What is there to do around LaBelle besides camping?
More than its quiet size suggests. The Caloosahatchee River and Okeechobee Waterway anchor the recreation, with boating, paddling, fishing, and manatee viewing in the cooler months. Lake Okeechobee, about thirty miles east, offers world-class bass fishing and the Lake Okeechobee Scenic Trail for cycling and walking the dike. Historic downtown LaBelle is a genuine old Florida river town known for its local honey, riverfront parks, and the lively Swamp Cabbage Festival each winter. The surrounding countryside is citrus and cattle land, with agritourism stops and farm stands. And because Fort Myers, Sanibel, and the Gulf beaches are only about thirty miles west, you can pair quiet interior camping with day trips to the coast, getting the best of both worlds from one affordable base.
What is the weather like for RV camping in LaBelle?
LaBelle has a subtropical climate with a sharp wet and dry season split. The winter dry season, roughly November through April, is the draw: warm, sunny days often in the 70s to low 80s, low humidity, and comfortable nights, which is ideal RV weather and why snowbirds flock here. The summer wet season, May through October, is hot and humid with highs in the 90s, daily afternoon thunderstorms, and heavy bug pressure, so strong air conditioning and a screen room are important then. Fall overlaps hurricane season, so keep an eye on tropical forecasts if you camp from August into October. Frost is rare but a brief cold snap can drop winter nights into the 40s, so pack a few layers even for a winter stay in the Florida interior.
What are the best RV parks in LaBelle, Florida?
For full amenities, The Glades RV Resort is a standout, with 500 riverfront acres, a 9-hole golf course, marina, and boat ramp on the Caloosahatchee. Whisper Creek RV Resort is a gated 55+ park with wide full-hookup lots, a fitness center, and a dog park, while Riverbend is the upscale motorcoach resort along the river and Aqua Isles is the relaxed, value-friendly choice for extended snowbird stays. For budget waterfront camping, the public Ortona South Campground, run by the Army Corps of Engineers at the Ortona Lock, puts you right on the Okeechobee Waterway with electric-and-water sites for far less. Most visitors choose based on whether they want resort amenities or affordable waterfront simplicity.
Do LaBelle RV parks have full hookups with sewer?
Yes, the private resorts do. The Glades, Whisper Creek, Riverbend, and Aqua Isles all offer full hookups with electric, water, and sewer, plus 50-amp service at most sites, which suits the long winter stays common here. The public Ortona South Campground is electric-and-water only, as is typical for Army Corps of Engineers campgrounds, so you'd use its dump station rather than a sewer hookup at your site. If having sewer at your site matters for a season-long stay, base at one of the private resorts; if you'd rather have waterfront access on the Okeechobee Waterway for a fraction of the cost and don't mind dumping on the way out, Ortona South is the value choice.
How much does RV camping cost in LaBelle?
It's one of the better winter values in southwest Florida. Private full-hookup resorts vary, with upscale riverfront and motorcoach parks like The Glades and Riverbend at the higher end and value snowbird parks like Aqua Isles and Whisper Creek more moderate; peak-winter nightly rates often run roughly $45 to $70. The real savings come from monthly snowbird rates, which lower the per-night cost substantially and undercut comparable coastal parks by a wide margin. The big budget pick is the public Ortona South Campground, where Corps of Engineers waterfront sites cost a fraction of the resorts, with an added discount for federal senior or access pass holders. Summer rates everywhere drop sharply once the snowbirds head north.
Why is LaBelle popular with snowbirds?
LaBelle offers the warm, dry Florida winter that snowbirds want, but inland and away from the crowds and high prices of the Gulf coast. The town sits in the agricultural interior along the Caloosahatchee, so it's quieter and more affordable than coastal hubs, with a cluster of resorts geared specifically to long winter stays, including a 55+ community and several with riverfront access, golf, and marinas. Monthly rates make a season here genuinely economical, and the Okeechobee Waterway brings excellent fishing and boating right to the doorstep. You still get full services in town and easy access to Fort Myers, its airport, and the beaches about thirty miles west, so you trade coastal density for a slower river-town pace without giving up convenience.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in LaBelle?
For the winter snowbird season from December through March, reserve as early as you can, ideally by summer, because the best monthly sites at the popular private resorts and the waterfront Ortona South Corps campground fill months in advance. The Corps campground is booked through Recreation.gov, which opens a reservation window ahead of time, and prime winter dates there go quickly. Outside the peak season, availability is far easier: summer is wide open and cheap as the snowbirds head north, and the fall and late-spring shoulders are usually bookable a few weeks out. If your heart is set on a specific riverfront or 55+ resort for the winter, treat it like a popular reservation and lock it in well ahead.
Can big rigs camp in LaBelle?
Yes, comfortably at most parks. The motorcoach and riverfront resorts like Riverbend and The Glades are built for large, high-end rigs, and Whisper Creek offers wide, deep full-hookup lots with 50-amp service. Aqua Isles handles rigs up to about 50 feet, so only the very largest setups need to confirm fit there. The public Ortona South Campground has many big-rig-friendly pull-through sites, which is a bonus for a Corps campground. Access is easy throughout, since State Road 80 runs flat and open along the river with no tight turns or low bridges, and Interstate 75 is a straightforward thirty miles west. Between the resort infrastructure and the easy roads, LaBelle is a relaxed big-rig destination for a long winter stay.
What fishing is available around LaBelle?
LaBelle sits on the Caloosahatchee River, part of the Okeechobee Waterway, which gives anglers excellent access to largemouth bass, crappie, bluegill, and catfish, and big Lake Okeechobee, one of the country's premier bass lakes, is only about thirty miles east. The waterfront Ortona South Campground is a favorite base for anglers because you can fish right from the area around the lock. You'll need a valid Florida fishing license, available online or locally, and should review current freshwater regulations and limits before heading out. Winter and spring are prime for bass as the fish move shallow, and the mild climate keeps the fishing productive much of the year. Boat ramps are available at The Glades and at public access points along the river, and guides operate on Okeechobee for those who want help.
What is the Ortona South Campground like?
Ortona South is an Army Corps of Engineers campground at the Ortona Lock on the Okeechobee Waterway, a few miles east of LaBelle, and it's one of the best public camping values in the area. It offers waterfront electric-and-water sites, many of them big-rig-friendly pull-throughs, at prices well below the private resorts, with an additional discount for holders of the federal senior or access pass. Campers enjoy watching boats lock through on their cross-Florida journey, excellent fishing access, and a quiet, natural riverside setting. Because it's both cheap and scenic, it books up months ahead for the winter season through Recreation.gov, so reserve early if you want a peak-season stay. In summer it's far easier to get a site, though you'll contend with heat and bugs.
When is the best time to go RV camping in LaBelle?
Winter, from December through March, is the prime season, with warm, dry, sunny days and comfortable nights that are ideal for camping, fishing, and boating, which is exactly why it's the busy snowbird window and why you must book ahead. Late fall and early spring are excellent shoulder seasons, with warm weather, good fishing, easier availability, and lower prices, though fall overlaps hurricane season so keep an eye on the tropics. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy, with daily afternoon thunderstorms and heavy bug pressure, so it's the cheapest and emptiest time but the least comfortable. For the best balance of weather and value, target November or April, just on the edges of the peak snowbird rush.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in LaBelle?
If you stay at any of the private full-hookup resorts like The Glades, Whisper Creek, Riverbend, or Aqua Isles, you'll have sewer at your site and won't need a separate dump. Campers at the public Ortona South Campground use the campground's dump station, since those waterfront sites are electric-and-water only. For travelers passing through, some fuel stations and county facilities in the LaBelle and Caloosahatchee corridor offer dump services, and the larger Fort Myers area to the west has more options. Because LaBelle is a real town with full services rather than a remote outpost, finding a place to empty your tanks is straightforward. For a fuller breakdown of local dump options, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in LaBelle, which covers the public and pay choices nearby.
What is there to do around LaBelle besides camping?
More than its quiet size suggests. The Caloosahatchee River and Okeechobee Waterway anchor the recreation, with boating, paddling, fishing, and manatee viewing in the cooler months. Lake Okeechobee, about thirty miles east, offers world-class bass fishing and the Lake Okeechobee Scenic Trail for cycling and walking the dike. Historic downtown LaBelle is a genuine old Florida river town known for its local honey, riverfront parks, and the lively Swamp Cabbage Festival each winter. The surrounding countryside is citrus and cattle land, with agritourism stops and farm stands. And because Fort Myers, Sanibel, and the Gulf beaches are only about thirty miles west, you can pair quiet interior camping with day trips to the coast, getting the best of both worlds from one affordable base.
What is the weather like for RV camping in LaBelle?
LaBelle has a subtropical climate with a sharp wet and dry season split. The winter dry season, roughly November through April, is the draw: warm, sunny days often in the 70s to low 80s, low humidity, and comfortable nights, which is ideal RV weather and why snowbirds flock here. The summer wet season, May through October, is hot and humid with highs in the 90s, daily afternoon thunderstorms, and heavy bug pressure, so strong air conditioning and a screen room are important then. Fall overlaps hurricane season, so keep an eye on tropical forecasts if you camp from August into October. Frost is rare but a brief cold snap can drop winter nights into the 40s, so pack a few layers even for a winter stay in the Florida interior.
What is the highest-rated dump station in LaBelle?
The highest-rated station is KOA - Moore Haven KOA with a rating of 3.8/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in LaBelle?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near LaBelle.
All Dump Stations Near LaBelle (99)
RV ParkLabelle Woods RV Resort
RV ParkWhisper Creek RV Resort
RV ParkGrandma's Grove RV Resort
RV ParkRiverbend Motorcoach Resort
RV ParkOlde Florida Motorcoach Resort
RV ParkMeadowlark Shores RV Park
RV ParkThe Glades RV Resort
RV Park



