RV Dump Stations In Miami Beach, Florida
25.7906° N, 80.1300° W
Quick Overview
Miami Beach is famous for everything except RV infrastructure. There's no public RV dump on the barrier island, no truck stops, and the city's municipal lots are sized for cars and SUVs, not rigs. For travelers rolling into the Miami area with full tanks, the realistic plan is the same as every smart RV traveler uses: dump at one of the inland county-park stations, then come over the causeways in a tow vehicle to actually enjoy Miami Beach. Don't try to find a clever workaround on the island. It doesn't exist.
The two reliable public RV dumps in metro Miami are Larry & Penny Thompson Park in Miami-Dade (24 miles southwest of Miami Beach) and T-Y Park in Hollywood (24 miles north, Broward County). Both accept day-use customers for a modest fee, both include potable water for tank rinse, and both are big-rig friendly. The Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, and Bluesky in Homestead all have dumps but typically reserve them for guests.
Treat Miami Beach as a beach and culture day, not a service day. Empty tanks, fill water, refill propane on the inland I-95 corridor before you turn east. Once you're staged at a campground or RV resort 20 to 40 miles from Miami Beach, the tow vehicle is your beach taxi and the rig stays clean and parked. That's how everyone who knows this area handles it. Plan around the metro traffic (especially the 4 to 7 p.m. crawl) and you'll move through Miami without losing half a day to logistics every time you need to dump.
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All Dump Stations Near Miami Beach
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Holiday Mobile Estates / Holiday Park | 13.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lake Trinity Estates | 14.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| KOA - Hollywood KOA | 16.0 mi | 3.4 | Dump Station | Free |
| Topeekeegee Yugnee Park (T.Y. Park) | 17.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| NorthCoast Park and Marina | 19.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| C.B. Smith Park Campground (Broward County Park) | 19.5 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Free |
| Yacht Haven Park & Marina | 20.7 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Lakes Travel Park | 20.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Larry & Penny Thompson Park & Campground | 21.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| KOA - Davie / Fort Lauderdale KOA | 23.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Holiday Mobile Estates / Holiday Park
13.6 miLake Trinity Estates
14.5 miKOA - Hollywood KOA
16.0 miTopeekeegee Yugnee Park (T.Y. Park)
17.2 miNorthCoast Park and Marina
19.1 miC.B. Smith Park Campground (Broward County Park)
19.5 miYacht Haven Park & Marina
20.7 miTwin Lakes Travel Park
20.8 miLarry & Penny Thompson Park & Campground
21.2 miKOA - Davie / Fort Lauderdale KOA
23.3 miTraveling to Miami Beach by RV
From Miami Beach, the rig should not be on the barrier island in the first place. Cross westbound via I-195 (Julia Tuttle Causeway) or I-395 (MacArthur Causeway) in a tow vehicle, then connect to I-95 for the corridor between metro Miami and Hollywood. Take Florida's Turnpike south to SW 184th Street for Larry & Penny Thompson Park, or stay on I-95 north to Sheridan Street for T-Y Park in Hollywood. Either route is about 25 miles and 35-50 minutes depending on traffic.
For Miami Everglades Resort, take SR-836 west to Krome Avenue (SR-997), about 35 miles. For Bluesky RV Resort in Homestead, head south on Florida's Turnpike to Florida City, about 40 miles. Plan all of these moves outside the 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. rush window on I-95; the I-95/I-195 interchange backs up daily and dumps the timing of your evening setup. Morning runs (before 8 a.m.) and weekend runs are the cleanest.
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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 Miami Beach, 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 Miami Beach
Larry & Penny Thompson Park typically charges a $10-$12 day-use dump fee for non-campers and includes potable water for tank rinse. T-Y Park is similar. Campers at any of the county parks have dump included in the nightly fee. The Hollywood KOA and Miami Everglades Resort generally limit dump access to guests, so the public day-use options are the only non-camping plays in the region.
Propane runs $4 to $5 per gallon at U-Haul North Miami and AmeriGas Hollywood. Diesel on the I-95 corridor tracks slightly above the Florida average; Costco North Miami is the local cheap option with membership. On Miami Beach itself, tow-vehicle metered parking is $3/hr street and $2/hr lot, 9 a.m. to 3 a.m. daily. Budget $20-$40 per day-trip in Miami Beach parking and tolls. The dump expense is small compared to the parking and dining costs of the island visit itself.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Miami Beach by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
62F - 76F
Crowds: High
Best dumping window if you go before 10 a.m. Larry & Penny Thompson queues from 11 a.m. checkout in snowbird season. Plan dump-and-go around camp transitions.
Spring
Mar - May
68F - 82F
Crowds: High
Spring break (March-April) packs the area; expect queues at county-park dumps around checkout. Easter heavy. Heat climbs through May.
Summer
Jun - Aug
76F - 89F
Crowds: Low
Easy dumps, low queues. Daily afternoon storms common; aim for morning. Mosquitoes brutal at Everglades-adjacent options.
Fall
Sep - Oct
70F - 84F
Crowds: Medium
Hurricane risk through November; watch NHC. Snowbird arrivals fill the queue by Thanksgiving. October is the cleanest window.
Explore the Miami Beach Area
Larry & Penny Thompson is the day-use dump champion in this metro: $10-$12 fee, potable water included, big-rig pad with pull-through access. Pay at the campground entrance, follow signs to the dump. Plan for it to be busiest around the 11 a.m. checkout window in snowbird season; aim for before 10 a.m. or after 1 p.m. T-Y Park works the same way and is the better choice if you're coming from the north.
If you're staying at any of the county or private campgrounds, dump on the way out instead of at check-in. Check-out queues are shorter and easier to time. Newcomers often run their dump-and-go before settling in; old hands save it for the morning they leave.
Propane is easier off the island than on it. U-Haul North Miami on US-1 handles RV propane refills consistently; AmeriGas Hollywood is the alternate. Exchange tanks at Home Depot Hallandale Beach Blvd work for portable cylinders, not built-in tanks. Combine propane with a Costco diesel run for the cleanest service-day setup.
Don't even consider trying to street-park the rig in Miami Beach to use a city water hookup or any informal service. City code enforcement is some of the most aggressive in South Florida. The fine plus tow easily outpaces $50 in dump fees and a tank fill at Larry & Penny.
Hurricane season is the wild card. From August through October, watch the National Hurricane Center cone and have a dump-and-evacuate plan north up I-95 ready before any named storm enters the Caribbean. Don't get stuck on the island.
National Parks Nearby
RV Tips & Articles
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Miami Beach
Where is the closest RV dump station to Miami Beach, Florida?
Larry & Penny Thompson Park, 24 miles southwest in Miami-Dade County, is the closest reliable RV dump and is open year-round to non-campers for a small day-use fee. T-Y Park in Hollywood (Broward County, 24 miles north) is the other major public day-use dump in the region. There is no RV dump station on the Miami Beach barrier island and the city does not maintain any public RV-grade infrastructure. Plan to dump on the inland I-95 corridor, then drive a tow vehicle across the causeway for the beach.
Can I dump at a Miami-area campground if I am not a guest?
Yes, at the county parks. Both Larry & Penny Thompson and T-Y Park offer day-use RV dump access at fees in the $10-$12 range, with potable water included for tank rinse. You pay at the campground entrance kiosk and follow signs. The Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, and Bluesky RV Resort in Homestead generally limit dump access to overnight guests. For non-camping dump-only stops, the two county-park options are the practical choices in metro Miami; both handle big rigs without trouble.
Are there any free RV dump stations near Miami Beach?
Not in metro Miami. The southeast Florida coast is the most expensive RV market in the state, and the dump infrastructure follows that pattern. Most options charge a fee, bundled into camping or sold as a day-use rate of $10-$12 per dump. Free dumps exist at some Walmart and truck-stop locations further inland (Naples direction) but there's no free option close to Miami Beach. The day-use fee at Larry & Penny Thompson is the cheapest reliable choice in this metro and worth the modest cost.
Can I park my RV overnight on Miami Beach?
No. The Miami Beach barrier island has no provision for overnight RV stays on any street, lot, or alley. Code enforcement is among the most aggressive in South Florida and tow fees stack quickly. The municipal parking program is for tow-vehicle-sized cars and SUVs only. Plan to camp at Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, or Bluesky in Homestead. Cross to the island only in a tow vehicle during the daytime, park in a city garage or metered lot, and head back to camp by evening.
Where can I refill RV propane near Miami Beach?
U-Haul North Miami on US-1 is the closest RV-grade propane refill, the most consistent option for onboard tanks in this area. AmeriGas Hollywood is the alternate, about 22 miles north. Exchange tanks at Home Depot (Hallandale Beach Boulevard) and most gas stations work for portable cylinders but won't help if your tank stays mounted. Miami Beach itself has no propane refill option. Combine propane with a Costco diesel run or grocery stop along the inland I-95 corridor for an efficient service day with one drive.
What is the best time of year to dump tanks near Miami Beach?
Late October through early December is the sweet spot: clear weather, low queues, and hurricane risk fading by Thanksgiving. December through March is heavy snowbird season; dumps still work fine but queues build from 11 a.m. to noon at the county parks, so aim for early morning. June through September is humid and stormy but quiet at the dump stations; morning dumps avoid afternoon thunderstorms. Spring break in March packs the area; book and dump around the busiest weekends, and watch the calendar for Easter week which adds another peak.
Are there truck-stop dumps near Miami Beach?
No major truck-stop chains operate near Miami Beach. The nearest Pilot/Flying J locations are well west on I-75 toward Naples or north along I-95 in Palm Beach County. For RV-specific dumping in metro Miami, the county-park campgrounds at Larry & Penny Thompson and T-Y Park are the practical options. Don't expect a roadside or service-station RV dump in this area; the dense urban land use doesn't support that model. Plan dumps as part of your camp and uncamp routine instead of as roadside stops between destinations.
Can I refill fresh water at Larry & Penny Thompson?
Yes. The dump station at Larry & Penny Thompson Park includes a potable water tap for tank rinse and fill, included in the day-use dump fee. T-Y Park is the same setup. Plan your timing so you arrive with the gray and black tanks ready to dump and the fresh tank empty for a quick fill. Don't try to source fresh water from marinas or municipal parks on the barrier island; those taps aren't intended for RV-grade potable use and the pressure is inconsistent.
Will my big rig fit at the Miami-area dump stations?
Yes. Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, and Miami Everglades Resort all have dump pads sized for 40-foot rigs with pull-through approach. The constraint isn't the dump pad, it's the route in. Stay off the Miami Beach barrier island entirely with anything big; use I-95 and Florida's Turnpike to reach the inland county parks. For Larry & Penny Thompson the entrance shares the Zoo Miami driveway off SW 184th Street with plenty of swing room. T-Y Park's Sheridan Street entrance is also big-rig friendly.
How does the dump fee work at Larry & Penny Thompson?
Pay the $10-$12 day-use dump fee at the campground entrance kiosk on arrival and the staff will direct you to the dump pad. The fee includes potable water for tank rinse. Campers staying at the park have dump included in the nightly fee at no extra charge. Queue volume peaks around the 11 a.m. campground checkout; arrive before 10 a.m. for fastest in-and-out, especially in snowbird season from January through March. Cash is accepted at the kiosk; cards work for online reservations.
Should I dump before or after Everglades and Keys day trips?
Dump before. Everglades National Park's main entrance is 50+ miles from Miami Beach and has limited RV-grade dump capacity inside the park; the closest reliable dumps to the Everglades are at Bluesky in Homestead and Miami Everglades Resort. For Florida Keys trips, dump in Homestead before crossing the 18-Mile Stretch to Key Largo. Going into the park or the Keys with empty gray and black and full fresh gives you the most flexibility for boondocking and primitive camping, and saves you the backtrack across long bridges with full tanks.
What about hurricane-season dump planning for Miami Beach trips?
Hurricane season runs June 1 to November 30, with peak risk for South Florida from August through mid-October. The county parks close ahead of named storms, and dump stations close with them. Watch the National Hurricane Center five-day cone in summer and have a dump-and-evacuate plan north up I-95 picked before any system enters the Caribbean. From December through May, hurricane risk is minimal. Dump planning becomes just about queues and weather rather than evacuation orders. Travel insurance is worth carrying for peak-season trips.
Camping here instead of just dumping? See our guide to RV parks in Miami Beach.
If you want to camp rather than just dump tanks, see our companion guide to RV parks in Miami Beach, Florida for the full breakdown of Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, and Bluesky in Homestead. The park page covers reservation timing, snowbird booking windows, full-hookup availability, big-rig fit, and a side-by-side cost comparison so you can pick the right base for a southeast Florida trip without stitching together a dozen separate listings on your own.
Where is the closest RV dump station to Miami Beach, Florida?
Larry & Penny Thompson Park, 24 miles southwest in Miami-Dade County, is the closest reliable RV dump and is open year-round to non-campers for a small day-use fee. T-Y Park in Hollywood (Broward County, 24 miles north) is the other major public day-use dump in the region. There is no RV dump station on the Miami Beach barrier island and the city does not maintain any public RV-grade infrastructure. Plan to dump on the inland I-95 corridor, then drive a tow vehicle across the causeway for the beach.
Can I dump at a Miami-area campground if I am not a guest?
Yes, at the county parks. Both Larry & Penny Thompson and T-Y Park offer day-use RV dump access at fees in the $10-$12 range, with potable water included for tank rinse. You pay at the campground entrance kiosk and follow signs. The Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, and Bluesky RV Resort in Homestead generally limit dump access to overnight guests. For non-camping dump-only stops, the two county-park options are the practical choices in metro Miami; both handle big rigs without trouble.
Are there any free RV dump stations near Miami Beach?
Not in metro Miami. The southeast Florida coast is the most expensive RV market in the state, and the dump infrastructure follows that pattern. Most options charge a fee, bundled into camping or sold as a day-use rate of $10-$12 per dump. Free dumps exist at some Walmart and truck-stop locations further inland (Naples direction) but there's no free option close to Miami Beach. The day-use fee at Larry & Penny Thompson is the cheapest reliable choice in this metro and worth the modest cost.
Can I park my RV overnight on Miami Beach?
No. The Miami Beach barrier island has no provision for overnight RV stays on any street, lot, or alley. Code enforcement is among the most aggressive in South Florida and tow fees stack quickly. The municipal parking program is for tow-vehicle-sized cars and SUVs only. Plan to camp at Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, or Bluesky in Homestead. Cross to the island only in a tow vehicle during the daytime, park in a city garage or metered lot, and head back to camp by evening.
Where can I refill RV propane near Miami Beach?
U-Haul North Miami on US-1 is the closest RV-grade propane refill, the most consistent option for onboard tanks in this area. AmeriGas Hollywood is the alternate, about 22 miles north. Exchange tanks at Home Depot (Hallandale Beach Boulevard) and most gas stations work for portable cylinders but won't help if your tank stays mounted. Miami Beach itself has no propane refill option. Combine propane with a Costco diesel run or grocery stop along the inland I-95 corridor for an efficient service day with one drive.
What is the best time of year to dump tanks near Miami Beach?
Late October through early December is the sweet spot: clear weather, low queues, and hurricane risk fading by Thanksgiving. December through March is heavy snowbird season; dumps still work fine but queues build from 11 a.m. to noon at the county parks, so aim for early morning. June through September is humid and stormy but quiet at the dump stations; morning dumps avoid afternoon thunderstorms. Spring break in March packs the area; book and dump around the busiest weekends, and watch the calendar for Easter week which adds another peak.
Are there truck-stop dumps near Miami Beach?
No major truck-stop chains operate near Miami Beach. The nearest Pilot/Flying J locations are well west on I-75 toward Naples or north along I-95 in Palm Beach County. For RV-specific dumping in metro Miami, the county-park campgrounds at Larry & Penny Thompson and T-Y Park are the practical options. Don't expect a roadside or service-station RV dump in this area; the dense urban land use doesn't support that model. Plan dumps as part of your camp and uncamp routine instead of as roadside stops between destinations.
Can I refill fresh water at Larry & Penny Thompson?
Yes. The dump station at Larry & Penny Thompson Park includes a potable water tap for tank rinse and fill, included in the day-use dump fee. T-Y Park is the same setup. Plan your timing so you arrive with the gray and black tanks ready to dump and the fresh tank empty for a quick fill. Don't try to source fresh water from marinas or municipal parks on the barrier island; those taps aren't intended for RV-grade potable use and the pressure is inconsistent.
Will my big rig fit at the Miami-area dump stations?
Yes. Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, and Miami Everglades Resort all have dump pads sized for 40-foot rigs with pull-through approach. The constraint isn't the dump pad, it's the route in. Stay off the Miami Beach barrier island entirely with anything big; use I-95 and Florida's Turnpike to reach the inland county parks. For Larry & Penny Thompson the entrance shares the Zoo Miami driveway off SW 184th Street with plenty of swing room. T-Y Park's Sheridan Street entrance is also big-rig friendly.
How does the dump fee work at Larry & Penny Thompson?
Pay the $10-$12 day-use dump fee at the campground entrance kiosk on arrival and the staff will direct you to the dump pad. The fee includes potable water for tank rinse. Campers staying at the park have dump included in the nightly fee at no extra charge. Queue volume peaks around the 11 a.m. campground checkout; arrive before 10 a.m. for fastest in-and-out, especially in snowbird season from January through March. Cash is accepted at the kiosk; cards work for online reservations.
Should I dump before or after Everglades and Keys day trips?
Dump before. Everglades National Park's main entrance is 50+ miles from Miami Beach and has limited RV-grade dump capacity inside the park; the closest reliable dumps to the Everglades are at Bluesky in Homestead and Miami Everglades Resort. For Florida Keys trips, dump in Homestead before crossing the 18-Mile Stretch to Key Largo. Going into the park or the Keys with empty gray and black and full fresh gives you the most flexibility for boondocking and primitive camping, and saves you the backtrack across long bridges with full tanks.
What about hurricane-season dump planning for Miami Beach trips?
Hurricane season runs June 1 to November 30, with peak risk for South Florida from August through mid-October. The county parks close ahead of named storms, and dump stations close with them. Watch the National Hurricane Center five-day cone in summer and have a dump-and-evacuate plan north up I-95 picked before any system enters the Caribbean. From December through May, hurricane risk is minimal. Dump planning becomes just about queues and weather rather than evacuation orders. Travel insurance is worth carrying for peak-season trips.
Camping here instead of just dumping? See our guide to RV parks in Miami Beach.
If you want to camp rather than just dump tanks, see our companion guide to RV parks in Miami Beach, Florida for the full breakdown of Larry & Penny Thompson, T-Y Park, Hollywood KOA, Miami Everglades Resort, and Bluesky in Homestead. The park page covers reservation timing, snowbird booking windows, full-hookup availability, big-rig fit, and a side-by-side cost comparison so you can pick the right base for a southeast Florida trip without stitching together a dozen separate listings on your own.
Are there free dump stations in Miami Beach?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Miami Beach.
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