RV Parks In Palm Bay, Florida
28.0345° N, 80.5887° W
Quick Overview
Palm Bay sits at the south end of Brevard County's Space Coast, spread along the Indian River Lagoon just below Melbourne, and it makes a practical, mild-winter RV base on Florida's Atlantic side. It's a big, spread-out city rather than a tourist downtown, so the appeal is location: easy beach access, the lagoon, rocket launches up the coast, and a mix of private parks in town plus strong public campgrounds nearby.
In Palm Bay itself, Breezy Palms RV Park on Dixie Highway NE is a convenient full hookup base near US-1 and the lagoon, and Palm Shores RV Park just north sits near the Indian River and the Brevard Zoo with a clubhouse, laundry, and restaurants within walking distance. These are comfortable Space Coast parks that work for both a Kennedy Space Center trip and a longer snowbird winter.
The public camping around here is genuinely good. Brevard County's Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, is a large campground with 133 full hookup sites and trails, and Long Point Park sits out on the barrier island near Sebastian Inlet with a boat ramp, fishing, and beach access across A1A. About 30 minutes south, Sebastian Inlet State Park offers campsites with hookups right where the Atlantic meets the lagoon, famous for surfing and fishing. These give you a public, lower-cost alternative to the private parks.
What you do here is the coast and the space program. Turkey Creek Sanctuary, right in Palm Bay, has 117 acres of boardwalks along the creek with manatees and good kayaking and birding. Kennedy Space Center is about 45 minutes north, and rocket launches are visible far down the Space Coast. The Indian River Lagoon offers fishing, paddling, and manatee viewing, the Atlantic beaches at Melbourne Beach and Sebastian Inlet are close, and the Brevard Zoo is 20 minutes north. Between in-town parks and the county and state campgrounds nearby, Palm Bay is a flexible Space Coast base.
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Gear for Your Trip to Palm Bay
All Dump Stations Near Palm Bay
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breezy Palms RV Park | 1.9 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Breezy Palms RV Park | 1.9 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Enchanted Lakes Mh & RV Resort | 2.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Melbourne Beach Mobile Park | 2.6 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camelot RV Park Inc | 2.8 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Orbit RV Park Inc | 6.1 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ocean View RV & Mobile Home Court | 7.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Land Yacht Harbor Of Melbourne | 8.4 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Palm Shores RV Park | 11.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Breezeway Trailer Park | 13.0 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
Breezy Palms RV Park
1.9 miBreezy Palms RV Park
1.9 miEnchanted Lakes Mh & RV Resort
2.6 miMelbourne Beach Mobile Park
2.6 miCamelot RV Park Inc
2.8 miOrbit RV Park Inc
6.1 miOcean View RV & Mobile Home Court
7.3 miLand Yacht Harbor Of Melbourne
8.4 miPalm Shores RV Park
11.7 miBreezeway Trailer Park
13.0 miTraveling to Palm Bay by RV
Palm Bay is simple to reach. I-95 runs right through the city, with US-1 paralleling it along the Indian River Lagoon, and Palm Bay Road and Malabar Road (FL-514) connect the interstate to US-1 and the older parts of town. The coastal roads are flat with no grades or low bridges, so towing in is easy. To reach the barrier-island beaches and Long Point Park, you cross to A1A, which is narrow in spots but manageable in a normal rig.
Melbourne is right next door for shopping, with full grocery and big-box stores along US-1 and Palm Bay Road, and Orlando International is about an hour northwest if you're flying in to meet a rig; Melbourne Orlando International is much closer. RV service and parts are available in the Melbourne and Palm Bay area. Summer brings frequent afternoon thunderstorms and lightning, and hurricane season runs June through November, peaking from August into October, so watch the tropics and have a plan during a warm-season stay.
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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 Palm Bay, 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 Palm Bay
Palm Bay is a reasonably priced Space Coast base, generally cheaper than the beachside parks right on A1A or up near Cocoa Beach. The private parks like Breezy Palms and Palm Shores run mid-range full hookup rates that drop on weekly and monthly terms, which is what makes Palm Bay work as a snowbird winter base. The clear value is the public camping: Brevard County’s Wickham Park and Long Point Park, and Sebastian Inlet State Park to the south, all charge public-park rates well below the private resorts, though their sites book early for the winter season. Expect peak prices and tight availability from January through March, with deals in the hot, quiet summer. Fuel and groceries are standard coastal-Florida prices. For value, look at a monthly private-park rate or grab a county-park site where you can.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Palm Bay by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
54F - 73F
Crowds: High
Mild, dry, and the busiest snowbird season; book Palm Bay parks and county campgrounds well ahead from January.
Spring
Mar - May
64F - 82F
Crowds: High
Warm and pleasant with lower humidity; a comfortable, busy time before the summer heat, so reserve early.
Summer
Jun - Aug
74F - 90F
Crowds: Low
Hot, humid, and stormy with daily thunderstorms and hurricane-season risk; the cheapest and quietest camping of the year.
Fall
Sep - Oct
70F - 84F
Crowds: Medium
Warm with storm risk easing late in the season; snowbirds start returning by November.
Explore the Palm Bay Area
A few Palm Bay pointers. First, winter is peak snowbird season on the Space Coast, so book the Palm Bay parks and the Brevard County campgrounds ahead from January through March; this stretch of coast fills up. Second, the public Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, is a full hookup county campground and a strong value if the in-town parks are full or pricey. Third, plan around a rocket launch if you can; Kennedy Space Center is about 45 minutes north and launches are visible far down the coast, often from the beaches and the lagoon.
Fourth, get on the water. Turkey Creek Sanctuary and the Indian River Lagoon are great for kayaking, manatee viewing, and birding right in Palm Bay, and the Atlantic beaches at Melbourne Beach and Sebastian Inlet are a short drive. Fifth, summer is hot, stormy, and the heart of hurricane season, so the cool, dry winter is the time to come. Staying a while? See our guide to RV dump stations in Palm Bay.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Palm Bay
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Palm Bay, Florida?
In Palm Bay itself, Breezy Palms RV Park on Dixie Highway NE and Palm Shores RV Park to the north are the convenient full hookup options near US-1 and the Indian River Lagoon. For public camping, Brevard County’s Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, is a large full hookup campground, and Long Point Park sits on the barrier island near Sebastian Inlet with beach and boat access. About 30 minutes south, Sebastian Inlet State Park has campsites with hookups at the inlet. Together they give you in-town private parks plus strong county and state public campgrounds nearby.
Do Palm Bay RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private parks in Palm Bay, Breezy Palms and Palm Shores, offer full hookups with electric, water, and sewer at the site, which is standard for the Space Coast snowbird parks. The public Wickham Park in Melbourne also has 133 sites with full hookups, so it is a genuine full-service county option. Long Point Park and Sebastian Inlet State Park have hookup sites too, though availability and hookup type vary, so confirm when you book. If you need full hookups for a long winter stay, both the private Palm Bay parks and Wickham Park will cover you, and the private parks offer monthly snowbird rates.
How much does RV camping cost in Palm Bay?
Palm Bay is mid-priced for the Space Coast and generally cheaper than the beachside parks on A1A. The private parks like Breezy Palms and Palm Shores run mid-range full hookup rates that fall on weekly and monthly terms, which is how snowbirds use the town as a winter base. The public campgrounds are the value play: Brevard County’s Wickham Park and Long Point Park and Sebastian Inlet State Park all run public-park rates below the private resorts, though they book early for winter. Prices and demand peak January through March and ease off in the hot summer. Fuel and groceries are standard coastal-Florida prices.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Palm Bay?
For the winter, book well ahead. The Space Coast is a popular snowbird region, so the Palm Bay parks and the Brevard County campgrounds fill from January through March, and you should reserve weeks to a couple of months out for those dates. The county parks, Wickham and Long Point, and Sebastian Inlet State Park all take reservations and their hookup sites go fast for the dry season, with the state park bookable up to 11 months ahead. Summer is hot, stormy, and quiet, so you can usually camp on short notice then. If a rocket launch lines up with a holiday, expect extra demand.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Palm Bay?
November through April is the prime window, with mild, dry, comfortable weather, lower humidity, and far less storm risk, which is exactly why snowbirds fill the Space Coast in those months. Winter is the busiest and the nicest. Summer, June through September, is hot and humid with near-daily afternoon thunderstorms and the core of hurricane season from August into October, so while rates are low and crowds thin, you trade weather for value. Spring and fall are warm shoulder seasons. For the best camping conditions and the most going on, aim for the cool, dry winter and spring.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp in Palm Bay?
Yes. The private parks in Palm Bay and the county’s Wickham Park are set up for full-size rigs with full hookups, so 35 to 40 foot motorhomes and fifth-wheels fit comfortably; call ahead to confirm site length and a pull-through. Towing in is easy on flat I-95 and US-1 with no grades or low bridges. If you head to the barrier-island parks like Long Point, the crossing to A1A is fine for a normal rig but the beachside roads are narrower, so take it slow. Sebastian Inlet State Park can take larger rigs at some sites, so check site dimensions before booking a 40-footer there.
Can I see a rocket launch from Palm Bay?
Often, yes. Palm Bay sits on the Space Coast about 45 minutes south of Kennedy Space Center, and launches from Cape Canaveral are frequently visible up and down this stretch of coast, especially from the Atlantic beaches and along the Indian River Lagoon with a clear northern view. Launch schedules shift, so check the current Kennedy Space Center and SpaceX schedules and pick a viewing spot with an open horizon to the north. For the full experience, the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex is a great day trip from a Palm Bay base. Camping here lets you catch launches without paying Cape-area prices.
Are there public or state parks near Palm Bay for camping?
Yes, several good ones. Brevard County runs Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, a large campground with 133 full hookup sites and trails, and Long Point Park on the barrier island near Sebastian Inlet, with a boat ramp, fishing, and beach access. About 30 minutes south, Sebastian Inlet State Park has campsites with hookups right at the inlet, famous for surfing, jetty fishing, and beaches. Farther up the coast, Manatee Hammock Park near Titusville offers Indian River sites with rocket-launch views. These public campgrounds give you a lower-cost, more natural alternative to the private Palm Bay parks, though they book early for winter.
What is there to do around Palm Bay while camping?
Plenty along the coast. Turkey Creek Sanctuary, right in Palm Bay, has 117 acres of boardwalks along the creek with manatees, kayaking, and birding. The Indian River Lagoon offers fishing, paddling, and manatee viewing, and the Atlantic beaches at Melbourne Beach and Sebastian Inlet are a short drive for surfing and swimming. Kennedy Space Center and its visitor complex are about 45 minutes north, with launches visible from the coast, and the Brevard Zoo in Melbourne, 20 minutes north, has animal encounters and a treetop course. The Space Coast also has good birding and paddling trails for anyone who likes to get on the water.
Is Palm Bay a good snowbird base?
It is a solid, practical one. Palm Bay offers mild, dry Atlantic-side winters, a mix of private full hookup parks with monthly snowbird rates, and strong public campgrounds nearby, all at prices generally below the beachfront parks up the coast. You get easy access to beaches, the Indian River Lagoon, rocket launches, and the Melbourne area’s shopping and services, with Orlando about an hour away for bigger outings. Keep in mind Palm Bay is a large, spread-out city rather than a walkable tourist town, so you will drive to most things. For an affordable, well-located Space Coast winter, it works well.
Is Palm Bay close to the beaches?
Yes, the Atlantic beaches are a short drive east. Palm Bay sits along the Indian River Lagoon on the mainland, and you cross the lagoon to the barrier island to reach the ocean. Melbourne Beach and the beaches off A1A are roughly 20 to 30 minutes away, and Sebastian Inlet, with its famous surf and jetty fishing, is about 30 minutes south. From a Palm Bay campsite you can easily make a beach day, then come back to a lower-priced inland park at night rather than paying beachfront rates. The county’s Long Point Park puts you right on the barrier island near the inlet if you want to camp closer to the sand.
What can I do on the Indian River Lagoon near Palm Bay?
The Indian River Lagoon is one of the best parts of basing in Palm Bay. It is one of North America’s most biodiverse estuaries, and right in town Turkey Creek Sanctuary offers boardwalks, a nature center, and put-ins for kayaking among manatees and wading birds. You can fish the lagoon for redfish, trout, and snook, paddle its calm waters, and watch for manatees and dolphins year-round. The Space Coast has marked paddling and birding trails along the lagoon, and several outfitters in the Palm Bay and Melbourne area rent kayaks and run eco-tours. It is an easy, scenic way to spend a morning close to camp.
Where do I dump tanks and get propane and supplies near Palm Bay?
The private RV parks and the county and state campgrounds all have dump stations for guests; use designated sani-dumps only, never roadside. Propane refills are available around Palm Bay and Melbourne along US-1, and RV service and parts are available in the Melbourne and Palm Bay area. For groceries and big-box shopping, Palm Bay and neighboring Melbourne have the full set of stores along US-1 and Palm Bay Road. Fuel, including diesel, is plentiful along I-95, US-1, and Palm Bay Road, so topping off before heading up or down the coast is easy. Provisioning on the Space Coast is straightforward.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Palm Bay, Florida?
In Palm Bay itself, Breezy Palms RV Park on Dixie Highway NE and Palm Shores RV Park to the north are the convenient full hookup options near US-1 and the Indian River Lagoon. For public camping, Brevard County’s Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, is a large full hookup campground, and Long Point Park sits on the barrier island near Sebastian Inlet with beach and boat access. About 30 minutes south, Sebastian Inlet State Park has campsites with hookups at the inlet. Together they give you in-town private parks plus strong county and state public campgrounds nearby.
Do Palm Bay RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private parks in Palm Bay, Breezy Palms and Palm Shores, offer full hookups with electric, water, and sewer at the site, which is standard for the Space Coast snowbird parks. The public Wickham Park in Melbourne also has 133 sites with full hookups, so it is a genuine full-service county option. Long Point Park and Sebastian Inlet State Park have hookup sites too, though availability and hookup type vary, so confirm when you book. If you need full hookups for a long winter stay, both the private Palm Bay parks and Wickham Park will cover you, and the private parks offer monthly snowbird rates.
How much does RV camping cost in Palm Bay?
Palm Bay is mid-priced for the Space Coast and generally cheaper than the beachside parks on A1A. The private parks like Breezy Palms and Palm Shores run mid-range full hookup rates that fall on weekly and monthly terms, which is how snowbirds use the town as a winter base. The public campgrounds are the value play: Brevard County’s Wickham Park and Long Point Park and Sebastian Inlet State Park all run public-park rates below the private resorts, though they book early for winter. Prices and demand peak January through March and ease off in the hot summer. Fuel and groceries are standard coastal-Florida prices.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Palm Bay?
For the winter, book well ahead. The Space Coast is a popular snowbird region, so the Palm Bay parks and the Brevard County campgrounds fill from January through March, and you should reserve weeks to a couple of months out for those dates. The county parks, Wickham and Long Point, and Sebastian Inlet State Park all take reservations and their hookup sites go fast for the dry season, with the state park bookable up to 11 months ahead. Summer is hot, stormy, and quiet, so you can usually camp on short notice then. If a rocket launch lines up with a holiday, expect extra demand.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Palm Bay?
November through April is the prime window, with mild, dry, comfortable weather, lower humidity, and far less storm risk, which is exactly why snowbirds fill the Space Coast in those months. Winter is the busiest and the nicest. Summer, June through September, is hot and humid with near-daily afternoon thunderstorms and the core of hurricane season from August into October, so while rates are low and crowds thin, you trade weather for value. Spring and fall are warm shoulder seasons. For the best camping conditions and the most going on, aim for the cool, dry winter and spring.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp in Palm Bay?
Yes. The private parks in Palm Bay and the county’s Wickham Park are set up for full-size rigs with full hookups, so 35 to 40 foot motorhomes and fifth-wheels fit comfortably; call ahead to confirm site length and a pull-through. Towing in is easy on flat I-95 and US-1 with no grades or low bridges. If you head to the barrier-island parks like Long Point, the crossing to A1A is fine for a normal rig but the beachside roads are narrower, so take it slow. Sebastian Inlet State Park can take larger rigs at some sites, so check site dimensions before booking a 40-footer there.
Can I see a rocket launch from Palm Bay?
Often, yes. Palm Bay sits on the Space Coast about 45 minutes south of Kennedy Space Center, and launches from Cape Canaveral are frequently visible up and down this stretch of coast, especially from the Atlantic beaches and along the Indian River Lagoon with a clear northern view. Launch schedules shift, so check the current Kennedy Space Center and SpaceX schedules and pick a viewing spot with an open horizon to the north. For the full experience, the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex is a great day trip from a Palm Bay base. Camping here lets you catch launches without paying Cape-area prices.
Are there public or state parks near Palm Bay for camping?
Yes, several good ones. Brevard County runs Wickham Park in Melbourne, about 25 minutes north, a large campground with 133 full hookup sites and trails, and Long Point Park on the barrier island near Sebastian Inlet, with a boat ramp, fishing, and beach access. About 30 minutes south, Sebastian Inlet State Park has campsites with hookups right at the inlet, famous for surfing, jetty fishing, and beaches. Farther up the coast, Manatee Hammock Park near Titusville offers Indian River sites with rocket-launch views. These public campgrounds give you a lower-cost, more natural alternative to the private Palm Bay parks, though they book early for winter.
What is there to do around Palm Bay while camping?
Plenty along the coast. Turkey Creek Sanctuary, right in Palm Bay, has 117 acres of boardwalks along the creek with manatees, kayaking, and birding. The Indian River Lagoon offers fishing, paddling, and manatee viewing, and the Atlantic beaches at Melbourne Beach and Sebastian Inlet are a short drive for surfing and swimming. Kennedy Space Center and its visitor complex are about 45 minutes north, with launches visible from the coast, and the Brevard Zoo in Melbourne, 20 minutes north, has animal encounters and a treetop course. The Space Coast also has good birding and paddling trails for anyone who likes to get on the water.
Is Palm Bay a good snowbird base?
It is a solid, practical one. Palm Bay offers mild, dry Atlantic-side winters, a mix of private full hookup parks with monthly snowbird rates, and strong public campgrounds nearby, all at prices generally below the beachfront parks up the coast. You get easy access to beaches, the Indian River Lagoon, rocket launches, and the Melbourne area’s shopping and services, with Orlando about an hour away for bigger outings. Keep in mind Palm Bay is a large, spread-out city rather than a walkable tourist town, so you will drive to most things. For an affordable, well-located Space Coast winter, it works well.
Is Palm Bay close to the beaches?
Yes, the Atlantic beaches are a short drive east. Palm Bay sits along the Indian River Lagoon on the mainland, and you cross the lagoon to the barrier island to reach the ocean. Melbourne Beach and the beaches off A1A are roughly 20 to 30 minutes away, and Sebastian Inlet, with its famous surf and jetty fishing, is about 30 minutes south. From a Palm Bay campsite you can easily make a beach day, then come back to a lower-priced inland park at night rather than paying beachfront rates. The county’s Long Point Park puts you right on the barrier island near the inlet if you want to camp closer to the sand.
What can I do on the Indian River Lagoon near Palm Bay?
The Indian River Lagoon is one of the best parts of basing in Palm Bay. It is one of North America’s most biodiverse estuaries, and right in town Turkey Creek Sanctuary offers boardwalks, a nature center, and put-ins for kayaking among manatees and wading birds. You can fish the lagoon for redfish, trout, and snook, paddle its calm waters, and watch for manatees and dolphins year-round. The Space Coast has marked paddling and birding trails along the lagoon, and several outfitters in the Palm Bay and Melbourne area rent kayaks and run eco-tours. It is an easy, scenic way to spend a morning close to camp.
Where do I dump tanks and get propane and supplies near Palm Bay?
The private RV parks and the county and state campgrounds all have dump stations for guests; use designated sani-dumps only, never roadside. Propane refills are available around Palm Bay and Melbourne along US-1, and RV service and parts are available in the Melbourne and Palm Bay area. For groceries and big-box shopping, Palm Bay and neighboring Melbourne have the full set of stores along US-1 and Palm Bay Road. Fuel, including diesel, is plentiful along I-95, US-1, and Palm Bay Road, so topping off before heading up or down the coast is easy. Provisioning on the Space Coast is straightforward.
Are there free dump stations in Palm Bay?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Palm Bay.
All Dump Stations Near Palm Bay (52)
RV Park with Dump StationsBreezy Palms RV Park
RV Park with Dump StationsBreezy Palms RV Park
RV ParkEnchanted Lakes Mh & RV Resort
RV ParkCamelot RV Park Inc
RV ParkMelbourne Beach Mobile Park
RV ParkOrbit RV Park Inc
RV ParkOcean View RV & Mobile Home Court
RV Park



