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RV Parks In Pompano Beach, Florida

26.2379° N, 80.1248° W

Quick Overview

Pompano Beach is one of Southeast Florida’s easygoing snowbird towns, a stretch of warm Atlantic coast just north of Fort Lauderdale where RVers settle in for the winter sun. For trip planning it’s really a question of beach-close private resorts versus cheaper public hookups a short drive away. The town itself is dense coastal Broward County, so most of the RV-park action is in established seasonal communities rather than rustic campgrounds, and that suits the people who come here: they want a full-hookup site, a heated pool, and the beach a couple of miles down the road.

The headline private option is Breezy Hill RV Resort, with full 30 and 50-amp hookups, a clubhouse, hot tub, and heated pool about two miles from the sand. It draws a big returning crowd, many of them French-Canadian, so winter sites go fast. Aztec RV Resort is another established snowbird community nearby, though most of its lots are owner-held with only limited rentals. For full hookups at a public rate, Broward County Parks run two solid campgrounds just south: Easterlin Park in Oakland Park has 45 full-hookup sites tucked into a rare urban old-growth hammock, and T.Y. Park in Hollywood has 61 full-hookup sites around a lake. You can plan and reserve those through Broward County Parks.

Big rigs do fine at the private resorts and T.Y. Park; Easterlin’s hammock loops are tighter, so call to confirm a site that fits 40 feet. The catch is timing and cost. This is one of the pricier RV markets in the country, and the snowbird season from December through April books months ahead, sometimes a full year for the popular resorts. Come in late spring or fall and you’ll find lower rates and open sites, with the trade-off of summer heat, daily storms, and hurricane season. For most RVers Pompano Beach is a winter play: warm, dry, social, and minutes from the Atlantic.

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Traveling to Pompano Beach by RV

Getting to Pompano Beach with an RV is straightforward. I-95 and Florida’s Turnpike both run north-south through Broward County, and US-1 (Federal Highway) parallels them closer to the coast. Stay on those corridors and off the narrow barrier-island beach streets, which are residential and tight for anything large. From the north you’ll roll in on I-95; from central Florida the Turnpike feeds you down through Orlando and the middle of the state. Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport is about fifteen miles south if you’re flying in to a rental, and Miami is roughly forty miles farther.

The town is fully serviced, so provisioning is easy: full grocery stores, fuel along US-1 and the interstate exits, propane, and RV repair are all close, with even more options spread through Fort Lauderdale to the south. Stock up inland rather than on the island where parking is scarce. Staying a while and need to empty the tanks between hookup stops? See our guide to RV dump stations in Pompano Beach. Day parking near the beach and pier is available but fills early in season, so most RVers leave the rig at camp and drive or bike over.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Pompano Beach sits in one of the more expensive RV markets in the country, and the price swings hard by season. In peak winter, private snowbird resorts commonly run from about $60 to over $100 a night, and most push you toward monthly or full-season packages that bring the effective nightly rate down for long stays. If you’re committing to the whole winter, ask about seasonal pricing rather than paying nightly. The Broward County public campgrounds, Easterlin and T.Y. Park, are the budget play at roughly $35 to $50 a night for full hookups, a real saving for the same electric, water, and sewer.

Summer flips the math. Demand collapses in the heat, so private parks discount steeply and you can sometimes camp for half the winter rate. Build in a little for tolls if you arrive on Florida’s Turnpike, and remember that beach-area day parking can add up if you drive over often, which is another reason to bike. Overall, plan a higher nightly budget here than for inland Florida, and let your travel dates do the heavy lifting on cost.

Free: 8 stations (62%)
Paid: 5 stations (38%)

Contact station for pricing details.

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

What RVers Are Saying About Pompano Beach

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Best Time to Visit Pompano Beach by RV

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Winter

Nov - Feb

60F - 77F

Crowds: High

Snowbird high season runs December through April: warm, dry, and the resorts fill with seasonal regulars. Book Breezy Hill or Aztec a season ahead and expect peak nightly rates.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

67F - 83F

Crowds: High

March and April stay warm and dry and the beaches are excellent. Snowbirds begin heading north in late spring, so sites loosen up and shoulder rates appear by May.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

76F - 90F

Crowds: Low

Hot, humid, with daily afternoon thunderstorms and the start of hurricane season in June. This is the cheapest, most available time, but pack for heat and storms.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

72F - 85F

Crowds: Medium

September and October are the peak hurricane months and the quietest for camping. By November the weather dries out and snowbirds start arriving again.

Explore the Pompano Beach Area

A few things we’ve learned about camping the Pompano Beach area. First, treat winter like a reservation race. The private snowbird resorts often rebook before guests leave, so if you want January through March, reserve the previous summer or fall and don’t wait. Second, if the resort rates sting, go public: Easterlin and T.Y. Park give you full hookups for roughly half the price, booked through Broward County’s WebTrac system or by calling the park office. They’re a short drive south but worth it.

Third, think about the season honestly. Summer is cheap and wide open, but it’s hot, humid, and stormy, with daily afternoon lightning, so carry a good surge protector and plan activities for the morning. Fall is quiet but carries real hurricane risk in September and October, so keep an evacuation plan in mind. Fourth, provision inland off US-1 or the interstate rather than on the barrier island, where big-rig parking is a headache. Finally, leave the rig at camp and explore by car or bike; the pier, beaches, and Intracoastal are all close, and parking near the sand is tight in season.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Pompano Beach

What are the best RV parks in Pompano Beach, FL?

Pompano Beach is snowbird country, so the headline options are private resorts close to the Atlantic. Breezy Hill RV Resort is the best known, with full 30/50-amp hookups, a heated pool, hot tub, and clubhouse about two miles from the beach, and it draws a big French-Canadian winter crowd. Aztec RV Resort is an established snowbird community with limited rentals. For a public full-hookup option at a lower rate, Easterlin Park and T.Y. Park, both run by Broward County, sit a short drive south. Between them you can match almost any budget.

Do Pompano Beach RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Yes. The private resorts like Breezy Hill offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, sewer, and water at most sites, which is what snowbirds expect for long winter stays. The Broward County campgrounds also deliver full hookups: Easterlin Park has 45 full-hookup RV sites and T.Y. Park has 61. That means you can run air conditioning through the humid months and stay put for weeks without hunting for a dump station. If you want sewer at the site rather than a shared dump, confirm when you book, since a few older private lots vary.

How much does RV camping cost in Pompano Beach?

Coastal South Florida is one of the pricier RV markets in the country, especially in winter. Private snowbird resorts in and around Pompano Beach commonly run roughly $60 to $100-plus a night in peak season, and many sell monthly or seasonal packages that work out better for long stays. Broward County public campgrounds are a relative bargain at roughly $35 to $50 a night for full hookups. Summer rates drop sharply at the private parks because demand collapses in the heat, so a flexible schedule can cut your nightly cost in half.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Pompano Beach?

For the winter snowbird season, very far ahead. The popular private resorts often book a full season in advance for January through March, and many returning guests rebook before they leave, so cancellations are rare. If your trip is set, reserve in summer or early fall for the following winter. The Broward County parks, Easterlin and T.Y. Park, take reservations through the county WebTrac system or by calling the park office, generally up to six months out. Summer is the opposite story, with sites widely open and easy to grab last minute.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Pompano Beach?

It depends on what you want. For warm, dry, sunny weather, the winter dry season from December through April is ideal, which is exactly why snowbirds flock here and why rates and crowds peak. For the best value and quiet, late spring and fall bring fewer people and lower prices, with fall carrying hurricane-season risk in September and October. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy but cheap. Most RVers targeting Pompano Beach come for the winter sun, then head north before the heat and storms arrive.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Pompano Beach?

Yes, with some care about where you book. The private resorts and T.Y. Park are set up for larger motorhomes and fifth-wheels, with pull-through and longer back-in sites and wider interior roads. Easterlin Park is beautiful but sits in a tight old-growth oak and cypress hammock, so the loops can be snug for a 40-footer, and you should call to confirm a site that fits. On the roads, stick to I-95 and the Turnpike and stay off the narrow barrier-island beach streets, which are not built for big rigs.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Pompano Beach?

Not really, and you should not count on it. This is dense, built-up coastal Broward County with strict ordinances against overnight RV parking on streets, in lots, and at the beach. There is no public land for dispersed camping nearby, and the county campgrounds are reservation-based rather than first-come. If you need a free overnight while passing through, plan to use a highway-corridor option well outside the metro rather than anything in town. For an actual stay, budget for a private resort or a county park site.

What public campgrounds are near Pompano Beach?

The closest public RV camping is run by Broward County Parks. Easterlin Park in Oakland Park, about eight miles south, offers 45 full-hookup RV sites tucked into a rare urban old-growth hammock. T.Y. (Topeekeegee Yugnee) Park in Hollywood, roughly twelve miles south, has 61 full-hookup sites around a lake with a water playground and paved trails. Both are reservable through the Broward County WebTrac portal or by calling the park office directly. They are far cheaper than the private snowbird resorts and a good choice if you want hookups without the resort price tag.

Is Pompano Beach good for snowbirds?

Very much so. It is one of the classic Southeast Florida snowbird bases, with warm, dry winters, beaches minutes away, and resorts built around long seasonal stays. Communities like Breezy Hill and Aztec are full of returning winter residents, many from Quebec and the Northeast, and they offer the pools, clubhouses, and activity calendars that long-stay campers want. The trade-off is cost and competition for sites, so you book early and often commit to monthly or seasonal rates. If a warm, social, beach-close winter is the goal, Pompano Beach delivers it.

What is there to do around Pompano Beach while camping?

Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. The rebuilt Pompano Beach Pier anchors a wide public beach with fishing, restaurants, and easy diving and snorkeling on the offshore reefs. The Hillsboro Inlet Lighthouse makes a classic photo stop, and the Intracoastal is busy with boats. Inland, Sawgrass Recreation Park runs airboat tours into the Everglades about half an hour west, and Butterfly World in nearby Coconut Creek is a fun rainy-day stop. Fort Lauderdale beaches, Las Olas, and spring-training baseball are all a short drive south.

How do I reserve a Broward County Park campsite?

Broward County Parks handle RV camping reservations through their WebTrac online system at webtrac.broward.org, or you can call the individual park office directly. For Easterlin Park the office line is 954-357-5190, and for T.Y. Park it is 954-357-8811. Reservations generally open up to six months in advance, which is usually plenty of lead time outside the busiest winter weekends. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready when you book, since site sizes vary. These county sites are a smart, affordable alternative to the private snowbird resorts that ring the coast.

What is the weather like for RV camping in Pompano Beach?

Pompano Beach has a warm, humid subtropical climate with two real seasons. The dry season from roughly November through April is the draw, with highs in the upper 70s to low 80s, low humidity, and very little rain, which is perfect camping weather. The wet season from May through October is hot and sticky, with highs near 90, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and the Atlantic hurricane season peaking in September and October. Plan around the dry season if you can, and keep an eye on tropical forecasts if you camp in late summer or fall.

Can I camp near the beach in Pompano Beach?

You can camp close to it, but not on it. There is no beachfront RV camping in Pompano Beach itself; the barrier island is residential and tightly regulated. What you get instead are private resorts like Breezy Hill that sit just a couple of miles inland, an easy drive or bike ride to the sand. The Broward County parks are a bit farther south and built around lakes and hammocks rather than the ocean. For most RVers that mix works well: a full-hookup site nearby, then day trips to the pier and the public beaches.

What are the best RV parks in Pompano Beach, FL?

Pompano Beach is snowbird country, so the headline options are private resorts close to the Atlantic. Breezy Hill RV Resort is the best known, with full 30/50-amp hookups, a heated pool, hot tub, and clubhouse about two miles from the beach, and it draws a big French-Canadian winter crowd. Aztec RV Resort is an established snowbird community with limited rentals. For a public full-hookup option at a lower rate, Easterlin Park and T.Y. Park, both run by Broward County, sit a short drive south. Between them you can match almost any budget.

Do Pompano Beach RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Yes. The private resorts like Breezy Hill offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, sewer, and water at most sites, which is what snowbirds expect for long winter stays. The Broward County campgrounds also deliver full hookups: Easterlin Park has 45 full-hookup RV sites and T.Y. Park has 61. That means you can run air conditioning through the humid months and stay put for weeks without hunting for a dump station. If you want sewer at the site rather than a shared dump, confirm when you book, since a few older private lots vary.

How much does RV camping cost in Pompano Beach?

Coastal South Florida is one of the pricier RV markets in the country, especially in winter. Private snowbird resorts in and around Pompano Beach commonly run roughly $60 to $100-plus a night in peak season, and many sell monthly or seasonal packages that work out better for long stays. Broward County public campgrounds are a relative bargain at roughly $35 to $50 a night for full hookups. Summer rates drop sharply at the private parks because demand collapses in the heat, so a flexible schedule can cut your nightly cost in half.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Pompano Beach?

For the winter snowbird season, very far ahead. The popular private resorts often book a full season in advance for January through March, and many returning guests rebook before they leave, so cancellations are rare. If your trip is set, reserve in summer or early fall for the following winter. The Broward County parks, Easterlin and T.Y. Park, take reservations through the county WebTrac system or by calling the park office, generally up to six months out. Summer is the opposite story, with sites widely open and easy to grab last minute.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Pompano Beach?

It depends on what you want. For warm, dry, sunny weather, the winter dry season from December through April is ideal, which is exactly why snowbirds flock here and why rates and crowds peak. For the best value and quiet, late spring and fall bring fewer people and lower prices, with fall carrying hurricane-season risk in September and October. Summer is hot, humid, and stormy but cheap. Most RVers targeting Pompano Beach come for the winter sun, then head north before the heat and storms arrive.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Pompano Beach?

Yes, with some care about where you book. The private resorts and T.Y. Park are set up for larger motorhomes and fifth-wheels, with pull-through and longer back-in sites and wider interior roads. Easterlin Park is beautiful but sits in a tight old-growth oak and cypress hammock, so the loops can be snug for a 40-footer, and you should call to confirm a site that fits. On the roads, stick to I-95 and the Turnpike and stay off the narrow barrier-island beach streets, which are not built for big rigs.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Pompano Beach?

Not really, and you should not count on it. This is dense, built-up coastal Broward County with strict ordinances against overnight RV parking on streets, in lots, and at the beach. There is no public land for dispersed camping nearby, and the county campgrounds are reservation-based rather than first-come. If you need a free overnight while passing through, plan to use a highway-corridor option well outside the metro rather than anything in town. For an actual stay, budget for a private resort or a county park site.

What public campgrounds are near Pompano Beach?

The closest public RV camping is run by Broward County Parks. Easterlin Park in Oakland Park, about eight miles south, offers 45 full-hookup RV sites tucked into a rare urban old-growth hammock. T.Y. (Topeekeegee Yugnee) Park in Hollywood, roughly twelve miles south, has 61 full-hookup sites around a lake with a water playground and paved trails. Both are reservable through the Broward County WebTrac portal or by calling the park office directly. They are far cheaper than the private snowbird resorts and a good choice if you want hookups without the resort price tag.

Is Pompano Beach good for snowbirds?

Very much so. It is one of the classic Southeast Florida snowbird bases, with warm, dry winters, beaches minutes away, and resorts built around long seasonal stays. Communities like Breezy Hill and Aztec are full of returning winter residents, many from Quebec and the Northeast, and they offer the pools, clubhouses, and activity calendars that long-stay campers want. The trade-off is cost and competition for sites, so you book early and often commit to monthly or seasonal rates. If a warm, social, beach-close winter is the goal, Pompano Beach delivers it.

What is there to do around Pompano Beach while camping?

Plenty, and most of it is outdoors. The rebuilt Pompano Beach Pier anchors a wide public beach with fishing, restaurants, and easy diving and snorkeling on the offshore reefs. The Hillsboro Inlet Lighthouse makes a classic photo stop, and the Intracoastal is busy with boats. Inland, Sawgrass Recreation Park runs airboat tours into the Everglades about half an hour west, and Butterfly World in nearby Coconut Creek is a fun rainy-day stop. Fort Lauderdale beaches, Las Olas, and spring-training baseball are all a short drive south.

How do I reserve a Broward County Park campsite?

Broward County Parks handle RV camping reservations through their WebTrac online system at webtrac.broward.org, or you can call the individual park office directly. For Easterlin Park the office line is 954-357-5190, and for T.Y. Park it is 954-357-8811. Reservations generally open up to six months in advance, which is usually plenty of lead time outside the busiest winter weekends. Have your rig length and hookup needs ready when you book, since site sizes vary. These county sites are a smart, affordable alternative to the private snowbird resorts that ring the coast.

What is the weather like for RV camping in Pompano Beach?

Pompano Beach has a warm, humid subtropical climate with two real seasons. The dry season from roughly November through April is the draw, with highs in the upper 70s to low 80s, low humidity, and very little rain, which is perfect camping weather. The wet season from May through October is hot and sticky, with highs near 90, near-daily afternoon thunderstorms, and the Atlantic hurricane season peaking in September and October. Plan around the dry season if you can, and keep an eye on tropical forecasts if you camp in late summer or fall.

Can I camp near the beach in Pompano Beach?

You can camp close to it, but not on it. There is no beachfront RV camping in Pompano Beach itself; the barrier island is residential and tightly regulated. What you get instead are private resorts like Breezy Hill that sit just a couple of miles inland, an easy drive or bike ride to the sand. The Broward County parks are a bit farther south and built around lakes and hammocks rather than the ocean. For most RVers that mix works well: a full-hookup site nearby, then day trips to the pier and the public beaches.

What is the highest-rated dump station in Pompano Beach?

The highest-rated station is Del-Raton Travel Trailer Park with a rating of 4.1/5 stars.

Are there free dump stations in Pompano Beach?

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