RV Parks In Augusta, Georgia
33.4710° N, 81.9748° W
Quick Overview
Augusta sits right on the Savannah River where Georgia meets South Carolina, and for RVers it works as two very different kinds of stop. It is a convenient hookup-park hub just off I-20, and it is the gateway to Clarks Hill Lake, one of the biggest reservoirs in the Southeast. Whether you are rolling through on the interstate or planning a week on the water, you have a real choice between a quiet lakeside state park and easy full-hookup parks near town. We have found Augusta to be one of those places where the trip you want shapes which park you pick.
The public-versus-private split here is clean. On the public side, Mistletoe State Park is the anchor. It sits on a peninsula in the 71,100-acre Clarks Hill Lake about 34 miles northwest of downtown, with roughly 92 tree-lined sites, many of them lakeside, offering water and 30/50-amp electric. There is no sewer at the sites, but a dump station near the campground entrance handles that on your way out. On the private side, Heritage RV Park sits about three minutes off I-20 with 50-amp full-hookup gravel pads and easy big-rig maneuvering, while Made in the Shade RV Park and Vogtle RV Park give you shaded full-hookup sites closer to the river and services.
Big rigs do fine here as long as you plan the approach. Mistletoe has back-in and pull-through sites from 30 to 50 feet, and the private parks are built for larger motorhomes with level pads and room to turn. The one thing we would avoid is trying to thread a 40-footer through the historic downtown grid. Stay on I-20 and the I-520 Bobby Jones Expressway loop to reach the parks and you will have no trouble. Hookup levels are the other decision point: if you need sewer at the site for a longer stay, go private; if you want the lake and a great price, the state park wins.
One thing every RVer should know before booking: Augusta is home to Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament each April. During Masters week, private parks anywhere near the course fill months ahead and charge premium rates, so plan around it. The rest of the year, Augusta is affordable and mild, with year-round camping thanks to gentle winters. Below we break down the notable parks, when to come, what it costs, and how far ahead to reserve so you can pick the right site for your rig and your plans.
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Gear for Your Trip to Augusta
All Dump Stations Near Augusta
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apache Woods | 4.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| RV Complex | 4.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Heritage RV Park | 8.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Homeplace RV Sites | 8.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Whispering Oaks RV Park | 8.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Peach Orchard RV Park & Campground | 8.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Betty RV Park | 8.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Plantation Oaks | 9.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fox Hollow Camp Ground | 10.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Magnolia RV Park | 11.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Apache Woods
4.2 miRV Complex
4.8 miHeritage RV Park
8.0 miThe Homeplace RV Sites
8.1 miWhispering Oaks RV Park
8.5 miPeach Orchard RV Park & Campground
8.7 miBetty RV Park
8.7 miPlantation Oaks
9.8 miFox Hollow Camp Ground
10.4 miTwin Magnolia RV Park
11.1 miTraveling to Augusta by RV
Getting to Augusta is straightforward, and that is a big part of the appeal for road-trippers. I-20 is the main artery, a transcontinental interstate running east-west through Augusta-Richmond County from Texas all the way to South Carolina. It drops you within a few minutes of Heritage RV Park and the other private parks clustered near town, so an overnight stop off the highway is genuinely quick and easy. The I-520 Bobby Jones Expressway loops the south side of the city and ties into the Washington Road commercial corridor, where you will find fuel, groceries, and big-box shopping without fighting downtown traffic.
To reach Mistletoe State Park, take I-20 to exit 175 and follow GA-150 up toward the lake. The route is big-rig friendly, and the reward is a peninsula campground on Clarks Hill Lake. In-town, Gordon Highway and US-1 handle local travel, but we keep big rigs off the older historic downtown streets, which run tight. Augusta Regional Airport is close if you are flying in for a rental, and the city sits about two and a half hours from Atlanta and roughly an hour from Columbia, South Carolina. Propane refills and RV fuel lanes are easy to find at travel centers off I-520 and near the I-20 interchanges, so topping off before a lake stay is simple.
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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 Augusta, Georgia, 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 Augusta
Augusta is an affordable place to camp for most of the year, with one loud exception. Mistletoe State Park runs about $34 to $38 a night for a water-and-electric site, which is a strong value for a lakeside spot on Clarks Hill Lake, especially given many sites have water views. Private full-hookup parks near I-20, like Heritage RV Park, Made in the Shade, and Vogtle RV Park, generally land somewhere in the $40s to $60s per night depending on the park, the season, and whether you want a premium pull-through. The gap between the two is real: you are paying the private premium mainly for sewer at the site and quick interstate access.
The exception is Masters Tournament week in early April, when demand explodes and private parks near Augusta National charge premium rates with multi-night minimums. If your trip is not tied to the tournament, avoid that week and your costs drop right back to normal. Winter brings the lowest rates and the easiest reservations, since demand outside Masters is light and the mild climate keeps parks open year-round. Our honest budget take: if you do not need sewer hooked up at your site, the state park is the clear value pick, and you can dump at the entrance station on the way out.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Augusta
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Best Time to Visit Augusta by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38F - 58F
Crowds: Low
Augusta winters stay mild, so the private full-hookup parks near I-20 keep running and Mistletoe State Park stays open year-round. Freezes happen but rarely stick, so you can camp comfortably with a light setup. Sites are wide open and cheap outside the holidays, and this is the one stretch where you can grab a Masters-area park without paying a premium. Pack a space heater for the odd cold snap and enjoy the quiet lake.
Spring
Mar - May
55F - 78F
Crowds: High
Spring is the big one here. Masters week in early April fills every private park for miles and rates spike, so book months out or plan to stay farther from Augusta National. Outside that week, March through May is gorgeous camping weather at Mistletoe and along the Savannah River. Pollen gets heavy in April, so rinse your rig and keep windows shut on yellow-dust days. Lake sites book fast for spring weekends.
Summer
Jun - Aug
72F - 92F
Crowds: Medium
Summer is hot and sticky, with highs in the low 90s and real humidity from June into September. You will want 50-amp service to run the AC hard, which the private parks handle better than the electric-only state park loops. Afternoon thunderstorms roll through most days. Clarks Hill Lake at Mistletoe is the saving grace, with swimming and paddling right off the campground. Lakeside sites fill on summer weekends, so reserve ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
52F - 78F
Crowds: Medium
Fall is the sweet spot. October and early November are the driest, most comfortable months of the year, with warm days and cool nights that are perfect for lake camping. Crowds thin out after the summer rush, midweek sites open up, and rates settle back down at the private parks. Mistletoe State Park stays open and the fishing on Clarks Hill Lake is excellent this time of year. Bring a light jacket for the mornings.
Explore the Augusta Area
A few things we have learned about camping around Augusta. First and biggest: if your trip touches Masters week in early April, book as early as you possibly can, because private parks near Augusta National sell out months ahead and charge premium rates. If you are just passing through in early April and not attending the tournament, camp farther out at Mistletoe State Park to dodge the crunch entirely. Second, plan your tank dumps around Mistletoe having no sewer at the sites. Use the dump station by the campground entrance on your way out, and top off fresh water before you settle in.
Timing matters here more than in a lot of places. Fall, especially October and early November, is the driest and most comfortable stretch, with thinner crowds and lower rates, so it is our top pick if you have flexibility. Summer is hot and humid, so grab a 50-amp private site to run the AC hard, and take advantage of Clarks Hill Lake for swimming and paddling. In spring, watch for heavy pollen in April and rinse your rig after yellow-dust days. Reserve lakeside sites early for summer weekends. And keep your big rig on I-20 and I-520 to reach the parks rather than testing the narrow downtown streets. For an in-town day, the Augusta Riverwalk and its Saturday market are an easy, walkable break from the campground.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Augusta
What are the best RV parks in Augusta, GA?
The standout public option is Mistletoe State Park on Clarks Hill Lake, about 34 miles northwest of downtown, with roughly 92 shaded and lakeside sites and water plus 30/50-amp electric. For convenience and full hookups close to the interstate, Heritage RV Park sits about three minutes off I-20 with 50-amp full-hookup gravel pads. Made in the Shade RV Park and Vogtle RV Park round out the private full-hookup choices. Between the state park and these private parks you can pick lakeside nature or easy in-and-out access depending on your trip.
Do Augusta RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It depends whether you go public or private. The private parks like Heritage RV Park, Made in the Shade, and Vogtle RV Park offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric right at your site on level pads. Mistletoe State Park, the main public option, gives you water and 30/50-amp electric but no sewer hookup at the site. Instead there is a dump station near the campground entrance you use on the way out. If you need to stay hooked up to sewer for a long stay, choose one of the private parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Augusta?
Mistletoe State Park runs about $34 to $38 a night for an electric site, which is a solid deal for a lakeside spot. Private full-hookup parks near I-20 generally land in the $40s to $60s per night depending on the park and season. The big exception is Masters Tournament week in early April, when private parks near Augusta National charge premium rates and often require multi-night minimums. Outside that week, camping here is affordable, and the state park is the clear value pick if you do not need sewer at your site.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Augusta?
For most of the year, a week or two of lead time is plenty midweek, though summer lake weekends at Mistletoe State Park fill faster. Georgia State Parks lets you book Mistletoe through ReserveAmerica up to 13 months in advance, which helps for popular summer dates. The one time you cannot wait is Masters week in early April. Private parks anywhere near Augusta National book out months ahead and sell at premium rates, so if your trip overlaps the tournament, lock in your site as early as you possibly can.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Augusta?
Fall, specifically October and early November, is the best all-around time. It is the driest, most comfortable stretch of the year, crowds thin out, and rates settle down. Spring from March into May is a close second and beautiful, just be ready for heavy pollen in April and the Masters-week crunch. Summer is doable if you have 50-amp power for the AC and do not mind heat and humidity, and the lake makes it worthwhile. Winter is mild and quiet, a good option if you want cheap, open sites.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Augusta?
Yes. Mistletoe State Park has both back-in and pull-through sites ranging from 30 to 50 feet, so most big rigs fit with a little planning around site selection. The private parks are built for larger motorhomes: Heritage RV Park advertises easy maneuvering and level gravel pads, and Made in the Shade and Vogtle RV Park welcome big rigs too. The main thing to avoid is threading a big rig through Augusta historic downtown streets. Stay on I-20 and I-520 to reach the parks and you will have no trouble.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Augusta?
Options are limited close to the city. Augusta is more of a hookup-park destination than a boondocking one. Some travelers use Walmart lots for a single overnight rest stop, but that is manager discretion in Augusta, so you must call the specific store first and never dump tanks, run slides, or set up outside. For actual camping, the affordable move is a Mistletoe State Park electric site rather than trying to boondock. If you want dispersed camping, you will generally need to head to national forest land well outside the immediate Augusta area.
Is Mistletoe State Park worth it for RVers?
For most RVers, yes. Mistletoe sits on a peninsula in the 71,100-acre Clarks Hill Lake, so you get sunrise and sunset views over the water and swimming and paddling right off the campground. The roughly 92 sites are tree-lined and many are lakeside, with water and 30/50-amp electric. The trade-off is no sewer at the site, so you dump at the station by the entrance. It is about 34 miles northwest of downtown Augusta via I-20, so it is a nature base rather than a city-convenient spot. For the price and setting, it is a great pick.
What is camping like during Masters week in Augusta?
Intense. The Masters Tournament in early April is one of the biggest golf events in the world, and it turns Augusta RV camping into a seller market. Private parks near Augusta National fill months in advance, charge premium nightly rates, and often require multi-night stays. Some homeowners and lots also open temporary RV parking during the week. If you are coming for the tournament, reserve as early as humanly possible. If you are just passing through Augusta in early April and not attending, plan to camp farther out, like at Mistletoe State Park, to dodge the crunch.
Do Augusta RV parks stay open year-round?
Yes, most do. Augusta winters are mild enough that the private full-hookup parks near I-20 operate all year, and Mistletoe State Park is open year-round as well. That makes Augusta a genuine winter option compared with much of the country, where public campgrounds close for the season. You may hit an occasional freeze, so keep a heater and a plan for your water hose on cold nights, but sustained hard freezes are rare. Winter also brings the lowest rates and the easiest reservations, since demand outside Masters week is light.
What is there to do near Augusta while camping?
Plenty. The Augusta Riverwalk is a multi-level brick trail along the Savannah River with a fountain plaza and a Saturday market from March through November. Downtown you can visit the Morris Museum of Art, the oldest museum devoted to Southern art, and the Augusta Museum of History with its 1914 locomotive, James Brown memorabilia, and a Masters green jacket. The Augusta Canal offers towpath trails and boat tours. If you are camped at Mistletoe, Clarks Hill Lake itself delivers fishing, boating, and paddling right at your doorstep.
What highways do RVers use to reach Augusta parks?
I-20 is the main artery, running east-west through Augusta-Richmond County as a transcontinental route from Texas to South Carolina. It puts you within a few minutes of Heritage RV Park and other private parks. I-520, the Bobby Jones Expressway, loops the south side of the city and connects to shopping and services along Washington Road. To reach Mistletoe State Park, take I-20 to exit 175 and follow GA-150. Gordon Highway and US-1 handle in-town travel, but keep big rigs on the interstates rather than the older downtown grid.
Where can I dump tanks and refill propane near Augusta?
Mistletoe State Park has a dump station near its campground entrance for guests, and the private full-hookup parks let you dump at your site. Propane refills are available at travel centers off I-520 and Gordon Highway and at RV dealers around town, and the larger truck stops near I-20 interchanges have RV fuel lanes. For a full rundown of public dump options in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Augusta. Always call ahead to confirm hours and current pricing before you rely on any single location.
What are the best RV parks in Augusta, GA?
The standout public option is Mistletoe State Park on Clarks Hill Lake, about 34 miles northwest of downtown, with roughly 92 shaded and lakeside sites and water plus 30/50-amp electric. For convenience and full hookups close to the interstate, Heritage RV Park sits about three minutes off I-20 with 50-amp full-hookup gravel pads. Made in the Shade RV Park and Vogtle RV Park round out the private full-hookup choices. Between the state park and these private parks you can pick lakeside nature or easy in-and-out access depending on your trip.
Do Augusta RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It depends whether you go public or private. The private parks like Heritage RV Park, Made in the Shade, and Vogtle RV Park offer full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric right at your site on level pads. Mistletoe State Park, the main public option, gives you water and 30/50-amp electric but no sewer hookup at the site. Instead there is a dump station near the campground entrance you use on the way out. If you need to stay hooked up to sewer for a long stay, choose one of the private parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Augusta?
Mistletoe State Park runs about $34 to $38 a night for an electric site, which is a solid deal for a lakeside spot. Private full-hookup parks near I-20 generally land in the $40s to $60s per night depending on the park and season. The big exception is Masters Tournament week in early April, when private parks near Augusta National charge premium rates and often require multi-night minimums. Outside that week, camping here is affordable, and the state park is the clear value pick if you do not need sewer at your site.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Augusta?
For most of the year, a week or two of lead time is plenty midweek, though summer lake weekends at Mistletoe State Park fill faster. Georgia State Parks lets you book Mistletoe through ReserveAmerica up to 13 months in advance, which helps for popular summer dates. The one time you cannot wait is Masters week in early April. Private parks anywhere near Augusta National book out months ahead and sell at premium rates, so if your trip overlaps the tournament, lock in your site as early as you possibly can.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Augusta?
Fall, specifically October and early November, is the best all-around time. It is the driest, most comfortable stretch of the year, crowds thin out, and rates settle down. Spring from March into May is a close second and beautiful, just be ready for heavy pollen in April and the Masters-week crunch. Summer is doable if you have 50-amp power for the AC and do not mind heat and humidity, and the lake makes it worthwhile. Winter is mild and quiet, a good option if you want cheap, open sites.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Augusta?
Yes. Mistletoe State Park has both back-in and pull-through sites ranging from 30 to 50 feet, so most big rigs fit with a little planning around site selection. The private parks are built for larger motorhomes: Heritage RV Park advertises easy maneuvering and level gravel pads, and Made in the Shade and Vogtle RV Park welcome big rigs too. The main thing to avoid is threading a big rig through Augusta historic downtown streets. Stay on I-20 and I-520 to reach the parks and you will have no trouble.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Augusta?
Options are limited close to the city. Augusta is more of a hookup-park destination than a boondocking one. Some travelers use Walmart lots for a single overnight rest stop, but that is manager discretion in Augusta, so you must call the specific store first and never dump tanks, run slides, or set up outside. For actual camping, the affordable move is a Mistletoe State Park electric site rather than trying to boondock. If you want dispersed camping, you will generally need to head to national forest land well outside the immediate Augusta area.
Is Mistletoe State Park worth it for RVers?
For most RVers, yes. Mistletoe sits on a peninsula in the 71,100-acre Clarks Hill Lake, so you get sunrise and sunset views over the water and swimming and paddling right off the campground. The roughly 92 sites are tree-lined and many are lakeside, with water and 30/50-amp electric. The trade-off is no sewer at the site, so you dump at the station by the entrance. It is about 34 miles northwest of downtown Augusta via I-20, so it is a nature base rather than a city-convenient spot. For the price and setting, it is a great pick.
What is camping like during Masters week in Augusta?
Intense. The Masters Tournament in early April is one of the biggest golf events in the world, and it turns Augusta RV camping into a seller market. Private parks near Augusta National fill months in advance, charge premium nightly rates, and often require multi-night stays. Some homeowners and lots also open temporary RV parking during the week. If you are coming for the tournament, reserve as early as humanly possible. If you are just passing through Augusta in early April and not attending, plan to camp farther out, like at Mistletoe State Park, to dodge the crunch.
Do Augusta RV parks stay open year-round?
Yes, most do. Augusta winters are mild enough that the private full-hookup parks near I-20 operate all year, and Mistletoe State Park is open year-round as well. That makes Augusta a genuine winter option compared with much of the country, where public campgrounds close for the season. You may hit an occasional freeze, so keep a heater and a plan for your water hose on cold nights, but sustained hard freezes are rare. Winter also brings the lowest rates and the easiest reservations, since demand outside Masters week is light.
What is there to do near Augusta while camping?
Plenty. The Augusta Riverwalk is a multi-level brick trail along the Savannah River with a fountain plaza and a Saturday market from March through November. Downtown you can visit the Morris Museum of Art, the oldest museum devoted to Southern art, and the Augusta Museum of History with its 1914 locomotive, James Brown memorabilia, and a Masters green jacket. The Augusta Canal offers towpath trails and boat tours. If you are camped at Mistletoe, Clarks Hill Lake itself delivers fishing, boating, and paddling right at your doorstep.
What highways do RVers use to reach Augusta parks?
I-20 is the main artery, running east-west through Augusta-Richmond County as a transcontinental route from Texas to South Carolina. It puts you within a few minutes of Heritage RV Park and other private parks. I-520, the Bobby Jones Expressway, loops the south side of the city and connects to shopping and services along Washington Road. To reach Mistletoe State Park, take I-20 to exit 175 and follow GA-150. Gordon Highway and US-1 handle in-town travel, but keep big rigs on the interstates rather than the older downtown grid.
Where can I dump tanks and refill propane near Augusta?
Mistletoe State Park has a dump station near its campground entrance for guests, and the private full-hookup parks let you dump at your site. Propane refills are available at travel centers off I-520 and Gordon Highway and at RV dealers around town, and the larger truck stops near I-20 interchanges have RV fuel lanes. For a full rundown of public dump options in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Augusta. Always call ahead to confirm hours and current pricing before you rely on any single location.
Are there free dump stations in Augusta?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Augusta.
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