Skip to main content
Formerly known as Sanidumps.
RVingLife.com

RV Dump Stations In Blairsville, Georgia

34.8762° N, 83.9582° W

Quick Overview

Blairsville sits in the north Georgia mountains, a Union County town where US-19/129, US-76, and GA-515 come together at the edge of the Chattahoochee National Forest. For RVers it makes a solid mountain base: several dump stations, a good spread of campgrounds from state park to luxury resort, and enough town services to reset before you head higher. We track several stations here and every one is paid (a portion paid, a portion free), so plan on a campground stay or a day-use dump fee rather than a free pull-through.

Most dump access is tied to the campgrounds. Vogel State Park about 11 miles south has an on-site dump station, 103 sites, and fits rigs up to 40 feet, while Crossing Creeks RV Resort offers concrete pads for big rigs up to 45 feet with full hookups. If you are self-contained and passing through, the practical move is to stock groceries at the Walmart or Ingles on GA-515, top off diesel in town, and empty your tanks at a campground on the way out. Free public stations are scarce up here, so plan around the parks.

Getting here is easy if you respect the terrain. GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) and US-19/129 are the safe RV routes; the narrow mountain back roads are not, and GPS will happily send you down roads no trailer belongs on. No interstate serves Blairsville directly, so services thin out and you should fuel and shop before heading to remote campgrounds. Come for fall foliage in mid-October to early November, watch for winter ice storms, and this mountain town rewards the trip with waterfalls, lakes, and Georgia's highest peak nearby.

4.5 ★Avg Rating
320Reviews

Top Rated Dump Stations in Blairsville

No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!

Traveling to Blairsville by RV

Blairsville sits at the junction of US-19/129, US-76, and GA-515, the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway. GA-515 and US-19/129 are the safest, easiest routes for RVs and the ones we recommend sticking to. The mountain back roads are a different animal, with steep grades and switchbacks. GA-180 to Vogel State Park is narrow and winding, and the Brasstown Bald access road has tight switchbacks that large RVs and trailers should not attempt. Do not follow GPS blindly to campgrounds like Trackrock, since it may route you onto roads unsuitable for big rigs. Use the campgrounds' own directions.

No interstate directly serves Blairsville. GA-515 connects south to I-575 near Jasper, about 50 miles, the fastest way down to Atlanta, while US-19/129 leads north roughly 21 miles to Murphy, North Carolina, and US-74. There are no dedicated truck stops with RV lanes nearby, so top off diesel before leaving the interstate corridor or fuel at the stations along US-19/129 and GA-515. Winter ice storms can close mountain roads with little warning, and valley fog is common on spring and fall mornings, so drive to the conditions and check forecasts.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Budget for paid dumping here, because all several of the stations we track are paid (a portion paid). At the private parks like Crossing Creeks RV Resort and Trackrock, dumping is simply part of a full-hookup site, with rates that climb during fall foliage season when demand peaks. Vogel State Park runs about $25 a night with hookups, but remember the $5 parking fee per vehicle per day that every visitor pays on top, camping or not, so factor that into a state park stay.

If you want to keep costs down, the Chattahoochee National Forest surrounding Blairsville offers free dispersed camping with a 14-day limit, so you can boondock a few nights and pair it with a paid campground stop just for dumping and recharging. Refill propane through long-running Folger Gas or AmeriGas rather than paying resort prices, and do your big shop at Walmart or Ingles instead of the small stores near the trailheads. Book early for foliage season, when both demand and rates spike hard.

Free: 3 stations (50%)
Paid: 3 stations (50%)

Contact station for pricing details.

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

What RVers Are Saying About Blairsville

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!

Best Time to Visit Blairsville by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

29F - 45F

Crowds: Low

Cold with occasional snow and ice. Mountain roads can turn treacherous fast, and ice storms sometimes close them with little warning. The quietest season, but keep an eye on forecasts and avoid the high back roads if weather is coming in.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

42F - 67F

Crowds: Medium

Wildflower season with cool mornings that warm nicely by afternoon. Rain is common, and valley fog is frequent on spring mornings. Late spring in May and June is a great window before the summer crowds arrive.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

62F - 84F

Crowds: High

Warm days but cool mountain nights thanks to the elevation, which keeps things milder than lowland Georgia. Afternoon thunderstorms are common. Campgrounds get busy, so reserve ahead through the summer stretch.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

44F - 68F

Crowds: High

The headline season. Peak foliage runs mid-October to early November, later than the Blue Ridge Parkway further north. Comfortable temperatures and lower humidity, but Vogel State Park and area campgrounds fill fast, so book well in advance.

Explore the Blairsville Area

GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) is the safest, easiest route into Blairsville for RVs, so avoid shortcutting through the back mountain roads. Stock up at Walmart or Ingles in town before heading to Vogel State Park or the more remote campgrounds, because services thin out fast once you leave the GA-515 corridor. Vogel fills up quickly during fall foliage in mid-October, so reserve well in advance if you want a spot during peak color.

Do not attempt the Brasstown Bald access road with a large RV or trailer; it is steep with tight switchbacks and better done in your tow vehicle. Remember that fall color in the north Georgia mountains runs two to three weeks later than the Blue Ridge Parkway further north, so plan around mid-October to early November here. Cell signal can be spotty in the mountain valleys, so download offline maps before heading out, and never trust GPS routing to the campgrounds. Follow the directions the campground gives you instead.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Blairsville

How many RV dump stations are near Blairsville, Georgia?

We count several dump stations in and around Blairsville, and right now every one is paid rather than free (a portion paid). Most are tied to the area campgrounds rather than standalone public stations. Vogel State Park about 11 miles south has an on-site dump station, and private options like Crossing Creeks RV Resort and Trackrock Campground handle waste for guests. If you are self-contained and passing through, plan a loop that stocks up in town off GA-515 and empties your tanks at a campground on the way out. Call ahead in the off season, since some smaller mountain parks limit dump access to registered guests or close seasonally.

Are there any free dump stations in Blairsville?

Not that we have confirmed. All several of the stations we track here are paid, usually bundled into a campground stay or charged as a day-use dump fee. Vogel State Park has a dump station but also charges a $5 parking fee per vehicle per day for all visitors on top of camping rates. If you need a free option you will likely have to carry your tanks further, either south toward the I-575 corridor near Jasper or north on US-19/129 toward Murphy, North Carolina, where other small-town facilities sometimes turn up. In the north Georgia mountains, free public dump stations are genuinely scarce.

Can I dump at Vogel State Park?

Yes. Vogel State Park, about 11 miles south of Blairsville on US-19/129, has an on-site RV dump station and is one of the practical choices in the area. The park has 103 sites, roughly 95 with electric and water hookups, and fits rigs up to 40 feet with both pull-through and back-in sites. Camping runs about $25 a night with hookups, and every vehicle pays a $5 daily parking fee on top. Established in 1931, it is one of Georgia's oldest and most popular parks, with a 20-acre lake, swimming beach, and hiking including the Bear Hair Gap loop. Reserve ahead, especially during fall foliage.

What highways lead into Blairsville and are they RV-friendly?

Blairsville sits where US-19/129, US-76, and GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) come together. GA-515 and US-19/129 are the safest, easiest routes for RVs, and we strongly recommend sticking to them. The mountain back roads are another story, with steep grades and switchbacks. GA-180 to Vogel is narrow and winding, and the Brasstown Bald access road is steep with tight switchbacks that no large RV or trailer should attempt. Do not follow GPS blindly to campgrounds like Trackrock, since it may route you onto narrow mountain roads unsuitable for big rigs. Use the campgrounds' own directions instead.

How far is the nearest interstate from Blairsville?

No interstate directly serves Blairsville, which is part of its quiet mountain appeal but also means services thin out. GA-515 connects south to I-575 near Jasper, roughly 50 miles away, and that is your fastest route down to the Atlanta metro. US-19/129 leads north about 21 miles to Murphy, North Carolina, tying into US-74. There are no dedicated truck stops with RV lanes in the immediate area, so we top off diesel before leaving the interstate corridor or fuel up at the stations along US-19/129 and GA-515 in town. Plan fuel stops with the distances in mind, especially heading into the more remote campgrounds.

Where can I get propane and RV repairs in Blairsville?

Propane is well covered in town. Folger Gas has served Union County for over 50 years with delivery and tank service, Proflame Gas operates at 72 Crossing Drive, and there is an AmeriGas location in Blairsville too. Repairs are the harder part up here. The nearest major RV service is in the greater Atlanta metro area, about 90 miles south, so this is not the place to count on a quick fix for anything serious. Some local mechanics may handle basic work. Our advice is to arrive with your rig in good shape and carry spares, because a breakdown in the mountains can mean a long tow south.

What is there to do in Blairsville with an RV?

The north Georgia mountains pack a lot in. Vogel State Park, 11 miles south, has a lake, swimming beach, and trails from the short Bear Hair Gap loop to the 13-mile Coosa Backcountry Trail. Brasstown Bald, Georgia's highest point at 4,784 feet, has a summit visitor center with views of four states, though the access road is too steep for large RVs. Lake Nottely just north offers 106 miles of shoreline for boating and fishing. Helton Creek Falls drops about 100 feet a short walk from parking, and over 80 miles of the Appalachian Trail cross Union County. In town, Meeks Park has trails, disc golf, and a Nottely River kayak launch.

When is the best time to bring an RV to Blairsville?

Fall is the marquee season, roughly October into November, for stunning foliage and comfortable temperatures. Worth knowing: color in the north Georgia mountains typically peaks two to three weeks later than the Blue Ridge Parkway further north, usually mid-October to early November here. Late spring, May and June, is the other sweet spot, with wildflowers and green mountains before the summer crowds. Summer is pleasant thanks to cool mountain nights, but campgrounds are busy and afternoon thunderstorms roll in. Winter is quiet but cold, with ice storms that can close mountain roads on short notice. If you want the postcard, come for foliage and reserve well ahead.

Is boondocking or free camping available near Blairsville?

Yes, more than in a lot of the East. The Chattahoochee National Forest surrounds Blairsville and allows dispersed camping with a 14-day limit, so there are genuine boondocking options on national forest land. The catch is access: many of the forest roads are rough and narrow, so scout before committing a big rig and do not rely on GPS to pick your route. If you want hookups and an easy pad, Vogel State Park, Crossing Creeks RV Resort, and Poteete Creek Park near Lake Nottely are the developed choices. For most travelers the mix is a night or two boondocking in the forest paired with a campground stay for dumping and recharging.

Are the mountain roads around Blairsville safe for big rigs?

They can be, if you stick to the right ones. GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) and US-19/129 are built for through traffic and are the safe, easy routes for RVs. The trouble starts on the back roads: GA-180 to Vogel is narrow and winding, the Brasstown Bald access road has tight switchbacks and steep grades that large rigs should skip entirely, and GPS routing to spots like Trackrock will happily send you down roads no trailer belongs on. Follow campground-provided directions, not your navigation app. In winter, ice storms can close mountain roads with little warning, and valley fog is common on spring and fall mornings, so drive to the conditions.

Where do I buy groceries and water in Blairsville?

Blairsville is the resupply hub for this corner of the mountains. There is a Walmart Supercenter and an Ingles Market along GA-515, which cover a full grocery stock-up plus most camping and RV odds and ends. We always load up here before heading out to Vogel State Park or the more remote mountain campgrounds, because services thin out fast once you leave town and the small stores closer to the trailheads carry little. Potable water is available at Vogel State Park and other area campgrounds, so top off your fresh tank when you can. Treat Blairsville as your last real shopping stop before the higher country.

What are the dump station and parking rules around Blairsville?

Rules are fairly relaxed for a rural mountain county. No special RV permits are required. Vogel State Park has an RV dump station, but note the $5 parking fee per vehicle per day that applies to every park visitor, camping or not. We found no specific Union County ordinance for overnight RV parking. Georgia rest areas generally allow overnight stays, and the Walmart in Blairsville may permit overnight parking, but check with the store manager rather than assume, since policies vary by location. Meeks Park in town has a large parking area as well. For anything private, ask permission first and you will rarely have a problem.

How reliable is cell service around Blairsville?

In town along GA-515, service is generally fine for calls, maps, and data. Once you drop into the mountain valleys or head out toward the campgrounds and trailheads, though, signal gets spotty and can disappear entirely in the deeper hollows. This matters because so much of what you will want to do here is off in the national forest or up narrow mountain roads. Download offline maps before you head out, especially since you should not be trusting live GPS routing to the campgrounds anyway. Tell someone your plan if you are heading into the backcountry, and do not count on a data connection to bail you out if you take a wrong turn.

How many RV dump stations are near Blairsville, Georgia?

We count {{stationCount}} dump stations in and around Blairsville, and right now every one is paid rather than free ({{paidPct}} paid). Most are tied to the area campgrounds rather than standalone public stations. Vogel State Park about 11 miles south has an on-site dump station, and private options like Crossing Creeks RV Resort and Trackrock Campground handle waste for guests. If you are self-contained and passing through, plan a loop that stocks up in town off GA-515 and empties your tanks at a campground on the way out. Call ahead in the off season, since some smaller mountain parks limit dump access to registered guests or close seasonally.

Are there any free dump stations in Blairsville?

Not that we have confirmed. All {{stationCount}} of the stations we track here are paid, usually bundled into a campground stay or charged as a day-use dump fee. Vogel State Park has a dump station but also charges a $5 parking fee per vehicle per day for all visitors on top of camping rates. If you need a free option you will likely have to carry your tanks further, either south toward the I-575 corridor near Jasper or north on US-19/129 toward Murphy, North Carolina, where other small-town facilities sometimes turn up. In the north Georgia mountains, free public dump stations are genuinely scarce.

Can I dump at Vogel State Park?

Yes. Vogel State Park, about 11 miles south of Blairsville on US-19/129, has an on-site RV dump station and is one of the practical choices in the area. The park has 103 sites, roughly 95 with electric and water hookups, and fits rigs up to 40 feet with both pull-through and back-in sites. Camping runs about $25 a night with hookups, and every vehicle pays a $5 daily parking fee on top. Established in 1931, it is one of Georgia's oldest and most popular parks, with a 20-acre lake, swimming beach, and hiking including the Bear Hair Gap loop. Reserve ahead, especially during fall foliage.

What highways lead into Blairsville and are they RV-friendly?

Blairsville sits where US-19/129, US-76, and GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) come together. GA-515 and US-19/129 are the safest, easiest routes for RVs, and we strongly recommend sticking to them. The mountain back roads are another story, with steep grades and switchbacks. GA-180 to Vogel is narrow and winding, and the Brasstown Bald access road is steep with tight switchbacks that no large RV or trailer should attempt. Do not follow GPS blindly to campgrounds like Trackrock, since it may route you onto narrow mountain roads unsuitable for big rigs. Use the campgrounds' own directions instead.

How far is the nearest interstate from Blairsville?

No interstate directly serves Blairsville, which is part of its quiet mountain appeal but also means services thin out. GA-515 connects south to I-575 near Jasper, roughly 50 miles away, and that is your fastest route down to the Atlanta metro. US-19/129 leads north about 21 miles to Murphy, North Carolina, tying into US-74. There are no dedicated truck stops with RV lanes in the immediate area, so we top off diesel before leaving the interstate corridor or fuel up at the stations along US-19/129 and GA-515 in town. Plan fuel stops with the distances in mind, especially heading into the more remote campgrounds.

Where can I get propane and RV repairs in Blairsville?

Propane is well covered in town. Folger Gas has served Union County for over 50 years with delivery and tank service, Proflame Gas operates at 72 Crossing Drive, and there is an AmeriGas location in Blairsville too. Repairs are the harder part up here. The nearest major RV service is in the greater Atlanta metro area, about 90 miles south, so this is not the place to count on a quick fix for anything serious. Some local mechanics may handle basic work. Our advice is to arrive with your rig in good shape and carry spares, because a breakdown in the mountains can mean a long tow south.

What is there to do in Blairsville with an RV?

The north Georgia mountains pack a lot in. Vogel State Park, 11 miles south, has a lake, swimming beach, and trails from the short Bear Hair Gap loop to the 13-mile Coosa Backcountry Trail. Brasstown Bald, Georgia's highest point at 4,784 feet, has a summit visitor center with views of four states, though the access road is too steep for large RVs. Lake Nottely just north offers 106 miles of shoreline for boating and fishing. Helton Creek Falls drops about 100 feet a short walk from parking, and over 80 miles of the Appalachian Trail cross Union County. In town, Meeks Park has trails, disc golf, and a Nottely River kayak launch.

When is the best time to bring an RV to Blairsville?

Fall is the marquee season, roughly October into November, for stunning foliage and comfortable temperatures. Worth knowing: color in the north Georgia mountains typically peaks two to three weeks later than the Blue Ridge Parkway further north, usually mid-October to early November here. Late spring, May and June, is the other sweet spot, with wildflowers and green mountains before the summer crowds. Summer is pleasant thanks to cool mountain nights, but campgrounds are busy and afternoon thunderstorms roll in. Winter is quiet but cold, with ice storms that can close mountain roads on short notice. If you want the postcard, come for foliage and reserve well ahead.

Is boondocking or free camping available near Blairsville?

Yes, more than in a lot of the East. The Chattahoochee National Forest surrounds Blairsville and allows dispersed camping with a 14-day limit, so there are genuine boondocking options on national forest land. The catch is access: many of the forest roads are rough and narrow, so scout before committing a big rig and do not rely on GPS to pick your route. If you want hookups and an easy pad, Vogel State Park, Crossing Creeks RV Resort, and Poteete Creek Park near Lake Nottely are the developed choices. For most travelers the mix is a night or two boondocking in the forest paired with a campground stay for dumping and recharging.

Are the mountain roads around Blairsville safe for big rigs?

They can be, if you stick to the right ones. GA-515 (the Zell Miller Mountain Parkway) and US-19/129 are built for through traffic and are the safe, easy routes for RVs. The trouble starts on the back roads: GA-180 to Vogel is narrow and winding, the Brasstown Bald access road has tight switchbacks and steep grades that large rigs should skip entirely, and GPS routing to spots like Trackrock will happily send you down roads no trailer belongs on. Follow campground-provided directions, not your navigation app. In winter, ice storms can close mountain roads with little warning, and valley fog is common on spring and fall mornings, so drive to the conditions.

Where do I buy groceries and water in Blairsville?

Blairsville is the resupply hub for this corner of the mountains. There is a Walmart Supercenter and an Ingles Market along GA-515, which cover a full grocery stock-up plus most camping and RV odds and ends. We always load up here before heading out to Vogel State Park or the more remote mountain campgrounds, because services thin out fast once you leave town and the small stores closer to the trailheads carry little. Potable water is available at Vogel State Park and other area campgrounds, so top off your fresh tank when you can. Treat Blairsville as your last real shopping stop before the higher country.

What are the dump station and parking rules around Blairsville?

Rules are fairly relaxed for a rural mountain county. No special RV permits are required. Vogel State Park has an RV dump station, but note the $5 parking fee per vehicle per day that applies to every park visitor, camping or not. We found no specific Union County ordinance for overnight RV parking. Georgia rest areas generally allow overnight stays, and the Walmart in Blairsville may permit overnight parking, but check with the store manager rather than assume, since policies vary by location. Meeks Park in town has a large parking area as well. For anything private, ask permission first and you will rarely have a problem.

How reliable is cell service around Blairsville?

In town along GA-515, service is generally fine for calls, maps, and data. Once you drop into the mountain valleys or head out toward the campgrounds and trailheads, though, signal gets spotty and can disappear entirely in the deeper hollows. This matters because so much of what you will want to do here is off in the national forest or up narrow mountain roads. Download offline maps before you head out, especially since you should not be trusting live GPS routing to the campgrounds anyway. Tell someone your plan if you are heading into the backcountry, and do not count on a data connection to bail you out if you take a wrong turn.

Are there free dump stations in Blairsville?

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