RV Parks In Angola, Indiana
41.6348° N, 84.9994° W
Quick Overview
Angola sits in the far northeast corner of Indiana, in Steuben County, which has more lakes than any other county in the state, over 101 of them. For RVers, that geography is the whole story. This is lake country, and the reason to bring the rig here is water, woods, and a state park that punches well above its size.
The centerpiece is Pokagon State Park, a 1,260-acre Indiana DNR park framed by Lake James and Snow Lake, just off I-69 north of town. It anchors the public camping here with more than 200 electric sites, water hookups, pull-through sites that handle big rigs, and an on-site dump station. The nearby Trine State Recreation Area, part of the same park property on Crooked Lake, adds more electric sites. Both book through the Indiana ReserveAmerica system.
On the private side, you have real choices. Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park runs pools, water slides and family programming with 30/50-amp and water hookups. The Angola/Hogback Lake KOA Holiday gives you a lake-country KOA with full and partial hookup sites, and Miller's Happy Acres keeps it simpler with a heated pool, laundry and hot showers. So the choice here comes down to a familiar one: the state park for the woods-and-water setting and the better value, or a private park for full hookups, 50-amp service and a pool for the kids.
Big-rig access is easy, since Pokagon sits right off the interstate and offers pull-throughs, though a few of the older wooded loops run tight. Hookups top out at 30-amp electric and water at the state park, with no sewer at the site, so plan on the dump station, or book a private park if you want full hookups at the pad. Staying a while and need to empty tanks in town? See our guide to RV dump stations in Angola. What makes this stop stand out is the year-round appeal: summer is all lakes and trails, fall brings color and easy bookings, and winter turns Campground 3 into a base camp for the state's only refrigerated toboggan run.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Angola
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All Dump Stations Near Angola
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cap's Mobile Home Park | 3.4 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Silver Lake RV & Mh Estates | 3.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Angola / Hogback Lake Koa Holiday | 4.5 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pow Wow Point | 5.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Waggoner RV Park | 5.9 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Circle Park Mobile Home Estates | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Manapogo Park | 9.5 mi | 4.5 | RV Park | Varies |
| Gordons Campground | 13.7 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Gordons Campground | 13.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| South Shore Mobile Home Park | 16.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Cap's Mobile Home Park
3.4 miSilver Lake RV & Mh Estates
3.8 miAngola / Hogback Lake Koa Holiday
4.5 miPow Wow Point
5.7 miWaggoner RV Park
5.9 miCircle Park Mobile Home Estates
7.5 miManapogo Park
9.5 miGordons Campground
13.7 miGordons Campground
13.8 miSouth Shore Mobile Home Park
16.5 miTraveling to Angola by RV
Getting to Angola with an RV is about as simple as northern Indiana gets. The town sits where I-69 crosses the Indiana Toll Road (I-80/90), so you can roll in from Fort Wayne to the south, the Ohio line and Toledo to the east, or southern Michigan to the north without leaving the interstate until the last few miles. Pokagon State Park is just off I-69 north of town, which keeps the final approach easy even for a 40-foot motorhome or fifth-wheel.
For local trips to the surrounding lakes, US-20 and SR-127 do the work, and there are no unusual clearance or weight restrictions to plan around on the main routes. Fuel, groceries and basic RV services cluster near the I-69 interchange, so top off the tanks and the pantry before you head out to the water. If you are flying in and renting, Fort Wayne is the closest sizable airport, about an hour south. Once you are set up at the park, most of what you came for, the lakes, the trails, the bison preserve and the inn, is within the park boundary or a short drive around Lake James.
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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 Angola, Indiana, 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 Angola
Camping costs here split cleanly along public-versus-private lines. Pokagon State Park is the value option: its electric sites fall in the standard Indiana state-park range, with a small non-refundable reservation fee for advance bookings and a per-vehicle entrance fee on top. Out-of-state plates pay a higher entrance fee than Indiana residents, which adds up over a multi-day stay, so it is worth knowing before you arrive.
Private parks around Angola cost more per night, and you pay for the amenities: pools, water slides, and full hookups with 50-amp service. Those rates climb on summer weekends and holidays, when demand around Lake James peaks. If you are watching the budget, the cheapest good nights are midweek and in the fall shoulder season, when both the state park and the private parks ease off peak pricing. Winter camping at Campground 3 runs on off-season rates, so a toboggan-run trip can actually be one of the better-value stays of the year if you are equipped for the cold.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Angola
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Best Time to Visit Angola by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
18F - 32F
Crowds: Low
Campground 3 at Pokagon stays open with a heated comfort station and water fill. This is toboggan-run season, so cold-weather campers do come up.
Spring
Mar - May
38F - 58F
Crowds: Low
Most campgrounds open by late April. Cool, wet weeks, but you can usually walk up to a site midweek and skip the summer booking scramble. Trails can be muddy.
Summer
Jun - Aug
62F - 82F
Crowds: High
The busy season on Lake James. Reserve Pokagon weekends months out on ReserveAmerica; midweek nights open up. Warm lake swimming and boating.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42F - 63F
Crowds: Medium
Our favorite window. Color on the hardwoods, cooler nights, thinner crowds and easier bookings. Some private parks wind down after Labor Day.
Explore the Angola Area
A few things we have learned about camping this corner of Indiana. First, if you want a summer weekend at Pokagon, book the moment your window opens on ReserveAmerica. Lakeside and pull-through sites go first, and holiday weeks are gone months out. Midweek summer and the entire spring and fall shoulder seasons are a completely different, easier experience, and fall is genuinely the sweet spot for weather, color and price.
Second, remember the state park has no sewer at the site. Plan your dump-station stop on the way out, or pick a private park if you want full hookups at the pad. Third, out-of-state plates pay a higher park entrance fee than Indiana residents, so build that into the budget if you are passing through. Fourth, do not write off winter here. Campground 3 stays open, and pairing a cold-weather stay with the refrigerated toboggan run is the kind of trip you cannot do at most parks. Bring a heated hose and cold-rated gear if you try it. Finally, leave time for the bison preserve and a meal at the historic Potawatomi Inn on Lake James, even if you never leave your campsite otherwise.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Angola
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Angola, Indiana?
The anchor is Pokagon State Park, an Indiana DNR park on Lake James and Snow Lake with more than 200 electric sites, pull-throughs, and a dump station. For a resort feel, private parks like Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park and the Angola/Hogback Lake KOA Holiday add pools and full hookups, and Miller's Happy Acres offers a simpler setup with a heated pool and laundry. Between the state park and the private options, you can pick between a woodsy public campground and an amenity-heavy private park within a few minutes of each other.
Do campgrounds near Angola have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It depends on public versus private. Pokagon State Park gives you 30-amp electric and water at the site plus an on-site dump station, but it does not have sewer hookups at individual sites, which is normal for Indiana state parks. If you want full hookups with sewer at the pad, the private parks are the better bet: Jellystone and the local KOA offer full and partial hookup sites, and 30/50-amp service for larger rigs. Plan to use the state park dump station on your way out if you camp there.
How much does RV camping cost in Angola?
Public sites at Pokagon State Park are the value play, with electric sites in the typical Indiana state-park range plus a small non-refundable reservation fee for advance bookings and a per-vehicle entrance fee. Private RV parks with pools and full hookups charge more per night, especially on summer weekends and holidays. Out-of-state visitors pay a higher park entrance fee than Indiana residents, so budget for that if you are passing through. Fall and midweek stays are noticeably cheaper than peak summer weekends.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Angola?
For Pokagon State Park in summer, book as far ahead as you can. Weekends and holidays around Lake James fill months in advance through the Indiana ReserveAmerica system, and the best lakeside and pull-through sites go first. Midweek summer nights and the whole spring and fall shoulder seasons are much easier, and you can often reserve within a week or even walk up. Private parks take direct reservations and also fill on summer weekends, so call ahead if you want a specific site or a pull-through.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Angola, Indiana?
Late spring through fall is prime camping in this lake country. Summer is warmest and busiest, with full lake activity but the tightest bookings. Fall is our pick: the hardwoods color up, nights cool off, crowds thin, and sites are easier to get. Winter is a different trip entirely because Campground 3 at Pokagon stays open for cold-weather campers who come for the refrigerated toboggan run, which operates from late November into early March regardless of snowfall. Spring is quiet and cheap but wet, with muddy trails and cool nights, so it suits campers who want the lakes to themselves.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp near Angola?
Yes. Pokagon State Park has pull-through sites and straightforward big-rig access right off I-69, so getting a 35 to 40 foot rig in and set up is manageable, though as with most older state parks some loops are tighter and wooded. The private parks around Angola are generally built with larger sites and 50-amp service for big rigs. If you are running a long fifth-wheel or motorhome, call the park to confirm site length and request a pull-through when you book rather than risking a tight back-in loop.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Angola?
Not really in the free sense. Steuben County is developed lake country, so there is no meaningful dispersed or boondocking option nearby the way there is out west. The public camping here is the Indiana DNR system at Pokagon State Park and Trine State Recreation Area, both of which use reservations through ReserveAmerica, though you can sometimes find first-come or walk-up availability midweek and in the shoulder seasons. If you want free overnight parking, plan to stop elsewhere and use these parks as a paid destination stay.
What is there to do around Angola besides camp?
Plenty, and most of it is why people camp here. Pokagon State Park has miles of hiking and biking trails, a saddle barn with horseback rides in summer, a nature center, and a 200-acre bison preserve you can tour. Lake James and Snow Lake are right there for boating, swimming, paddling and fishing, and Steuben County has more than 101 lakes total. In winter the refrigerated toboggan run is the headline attraction. The historic Potawatomi Inn on Lake James is worth a meal even if you are camping.
Is Pokagon State Park open year-round for RV camping?
Most of Pokagon runs on standard rates and services from late April through early November, then shifts to winter rates. Campground 3 stays open all winter with one heated comfort station and a water fill station, so year-round RV camping is possible if you are set up for cold weather. This makes Pokagon one of the few Indiana state parks where you can pair a winter camping trip with a real winter attraction, since the toboggan run operates through the coldest months. Call the park for off-season rates and site availability.
Which is better near Angola, the state park or a private RV park?
It depends on what you want. The state park wins for setting and value: you camp in the woods on Lake James with trails and the nature center at your doorstep, for less money, though you trade away sewer hookups at the site. The private parks win for amenities and big-rig convenience, with pools, water slides, full hookups and 50-amp service that suit families and larger rigs. Our rule of thumb here is state park for the outdoors, private park for the pool and the full hookups.
Do I need reservations for the Pokagon toboggan run?
The toboggan run operates on set hours during its season from late November into early March, and it works on a per-toboggan rental basis rather than a campsite booking. It is a separate activity from your campsite reservation, so you book your winter site at Campground 3 through ReserveAmerica and then pay for toboggan time at the run itself. Weekends and holiday weeks are busiest, so arrive early. Because the track is refrigerated, it runs regardless of natural snowfall, which makes it a reliable winter-trip anchor.
What are the RV site hookups like at Pokagon State Park?
Pokagon offers more than 200 electric sites with 30-amp service and water hookups, plus pull-through sites that fit larger rigs and an on-site dump station for registered campers. There are also non-electric sites if you want a more rustic stay. What you will not find is a sewer hookup at each site, which is standard for the Indiana state park system, so plan to use the central dump station. If you need 50-amp or full hookups, look to the private parks in the Angola area instead.
How do I get to Angola and the lakes with an RV?
Angola sits in the far northeast corner of Indiana where I-69 meets the Indiana Toll Road (I-80/90), so it is an easy interstate approach from Fort Wayne, Toledo and the Michigan line. Pokagon State Park is just off I-69 north of town, which keeps the final approach simple even for a big rig. US-20 and SR-127 handle local trips to the surrounding lakes. There are no unusual RV restrictions on these routes, and fuel and groceries are available near the interchange, so you can top off before heading to the water.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Angola, Indiana?
The anchor is Pokagon State Park, an Indiana DNR park on Lake James and Snow Lake with more than 200 electric sites, pull-throughs, and a dump station. For a resort feel, private parks like Yogi Bear's Jellystone Park and the Angola/Hogback Lake KOA Holiday add pools and full hookups, and Miller's Happy Acres offers a simpler setup with a heated pool and laundry. Between the state park and the private options, you can pick between a woodsy public campground and an amenity-heavy private park within a few minutes of each other.
Do campgrounds near Angola have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
It depends on public versus private. Pokagon State Park gives you 30-amp electric and water at the site plus an on-site dump station, but it does not have sewer hookups at individual sites, which is normal for Indiana state parks. If you want full hookups with sewer at the pad, the private parks are the better bet: Jellystone and the local KOA offer full and partial hookup sites, and 30/50-amp service for larger rigs. Plan to use the state park dump station on your way out if you camp there.
How much does RV camping cost in Angola?
Public sites at Pokagon State Park are the value play, with electric sites in the typical Indiana state-park range plus a small non-refundable reservation fee for advance bookings and a per-vehicle entrance fee. Private RV parks with pools and full hookups charge more per night, especially on summer weekends and holidays. Out-of-state visitors pay a higher park entrance fee than Indiana residents, so budget for that if you are passing through. Fall and midweek stays are noticeably cheaper than peak summer weekends.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Angola?
For Pokagon State Park in summer, book as far ahead as you can. Weekends and holidays around Lake James fill months in advance through the Indiana ReserveAmerica system, and the best lakeside and pull-through sites go first. Midweek summer nights and the whole spring and fall shoulder seasons are much easier, and you can often reserve within a week or even walk up. Private parks take direct reservations and also fill on summer weekends, so call ahead if you want a specific site or a pull-through.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Angola, Indiana?
Late spring through fall is prime camping in this lake country. Summer is warmest and busiest, with full lake activity but the tightest bookings. Fall is our pick: the hardwoods color up, nights cool off, crowds thin, and sites are easier to get. Winter is a different trip entirely because Campground 3 at Pokagon stays open for cold-weather campers who come for the refrigerated toboggan run, which operates from late November into early March regardless of snowfall. Spring is quiet and cheap but wet, with muddy trails and cool nights, so it suits campers who want the lakes to themselves.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp near Angola?
Yes. Pokagon State Park has pull-through sites and straightforward big-rig access right off I-69, so getting a 35 to 40 foot rig in and set up is manageable, though as with most older state parks some loops are tighter and wooded. The private parks around Angola are generally built with larger sites and 50-amp service for big rigs. If you are running a long fifth-wheel or motorhome, call the park to confirm site length and request a pull-through when you book rather than risking a tight back-in loop.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Angola?
Not really in the free sense. Steuben County is developed lake country, so there is no meaningful dispersed or boondocking option nearby the way there is out west. The public camping here is the Indiana DNR system at Pokagon State Park and Trine State Recreation Area, both of which use reservations through ReserveAmerica, though you can sometimes find first-come or walk-up availability midweek and in the shoulder seasons. If you want free overnight parking, plan to stop elsewhere and use these parks as a paid destination stay.
What is there to do around Angola besides camp?
Plenty, and most of it is why people camp here. Pokagon State Park has miles of hiking and biking trails, a saddle barn with horseback rides in summer, a nature center, and a 200-acre bison preserve you can tour. Lake James and Snow Lake are right there for boating, swimming, paddling and fishing, and Steuben County has more than 101 lakes total. In winter the refrigerated toboggan run is the headline attraction. The historic Potawatomi Inn on Lake James is worth a meal even if you are camping.
Is Pokagon State Park open year-round for RV camping?
Most of Pokagon runs on standard rates and services from late April through early November, then shifts to winter rates. Campground 3 stays open all winter with one heated comfort station and a water fill station, so year-round RV camping is possible if you are set up for cold weather. This makes Pokagon one of the few Indiana state parks where you can pair a winter camping trip with a real winter attraction, since the toboggan run operates through the coldest months. Call the park for off-season rates and site availability.
Which is better near Angola, the state park or a private RV park?
It depends on what you want. The state park wins for setting and value: you camp in the woods on Lake James with trails and the nature center at your doorstep, for less money, though you trade away sewer hookups at the site. The private parks win for amenities and big-rig convenience, with pools, water slides, full hookups and 50-amp service that suit families and larger rigs. Our rule of thumb here is state park for the outdoors, private park for the pool and the full hookups.
Do I need reservations for the Pokagon toboggan run?
The toboggan run operates on set hours during its season from late November into early March, and it works on a per-toboggan rental basis rather than a campsite booking. It is a separate activity from your campsite reservation, so you book your winter site at Campground 3 through ReserveAmerica and then pay for toboggan time at the run itself. Weekends and holiday weeks are busiest, so arrive early. Because the track is refrigerated, it runs regardless of natural snowfall, which makes it a reliable winter-trip anchor.
What are the RV site hookups like at Pokagon State Park?
Pokagon offers more than 200 electric sites with 30-amp service and water hookups, plus pull-through sites that fit larger rigs and an on-site dump station for registered campers. There are also non-electric sites if you want a more rustic stay. What you will not find is a sewer hookup at each site, which is standard for the Indiana state park system, so plan to use the central dump station. If you need 50-amp or full hookups, look to the private parks in the Angola area instead.
How do I get to Angola and the lakes with an RV?
Angola sits in the far northeast corner of Indiana where I-69 meets the Indiana Toll Road (I-80/90), so it is an easy interstate approach from Fort Wayne, Toledo and the Michigan line. Pokagon State Park is just off I-69 north of town, which keeps the final approach simple even for a big rig. US-20 and SR-127 handle local trips to the surrounding lakes. There are no unusual RV restrictions on these routes, and fuel and groceries are available near the interchange, so you can top off before heading to the water.
Are there free dump stations in Angola?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Angola.
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