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

RV Parks In Brownsburg, Indiana

39.8434° N, 86.3978° W

Quick Overview

Brownsburg is a fast-growing suburb on the northwest edge of the Indianapolis metro, and for RVers it's less a place to park inside town than a launch pad for the whole region. There's almost no camping in the built-up core itself, so the game here is simple: base at a full-hookup private park nearby, then use Brownsburg's excellent interstate access to reach lakes, canyons, and one of the country's great motorsports scenes. This is racing country, home to Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park and a corridor of pro drag-racing team garages.

Because the town is suburban, the private parks do the heavy lifting for full hookups. The Indianapolis KOA Holiday in Greenfield, east of the city off I-70, offers full-hookup pull-throughs with 50/30-amp and long gravel pads built for big rigs, open March through November. To the west, the Cloverdale / Indianapolis West KOA Journey runs year-round with the same full-hookup pull-throughs about 40 miles out. Closest to Brownsburg itself, the small Shalamar Farm offers a handful of full-hookup sites, with back-ins taking rigs up to about 45 feet. These are your sewer-and-50-amp options.

Public camping means a drive, and it trades sewer hookups for scenery. Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake, about an hour west, is the region's biggest public campground with 317 sites, roughly 240 on 30 and 50-amp electric, plus fill stations and a dump station. About an hour northwest, Turkey Run State Park adds 200-plus Class A electric sites among sandstone canyons. Both are electric-only with modern restrooms, so you fill and dump rather than hook up sewer at the pad, but the scenery and low rates more than make up for it on a weekend trip. Heading out with full tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Brownsburg. Below we break down hookups, reservations, seasons, costs, and what to do.

Top Rated Dump Stations in Brownsburg

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

Traveling to Brownsburg by RV

Access is Brownsburg's strong suit. I-74 and US-136 run right through town, and I-465 loops the Indianapolis metro just to the east, so getting a big rig to any of the private parks is straightforward on interstate and divided highway. The Greenfield KOA sits off I-70 on the east side, and the Cloverdale KOA is off I-70 to the west.

For public camping you'll drive out of the metro: head west toward Rockville for Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake, or continue northwest on good state highways for Turkey Run State Park. Both routes handle RVs well. One of Brownsburg's biggest advantages is the airport: Indianapolis International is only about 20 to 30 minutes away, which makes this a genuinely good fly-and-rent base if you're picking up a rental motorhome. Full services, groceries, fuel, and repair shops are all close in the metro, so there's no need to stock up in advance the way you would in a remote town. Indiana's public parks and reservoirs are listed at in.gov/dnr and Recreation.gov.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

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

Costs here split cleanly between public and private. The public options are the value play: Raccoon State Recreation Area and Turkey Run charge typical Indiana state-park rates for electric sites, generally in the mid tier, with a dump station included and no separate sewer-hookup fee because there isn't one. Non-electric sites at the reservoir run cheaper still. The tradeoff is the drive out of the metro and electric-only service.

The private full-hookup parks cost more for the convenience and the sewer-and-50-amp service. Expect the Greenfield and Cloverdale KOAs to run in the higher band, well above state-park rates, in exchange for full hookups, long pull-throughs, and amenities. Watch for peak and event pricing: around the NHRA U.S. Nationals on Labor Day weekend and other big race dates, nearby parks charge their top rates and sell out, so booking early both secures a site and often locks a better price. If you're on a budget and don't mind driving, the reservoir and state parks deliver the most camping for your money in the region.

Free: 2 stations (50%)
Paid: 2 stations (50%)

Contact station for pricing details.

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

What RVers Are Saying About Brownsburg

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

Best Time to Visit Brownsburg by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

24°F - 39°F

Crowds: Low

The Greenfield KOA and most public electric loops close for winter. The year-round Cloverdale KOA and a few private parks keep power on. Expect cold, wind, and possible snow if you camp through the off-season, so come self-contained.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

42°F - 61°F

Crowds: Medium

Parks reopen and the racing season starts at Lucas Oil Raceway. Rain and trail mud are common and nights stay cool, so pack layers. Weekends fill as the weather warms, but midweek stays easy to book.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

64°F - 85°F

Crowds: High

Warm and humid with lakes and pools open. Private parks and Raccoon SRA fill on weekends, and race weekends spike demand, so reserve ahead. Bring bug protection near the reservoir and expect midday heat.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

44°F - 67°F

Crowds: High

Great camping weather, but the Labor Day NHRA U.S. Nationals packs Brownsburg lodging and parks, so book months out for that weekend. After Labor Day, mild days and color make for excellent, thinner-crowd camping.

Explore the Brownsburg Area

Treat Brownsburg as a hub, not a campground. The town itself has almost no RV camping, so pick a private park with full hookups and use the interstates to reach everything else. The Greenfield or Cloverdale KOAs are the most reliable full-hookup, big-rig-friendly bases, while Shalamar Farm is the closest option if you want to stay right by Brownsburg.

Plan hard around the racing calendar. Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park hosts the NHRA U.S. Nationals every Labor Day weekend, and that event packs local hotels and campgrounds, so book any nearby park months in advance if you're coming for it. The rest of the March-to-October racing season also draws crowds on event weekends. If you want full hookups with sewer and 50-amp, stick to the private parks, because the public options at Raccoon SRA and Turkey Run are electric-only with a dump station rather than site sewer. For a scenery day, drive to Turkey Run's canyons or spend a day boating and fishing on Cecil M. Harden Lake. Book the year-round Cloverdale KOA if you're traveling in the cold months, since most public loops close.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Brownsburg

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Brownsburg, Indiana?

Because Brownsburg is a suburb with little in-town camping, the best options ring the metro. For full hookups, the Indianapolis KOA Holiday in Greenfield (east, off I-70) and the year-round Cloverdale / Indianapolis West KOA Journey (west) both offer big-rig pull-throughs with 50/30-amp, and the small Shalamar Farm is the closest full-hookup option to Brownsburg itself. For public camping with scenery, Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake has the region's largest campground, and Turkey Run State Park adds Class A electric sites among sandstone canyons. Together they cover full-service private parks and affordable public lakes and parks.

Do campgrounds near Brownsburg have full hookups?

The private parks do; the public ones don't. The Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield and the Cloverdale KOA both offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 50/30-amp service on long pull-throughs, and Shalamar Farm has a few full-hookup sites close to town. By contrast, the public options are electric-only: Raccoon State Recreation Area runs 30 and 50-amp electric loops with fill stations and a dump station but no sewer at the site, and Turkey Run offers Class A electric sites with a dump station. So if you need sewer and 50-amp at your pad, choose one of the KOAs; if electric-plus-dump-station is fine, the public parks are cheaper.

How much does RV camping cost near Brownsburg?

It splits by public versus private. The public parks are the value choice: Raccoon State Recreation Area and Turkey Run charge typical Indiana state-park electric rates in the mid tier, with a dump station included and cheaper non-electric sites available at the reservoir. The private full-hookup KOAs cost more, running in the higher band in exchange for sewer, 50-amp, long pull-throughs, and amenities. Expect peak and event pricing around the NHRA U.S. Nationals on Labor Day weekend and other big race dates, when nearby parks hit top rates and sell out. Booking early both secures a site and usually locks a better price.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Brownsburg?

For ordinary summer weekends, book the private KOAs and Raccoon State Recreation Area a few weeks to a couple of months ahead. For the NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park on Labor Day weekend, reserve months in advance, because that single event fills hotels and campgrounds across Brownsburg and Hendricks County. Public parks like Raccoon SRA and Turkey Run take Indiana DNR and Recreation.gov reservations up to six months out, which helps for peak dates. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier and can often be booked close to arrival, especially at the year-round Cloverdale KOA.

When is the best time to go RV camping near Brownsburg?

Late spring through fall is the window, with two things to plan around. Summer is warm and busy, with lakes and pools open and weekends filling at the private parks and Raccoon SRA. Fall offers excellent mild-weather camping, but the Labor Day NHRA U.S. Nationals packs the area, so either come for the race and book months ahead or aim for the quieter weeks after it. Spring brings reopening parks and the start of the racing season, with cooler nights and some mud. Winter is quiet and cold, with most public loops and the Greenfield KOA closed and only year-round private parks open.

Can big rigs over 35 to 40 feet camp near Brownsburg?

Yes. The best big-rig options are the private KOAs: the Indianapolis KOA Holiday in Greenfield and the Cloverdale KOA both have long full-hookup pull-throughs designed for large rigs, and Brownsburg's interstate access on I-74, I-465, and I-70 makes getting there easy. Shalamar Farm's back-in sites take rigs up to about 45 feet but are more limited. The public parks welcome big rigs on many sites, but the reservoir and state-park loops vary in length and are electric-only, so confirm site length when you reserve Raccoon State Recreation Area or Turkey Run. For guaranteed full-hookup big-rig space, book a KOA.

Are there free or first-come camping options near Brownsburg?

Very few close to the metro. Brownsburg and the surrounding suburbs are built up, so there's no dispersed or free camping right nearby. Your best chance at first-come is at some non-electric sites at Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake, and nearby state forests to the west can offer rustic, cheaper camping if you're self-contained. For the most part, plan on reserving a private full-hookup park or a public electric site rather than counting on free camping. If you want first-come, arrive early on weekends and have a backup, since summer and race weekends fill the region.

Where should I camp for a race at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park?

Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park is right in Brownsburg, so any of the metro-area parks works as a base, with the Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield and the year-round Cloverdale KOA offering full hookups and easy interstate hops back to the track. Shalamar Farm is the closest full-hookup park to Brownsburg itself. The catch is the NHRA U.S. Nationals on Labor Day weekend, the biggest event of the year, which fills lodging and campgrounds for miles, so book months ahead. On non-event weekends you have far more flexibility. The venue also hosts events from March to October, so check the schedule when planning.

Is Raccoon State Recreation Area good for RV camping?

Yes, it's the region's premier public campground and worth the hour-west drive from Brownsburg. Raccoon State Recreation Area sits on 2,060-acre Cecil M. Harden Lake and has 317 campsites, roughly 240 with 30 or 50-amp electric, spread through well-maintained, tree-canopied loops. Amenities include fill stations for water, a spacious dump station, flush and vault toilets, a summer camp store, boat launch and rentals, playground, and an amphitheater. There are no full hookups, so you fill and dump rather than connect sewer at the site. Reserve up to six months out through Indiana DNR and Recreation.gov, especially for summer weekends when it fills.

What is there to do while camping near Brownsburg?

Plenty, and it starts with motorsports. Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in Brownsburg hosts the NHRA U.S. Nationals and a full March-to-October racing schedule, and the area is lined with pro drag-racing team garages. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home of the Indy 500 and its museum, is about 15 minutes away. For the outdoors, drive west to boat and fish on Cecil M. Harden Lake or northwest to hike Turkey Run State Park's sandstone canyons and ladder trails along Sugar Creek. The full Indianapolis metro adds dining, shopping, breweries, and attractions, all a short interstate hop from your campsite.

Are campgrounds near Brownsburg open in winter?

Some are. The Greenfield Indianapolis KOA and most public electric loops close for the winter season, but the Cloverdale / Indianapolis West KOA runs year-round with full hookups, and a few other private parks keep power on. If you're camping through the cold months, base at a year-round park and come self-contained, because you should expect cold nights in the 20s, wind, and the chance of snow across central Indiana. Confirm which loops and amenities are open before you go, since seasonal facilities like camp stores and showers may be limited off-season. For most travelers, spring through fall is the practical camping window here.

Does Brownsburg work as a base for visiting Indianapolis?

Very well. Brownsburg sits on the northwest edge of the metro with direct access via I-74, US-136, and the I-465 loop, so downtown Indianapolis, the Motor Speedway, and metro attractions are all a short drive. Indianapolis International Airport is only about 20 to 30 minutes away, which makes Brownsburg a strong fly-and-rent base for a rental motorhome trip. Since the town itself has minimal camping, you'll stay at a full-hookup private park like the Greenfield or Cloverdale KOA, or Shalamar Farm, and commute in. Full services, groceries, fuel, and repair shops are all close by in the metro, so resupply is never a problem.

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Brownsburg, Indiana?

Because Brownsburg is a suburb with little in-town camping, the best options ring the metro. For full hookups, the Indianapolis KOA Holiday in Greenfield (east, off I-70) and the year-round Cloverdale / Indianapolis West KOA Journey (west) both offer big-rig pull-throughs with 50/30-amp, and the small Shalamar Farm is the closest full-hookup option to Brownsburg itself. For public camping with scenery, Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake has the region's largest campground, and Turkey Run State Park adds Class A electric sites among sandstone canyons. Together they cover full-service private parks and affordable public lakes and parks.

Do campgrounds near Brownsburg have full hookups?

The private parks do; the public ones don't. The Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield and the Cloverdale KOA both offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 50/30-amp service on long pull-throughs, and Shalamar Farm has a few full-hookup sites close to town. By contrast, the public options are electric-only: Raccoon State Recreation Area runs 30 and 50-amp electric loops with fill stations and a dump station but no sewer at the site, and Turkey Run offers Class A electric sites with a dump station. So if you need sewer and 50-amp at your pad, choose one of the KOAs; if electric-plus-dump-station is fine, the public parks are cheaper.

How much does RV camping cost near Brownsburg?

It splits by public versus private. The public parks are the value choice: Raccoon State Recreation Area and Turkey Run charge typical Indiana state-park electric rates in the mid tier, with a dump station included and cheaper non-electric sites available at the reservoir. The private full-hookup KOAs cost more, running in the higher band in exchange for sewer, 50-amp, long pull-throughs, and amenities. Expect peak and event pricing around the NHRA U.S. Nationals on Labor Day weekend and other big race dates, when nearby parks hit top rates and sell out. Booking early both secures a site and usually locks a better price.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Brownsburg?

For ordinary summer weekends, book the private KOAs and Raccoon State Recreation Area a few weeks to a couple of months ahead. For the NHRA U.S. Nationals at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park on Labor Day weekend, reserve months in advance, because that single event fills hotels and campgrounds across Brownsburg and Hendricks County. Public parks like Raccoon SRA and Turkey Run take Indiana DNR and Recreation.gov reservations up to six months out, which helps for peak dates. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier and can often be booked close to arrival, especially at the year-round Cloverdale KOA.

When is the best time to go RV camping near Brownsburg?

Late spring through fall is the window, with two things to plan around. Summer is warm and busy, with lakes and pools open and weekends filling at the private parks and Raccoon SRA. Fall offers excellent mild-weather camping, but the Labor Day NHRA U.S. Nationals packs the area, so either come for the race and book months ahead or aim for the quieter weeks after it. Spring brings reopening parks and the start of the racing season, with cooler nights and some mud. Winter is quiet and cold, with most public loops and the Greenfield KOA closed and only year-round private parks open.

Can big rigs over 35 to 40 feet camp near Brownsburg?

Yes. The best big-rig options are the private KOAs: the Indianapolis KOA Holiday in Greenfield and the Cloverdale KOA both have long full-hookup pull-throughs designed for large rigs, and Brownsburg's interstate access on I-74, I-465, and I-70 makes getting there easy. Shalamar Farm's back-in sites take rigs up to about 45 feet but are more limited. The public parks welcome big rigs on many sites, but the reservoir and state-park loops vary in length and are electric-only, so confirm site length when you reserve Raccoon State Recreation Area or Turkey Run. For guaranteed full-hookup big-rig space, book a KOA.

Are there free or first-come camping options near Brownsburg?

Very few close to the metro. Brownsburg and the surrounding suburbs are built up, so there's no dispersed or free camping right nearby. Your best chance at first-come is at some non-electric sites at Raccoon State Recreation Area on Cecil M. Harden Lake, and nearby state forests to the west can offer rustic, cheaper camping if you're self-contained. For the most part, plan on reserving a private full-hookup park or a public electric site rather than counting on free camping. If you want first-come, arrive early on weekends and have a backup, since summer and race weekends fill the region.

Where should I camp for a race at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park?

Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park is right in Brownsburg, so any of the metro-area parks works as a base, with the Indianapolis KOA in Greenfield and the year-round Cloverdale KOA offering full hookups and easy interstate hops back to the track. Shalamar Farm is the closest full-hookup park to Brownsburg itself. The catch is the NHRA U.S. Nationals on Labor Day weekend, the biggest event of the year, which fills lodging and campgrounds for miles, so book months ahead. On non-event weekends you have far more flexibility. The venue also hosts events from March to October, so check the schedule when planning.

Is Raccoon State Recreation Area good for RV camping?

Yes, it's the region's premier public campground and worth the hour-west drive from Brownsburg. Raccoon State Recreation Area sits on 2,060-acre Cecil M. Harden Lake and has 317 campsites, roughly 240 with 30 or 50-amp electric, spread through well-maintained, tree-canopied loops. Amenities include fill stations for water, a spacious dump station, flush and vault toilets, a summer camp store, boat launch and rentals, playground, and an amphitheater. There are no full hookups, so you fill and dump rather than connect sewer at the site. Reserve up to six months out through Indiana DNR and Recreation.gov, especially for summer weekends when it fills.

What is there to do while camping near Brownsburg?

Plenty, and it starts with motorsports. Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in Brownsburg hosts the NHRA U.S. Nationals and a full March-to-October racing schedule, and the area is lined with pro drag-racing team garages. The Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home of the Indy 500 and its museum, is about 15 minutes away. For the outdoors, drive west to boat and fish on Cecil M. Harden Lake or northwest to hike Turkey Run State Park's sandstone canyons and ladder trails along Sugar Creek. The full Indianapolis metro adds dining, shopping, breweries, and attractions, all a short interstate hop from your campsite.

Are campgrounds near Brownsburg open in winter?

Some are. The Greenfield Indianapolis KOA and most public electric loops close for the winter season, but the Cloverdale / Indianapolis West KOA runs year-round with full hookups, and a few other private parks keep power on. If you're camping through the cold months, base at a year-round park and come self-contained, because you should expect cold nights in the 20s, wind, and the chance of snow across central Indiana. Confirm which loops and amenities are open before you go, since seasonal facilities like camp stores and showers may be limited off-season. For most travelers, spring through fall is the practical camping window here.

Does Brownsburg work as a base for visiting Indianapolis?

Very well. Brownsburg sits on the northwest edge of the metro with direct access via I-74, US-136, and the I-465 loop, so downtown Indianapolis, the Motor Speedway, and metro attractions are all a short drive. Indianapolis International Airport is only about 20 to 30 minutes away, which makes Brownsburg a strong fly-and-rent base for a rental motorhome trip. Since the town itself has minimal camping, you'll stay at a full-hookup private park like the Greenfield or Cloverdale KOA, or Shalamar Farm, and commute in. Full services, groceries, fuel, and repair shops are all close by in the metro, so resupply is never a problem.

Are there free dump stations in Brownsburg?

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