RV Dump Stations In Warsaw, Indiana
41.2381° N, 85.8530° W
Quick Overview
Warsaw sits at the center of Kosciusko County lake country, right on US-30, and it is ringed by dozens of natural lakes from Winona and Center Lake in town to Tippecanoe Lake northeast. For RVers, that lake-and-campground character shapes exactly where you empty your tanks. We count several dump stations in and around Warsaw, and the practical ones are attached to campgrounds rather than to a standalone municipal facility.
The most dependable option is the city-run Pike Lake Campground, a lakeside park right in Warsaw that offers a dump station along with 50-amp full-hookup sites; you can check its season and reservation details through the City of Warsaw parks page. Hoffman Lake Camp, a private lakeside camp on the edge of town, also handles waste for its guests. Just north and east, family resorts like the Jellystone Park near Winona Lake carry dump facilities tied to a stay. There is no free public boat-ramp dump to count on here, so budget a small fee or a night at a park. Of our some free-listed options, availability is thin, so line up your plan before you arrive.
The one thing to respect in northern Indiana is the calendar. Winters here are genuinely cold and snowy, and most lake campgrounds winterize their dump stations from roughly November through March. If you are rolling through in the off-season, do not assume a lakeside dump will be open; call ahead or plan a heated travel-center facility along the US-30 corridor toward Fort Wayne instead. In the warm months the system is easy: nearly every campground dump is running, and the smart move is to combine your dump, a fresh-water top-off, and a propane refill into one loop along US-30 where the services cluster. Staying a while? See the local RV parks in Warsaw for full-hookup sites that skip the standalone dump hunt entirely.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Warsaw
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Warsaw
All Dump Stations Near Warsaw
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kosciusko County Fairgrounds | 0.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pike Lake Campground | 0.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Free |
| Hoffman Lake Camp | 7.6 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Free |
| Pic-A-Spot Campground | 7.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lakeview Campground | 16.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Elkhart County 4H Fair & Agriculture Exposition | 23.8 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Blue Lake Resort Campground | 26.1 mi | 3.6 | Dump Station | Free |
| All-Brand RV Service Inc. | 29.8 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Atwood Lake Campground | 30.3 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Free |
| Water Treatment Plant | 30.9 mi | 1.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
Kosciusko County Fairgrounds
0.9 miPike Lake Campground
0.9 miHoffman Lake Camp
7.6 miPic-A-Spot Campground
7.7 miLakeview Campground
16.0 miElkhart County 4H Fair & Agriculture Exposition
23.8 miBlue Lake Resort Campground
26.1 miAll-Brand RV Service Inc.
29.8 miAtwood Lake Campground
30.3 miWater Treatment Plant
30.9 miTraveling to Warsaw by RV
US-30, the Lake City Highway, is the artery through Warsaw. It runs mostly as a wide four-lane divided highway with grade-separated interchanges, no low bridges, and no weight limits, so big rigs move through comfortably heading east toward Fort Wayne or west toward Valparaiso. SR-15, known locally as Detroit Street, is the main north-south route, and SR-25 links the smaller lake towns. The nearest interstate is I-69, about 38 miles east near Fort Wayne, reached on the US-30/US-33 freeway; I-65 sits well to the west.
Fuel is easy along US-30, with truck-friendly stops and larger travel centers toward the I-69 interchange. Propane dealers, farm co-ops, and hardware stores in Warsaw handle both bottle exchange and on-board refills. Groceries are covered by a Walmart Supercenter, Kroger, and Meijer, all right on the corridor. Handle your fill-ups and dumps along US-30 and you will rarely need to thread the tighter downtown grid or the narrow lanes around Winona Lake village with a big rig.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Warsaw
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Indiana
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Warsaw, IN
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Warsaw, 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 Warsaw
Dumping in Warsaw usually rides on a campground stay. If you are booked at Pike Lake Campground or a private lake camp, the dump is included in your nightly rate, so the effective cost is nothing. For a non-guest quick dump where a park allows it, plan on a modest fee, typically in the $10 to $20 range, and call first since not every campground opens its lane to outsiders. State-park dumps in the wider region charge camper rates rather than cheap walk-up fees and run seasonally. Propane and fuel along US-30 price in line with the rest of northern Indiana. For a short stay, the most economical move is often to book a single night at a full-hookup site, which bundles your dump, fresh water, and a place to sleep for less than piecing those together separately around town.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Warsaw
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Warsaw by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
19F - 30F
Crowds: Low
Most campground dumps winterize from November through March; plan a heated facility on the highway if you are traveling through.
Spring
Mar - May
41F - 58F
Crowds: Medium
Campgrounds reopen through spring; Pike Lake reservations open April 15 and its dump comes back online with the season.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63F - 84F
Crowds: High
Peak lake season with all campground dumps open and busy; expect a short wait on holiday weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
45F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Dumps stay open into October, then close as parks winterize; a great low-stress window for a fill-and-dump loop.
Explore the Warsaw Area
Here is what we have learned pulling through Warsaw. First, treat the campgrounds as your dump network; there is no roadside municipal station, so Pike Lake Campground and the private lake camps are your reliable stops, and a quick call confirms whether they take non-guests. Second, mind the seasons hard here. From late November through March most lakeside dumps are winterized and closed, so an off-season traveler should plan a highway travel-center dump toward Fort Wayne rather than counting on a lake park. Third, do your dumping, fresh-water fill, and propane top-off in a single US-30 loop, because once you head out onto the smaller county roads toward Tippecanoe Lake the services thin out quickly. Finally, if you are visiting in summer, expect the popular lake campgrounds to be busy on weekends, so aim for a weekday dump if you want to skip any wait at the station.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Warsaw
How many RV dump stations are in Warsaw, Indiana?
We count about several dump stations in and around Warsaw, and in this lake-country town they are attached to campgrounds rather than a standalone municipal site. The city-run Pike Lake Campground is the most dependable, and private lake camps like Hoffman Lake Camp handle their guests. Only some tend to be free, so if you are passing through without a reservation, plan on a small fee at a campground lane. If you are camped at a full-hookup park, your site or the park dump usually covers waste at no extra charge, which is the easiest way to handle tanks while you are in the area.
Is there a free RV dump station in Warsaw?
Free options are limited around Warsaw. The city does not run a public roadside dump, and you should not count on finding one at a boat ramp or lakeside park, since those are day-use. Most dumping happens inside campgrounds, which typically fold the cost into a stay or charge non-guests a modest fee. Your best shot at no-cost dumping is to already be booked at a full-hookup park like Pike Lake Campground, where it is included. If free is a priority, plan your route to dump at a highway travel center along US-30 toward Fort Wayne before or after your lake stay.
Can I dump my tanks at Pike Lake Campground?
Yes. Pike Lake Campground is the city-run park right in Warsaw, and it offers a dump station along with 50-amp full-hookup, pull-through sites on the lake. It is the most reliable dump option in town. The catch is the season: the campground runs roughly May through October, with reservations opening every April 15 by phone, so the dump is not available in the frozen winter months. Check the City of Warsaw parks page for current dates and reservation details before you rely on it, and if you are not a registered camper, call ahead to confirm whether a quick non-guest dump is allowed.
Are the dump stations open in winter near Warsaw?
Mostly no. Northern Indiana winters are cold and snowy, and the lake campgrounds around Warsaw winterize their dump stations from roughly November through March to keep the plumbing from freezing. That means Pike Lake Campground and the private lake camps are typically closed for the season. If you are traveling through in winter, do not assume a lakeside dump will be running. Plan instead on a heated travel-center facility along the US-30 or US-33 corridor toward Fort Wayne, and always call ahead to confirm hours, because off-season availability in this region is genuinely limited and worth verifying in advance.
Where can I refill propane near Warsaw?
Propane is easy to find along the US-30 corridor through Warsaw. Several propane dealers, farm co-ops, and hardware stores handle both bottle exchange and on-board tank refills, and because this is rural lake and farm country, local suppliers are used to RV fittings. Fill up during the week if you can, since weekends can bring a line as lake visitors and locals top off grills and campers. If you are heading out onto the smaller county roads toward Tippecanoe Lake or the northern lake chain, top off before you leave the US-30 corridor, because propane sources thin out quickly once you are off the main highway.
Is US-30 through Warsaw easy to drive in a big rig?
Yes. US-30, the Lake City Highway, is a wide, mostly four-lane divided route through Warsaw with grade-separated interchanges, no low bridges, and no weight restrictions, so even large motorhomes and fifth-wheels move through comfortably. It is the main spine for fuel, groceries, and propane, which means you can handle nearly every errand without leaving the highway. The older downtown grid and the narrow lanes around Winona Lake village get tight, so avoid those with a big rig. Stick to the US-30 corridor for services and you will find Warsaw one of the more relaxed northern-Indiana towns to navigate.
When is the busiest time for RVs in Warsaw?
Summer, hands down. Warsaw sits in the middle of Indiana lake country, so from Memorial Day through Labor Day the lakes and campgrounds fill with boaters, anglers, and families. Holiday weekends around the Fourth of July are the peak, when full-hookup and lakeside sites are spoken for well ahead and dump lanes see a short wait. If you want a quiet visit with easy access to services, aim for the shoulder weeks in late spring or September, when the weather is still pleasant, the crowds thin out, and you can dump, fuel, and provision along US-30 without any line at all.
What does it cost to dump RV tanks in Warsaw?
If you are staying at a campground like Pike Lake or a private lake camp, dumping is almost always included in your nightly rate, so the effective cost is zero. For a non-guest quick dump where a park allows it, budget roughly $10 to $20 per visit, and call ahead since not every campground opens its lane to outsiders. State-park facilities in the wider region charge camper rates rather than a cheap walk-up fee and run only in season. The most economical approach for a short stay is often to book a single full-hookup night, which bundles your dump, fresh water, and a place to sleep for less than paying for each separately.
Where do I get fresh water for my RV in Warsaw?
Every licensed campground in the Warsaw area provides potable water, and if you book a full-hookup site at Pike Lake Campground or a private lake camp you will have it right at your pad. If you are passing through and need to top off the fresh tank, the simplest route is to ask a campground, since many will let you fill for a small fee alongside a dump. Fill up before heading out onto the smaller county roads toward the northern lakes, where reliable potable-water sources become scarce. In the frozen winter months, plan a heated facility on the highway, as lakeside water is shut off.
Are there truck stops with dump stations near Warsaw?
The larger travel centers with RV-friendly facilities sit mostly along the US-30 and US-33 freeway toward the I-69 interchange near Fort Wayne, roughly 30 to 40 minutes east, rather than in Warsaw proper. In town, dumping is centered on the lake campgrounds rather than truck stops. If you prefer a highway dump, especially in the off-season when the lake parks are closed, plan to handle it on your way in or out of the region toward Fort Wayne. Within Warsaw itself, calling Pike Lake Campground or a private lake camp is the more reliable option during the warm months.
Can I stay overnight in a parking lot in Warsaw?
Warsaw does not have a blanket ordinance against it, but city lots and the lakeside parks are day-use and not set up for camping, so do not treat them as a campground substitute. Individual businesses set their own rules, so ask a manager before settling in for the night. With Pike Lake Campground right in town and several private lake camps nearby, the value of lot-sleeping here is low; a night at the city park often costs little and gives you power, water, and a proper dump. Save lot-parking for genuine emergencies and book a campground for anything longer, especially in summer.
Do I need to worry about winter weather when dumping near Warsaw?
Yes, more than in most of the country. Northern Indiana winters are freezing and snowy, with lake-effect snow rolling in off the many lakes, and campground dump stations here winterize from roughly November through March to protect the plumbing. That means your usual lakeside dump options are simply closed for the season. If you are RVing through in winter, plan on a heated travel-center facility along US-30 toward Fort Wayne, keep your own tanks from freezing with tank heaters or antifreeze, and call ahead to confirm any facility is open before you rely on it. Off-season dumping here takes planning.
Is Warsaw a good base for exploring Indiana lake country by RV?
It is an excellent one. Warsaw sits at the hub of Kosciusko County, which packs in more natural lakes than almost anywhere in Indiana, from Winona and Center Lake in town to deep Tippecanoe Lake northeast. US-30 gives you easy big-rig access, services cluster right on the corridor, and Pike Lake Campground offers a full-hookup base in the city. From here you can boat, fish, bike the Winona Lake trails, and explore the historic Village at Winona. For RVers who want a warm-season lake-and-trails getaway with straightforward logistics, Warsaw makes a comfortable and central place to settle in.
How many RV dump stations are in Warsaw, Indiana?
We count about {{stationCount}} dump stations in and around Warsaw, and in this lake-country town they are attached to campgrounds rather than a standalone municipal site. The city-run Pike Lake Campground is the most dependable, and private lake camps like Hoffman Lake Camp handle their guests. Only {{freeCount}} tend to be free, so if you are passing through without a reservation, plan on a small fee at a campground lane. If you are camped at a full-hookup park, your site or the park dump usually covers waste at no extra charge, which is the easiest way to handle tanks while you are in the area.
Is there a free RV dump station in Warsaw?
Free options are limited around Warsaw. The city does not run a public roadside dump, and you should not count on finding one at a boat ramp or lakeside park, since those are day-use. Most dumping happens inside campgrounds, which typically fold the cost into a stay or charge non-guests a modest fee. Your best shot at no-cost dumping is to already be booked at a full-hookup park like Pike Lake Campground, where it is included. If free is a priority, plan your route to dump at a highway travel center along US-30 toward Fort Wayne before or after your lake stay.
Can I dump my tanks at Pike Lake Campground?
Yes. Pike Lake Campground is the city-run park right in Warsaw, and it offers a dump station along with 50-amp full-hookup, pull-through sites on the lake. It is the most reliable dump option in town. The catch is the season: the campground runs roughly May through October, with reservations opening every April 15 by phone, so the dump is not available in the frozen winter months. Check the City of Warsaw parks page for current dates and reservation details before you rely on it, and if you are not a registered camper, call ahead to confirm whether a quick non-guest dump is allowed.
Are the dump stations open in winter near Warsaw?
Mostly no. Northern Indiana winters are cold and snowy, and the lake campgrounds around Warsaw winterize their dump stations from roughly November through March to keep the plumbing from freezing. That means Pike Lake Campground and the private lake camps are typically closed for the season. If you are traveling through in winter, do not assume a lakeside dump will be running. Plan instead on a heated travel-center facility along the US-30 or US-33 corridor toward Fort Wayne, and always call ahead to confirm hours, because off-season availability in this region is genuinely limited and worth verifying in advance.
Where can I refill propane near Warsaw?
Propane is easy to find along the US-30 corridor through Warsaw. Several propane dealers, farm co-ops, and hardware stores handle both bottle exchange and on-board tank refills, and because this is rural lake and farm country, local suppliers are used to RV fittings. Fill up during the week if you can, since weekends can bring a line as lake visitors and locals top off grills and campers. If you are heading out onto the smaller county roads toward Tippecanoe Lake or the northern lake chain, top off before you leave the US-30 corridor, because propane sources thin out quickly once you are off the main highway.
Is US-30 through Warsaw easy to drive in a big rig?
Yes. US-30, the Lake City Highway, is a wide, mostly four-lane divided route through Warsaw with grade-separated interchanges, no low bridges, and no weight restrictions, so even large motorhomes and fifth-wheels move through comfortably. It is the main spine for fuel, groceries, and propane, which means you can handle nearly every errand without leaving the highway. The older downtown grid and the narrow lanes around Winona Lake village get tight, so avoid those with a big rig. Stick to the US-30 corridor for services and you will find Warsaw one of the more relaxed northern-Indiana towns to navigate.
When is the busiest time for RVs in Warsaw?
Summer, hands down. Warsaw sits in the middle of Indiana lake country, so from Memorial Day through Labor Day the lakes and campgrounds fill with boaters, anglers, and families. Holiday weekends around the Fourth of July are the peak, when full-hookup and lakeside sites are spoken for well ahead and dump lanes see a short wait. If you want a quiet visit with easy access to services, aim for the shoulder weeks in late spring or September, when the weather is still pleasant, the crowds thin out, and you can dump, fuel, and provision along US-30 without any line at all.
What does it cost to dump RV tanks in Warsaw?
If you are staying at a campground like Pike Lake or a private lake camp, dumping is almost always included in your nightly rate, so the effective cost is zero. For a non-guest quick dump where a park allows it, budget roughly $10 to $20 per visit, and call ahead since not every campground opens its lane to outsiders. State-park facilities in the wider region charge camper rates rather than a cheap walk-up fee and run only in season. The most economical approach for a short stay is often to book a single full-hookup night, which bundles your dump, fresh water, and a place to sleep for less than paying for each separately.
Where do I get fresh water for my RV in Warsaw?
Every licensed campground in the Warsaw area provides potable water, and if you book a full-hookup site at Pike Lake Campground or a private lake camp you will have it right at your pad. If you are passing through and need to top off the fresh tank, the simplest route is to ask a campground, since many will let you fill for a small fee alongside a dump. Fill up before heading out onto the smaller county roads toward the northern lakes, where reliable potable-water sources become scarce. In the frozen winter months, plan a heated facility on the highway, as lakeside water is shut off.
Are there truck stops with dump stations near Warsaw?
The larger travel centers with RV-friendly facilities sit mostly along the US-30 and US-33 freeway toward the I-69 interchange near Fort Wayne, roughly 30 to 40 minutes east, rather than in Warsaw proper. In town, dumping is centered on the lake campgrounds rather than truck stops. If you prefer a highway dump, especially in the off-season when the lake parks are closed, plan to handle it on your way in or out of the region toward Fort Wayne. Within Warsaw itself, calling Pike Lake Campground or a private lake camp is the more reliable option during the warm months.
Can I stay overnight in a parking lot in Warsaw?
Warsaw does not have a blanket ordinance against it, but city lots and the lakeside parks are day-use and not set up for camping, so do not treat them as a campground substitute. Individual businesses set their own rules, so ask a manager before settling in for the night. With Pike Lake Campground right in town and several private lake camps nearby, the value of lot-sleeping here is low; a night at the city park often costs little and gives you power, water, and a proper dump. Save lot-parking for genuine emergencies and book a campground for anything longer, especially in summer.
Do I need to worry about winter weather when dumping near Warsaw?
Yes, more than in most of the country. Northern Indiana winters are freezing and snowy, with lake-effect snow rolling in off the many lakes, and campground dump stations here winterize from roughly November through March to protect the plumbing. That means your usual lakeside dump options are simply closed for the season. If you are RVing through in winter, plan on a heated travel-center facility along US-30 toward Fort Wayne, keep your own tanks from freezing with tank heaters or antifreeze, and call ahead to confirm any facility is open before you rely on it. Off-season dumping here takes planning.
Is Warsaw a good base for exploring Indiana lake country by RV?
It is an excellent one. Warsaw sits at the hub of Kosciusko County, which packs in more natural lakes than almost anywhere in Indiana, from Winona and Center Lake in town to deep Tippecanoe Lake northeast. US-30 gives you easy big-rig access, services cluster right on the corridor, and Pike Lake Campground offers a full-hookup base in the city. From here you can boat, fish, bike the Winona Lake trails, and explore the historic Village at Winona. For RVers who want a warm-season lake-and-trails getaway with straightforward logistics, Warsaw makes a comfortable and central place to settle in.
Are there free dump stations in Warsaw?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Warsaw.
All Dump Stations Near Warsaw (47)
RV Dump StationsPike Lake Campground
RV Dump StationsKosciusko County Fairgrounds
RV Dump StationsPic-A-Spot Campground
RV Dump StationsHoffman Lake Camp
RV Dump StationsLakeview Campground
RV Dump StationsElkhart County 4H Fair & Agriculture Exposition
RV Dump StationsAll-Brand RV Service Inc.
RV Dump Stations





