RV Parks In Campton, Kentucky
37.7343° N, 83.5474° W
Quick Overview
Campton is a small mountain town and the seat of Wolfe County, best known to RVers as a gateway to the Red River Gorge and the Daniel Boone National Forest. Sitting right on the Bert T. Combs Mountain Parkway, it puts you within about 15 miles of some of the best hiking, rock climbing, and natural arches in the eastern United States, and it has a solid ring of campgrounds and RV parks to use as a base.
The anchor for public camping is Natural Bridge State Resort Park near Slade, built around a 65-foot sandstone arch. Its Whittleton Campground has 40 wooded sites, 14 wired for 30 and 50 amp electric with 11 adding water, plus a dump station, showers, and laundry, and it reserves through the Kentucky State Parks system. Whittleton's sites and access road suit smaller and mid-size rigs, so bigger coaches should aim for the roomier pads at Middle Fork Campground in the same park. For full hookups including sewer, the private parks near the Gorge deliver: Firefly Hills RV Park near Beattyville has 15 full-hookup sites with metered 50, 30, and 20 amp service on 70-foot back-in gravel pads, 4 Guys RV Park near Slade offers spacious full-hookup pads with a pool and fishing pond, and Callie's Lake and Campground near Stanton runs 30 and 50 amp electric sites inside the national forest beside a stocked lake.
Getting here is easy on the Mountain Parkway, a modern four-lane with no low bridges or weight limits, but the two-lane roads that drop into the Gorge are narrow and winding, and the one-lane Nada Tunnel is far too low for any RV, so plan your route with care. Campton itself covers the basics with fuel, propane, and a grocery, while bigger supermarkets and RV service sit toward Stanton, Winchester, and Lexington. Fall is the marquee season, when October foliage draws heavy crowds and the campgrounds book out months ahead, while spring and early summer bring cooler rock for climbers and easier midweek availability. Reserve early for foliage weekends, aim for weekdays when you can, and use Campton as your resupply point before you head down into the Gorge. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Campton.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Campton
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Gear for Your Trip to Campton
All Dump Stations Near Campton
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Woodstock Campground | 4.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Golden Arrow Reservation | 4.9 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Koomer Ridge Campground | 5.8 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Land Of The Arches Campground | 6.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Daniel Boone Campground In Red River Gorge | 9.0 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ryders Ranch Campground | 9.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Strong's Pay Lake, Campgrounds, & Driving Range | 11.0 mi | 4.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| 4 Guys RV Park At The Gorge | 11.3 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Red River Gorge Campground | 11.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Boone Valley Camping | 11.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Woodstock Campground
4.2 miGolden Arrow Reservation
4.9 miKoomer Ridge Campground
5.8 miLand Of The Arches Campground
6.7 miDaniel Boone Campground In Red River Gorge
9.0 miRyders Ranch Campground
9.6 miStrong's Pay Lake, Campgrounds, & Driving Range
11.0 mi4 Guys RV Park At The Gorge
11.3 miRed River Gorge Campground
11.4 miBoone Valley Camping
11.9 miTraveling to Campton by RV
Campton sits on the Bert T. Combs Mountain Parkway at Exit 33, a modern four-lane with no low bridges or weight limits and fuel and turnaround room at the interchange. KY-15, KY-11, and KY-191 also feed the town. Most RVers arrive on the parkway from the Lexington and Winchester side to the northwest; I-64 is about 45 miles northwest via the parkway. The parkway itself tows easily, but the caution is the narrow, winding two-lane roads that drop into the Red River Gorge and toward Natural Bridge, and the 900-foot one-lane Nada Tunnel, which is far too low for an RV.
Fuel up on diesel or gas at the parkway interchange or along KY-15, and refill propane and fresh water in Campton or Stanton before you head into the Gorge, where services thin out fast. For campground reservations at Natural Bridge, use the Kentucky State Parks system, and book well ahead for any October foliage or holiday weekend.
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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 Campton, Kentucky, 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 Campton
Camping around Campton is reasonable by RV standards. Electric and water sites at Natural Bridge State Resort Park generally run in the $30s a night, less than a full resort but with a shared dump station rather than sewer at each pad. Private full-hookup parks such as Firefly Hills RV Park and 4 Guys RV Park tend to land in the $40s depending on season and hookup level, and some meter your electric on top of the site fee, so ask when you book.
The big cost driver is timing. October foliage and holiday weekends bring higher rates and minimum-night stays across both public and private campgrounds, while spring, early summer, and midweek fall stays are noticeably cheaper and easier to grab. Between modest site rates, affordable fuel at the parkway interchange, and free or low-cost draws like Gorge hiking and the Nada Tunnel, a few days here costs a fraction of a resort-town stay, especially if you steer clear of the peak leaf-peeping rush.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Campton
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Best Time to Visit Campton by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
26F - 44F
Crowds: Low
Cold and quiet with occasional snow and ice on the twisting park roads. Natural Bridge stays open but scales back, and private parks run a few winterized sites, so call ahead and bring your own heat.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 64F
Crowds: Medium
Green, rainy, and lively with rock climbers arriving for cooler rock. Creeks run full and sites are easy to grab midweek, though climbing weekends fill the private parks near the Gorge.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63F - 86F
Crowds: High
Warm, humid, and busy with families. Afternoon thunderstorms roll through and the shaded forest sites go first, so reserve hookups ahead for holiday weekends at Natural Bridge.
Fall
Sep - Oct
44F - 68F
Crowds: High
The best and busiest time. October foliage draws heavy crowds to the Gorge, and Natural Bridge campsites book out months in advance, so lock in dates early or aim for a private park with open pads.
Explore the Campton Area
A few things we would tell a friend heading to Campton. First, October foliage is the single busiest window in the Gorge, so if you want a site at Natural Bridge that month, reserve months in advance or you will be shut out. Second, match your rig to the campground: Whittleton's wooded sites and tight access road favor smaller and mid-size RVs, while Middle Fork and private parks like Firefly Hills handle longer rigs far better.
Third, never point an RV at the Nada Tunnel; it is a 900-foot one-lane former railroad tunnel that is too low and narrow for rigs, and it catches visitors off guard every season. Fourth, treat Campton as your last real resupply, filling fuel, water, and propane in town before you drop into the Gorge on the two-lane roads. Finally, come midweek in spring or early summer if you want the climbing scene without the weekend crush, and always call the private parks a day or two ahead to confirm an open full-hookup pad.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Campton
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Campton, KY?
The full-hookup options cluster around the Red River Gorge just south and east of Campton. Firefly Hills RV Park near Beattyville has 15 full-hookup sites with metered 50, 30, and 20 amp service on long back-in gravel pads with concrete patios and Wi-Fi. 4 Guys RV Park near Slade offers spacious full-hookup pads plus a pool and fishing pond. Callie's Lake and Campground near Stanton runs 30 and 50 amp electric sites inside the national forest by a stocked lake. For a public option, Natural Bridge State Resort Park has electric and water sites with a dump station a short drive away.
Do I need reservations for RV camping near Campton?
For most of the year you can find a private site on shorter notice, but the Gorge has two big rushes: spring and fall climbing weekends and, above all, October foliage season. During those windows the campgrounds at Natural Bridge State Resort Park book out months ahead through the Kentucky State Parks reservation system, and the nearby private parks like Firefly Hills and 4 Guys RV Park fill their weekends too. Book early for any October or holiday weekend, aim for midweek if you want a calmer stay, and always call the private parks a day or two out to confirm an open pad.
Is there public RV camping near Campton?
Yes. Natural Bridge State Resort Park near Slade, about 15 miles from Campton, is the main public choice and it has two campgrounds. Whittleton Campground offers 40 wooded sites, 14 of them with 30 and 50 amp electric and 11 with water, plus a dump station, showers, and laundry. Middle Fork Campground at the same park has larger pads better suited to bigger rigs. Both reserve through the Kentucky State Parks system. Deeper in the Daniel Boone National Forest you will also find developed and dispersed forest camping, though the resort park is the easiest public option on wheels.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Campton?
Camping here is reasonable by RV standards. Electric and water sites at Natural Bridge State Resort Park generally run in the $30s per night, cheaper than a full resort but with a dump station rather than sewer at every site. Private full-hookup parks such as Firefly Hills RV Park and 4 Guys RV Park tend to land in the $40s depending on season and hookup level, with the meter on electric at some parks. Prices climb and minimum-night rules appear for October foliage and holiday weekends, so if you are on a budget, target spring, early summer, or a midweek fall stay.
Can I camp with a big rig near Campton and the Red River Gorge?
You can, but choose your site and route carefully. At Natural Bridge State Resort Park, Middle Fork Campground has roomier pads than Whittleton, whose sites and access road are a tight fit for larger coaches and fifth wheels. Among the private parks, Firefly Hills RV Park has 70-foot back-in gravel pads that handle long rigs well. The critical thing is your route: the Mountain Parkway through Campton is a modern four-lane, but never point a big rig at the 900-foot one-lane Nada Tunnel in the Gorge, which is far too low and narrow for RVs.
What is the best time of year to RV around Campton?
Fall is the marquee season, when October turns the Gorge hardwoods brilliant and every campsite is in demand. Spring is a close second, green and rainy with rushing creeks and cooler rock that pulls climbers from all over. Summer is warm, humid, and family-busy with afternoon thunderstorms, and the shaded forest sites go first. Winter is quiet and cold with occasional snow and ice on the twisting roads, and both the state and private parks trim back services. If you want color, come in October and reserve early; if you want space, come midweek in spring or early summer.
Is Natural Bridge worth basing an RV trip around?
Absolutely. Natural Bridge State Resort Park is the anchor for the whole area, built around a 65-foot sandstone arch you reach by hiking trail or by riding the skylift. The park has a lodge, dining, miles of trails, and its own campgrounds at Whittleton and Middle Fork, so you can camp inside the park and walk to the trailheads. It also sits right beside the Red River Gorge Geological Area in the Daniel Boone National Forest, which means world-class hiking, arches, and climbing are minutes away. For an RVer it is a rare combo: a full resort park with real camping and a national forest next door.
What highways lead into Campton for an RV?
Campton sits on the Bert T. Combs Mountain Parkway, a modern four-lane with no low bridges or weight limits, at Exit 33 with fuel and turnaround room. KY-15, KY-11, and KY-191 also feed the town. Most RVers arrive on the parkway from the Lexington and Winchester side to the northwest or from the eastern mountains. I-64 is about 45 miles northwest via the parkway toward Winchester. The parkway itself is easy towing; the caution is the two-lane KY roads that drop into the Red River Gorge and toward Natural Bridge, which are narrow, winding, and not the place for an oversize rig.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and repair near Campton?
Campton covers the basics as the Wolfe County seat. You can refill propane at local dealers and hardware outlets in Campton and nearby Stanton, fuel up on diesel or gas at the Mountain Parkway interchange and along KY-15, and pick up groceries at a local store and dollar stores in town. For a bigger supermarket run, Stanton and Winchester are a short drive northwest. Basic auto and truck repair is available locally, but for serious RV-specific service you are looking at Winchester or Lexington. Top off fuel, water, and propane in Campton before you drop into the Gorge, where services are thin.
What is there to do near Campton besides Natural Bridge?
A lot, and it is why RVers stay more than a night. The Red River Gorge Geological Area offers world-class hiking, over 100 natural sandstone arches, and some of the best rock climbing in the country. Muir Valley is a 360-acre nonprofit preserve with more than 400 climbing routes and hiking trails. The Nada Tunnel is a photogenic 900-foot former logging tunnel on the National Register, best seen on foot or in a small vehicle. For motorheads, Hollerwood Off-Road Park spreads 2,500 acres of 4WD, UTV, and ATV trails. Add zipline canopy tours and paddling on area lakes and you have a full week.
Do the campgrounds near Campton have sewer at the site?
It depends where you stay. The public sites at Natural Bridge State Resort Park are electric and water hookups with a shared dump station rather than sewer at each pad, so plan to dump on your way out or between stays. If sewer at the site matters to you, choose a private full-hookup park such as Firefly Hills RV Park or 4 Guys RV Park, where full hookups include sewer. Callie's Lake and Campground runs electric sites inside the forest by the lake. A good plan is to full-hookup at a private park for the messy days and use the scenic state park sites for the rest.
Can I camp in the Red River Gorge backcountry with an RV?
Not with the RV itself. Dispersed backcountry camping in the Red River Gorge is for tents and backpackers and requires a Red River Gorge overnight backcountry camping permit from the Daniel Boone National Forest. Your rig stays at a developed campground. The practical RV plan is to park at Natural Bridge State Resort Park or a private RV park near Slade or Beattyville, then day-hike or backpack into the Gorge from there. That way you keep your hookups, showers, and a level pad while still getting deep into the wilderness on foot during the day.
How many days should I plan for a Campton and Red River Gorge RV stop?
Give it three or four days if you can. One day barely covers Natural Bridge itself, between the arch hike or skylift, the lodge, and the trails right at camp. A second day lets you explore the Red River Gorge proper, with its arches, overlooks, and famous hikes like Auxier Ridge. A third day opens up climbing at Muir Valley, off-roading at Hollerwood, or a paddle on a nearby lake. If you are chasing October foliage, add time and book far ahead, because this is one of the most popular fall destinations in Kentucky and the campgrounds reflect it.
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Campton, KY?
The full-hookup options cluster around the Red River Gorge just south and east of Campton. Firefly Hills RV Park near Beattyville has 15 full-hookup sites with metered 50, 30, and 20 amp service on long back-in gravel pads with concrete patios and Wi-Fi. 4 Guys RV Park near Slade offers spacious full-hookup pads plus a pool and fishing pond. Callie's Lake and Campground near Stanton runs 30 and 50 amp electric sites inside the national forest by a stocked lake. For a public option, Natural Bridge State Resort Park has electric and water sites with a dump station a short drive away.
Do I need reservations for RV camping near Campton?
For most of the year you can find a private site on shorter notice, but the Gorge has two big rushes: spring and fall climbing weekends and, above all, October foliage season. During those windows the campgrounds at Natural Bridge State Resort Park book out months ahead through the Kentucky State Parks reservation system, and the nearby private parks like Firefly Hills and 4 Guys RV Park fill their weekends too. Book early for any October or holiday weekend, aim for midweek if you want a calmer stay, and always call the private parks a day or two out to confirm an open pad.
Is there public RV camping near Campton?
Yes. Natural Bridge State Resort Park near Slade, about 15 miles from Campton, is the main public choice and it has two campgrounds. Whittleton Campground offers 40 wooded sites, 14 of them with 30 and 50 amp electric and 11 with water, plus a dump station, showers, and laundry. Middle Fork Campground at the same park has larger pads better suited to bigger rigs. Both reserve through the Kentucky State Parks system. Deeper in the Daniel Boone National Forest you will also find developed and dispersed forest camping, though the resort park is the easiest public option on wheels.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Campton?
Camping here is reasonable by RV standards. Electric and water sites at Natural Bridge State Resort Park generally run in the $30s per night, cheaper than a full resort but with a dump station rather than sewer at every site. Private full-hookup parks such as Firefly Hills RV Park and 4 Guys RV Park tend to land in the $40s depending on season and hookup level, with the meter on electric at some parks. Prices climb and minimum-night rules appear for October foliage and holiday weekends, so if you are on a budget, target spring, early summer, or a midweek fall stay.
Can I camp with a big rig near Campton and the Red River Gorge?
You can, but choose your site and route carefully. At Natural Bridge State Resort Park, Middle Fork Campground has roomier pads than Whittleton, whose sites and access road are a tight fit for larger coaches and fifth wheels. Among the private parks, Firefly Hills RV Park has 70-foot back-in gravel pads that handle long rigs well. The critical thing is your route: the Mountain Parkway through Campton is a modern four-lane, but never point a big rig at the 900-foot one-lane Nada Tunnel in the Gorge, which is far too low and narrow for RVs.
What is the best time of year to RV around Campton?
Fall is the marquee season, when October turns the Gorge hardwoods brilliant and every campsite is in demand. Spring is a close second, green and rainy with rushing creeks and cooler rock that pulls climbers from all over. Summer is warm, humid, and family-busy with afternoon thunderstorms, and the shaded forest sites go first. Winter is quiet and cold with occasional snow and ice on the twisting roads, and both the state and private parks trim back services. If you want color, come in October and reserve early; if you want space, come midweek in spring or early summer.
Is Natural Bridge worth basing an RV trip around?
Absolutely. Natural Bridge State Resort Park is the anchor for the whole area, built around a 65-foot sandstone arch you reach by hiking trail or by riding the skylift. The park has a lodge, dining, miles of trails, and its own campgrounds at Whittleton and Middle Fork, so you can camp inside the park and walk to the trailheads. It also sits right beside the Red River Gorge Geological Area in the Daniel Boone National Forest, which means world-class hiking, arches, and climbing are minutes away. For an RVer it is a rare combo: a full resort park with real camping and a national forest next door.
What highways lead into Campton for an RV?
Campton sits on the Bert T. Combs Mountain Parkway, a modern four-lane with no low bridges or weight limits, at Exit 33 with fuel and turnaround room. KY-15, KY-11, and KY-191 also feed the town. Most RVers arrive on the parkway from the Lexington and Winchester side to the northwest or from the eastern mountains. I-64 is about 45 miles northwest via the parkway toward Winchester. The parkway itself is easy towing; the caution is the two-lane KY roads that drop into the Red River Gorge and toward Natural Bridge, which are narrow, winding, and not the place for an oversize rig.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and repair near Campton?
Campton covers the basics as the Wolfe County seat. You can refill propane at local dealers and hardware outlets in Campton and nearby Stanton, fuel up on diesel or gas at the Mountain Parkway interchange and along KY-15, and pick up groceries at a local store and dollar stores in town. For a bigger supermarket run, Stanton and Winchester are a short drive northwest. Basic auto and truck repair is available locally, but for serious RV-specific service you are looking at Winchester or Lexington. Top off fuel, water, and propane in Campton before you drop into the Gorge, where services are thin.
What is there to do near Campton besides Natural Bridge?
A lot, and it is why RVers stay more than a night. The Red River Gorge Geological Area offers world-class hiking, over 100 natural sandstone arches, and some of the best rock climbing in the country. Muir Valley is a 360-acre nonprofit preserve with more than 400 climbing routes and hiking trails. The Nada Tunnel is a photogenic 900-foot former logging tunnel on the National Register, best seen on foot or in a small vehicle. For motorheads, Hollerwood Off-Road Park spreads 2,500 acres of 4WD, UTV, and ATV trails. Add zipline canopy tours and paddling on area lakes and you have a full week.
Do the campgrounds near Campton have sewer at the site?
It depends where you stay. The public sites at Natural Bridge State Resort Park are electric and water hookups with a shared dump station rather than sewer at each pad, so plan to dump on your way out or between stays. If sewer at the site matters to you, choose a private full-hookup park such as Firefly Hills RV Park or 4 Guys RV Park, where full hookups include sewer. Callie's Lake and Campground runs electric sites inside the forest by the lake. A good plan is to full-hookup at a private park for the messy days and use the scenic state park sites for the rest.
Can I camp in the Red River Gorge backcountry with an RV?
Not with the RV itself. Dispersed backcountry camping in the Red River Gorge is for tents and backpackers and requires a Red River Gorge overnight backcountry camping permit from the Daniel Boone National Forest. Your rig stays at a developed campground. The practical RV plan is to park at Natural Bridge State Resort Park or a private RV park near Slade or Beattyville, then day-hike or backpack into the Gorge from there. That way you keep your hookups, showers, and a level pad while still getting deep into the wilderness on foot during the day.
How many days should I plan for a Campton and Red River Gorge RV stop?
Give it three or four days if you can. One day barely covers Natural Bridge itself, between the arch hike or skylift, the lodge, and the trails right at camp. A second day lets you explore the Red River Gorge proper, with its arches, overlooks, and famous hikes like Auxier Ridge. A third day opens up climbing at Muir Valley, off-roading at Hollerwood, or a paddle on a nearby lake. If you are chasing October foliage, add time and book far ahead, because this is one of the most popular fall destinations in Kentucky and the campgrounds reflect it.
All Dump Stations Near Campton (88)
RV ParkWoodstock Campground
RV ParkGolden Arrow Reservation
RV ParkKoomer Ridge Campground
RV ParkLand Of The Arches Campground
RV ParkDaniel Boone Campground In Red River Gorge
RV ParkRyders Ranch Campground
RV ParkStrong's Pay Lake, Campgrounds, & Driving Range
RV Park





