RV Parks In Carrollton, Kentucky
38.6809° N, 85.1794° W
Quick Overview
Carrollton sits at the meeting of the Ohio and Kentucky Rivers, right on I-71 between Louisville and Cincinnati, and that location makes it one of the better small-town RV stops in northern Kentucky. For RVers the draw is simple: you can camp on the water at a full-service state resort park or a newer city-run riverfront park, then be back on the interstate in minutes. The camping here leans public and affordable, with a couple of private full-hookup resorts a short drive away for anyone who wants sewer at the site plus resort extras.
The anchor is General Butler State Resort Park, a 791-acre Kentucky State Parks property with a lake, a lodge, mini golf, hiking trails, and a river-valley overlook. Its campground runs about 111 sites, a handful of them full hookup and most with electric and water, on 30 and 50-amp service with pull-throughs, showers, laundry, and a dump station, and it stays open year-round. Reservations go through ReserveAmerica and can be booked up to twelve months out. Down in town, Two Rivers Campground is a newer city-run park with 33 full-hookup sites on level concrete pads, 30/50 amp, sewer, modern showers, and free WiFi, with paved walking trails leading to Point Park and the Ohio River.
If you want a private resort feel with full hookups, Follow the River RV Resort sits a short drive across the Ohio near Florence, Indiana, with concrete pads and 30/50-amp full-hookup sites, both pull-through and back-in, open year-round. Big rigs do well at all three, thanks to pull-through sites and paved or concrete pads, though a few older Carrollton streets near the river run tight, so stick to the marked campground routes. Between the state resort park, the city riverfront park, and the private resorts nearby, Carrollton gives you real range for a town its size. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Carrollton for the local options.
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All Dump Stations Near Carrollton
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two Rivers Campground | 0.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Treasure Cove Campground | 1.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Swiss Haven RV Resort | 3.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ghent RV Park | 7.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Happy Hollow Resort RV Park | 8.1 mi | 2.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Adventure Bound Camping Resorts - Eagle Valley | 9.9 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| City Campground | 10.7 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| River Park Campground | 11.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mccoy's Camping & Rentals | 11.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coopers Creek Campground | 12.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Two Rivers Campground
0.4 miTreasure Cove Campground
1.0 miSwiss Haven RV Resort
3.6 miGhent RV Park
7.8 miHappy Hollow Resort RV Park
8.1 miAdventure Bound Camping Resorts - Eagle Valley
9.9 miCity Campground
10.7 miRiver Park Campground
11.2 miMccoy's Camping & Rentals
11.5 miCoopers Creek Campground
12.0 miTraveling to Carrollton by RV
Getting to Carrollton with a big rig is easy. I-71 runs right past town at Exit 44, connecting Louisville about 45 minutes south and Cincinnati about an hour north, so this is a natural stopover on that corridor. US-42 and US-227 feed into town from the interstate, and the state resort park sits just off the main roads with an easy approach. Two Rivers Campground is down on the Kentucky River near the historic riverfront, and while the route in is manageable, a few older blocks near the water run tight, so follow the marked campground signs and take corners slowly with a long rig.
If you are flying in to rent a motorhome, both Louisville and Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky airports are roughly an hour away, making Carrollton a convenient base for a fly-and-drive loop through the Ohio Valley. Fuel is right at the Exit 44 interchange, groceries and a Walmart are in town, and RV service is available in the Louisville and Cincinnati metros a short drive off. Once you are set up, the riverfront, Point Park, and downtown Carrollton are close and walkable from Two Rivers, and General Butler puts trails and a lake right outside your door.
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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 Carrollton, 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 Carrollton
Carrollton is an affordable place to camp, especially if you lean public. General Butler State Resort Park is the budget pick, with electric-and-water sites at low state-park nightly rates and a smaller number of full-hookup sites for a little more, all bookable through Kentucky State Parks. Two Rivers Campground runs a bit higher for its full-hookup concrete-pad sites, but you are paying for sewer at the site, free WiFi, and a walk-to-the-river location in town. The private resorts nearby, such as Follow the River RV Resort, sit in a similar moderate range for full hookups with resort touches. Rates climb on summer weekends and during Kentucky Speedway race events, so book early and expect peak pricing then. Weekly and monthly discounts at the private and city parks can lower the effective nightly cost for longer stays, and in-town groceries keep provisioning cheap.
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What RVers Are Saying About Carrollton
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Best Time to Visit Carrollton by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
26F - 42F
Crowds: Low
Cold and quiet, but General Butler State Resort Park and Two Rivers Campground both stay open year-round; bring heat tape or a heated hose for freezing nights and expect fewer neighbors.
Spring
Mar - May
45F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Green and pleasant camping weather, though the Ohio and Kentucky can run high after spring rain, so ask about riverside site placement when you book.
Summer
Jun - Aug
66F - 86F
Crowds: High
Peak river season and the busiest camping window; reserve General Butler and Two Rivers ahead for weekends, and watch the Kentucky Speedway calendar for race-weekend crunch.
Fall
Sep - Oct
46F - 68F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days, fall color across the river hills, and thinner crowds make this one of the best times to camp; midweek sites are often easy to grab.
Explore the Carrollton Area
Here is how we would plan Carrollton. If you want to walk to the rivers and downtown, base at Two Rivers Campground, which sits on the Kentucky River with paved paths running to Point Park and the Ohio. If you would rather have a full resort park with a lake, trails, and mini golf, go up the hill to General Butler State Resort Park, which also stays open year-round for off-season stays. Check the Kentucky Speedway schedule in nearby Sparta before you lock in dates, because race weekends fill area campgrounds and lodging fast and push up demand for miles around. Spring rains can raise the Ohio and Kentucky, so if you are camping right after heavy weather, ask about site placement to avoid the lowest riverside spots. For big rigs, all three parks offer pull-through or concrete pad sites, but stick to the marked routes into the riverfront to skip the tightest old streets. Book General Butler well ahead for summer weekends since it draws campers from both the Louisville and Cincinnati metros.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Carrollton
What are the best RV parks in Carrollton, Kentucky?
Carrollton has a strong trio for its size. General Butler State Resort Park is the anchor, a 791-acre Kentucky State Parks property with about 111 campsites, a lake, lodge, mini golf, and hiking, open year-round. Two Rivers Campground is a newer city-run park right on the Kentucky River with 33 full-hookup sites on concrete pads, free WiFi, and paved trails to Point Park and the Ohio River. For a private resort feel with full hookups, Follow the River RV Resort sits a short drive across the Ohio near Florence, Indiana. Between the state park, the city riverfront park, and the private option, you can camp on the water cheaply or settle into a full-hookup pad with extras.
Do Carrollton RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at several. Two Rivers Campground offers 33 full-hookup sites, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, on level concrete pads with 30 and 50-amp service. Follow the River RV Resort nearby also provides full hookups on concrete pads. General Butler State Resort Park is a mix: it has a handful of full-hookup sites and a larger number of electric-and-water sites with a central dump station rather than sewer at every pad. So if full hookups are a must, book Two Rivers or Follow the River. If you are fine with electric and water plus a dump station in exchange for the resort-park setting and lower rates, General Butler is a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost in Carrollton?
It depends on public versus private. General Butler State Resort Park is the budget pick, with electric-and-water sites at low state-park nightly rates and a few full-hookup sites for a little more. Two Rivers Campground runs somewhat higher for full-hookup concrete-pad sites, but you get sewer at the site, free WiFi, and a walk-to-the-river location. Private resorts nearby like Follow the River RV Resort sit in a similar moderate range. Rates rise on summer weekends and during Kentucky Speedway race events, so reserve early and expect peak pricing then. Weekly and monthly discounts at the city and private parks lower the effective cost for longer stays, and in-town groceries keep the rest of the trip affordable.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Carrollton?
It varies by season and events. General Butler State Resort Park takes reservations up to twelve months out through ReserveAmerica and Kentucky State Parks, and you should book summer weekends and fall-color dates months ahead since it draws campers from both Louisville and Cincinnati. Two Rivers Campground and the private resorts fill on summer weekends too, so a week or more of lead time is wise. The single biggest factor is the Kentucky Speedway calendar in nearby Sparta: race weekends pack area campgrounds and lodging for miles, so if your trip overlaps one, book as far ahead as you can. On a spring or fall weekday, you can often find a site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Carrollton?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures in the 60s, green hills in spring and color in fall, and thinner crowds. Summer is the busiest river-camping season and it is warm, humid, and prone to afternoon thunderstorms, so parks fill on weekends. Fall brings crisp days and good color across the Ohio Valley, making it excellent camping weather. Winter is short but cold and wet, and while General Butler and Two Rivers stay open year-round, you will want cold-weather prep like heat tape or a heated hose. For the best mix of weather, scenery, and availability, target the shoulder seasons and avoid Kentucky Speedway race weekends unless the race is why you came.
Can big rigs camp in Carrollton?
Yes, and it is fairly easy here. General Butler State Resort Park offers pull-through sites with 30 and 50-amp service that handle big rigs, and Two Rivers Campground has level concrete pads with about half the sites pull-through, plus full hookups. Follow the River RV Resort nearby also caters to larger rigs with concrete pads and both pull-through and back-in sites. I-71 gives you a smooth big-rig approach at Exit 44, though a few older streets near the Carrollton riverfront run tight, so follow the marked campground routes and take corners slowly with a long rig. Confirm your length and site type when booking, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options at all three parks.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Carrollton?
Not really in the traditional sense. This is a developed river-valley area without much dispersed or boondocking camping, so the practical options are the three developed campgrounds, all of which take reservations. The good news is they are inexpensive, especially General Butler State Resort Park, where electric-and-water sites go at low state-park rates. If you are on a tight budget, the state resort park is your best value, and camping midweek in spring or fall keeps rates and crowds down further. For first-come flexibility, call ahead to Two Rivers or the state park to check current availability, since walk-in space depends heavily on the season and any events at Kentucky Speedway.
Can I camp on the river in Carrollton?
Yes, and it is the whole appeal here. Carrollton sits where the Kentucky River meets the Ohio, and both public campgrounds put you on or near the water. Two Rivers Campground is right on the Kentucky River with paved walking trails leading to Point Park and the Ohio, so you can walk to the confluence from your site. General Butler State Resort Park adds a lake plus a scenic overlook of the river valley. You will find boating, fishing, and paddling right at hand. One caution: spring rains can raise the rivers, so if you are camping right after heavy weather, ask about site placement to avoid the lowest riverside spots.
What is there to do around Carrollton while camping?
Plenty for a small town. General Butler State Resort Park has a lake, hiking trails, mini golf, tennis, fishing, and a river overlook right in town. Kentucky Speedway, about fifteen miles south in Sparta, hosts big racing events and is a major draw on race weekends. Point Park at the confluence of the Ohio and Kentucky Rivers is walkable from Two Rivers Campground, with river views and paths. Downtown Carrollton has a walkable historic district with local shops and restaurants, and the rivers themselves offer boating, fishing, and paddling. With Louisville and Cincinnati each about an hour off on I-71, you can also day-trip to big-city attractions from an affordable riverside base.
Is winter RV camping possible in Carrollton?
Yes, more than at many small towns. Both General Butler State Resort Park and Two Rivers Campground stay open year-round, so you are not limited to a single winter park here. That said, Carrollton winters are cold and wet, so come prepared to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose, and plan travel around winter storms on I-71. Off-season rates are lower and crowds thin out, which makes a quiet winter riverside stay genuinely pleasant if you are equipped for the cold. Two Rivers even offers longer-term winter stays from November through March. For reliable hookups in the cold months, its full-hookup concrete pads are a solid pick.
How do I get to Carrollton RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. I-71 runs right past Carrollton at Exit 44, linking Louisville about 45 minutes south and Cincinnati about an hour north, so the interstate approach is easy for a big rig. US-42 and US-227 feed into town from there. General Butler State Resort Park sits just off the main roads with a simple approach up the hill. Two Rivers Campground is down on the Kentucky River near the historic riverfront, and while the route is manageable, a few older blocks near the water run tight, so follow the marked campground signs and take corners slowly. Fuel is at the Exit 44 interchange, and RV service is available in the Louisville and Cincinnati metros nearby.
Are Carrollton RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. General Butler State Resort Park is pet-friendly and allows leashed pets under standard Kentucky State Parks rules, with plenty of trails and open ground to walk a dog. Two Rivers Campground and the private resorts nearby also typically welcome pets, though policies on number, leash rules, and designated areas vary, so confirm the specifics when you book. The riverfront paths, Point Park, and the trails at General Butler give dogs room to stretch their legs. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, pick up after them, and never leave a pet unattended in a hot rig during Kentucky summers.
Is Carrollton a good stopover on I-71 between Louisville and Cincinnati?
It is one of the better ones. Carrollton sits right at I-71 Exit 44, almost exactly between Louisville and Cincinnati, with fuel and groceries at the interchange and three quality campgrounds within minutes. General Butler State Resort Park gives you a full resort park with a lake and trails, Two Rivers Campground offers full-hookup concrete pads on the river in town, and private resorts nearby round out the options. That mix of easy access, real amenities, and riverside scenery makes it far more than a parking-lot overnight. If you are running the I-71 corridor and want an affordable, pleasant place to break the drive or spend a few days, Carrollton is an easy recommendation.
What are the best RV parks in Carrollton, Kentucky?
Carrollton has a strong trio for its size. General Butler State Resort Park is the anchor, a 791-acre Kentucky State Parks property with about 111 campsites, a lake, lodge, mini golf, and hiking, open year-round. Two Rivers Campground is a newer city-run park right on the Kentucky River with 33 full-hookup sites on concrete pads, free WiFi, and paved trails to Point Park and the Ohio River. For a private resort feel with full hookups, Follow the River RV Resort sits a short drive across the Ohio near Florence, Indiana. Between the state park, the city riverfront park, and the private option, you can camp on the water cheaply or settle into a full-hookup pad with extras.
Do Carrollton RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at several. Two Rivers Campground offers 33 full-hookup sites, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, on level concrete pads with 30 and 50-amp service. Follow the River RV Resort nearby also provides full hookups on concrete pads. General Butler State Resort Park is a mix: it has a handful of full-hookup sites and a larger number of electric-and-water sites with a central dump station rather than sewer at every pad. So if full hookups are a must, book Two Rivers or Follow the River. If you are fine with electric and water plus a dump station in exchange for the resort-park setting and lower rates, General Butler is a great choice.
How much does RV camping cost in Carrollton?
It depends on public versus private. General Butler State Resort Park is the budget pick, with electric-and-water sites at low state-park nightly rates and a few full-hookup sites for a little more. Two Rivers Campground runs somewhat higher for full-hookup concrete-pad sites, but you get sewer at the site, free WiFi, and a walk-to-the-river location. Private resorts nearby like Follow the River RV Resort sit in a similar moderate range. Rates rise on summer weekends and during Kentucky Speedway race events, so reserve early and expect peak pricing then. Weekly and monthly discounts at the city and private parks lower the effective cost for longer stays, and in-town groceries keep the rest of the trip affordable.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site in Carrollton?
It varies by season and events. General Butler State Resort Park takes reservations up to twelve months out through ReserveAmerica and Kentucky State Parks, and you should book summer weekends and fall-color dates months ahead since it draws campers from both Louisville and Cincinnati. Two Rivers Campground and the private resorts fill on summer weekends too, so a week or more of lead time is wise. The single biggest factor is the Kentucky Speedway calendar in nearby Sparta: race weekends pack area campgrounds and lodging for miles, so if your trip overlaps one, book as far ahead as you can. On a spring or fall weekday, you can often find a site with little notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Carrollton?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots, with mild temperatures in the 60s, green hills in spring and color in fall, and thinner crowds. Summer is the busiest river-camping season and it is warm, humid, and prone to afternoon thunderstorms, so parks fill on weekends. Fall brings crisp days and good color across the Ohio Valley, making it excellent camping weather. Winter is short but cold and wet, and while General Butler and Two Rivers stay open year-round, you will want cold-weather prep like heat tape or a heated hose. For the best mix of weather, scenery, and availability, target the shoulder seasons and avoid Kentucky Speedway race weekends unless the race is why you came.
Can big rigs camp in Carrollton?
Yes, and it is fairly easy here. General Butler State Resort Park offers pull-through sites with 30 and 50-amp service that handle big rigs, and Two Rivers Campground has level concrete pads with about half the sites pull-through, plus full hookups. Follow the River RV Resort nearby also caters to larger rigs with concrete pads and both pull-through and back-in sites. I-71 gives you a smooth big-rig approach at Exit 44, though a few older streets near the Carrollton riverfront run tight, so follow the marked campground routes and take corners slowly with a long rig. Confirm your length and site type when booking, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options at all three parks.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Carrollton?
Not really in the traditional sense. This is a developed river-valley area without much dispersed or boondocking camping, so the practical options are the three developed campgrounds, all of which take reservations. The good news is they are inexpensive, especially General Butler State Resort Park, where electric-and-water sites go at low state-park rates. If you are on a tight budget, the state resort park is your best value, and camping midweek in spring or fall keeps rates and crowds down further. For first-come flexibility, call ahead to Two Rivers or the state park to check current availability, since walk-in space depends heavily on the season and any events at Kentucky Speedway.
Can I camp on the river in Carrollton?
Yes, and it is the whole appeal here. Carrollton sits where the Kentucky River meets the Ohio, and both public campgrounds put you on or near the water. Two Rivers Campground is right on the Kentucky River with paved walking trails leading to Point Park and the Ohio, so you can walk to the confluence from your site. General Butler State Resort Park adds a lake plus a scenic overlook of the river valley. You will find boating, fishing, and paddling right at hand. One caution: spring rains can raise the rivers, so if you are camping right after heavy weather, ask about site placement to avoid the lowest riverside spots.
What is there to do around Carrollton while camping?
Plenty for a small town. General Butler State Resort Park has a lake, hiking trails, mini golf, tennis, fishing, and a river overlook right in town. Kentucky Speedway, about fifteen miles south in Sparta, hosts big racing events and is a major draw on race weekends. Point Park at the confluence of the Ohio and Kentucky Rivers is walkable from Two Rivers Campground, with river views and paths. Downtown Carrollton has a walkable historic district with local shops and restaurants, and the rivers themselves offer boating, fishing, and paddling. With Louisville and Cincinnati each about an hour off on I-71, you can also day-trip to big-city attractions from an affordable riverside base.
Is winter RV camping possible in Carrollton?
Yes, more than at many small towns. Both General Butler State Resort Park and Two Rivers Campground stay open year-round, so you are not limited to a single winter park here. That said, Carrollton winters are cold and wet, so come prepared to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose, and plan travel around winter storms on I-71. Off-season rates are lower and crowds thin out, which makes a quiet winter riverside stay genuinely pleasant if you are equipped for the cold. Two Rivers even offers longer-term winter stays from November through March. For reliable hookups in the cold months, its full-hookup concrete pads are a solid pick.
How do I get to Carrollton RV parks in a big rig?
It is straightforward. I-71 runs right past Carrollton at Exit 44, linking Louisville about 45 minutes south and Cincinnati about an hour north, so the interstate approach is easy for a big rig. US-42 and US-227 feed into town from there. General Butler State Resort Park sits just off the main roads with a simple approach up the hill. Two Rivers Campground is down on the Kentucky River near the historic riverfront, and while the route is manageable, a few older blocks near the water run tight, so follow the marked campground signs and take corners slowly. Fuel is at the Exit 44 interchange, and RV service is available in the Louisville and Cincinnati metros nearby.
Are Carrollton RV parks pet-friendly?
Generally yes. General Butler State Resort Park is pet-friendly and allows leashed pets under standard Kentucky State Parks rules, with plenty of trails and open ground to walk a dog. Two Rivers Campground and the private resorts nearby also typically welcome pets, though policies on number, leash rules, and designated areas vary, so confirm the specifics when you book. The riverfront paths, Point Park, and the trails at General Butler give dogs room to stretch their legs. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, pick up after them, and never leave a pet unattended in a hot rig during Kentucky summers.
Is Carrollton a good stopover on I-71 between Louisville and Cincinnati?
It is one of the better ones. Carrollton sits right at I-71 Exit 44, almost exactly between Louisville and Cincinnati, with fuel and groceries at the interchange and three quality campgrounds within minutes. General Butler State Resort Park gives you a full resort park with a lake and trails, Two Rivers Campground offers full-hookup concrete pads on the river in town, and private resorts nearby round out the options. That mix of easy access, real amenities, and riverside scenery makes it far more than a parking-lot overnight. If you are running the I-71 corridor and want an affordable, pleasant place to break the drive or spend a few days, Carrollton is an easy recommendation.
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