RV Parks In Newport, Maine
44.8353° N, 69.2739° W
Quick Overview
Newport is a small central-Maine town that sits right where Interstate 95 meets the shore of Sebasticook Lake, which makes it an easy and pretty base for RVers exploring the middle of the state. It is close enough to Bangor for shopping and an airport, but it feels like lake country, with boating, bass fishing and swimming right where you park. If you are working your way up I-95 toward Bar Harbor and the coast, or just want a quiet lake week, Newport is a convenient and underrated stop.
The camping here is mostly private and lakeside. The standout is Sebasticook Lake Campground, a family park of about 67 sites on 30 acres right on the water, with a heated pool, a camp store, a boat launch and dock, and a mix of full-hookup and 30/50-amp water-and-electric sites, including pull-throughs that handle big rigs. It opens mid-May and runs into early fall. For a smaller, quieter feel, Christies Campground is a family-run spot on Lake Sebasticook with partial and primitive sites and cottages, better suited to mid-size rigs than a 40-footer looking for full hookups.
Public camping takes a short drive. The nearest full state-park campground is Peaks-Kenny State Park, about 40 minutes north on Sebec Lake, where nearly 900 acres of old-growth forest surround a 56-site campground, a sand beach and 10 miles of trails. Peaks-Kenny sites are wooded and have no hookups, so they suit self-contained mid-size rigs, and you reserve them through the Maine State Parks system. So the pattern here is simple: full-hookup private lake camping in Newport itself, and a scenic no-hookup state park a short drive away when you want the big-woods experience.
Access could hardly be easier. Newport sits at I-95 Exit 157, so getting a big rig in and out is a non-issue, and the local lake roads are flat and simple. Provisioning is easy too, with stores in town and everything you could want 30 minutes northeast in Bangor. Big rigs should aim for the full-hookup and pull-through sites at Sebasticook Lake Campground, while smaller rigs and tent-and-trailer setups have more choices among the primitive and state-park sites. Either way, you get a real Maine lake right out the door.
Season is the thing to plan around. This is a short-season destination: the lake campgrounds open around mid-May and close by mid-October, so summer and early fall are your windows. Summer brings warm days, cool nights and the full lake scene, and it is when weekends and holidays fill first, so reserve ahead. Early fall is our favorite, with crisp air, strong foliage and far thinner crowds before the parks shut for the winter. Midweek in any month is the easy time to roll in and find a good site.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Newport
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Gear for Your Trip to Newport
All Dump Stations Near Newport
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christies Campground | 1.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tent Village Campground | 2.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sebasticook Lake Campground | 2.1 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Moosehead Trail Campground | 3.5 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Maple Ridge Park | 5.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Linkin Mobile Home Park | 6.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Stetson Shores Campground Inc | 7.5 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pleasant Lake Shores Campground | 7.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Spruce Grove Mobile Home Park | 10.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ericson Country Mobile Home Park | 13.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Christies Campground
1.8 miTent Village Campground
2.1 miSebasticook Lake Campground
2.1 miMoosehead Trail Campground
3.5 miMaple Ridge Park
5.7 miLinkin Mobile Home Park
6.1 miStetson Shores Campground Inc
7.5 miPleasant Lake Shores Campground
7.6 miSpruce Grove Mobile Home Park
10.9 miEricson Country Mobile Home Park
13.6 miTraveling to Newport by RV
Getting to Newport is about as easy as Maine RV travel gets. The town sits directly at Interstate 95 Exit 157, roughly halfway between Waterville and Bangor, so most RVers simply pull off the interstate and are at the lake within minutes. US-2 and state routes 7 and 11 fan out from town for local trips, and they are flat, straightforward roads with no notable low bridges or big-rig headaches near the campgrounds. Bangor is about 30 minutes northeast, and it is your hub for big-box shopping, RV service, an airport and dining.
Newport itself has grocery stores, fuel and the basics to provision a stay, and there is a Walmart and more services along the highway. Sebasticook Lake is the center of local life, so if you tow a boat or kayaks you will use them. Keep in mind that the marquee coastal destinations, Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor, are still about a two-hour drive east, so Newport works best as a central-Maine lake base or a comfortable overnight on the way to the coast. For the nearest full state park, plan on about 40 minutes north to Peaks-Kenny State Park on Sebec Lake, an easy day trip or an overnight if you want the big-woods setting.
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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 Newport, Maine, 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 Newport
Camping around Newport is reasonably priced by Maine standards, which matters because the coast gets expensive fast. At the private lake parks, expect full-hookup and water-and-electric nightly rates in roughly the $40s to $50s in peak summer at a park like Sebasticook Lake Campground, with weekly and seasonal rates bringing the effective cost down for longer stays. Smaller, simpler spots like Christies Campground run cheaper, often in the $30s, trading full hookups and amenities for a quiet family feel.
For the budget-minded, the public option is the value play: Peaks-Kenny State Park charges modest state-park nightly rates, though you give up hookups and take a 40-minute drive for it. Our honest take is that if you want the pool, the beach and full hookups, the in-town lake park is worth the higher rate, while a self-contained rig looking to save money does well at the state park or a primitive private site. Either way, book the summer weekends ahead, and consider a weekly rate if you are staying more than a few nights, since it usually beats paying night by night.
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What RVers Are Saying About Newport
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Best Time to Visit Newport by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
10F - 28F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy; the lake campgrounds are closed. No RV camping in Newport this season.
Spring
Mar - May
36F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Mud season into green-up; parks open around mid-May. Quiet, cool, and easy to get a site late in the season.
Summer
Jun - Aug
58F - 80F
Crowds: High
Prime lake season with warm days and cool nights; weekends and holidays fill first, so reserve full-hookup sites ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
38F - 58F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days and strong foliage before parks close by mid-October; our favorite time, with thinner crowds and easy booking midweek.
Explore the Newport Area
A few things we have learned camping around Newport. First, if you want full hookups and a beach right at your site, Sebasticook Lake Campground is the pick, and its pull-through sites are the ones to request for a big rig. Book summer weekends and any holiday well ahead, because the lakefront sites go first; midweek stays are far easier to grab last-minute. Second, do not overlook early fall. The foliage across central Maine is excellent, the nights are crisp and comfortable, and the crowds thin right out before the parks close for the season around mid-October.
Third, provision in Newport or make a Bangor run before you settle in, since the town covers the basics but Bangor has the full-size stores and RV service 30 minutes away. Fourth, if you want a taste of true Maine woods, day-trip or overnight to Peaks-Kenny State Park on Sebec Lake, but go in self-contained since there are no hookups there. Finally, remember Acadia is a two-hour drive east, so treat Newport as a relaxed lake base rather than a coastal one, and enjoy the boating and bass fishing that make Sebasticook Lake worth the stop.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Newport
What are the best RV parks in Newport, ME?
The best-known RV park in Newport is Sebasticook Lake Campground, a family park of about 67 sites right on the water with a heated pool, camp store, boat launch and a mix of full-hookup and 30/50-amp water-and-electric sites, including pull-throughs for big rigs. For a smaller, quieter stay, Christies Campground is a family-run lakeside spot on Lake Sebasticook with partial and primitive sites and cottages, better for mid-size rigs. If you want a public option, Peaks-Kenny State Park sits about 40 minutes north on Sebec Lake with wooded no-hookup sites and a sand beach. Choose the lake park for full hookups and amenities, the smaller camp for quiet, or the state park for big-woods scenery.
Do RV parks in Newport have full hookups?
Yes, but they are concentrated at the main lake park. Sebasticook Lake Campground offers full-hookup sites plus a larger number of 30 and 50-amp water-and-electric sites, along with a dump station, so you can get sewer at the site or use the central dump. Christies Campground, by contrast, offers partial and primitive sites rather than full hookups, which suits smaller or self-contained rigs. The nearby state park, Peaks-Kenny, has no hookups at all, just a dump station and comfort stations. So if full hookups matter to you, book a full-hookup site at Sebasticook Lake Campground early, and treat the other options as water-and-electric or dry camping.
Can big rigs stay at Newport RV parks?
Yes, at the right park. Sebasticook Lake Campground has pull-through and full-hookup sites that handle big rigs, and getting there is easy since Newport sits right at Interstate 95 Exit 157 with flat local roads and no tricky low bridges near the campgrounds. The smaller family campground and the state-park sites are wooded and better suited to mid-size rigs, so a 40-footer with slideouts should call ahead and request a pull-through or a longer full-hookup site. In short, big rigs are welcome in Newport as long as you book the appropriate site type in advance, especially in the busy summer weeks when the largest sites go first.
How much does RV camping cost in Newport, ME?
Costs are moderate by Maine standards. At the private lake parks, peak-summer full-hookup and water-and-electric sites run roughly in the $40s to $50s a night at a park like Sebasticook Lake Campground, with weekly and seasonal rates lowering the effective cost for longer stays. Smaller, simpler campgrounds such as Christies run cheaper, often in the $30s, trading amenities for a quiet feel. The public option, Peaks-Kenny State Park, charges modest state-park rates but has no hookups and takes a 40-minute drive. For the best value on a stay of several nights, ask about the weekly rate, which usually beats paying night by night at the lake parks.
When is the best time to camp in Newport?
Summer and early fall are the windows, because this is a short-season destination where the lake campgrounds open around mid-May and close by mid-October. Summer brings warm days, cool nights and the full lake scene of boating, fishing and swimming, and it is the busiest, so reserve weekends and holidays ahead. Early fall is our favorite: the central-Maine foliage is excellent, nights turn crisp, and the crowds thin right out before the parks shut for winter. Spring is quiet but muddy until green-up, and winter has no RV camping here at all. For the best mix of good weather and easy booking, aim for late summer into the first weeks of fall.
Are there reservations or first-come sites in Newport?
Most sites are reservation-based, and you should book ahead in the busy season. The private lake parks like Sebasticook Lake Campground take direct reservations through their own websites, and their lakefront and full-hookup sites fill first on summer weekends and holidays. The state park, Peaks-Kenny, uses the Maine State Parks reservation system, and its popular sites also book up in peak season. There are some primitive private sites that turn over more casually, and midweek in any month you can often roll in and find space. But for a guaranteed lakefront full-hookup site in July or August, reserve as far ahead as you can rather than counting on first-come availability.
What public or state-park camping is near Newport?
The nearest full public campground is Peaks-Kenny State Park, about 40 minutes north on Sebec Lake near Dover-Foxcroft. It protects nearly 900 acres of old-growth forest and offers a 56-site campground, a sand beach and about 10 miles of hiking trails. The sites are wooded and have no hookups, just comfort stations and a dump station, so they suit self-contained mid-size rigs. You reserve through the Maine State Parks system. It makes an easy day trip from a Newport base or an overnight if you want the quieter big-woods setting. Beyond that, most public land in this settled part of central Maine is limited, so the private lake parks in town are the main show.
Is there free or dispersed camping near Newport?
Not much. This is a settled, lake-country part of central Maine rather than the vast public forests farther north, so true free dispersed camping is scarce right around Newport. Most camping here is at reservation-based private lake parks or the nearby state park, all of which charge a nightly fee. If you are set on boondocking, you would generally head into the North Woods well beyond Newport, where there is more public and commercial forest land. For a stop in Newport itself, plan to pay for a site, and take advantage of the lakefront setting and hookups that come with it rather than expecting free options in town.
What is there to do around Newport besides camping?
Plenty for a lake stop. Sebasticook Lake is the centerpiece, good for boating, bass fishing, kayaking and swimming right from the campgrounds. Bangor is about 30 minutes northeast, a real city with shopping, dining, an airport and Stephen King landmarks for fans. The surrounding central-Maine countryside is dotted with lakes, and fall foliage drives here are excellent. A little farther, Peaks-Kenny State Park adds a sand beach and forest trails on Sebec Lake. And if you have the time, the town works as a base or overnight on the way to Acadia National Park and the coast, roughly two hours east. For a small town, there is more than enough to fill a relaxed lake week.
How far is Newport from Acadia National Park and the coast?
Newport is inland central Maine, so the famous coast is a drive, not out your door. Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor are roughly two hours east, which makes Newport a comfortable overnight or a base for a leisurely trip rather than a coastal destination itself. Many RVers use it exactly that way, breaking up the drive up Interstate 95 with a lake night before pushing on to the coast. If beachfront or oceanfront camping is your main goal, you would head to a coastal park instead. But if you want quiet lake camping with full hookups, easy interstate access and a shorter drive to Bangor, Newport earns its place as a central-Maine stop.
What are the roads and RV access like in Newport?
Access is excellent, which is a big part of Newport's appeal. The town sits right at Interstate 95 Exit 157, so you can get a big rig on and off the highway with no trouble, and the local roads out to Sebasticook Lake are flat and simple with no notable low bridges or weight restrictions near the campgrounds. US-2 and state routes 7 and 11 handle local trips easily. The only longer drive is to the state park about 40 minutes north, on ordinary paved roads. Compared with tucked-away coastal campgrounds that involve narrow lanes, Newport is refreshingly easy to reach, which makes it a stress-free stop for larger rigs traveling through Maine.
What is the weather like for camping in Newport?
Newport has a classic northern-New-England climate with a short, pleasant camping season. Summers are warm and comfortable, with highs around 80 and cool nights in the 50s that are perfect for sleeping, plus the lake for swimming. Spring is cool and muddy until green-up, which is why parks open around mid-May. Fall turns crisp with strong foliage, our favorite camping time, before the parks close by mid-October. Winters are cold and snowy with no RV camping. Rain can pass through any summer week, so pack layers and a rain plan, but overall the summer-into-fall window offers some of the most comfortable lake camping weather in the state.
Where can I dump tanks and get propane near Newport?
Dumping is straightforward. The main lake park, Sebasticook Lake Campground, has full-hookup sites plus a dump station, so you can either hook up sewer at the site or use the central dump on your way out. The state park, Peaks-Kenny, also has a dump station for its no-hookup campers. For propane, fuel and groceries, Newport has stores and stations in town that cover the basics, and Bangor, about 30 minutes northeast, has the full range of propane refill, RV service and big-box shopping. The smart move is to top off propane and provisions in town or on a Bangor run, and use the campground dump station or full-hookup site for your tanks.
Is Newport a good base for exploring central Maine?
Yes, it is one of the more convenient bases in the region. Sitting at Interstate 95 Exit 157 on Sebasticook Lake, Newport gives you a lakefront home with full-hookup camping, easy highway access in every direction, and Bangor just 30 minutes away for anything the small town lacks. From here you can day-trip to Peaks-Kenny State Park, explore the many lakes of central Maine, run into Bangor for city amenities, or use it as a staging point for the longer push to Acadia and the coast. The combination of easy access, a real lake out the door and reasonable rates makes Newport a practical and pleasant base for a central-Maine RV trip.
What are the best RV parks in Newport, ME?
The best-known RV park in Newport is Sebasticook Lake Campground, a family park of about 67 sites right on the water with a heated pool, camp store, boat launch and a mix of full-hookup and 30/50-amp water-and-electric sites, including pull-throughs for big rigs. For a smaller, quieter stay, Christies Campground is a family-run lakeside spot on Lake Sebasticook with partial and primitive sites and cottages, better for mid-size rigs. If you want a public option, Peaks-Kenny State Park sits about 40 minutes north on Sebec Lake with wooded no-hookup sites and a sand beach. Choose the lake park for full hookups and amenities, the smaller camp for quiet, or the state park for big-woods scenery.
Do RV parks in Newport have full hookups?
Yes, but they are concentrated at the main lake park. Sebasticook Lake Campground offers full-hookup sites plus a larger number of 30 and 50-amp water-and-electric sites, along with a dump station, so you can get sewer at the site or use the central dump. Christies Campground, by contrast, offers partial and primitive sites rather than full hookups, which suits smaller or self-contained rigs. The nearby state park, Peaks-Kenny, has no hookups at all, just a dump station and comfort stations. So if full hookups matter to you, book a full-hookup site at Sebasticook Lake Campground early, and treat the other options as water-and-electric or dry camping.
Can big rigs stay at Newport RV parks?
Yes, at the right park. Sebasticook Lake Campground has pull-through and full-hookup sites that handle big rigs, and getting there is easy since Newport sits right at Interstate 95 Exit 157 with flat local roads and no tricky low bridges near the campgrounds. The smaller family campground and the state-park sites are wooded and better suited to mid-size rigs, so a 40-footer with slideouts should call ahead and request a pull-through or a longer full-hookup site. In short, big rigs are welcome in Newport as long as you book the appropriate site type in advance, especially in the busy summer weeks when the largest sites go first.
How much does RV camping cost in Newport, ME?
Costs are moderate by Maine standards. At the private lake parks, peak-summer full-hookup and water-and-electric sites run roughly in the $40s to $50s a night at a park like Sebasticook Lake Campground, with weekly and seasonal rates lowering the effective cost for longer stays. Smaller, simpler campgrounds such as Christies run cheaper, often in the $30s, trading amenities for a quiet feel. The public option, Peaks-Kenny State Park, charges modest state-park rates but has no hookups and takes a 40-minute drive. For the best value on a stay of several nights, ask about the weekly rate, which usually beats paying night by night at the lake parks.
When is the best time to camp in Newport?
Summer and early fall are the windows, because this is a short-season destination where the lake campgrounds open around mid-May and close by mid-October. Summer brings warm days, cool nights and the full lake scene of boating, fishing and swimming, and it is the busiest, so reserve weekends and holidays ahead. Early fall is our favorite: the central-Maine foliage is excellent, nights turn crisp, and the crowds thin right out before the parks shut for winter. Spring is quiet but muddy until green-up, and winter has no RV camping here at all. For the best mix of good weather and easy booking, aim for late summer into the first weeks of fall.
Are there reservations or first-come sites in Newport?
Most sites are reservation-based, and you should book ahead in the busy season. The private lake parks like Sebasticook Lake Campground take direct reservations through their own websites, and their lakefront and full-hookup sites fill first on summer weekends and holidays. The state park, Peaks-Kenny, uses the Maine State Parks reservation system, and its popular sites also book up in peak season. There are some primitive private sites that turn over more casually, and midweek in any month you can often roll in and find space. But for a guaranteed lakefront full-hookup site in July or August, reserve as far ahead as you can rather than counting on first-come availability.
What public or state-park camping is near Newport?
The nearest full public campground is Peaks-Kenny State Park, about 40 minutes north on Sebec Lake near Dover-Foxcroft. It protects nearly 900 acres of old-growth forest and offers a 56-site campground, a sand beach and about 10 miles of hiking trails. The sites are wooded and have no hookups, just comfort stations and a dump station, so they suit self-contained mid-size rigs. You reserve through the Maine State Parks system. It makes an easy day trip from a Newport base or an overnight if you want the quieter big-woods setting. Beyond that, most public land in this settled part of central Maine is limited, so the private lake parks in town are the main show.
Is there free or dispersed camping near Newport?
Not much. This is a settled, lake-country part of central Maine rather than the vast public forests farther north, so true free dispersed camping is scarce right around Newport. Most camping here is at reservation-based private lake parks or the nearby state park, all of which charge a nightly fee. If you are set on boondocking, you would generally head into the North Woods well beyond Newport, where there is more public and commercial forest land. For a stop in Newport itself, plan to pay for a site, and take advantage of the lakefront setting and hookups that come with it rather than expecting free options in town.
What is there to do around Newport besides camping?
Plenty for a lake stop. Sebasticook Lake is the centerpiece, good for boating, bass fishing, kayaking and swimming right from the campgrounds. Bangor is about 30 minutes northeast, a real city with shopping, dining, an airport and Stephen King landmarks for fans. The surrounding central-Maine countryside is dotted with lakes, and fall foliage drives here are excellent. A little farther, Peaks-Kenny State Park adds a sand beach and forest trails on Sebec Lake. And if you have the time, the town works as a base or overnight on the way to Acadia National Park and the coast, roughly two hours east. For a small town, there is more than enough to fill a relaxed lake week.
How far is Newport from Acadia National Park and the coast?
Newport is inland central Maine, so the famous coast is a drive, not out your door. Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor are roughly two hours east, which makes Newport a comfortable overnight or a base for a leisurely trip rather than a coastal destination itself. Many RVers use it exactly that way, breaking up the drive up Interstate 95 with a lake night before pushing on to the coast. If beachfront or oceanfront camping is your main goal, you would head to a coastal park instead. But if you want quiet lake camping with full hookups, easy interstate access and a shorter drive to Bangor, Newport earns its place as a central-Maine stop.
What are the roads and RV access like in Newport?
Access is excellent, which is a big part of Newport's appeal. The town sits right at Interstate 95 Exit 157, so you can get a big rig on and off the highway with no trouble, and the local roads out to Sebasticook Lake are flat and simple with no notable low bridges or weight restrictions near the campgrounds. US-2 and state routes 7 and 11 handle local trips easily. The only longer drive is to the state park about 40 minutes north, on ordinary paved roads. Compared with tucked-away coastal campgrounds that involve narrow lanes, Newport is refreshingly easy to reach, which makes it a stress-free stop for larger rigs traveling through Maine.
What is the weather like for camping in Newport?
Newport has a classic northern-New-England climate with a short, pleasant camping season. Summers are warm and comfortable, with highs around 80 and cool nights in the 50s that are perfect for sleeping, plus the lake for swimming. Spring is cool and muddy until green-up, which is why parks open around mid-May. Fall turns crisp with strong foliage, our favorite camping time, before the parks close by mid-October. Winters are cold and snowy with no RV camping. Rain can pass through any summer week, so pack layers and a rain plan, but overall the summer-into-fall window offers some of the most comfortable lake camping weather in the state.
Where can I dump tanks and get propane near Newport?
Dumping is straightforward. The main lake park, Sebasticook Lake Campground, has full-hookup sites plus a dump station, so you can either hook up sewer at the site or use the central dump on your way out. The state park, Peaks-Kenny, also has a dump station for its no-hookup campers. For propane, fuel and groceries, Newport has stores and stations in town that cover the basics, and Bangor, about 30 minutes northeast, has the full range of propane refill, RV service and big-box shopping. The smart move is to top off propane and provisions in town or on a Bangor run, and use the campground dump station or full-hookup site for your tanks.
Is Newport a good base for exploring central Maine?
Yes, it is one of the more convenient bases in the region. Sitting at Interstate 95 Exit 157 on Sebasticook Lake, Newport gives you a lakefront home with full-hookup camping, easy highway access in every direction, and Bangor just 30 minutes away for anything the small town lacks. From here you can day-trip to Peaks-Kenny State Park, explore the many lakes of central Maine, run into Bangor for city amenities, or use it as a staging point for the longer push to Acadia and the coast. The combination of easy access, a real lake out the door and reasonable rates makes Newport a practical and pleasant base for a central-Maine RV trip.
Are there free dump stations in Newport?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Newport.
All Dump Stations Near Newport (93)
RV ParkChristies Campground
RV ParkTent Village Campground
RV Park with Dump StationsSebasticook Lake Campground
RV ParkMoosehead Trail Campground
RV ParkMaple Ridge Park
RV ParkLinkin Mobile Home Park
RV ParkStetson Shores Campground Inc
RV Park



