RV Dump Stations In Douglas, Massachusetts
42.0543° N, 71.7395° W
Quick Overview
Douglas sits in the far southern corner of Worcester County, right where Massachusetts meets Connecticut and Rhode Island in the Blackstone River Valley. For RVers, the draw is Douglas State Forest, a 6,282-acre park built around Wallum Lake with a swimming beach, boat launch, and miles of hiking and mountain-biking trails. Here is the catch that shapes this whole page: the state forest is day-use only, with no camping, no site water, and no dump station, so knowing where to actually empty your tanks matters.
We list several dump stations in and around Douglas. Because the marquee attraction offers none, the reliable places to dump are the private campgrounds and RV service centers spread through the surrounding valley, particularly in nearby Uxbridge and Webster. The Webster/Douglas Forest KOA Journey, formerly Douglas Forest RV Resort, sits right beside the state forest with pull-through hookup sites and is open roughly April through October, which makes it the natural home base for exploring the area with a rig.
Uxbridge, only about 3 miles away, is the practical service hub. It has a Camping World with an RV service department for maintenance and parts, and AmeriGas for propane refill and exchange. If your rig needs attention, Mass Mobile RV Service runs a mobile operation covering propane, appliances, and winterizing. So while Douglas itself is a small town, you are never far from real RV support, which is not something you can say about every rural New England destination.
Getting here takes a little planning because there is no interstate through town. Route 16 runs east-west through Douglas center and Route 96 heads south toward Rhode Island, while Route 146 and I-395 are close by and the Mass Pike (I-90) is a short drive north. The village stretch of Route 16 through Uxbridge and Douglas is a tight two-lane New England road, so larger rigs are happier staging off Route 146 or I-395 and making shorter runs in. You can check current park details on the Mass.gov state forest page before you go.
The reward for the planning is a genuinely pretty, uncrowded base. Wallum Lake is clean and quiet for swimming and paddling, the Blackstone River Bikeway offers 11 off-road miles along the river, and the whole area is steeped in mill-town history as part of the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor. Come in October and the foliage is worth the trip on its own. Just arrive self-contained, plan your dump around the private parks and service stops, and Douglas rewards you with a peaceful slice of the valley.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Douglas
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Douglas
All Dump Stations Near Douglas
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Manchaug Camping | 2.8 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Webster/Sturbridge Family Camp | 4.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Bowdish Lake Camping Area | 9.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - West Thompson Lake Campground | 10.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Upper Blackstone Water Pollution Abatement District | 11.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| City of Woonsocket Waste Water Treatment Plant | 13.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Holiday Acres Camping Resort | 13.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Circle C G Farm Campground Adult RV Park | 14.0 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Stateline Campresort & Cabins | 14.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Chamberlain Lake Campground | 17.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Lake Manchaug Camping
2.8 miWebster/Sturbridge Family Camp
4.3 miBowdish Lake Camping Area
9.0 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - West Thompson Lake Campground
10.7 miUpper Blackstone Water Pollution Abatement District
11.3 miCity of Woonsocket Waste Water Treatment Plant
13.0 miHoliday Acres Camping Resort
13.5 miCircle C G Farm Campground Adult RV Park
14.0 miStateline Campresort & Cabins
14.6 miChamberlain Lake Campground
17.4 miTraveling to Douglas by RV
Douglas is a bit of an off-highway destination, so route planning helps. There is no interstate directly through town. Route 16 is the main east-west road through Douglas center, and Route 96 drops south toward the Rhode Island state line. For heavier travel, Route 146 and I-395 run nearby, and the Mass Pike (I-90) is a short drive to the north, which is how most travelers approach from farther afield. If you are coming from Providence, the southern routes bring you up quickly, and from Worcester you drop down through the valley.
The honest caution is the village itself. Route 16 through Uxbridge and into Douglas center is a classic tight two-lane New England road with narrow shoulders and a compact town center, and it is not where you want to be maneuvering a 40-foot rig at rush hour. Larger RVs do better staging off Route 146 or I-395 and making shorter, deliberate runs into town for supplies or to reach the state forest. Uxbridge, about 3 miles away, is your service anchor with Camping World, AmeriGas propane, and general shopping, so plan a single trip there to cover fuel, propane, groceries, and any RV parts before settling in at the lake. Fill freshwater and dump on the way in, since Douglas State Forest offers neither.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Douglas
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Massachusetts
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Douglas, MA
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 Douglas, Massachusetts, 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 Douglas
Budgeting for Douglas comes down to one reality: there is no free municipal dump and the big state forest offers no waste facilities at all, so your dumping is tied to paid private parks or service visits. A stay at the nearby seasonal KOA bundles the dump station with your hookup site, which is the cleanest way to handle it if you are camping in the area anyway. If you only need service, a visit to the Camping World in Uxbridge can cover dumping alongside whatever maintenance or parts you are after, though that is a service relationship rather than a quick free stop.
The other line item is the state forest day-use parking fee, which you pay in season to access Wallum Lake and the trails. It is modest and separate from any camping cost. Our advice for keeping costs sensible is to consolidate: dump and fill water where you camp, batch propane and groceries in Uxbridge, and treat the forest as an inexpensive day-trip. Because the region's parks are seasonal, off-peak spring and fall stays often come cheaper and quieter than midsummer, when Wallum Lake demand is at its highest.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Douglas
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Douglas by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
Around 20F - Low 30sF
Crowds: Low
Freezing and snowy, with roughly 19 inches of snow across the season. The state forest and private parks scale way back, and seasonal water and dump services close, so plan to dump at a year-round service point and keep hoses from freezing.
Spring
Mar - May
30s-40sF - 43-67F
Crowds: Low
Cool and muddy early with late snow possible in March, then comfortable by May. The KOA reopens around April and Wallum Lake starts drawing day-users, making it a quiet, easy time to travel through.
Summer
Jun - Aug
Low 60sF - 80-82F
Crowds: High
Warm and pleasant and the busiest stretch. July is the warmest month and Wallum Lake's swimming beach is packed, so reserve private RV sites and time your dump around the weekend rush.
Fall
Sep - Oct
30s-40sF - 50-70F
Crowds: Medium
The best season here. New England foliage lights up the Blackstone Valley through October, the air is crisp and dry, and crowds thin after Labor Day, though private parks start closing by late October.
Explore the Douglas Area
Here is what we would tell a friend before they point the rig toward Douglas. First and most important: Douglas State Forest is day-use only. It has no camping, no site water, and no dump station, so arrive with a full freshwater tank and empty holding tanks, and use the forest purely for the lake, the trails, and the beach. Base your rig at the nearby seasonal private park instead, where you actually get hookups and waste facilities.
Second, make Uxbridge your one-stop service run. It is only about 3 miles away and has a Camping World for RV service and parts plus AmeriGas for propane, so batch your errands there rather than hunting around small towns. Third, mind the village roads. Route 16 through the center is tight, so stage bigger rigs off Route 146 or I-395. Fourth, time it for foliage. October in the Blackstone Valley is spectacular, and the crowds have thinned by then. Finally, respect the season. The KOA and other private options generally run April through October, and winter shuts down water and dump services, so a cold-weather visit means fewer open facilities and the need to dump at a year-round service center.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Douglas
How many RV dump stations are there in Douglas, Massachusetts?
We list several dump stations in and around Douglas. That is a modest count that fits a small southern-Worcester-County town, and it is important to know where they actually are. Douglas State Forest, the biggest name in the area, is day-use only with no camping and no dump station, so the reliable places to empty tanks are the private campgrounds and RV service centers in the surrounding Blackstone Valley, especially over in nearby Uxbridge and Webster. Confirm hours before you go, since several of the seasonal options close for the winter.
Does Douglas State Forest have an RV dump station or camping?
No, and this trips up a lot of travelers. Douglas State Forest is a 6,282-acre day-use park built around Wallum Lake, with a swimming beach, boat launch, hiking, and mountain biking, but it has no RV or tent camping, no site-level water hookups, and no dump station. You are expected to fill your freshwater tank before you arrive and dump elsewhere. Treat the forest as a day-trip destination for the lake and trails, and base your RV at a private park nearby that actually offers hookups and waste facilities.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Douglas?
Since the state forest has no dump station, your dependable options are the private RV parks and service centers in the surrounding area. The Webster/Douglas Forest KOA Journey sits right beside the state forest with hookups and is open roughly April through October. For service-based dumping and RV needs, Uxbridge, about 3 miles away, has a Camping World with an RV service department. As with most New England towns, plan to dump where you camp or where you get service rather than expecting a free standalone municipal dump in the village center.
Is there an RV park with hookups near Douglas?
Yes. The Webster/Douglas Forest KOA Journey, formerly Douglas Forest RV Resort, is set right beside Douglas State Forest and offers pull-through RV sites with hookups. It is a seasonal park, generally open from around April through October, which lines up with the warm-weather window when you would want to be at Wallum Lake anyway. Because the state forest itself has no camping, this private park is the practical home base for RVers who want to explore the Blackstone Valley, hike the Midstate Trail, and enjoy the lake without giving up hookups and a dump station.
What highways lead to Douglas, Massachusetts for RVs?
There is no interstate directly through Douglas, but you have good access nearby. Route 16 runs east-west through the town center, and Route 96 heads south toward the Rhode Island line. For bigger roads, Route 146 and I-395 are close, and the Mass Pike (I-90) is a short drive north. The thing to watch is that Route 16 through Uxbridge and Douglas center is a classic tight two-lane New England road, so if you are in a large rig you will be more comfortable staging off Route 146 or I-395 and making shorter runs into the village.
When is the best time to visit Douglas with an RV?
Late spring through early fall is the sweet spot, and October is the standout. Summer brings warm, pleasant weather with highs around 80 and Wallum Lake in full swing, though it is also the busiest time. Fall delivers the classic New England foliage the Blackstone Valley is known for, with crisp, dry air and thinner crowds after Labor Day. Just remember the seasonal parks here, including the nearby KOA, generally run April through October, so a winter trip means fewer open facilities and closed water and dump services.
Where do I refill propane near Douglas?
AmeriGas serves nearby Uxbridge, about 3 miles from Douglas, for propane refill and cylinder exchange, which is your closest convenient option. Uxbridge is genuinely the service hub for this corner of the Blackstone Valley, so it is worth planning a single stop there to knock out propane along with anything else you need. If you are staying at the KOA or camping in the area for a stretch, top off propane while you are running errands in Uxbridge rather than making a separate trip, since the towns out here are small and services are somewhat spread out.
Is there RV repair or service near Douglas?
Yes, and it is closer than you might expect for a small town. Camping World in Uxbridge, about 3 miles from Douglas, has an RV service department for maintenance and repairs, and it also carries parts and supplies. For issues you cannot easily bring in, Mass Mobile RV Service offers mobile repair covering propane diagnostics, heating and cooling, refrigeration, and winterizing. Between the two, you have both a fixed service center and a mobile option nearby, which is reassuring if something goes wrong while you are exploring the Blackstone Valley or camped at the lake.
What is there to do in Douglas with an RV?
The centerpiece is Douglas State Forest and its Wallum Lake, with a swimming beach, boat launch, hiking, and mountain biking across 6,282 acres that touch both Connecticut and Rhode Island. Beyond that, the Blackstone River Bikeway is an 11-mile off-road path along the river, and Blackstone River & Canal Heritage State Park in Uxbridge is great for kayaking and hiking. Families like Breezy Picnic Grounds & Waterslides about 2 miles away, and history buffs can dig into the mill-town story of the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor.
Can I boondock or dry camp in Douglas State Forest?
No. Douglas State Forest is a day-use park with no overnight camping of any kind, so dispersed or dry camping there is not allowed. If you want to dry camp in the region, you will need to look further afield, because the public land here is managed for day use around Wallum Lake and the trail network. The realistic approach for RVers is to book a site at the nearby seasonal private park, which gives you hookups and a dump station, and use the state forest purely for daytime hiking, biking, and swimming.
Are the dump stations near Douglas open in winter?
Mostly not. This is New England, and winters are freezing and snowy with roughly 19 inches of snowfall a year, so water-based facilities shut down to prevent freezing. The nearby KOA runs a seasonal calendar of about April through October, and the state forest has no dump at all, which leaves winter travelers relying on year-round RV service centers for waste facilities. If you are passing through in the cold months, call ahead to confirm what is actually open, take standard freeze precautions with your own rig, and be ready to dump in a larger nearby town if needed.
How far is Douglas from Worcester and Providence?
Douglas sits in the far south of Worcester County near where Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island meet, so you are within an easy drive of a couple of cities. Worcester is a reasonable run to the north for full-size shopping and services, and Providence, Rhode Island, is close to the south, reachable via Route 96 and the regional highways. That location is part of the appeal for RVers, since you can camp in a quiet forested setting on the lake yet still reach real cities, big-box stores, and RV dealers without a long haul.
Do I need to fill my freshwater tank before reaching Douglas?
If you are heading to Douglas State Forest, yes, absolutely. The forest does not offer site-level water hookups, so the state advises RV campers to fill their freshwater tanks before arrival. Even though it is a day-use park rather than a campground, that same reality applies to anyone planning to spend the day there in a rig. The simplest approach is to top off water and dump tanks at your private campground or a service stop in Uxbridge on your way in, so you arrive at the lake self-contained and ready for the day.
How many RV dump stations are there in Douglas, Massachusetts?
We list {{stationCount}} dump stations in and around Douglas. That is a modest count that fits a small southern-Worcester-County town, and it is important to know where they actually are. Douglas State Forest, the biggest name in the area, is day-use only with no camping and no dump station, so the reliable places to empty tanks are the private campgrounds and RV service centers in the surrounding Blackstone Valley, especially over in nearby Uxbridge and Webster. Confirm hours before you go, since several of the seasonal options close for the winter.
Does Douglas State Forest have an RV dump station or camping?
No, and this trips up a lot of travelers. Douglas State Forest is a 6,282-acre day-use park built around Wallum Lake, with a swimming beach, boat launch, hiking, and mountain biking, but it has no RV or tent camping, no site-level water hookups, and no dump station. You are expected to fill your freshwater tank before you arrive and dump elsewhere. Treat the forest as a day-trip destination for the lake and trails, and base your RV at a private park nearby that actually offers hookups and waste facilities.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Douglas?
Since the state forest has no dump station, your dependable options are the private RV parks and service centers in the surrounding area. The Webster/Douglas Forest KOA Journey sits right beside the state forest with hookups and is open roughly April through October. For service-based dumping and RV needs, Uxbridge, about 3 miles away, has a Camping World with an RV service department. As with most New England towns, plan to dump where you camp or where you get service rather than expecting a free standalone municipal dump in the village center.
Is there an RV park with hookups near Douglas?
Yes. The Webster/Douglas Forest KOA Journey, formerly Douglas Forest RV Resort, is set right beside Douglas State Forest and offers pull-through RV sites with hookups. It is a seasonal park, generally open from around April through October, which lines up with the warm-weather window when you would want to be at Wallum Lake anyway. Because the state forest itself has no camping, this private park is the practical home base for RVers who want to explore the Blackstone Valley, hike the Midstate Trail, and enjoy the lake without giving up hookups and a dump station.
What highways lead to Douglas, Massachusetts for RVs?
There is no interstate directly through Douglas, but you have good access nearby. Route 16 runs east-west through the town center, and Route 96 heads south toward the Rhode Island line. For bigger roads, Route 146 and I-395 are close, and the Mass Pike (I-90) is a short drive north. The thing to watch is that Route 16 through Uxbridge and Douglas center is a classic tight two-lane New England road, so if you are in a large rig you will be more comfortable staging off Route 146 or I-395 and making shorter runs into the village.
When is the best time to visit Douglas with an RV?
Late spring through early fall is the sweet spot, and October is the standout. Summer brings warm, pleasant weather with highs around 80 and Wallum Lake in full swing, though it is also the busiest time. Fall delivers the classic New England foliage the Blackstone Valley is known for, with crisp, dry air and thinner crowds after Labor Day. Just remember the seasonal parks here, including the nearby KOA, generally run April through October, so a winter trip means fewer open facilities and closed water and dump services.
Where do I refill propane near Douglas?
AmeriGas serves nearby Uxbridge, about 3 miles from Douglas, for propane refill and cylinder exchange, which is your closest convenient option. Uxbridge is genuinely the service hub for this corner of the Blackstone Valley, so it is worth planning a single stop there to knock out propane along with anything else you need. If you are staying at the KOA or camping in the area for a stretch, top off propane while you are running errands in Uxbridge rather than making a separate trip, since the towns out here are small and services are somewhat spread out.
Is there RV repair or service near Douglas?
Yes, and it is closer than you might expect for a small town. Camping World in Uxbridge, about 3 miles from Douglas, has an RV service department for maintenance and repairs, and it also carries parts and supplies. For issues you cannot easily bring in, Mass Mobile RV Service offers mobile repair covering propane diagnostics, heating and cooling, refrigeration, and winterizing. Between the two, you have both a fixed service center and a mobile option nearby, which is reassuring if something goes wrong while you are exploring the Blackstone Valley or camped at the lake.
What is there to do in Douglas with an RV?
The centerpiece is Douglas State Forest and its Wallum Lake, with a swimming beach, boat launch, hiking, and mountain biking across 6,282 acres that touch both Connecticut and Rhode Island. Beyond that, the Blackstone River Bikeway is an 11-mile off-road path along the river, and Blackstone River & Canal Heritage State Park in Uxbridge is great for kayaking and hiking. Families like Breezy Picnic Grounds & Waterslides about 2 miles away, and history buffs can dig into the mill-town story of the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor.
Can I boondock or dry camp in Douglas State Forest?
No. Douglas State Forest is a day-use park with no overnight camping of any kind, so dispersed or dry camping there is not allowed. If you want to dry camp in the region, you will need to look further afield, because the public land here is managed for day use around Wallum Lake and the trail network. The realistic approach for RVers is to book a site at the nearby seasonal private park, which gives you hookups and a dump station, and use the state forest purely for daytime hiking, biking, and swimming.
Are the dump stations near Douglas open in winter?
Mostly not. This is New England, and winters are freezing and snowy with roughly 19 inches of snowfall a year, so water-based facilities shut down to prevent freezing. The nearby KOA runs a seasonal calendar of about April through October, and the state forest has no dump at all, which leaves winter travelers relying on year-round RV service centers for waste facilities. If you are passing through in the cold months, call ahead to confirm what is actually open, take standard freeze precautions with your own rig, and be ready to dump in a larger nearby town if needed.
How far is Douglas from Worcester and Providence?
Douglas sits in the far south of Worcester County near where Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island meet, so you are within an easy drive of a couple of cities. Worcester is a reasonable run to the north for full-size shopping and services, and Providence, Rhode Island, is close to the south, reachable via Route 96 and the regional highways. That location is part of the appeal for RVers, since you can camp in a quiet forested setting on the lake yet still reach real cities, big-box stores, and RV dealers without a long haul.
Do I need to fill my freshwater tank before reaching Douglas?
If you are heading to Douglas State Forest, yes, absolutely. The forest does not offer site-level water hookups, so the state advises RV campers to fill their freshwater tanks before arrival. Even though it is a day-use park rather than a campground, that same reality applies to anyone planning to spend the day there in a rig. The simplest approach is to top off water and dump tanks at your private campground or a service stop in Uxbridge on your way in, so you arrive at the lake self-contained and ready for the day.
Are there free dump stations in Douglas?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Douglas.
All Dump Stations Near Douglas (84)
RV Dump StationsSouth Essex Sewage Plant
RV Dump StationsWhite Birch Campground
RV Dump Stations





