RV Parks In Bethany, Missouri
40.2683° N, 94.0283° W
Quick Overview
Bethany sits right on I-35 in the rolling farm country of northwest Missouri, about 75 miles north of Kansas City and 90 miles south of Des Moines, which makes it one of those handy corridor towns where RVers pull off for a night and end up glad they did. If you just need a fast, clean full-hookup stop, Quail Ridge RV Park is the obvious pick. It's an eighth of a mile east of I-35 off Highway 136, with concrete pull-through pads, 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer, and sites long enough for rigs over 40 feet. It runs first-come, first-served, so you rarely have to plan around it.
Want to actually stay a while? Harrison County Lake Campground, about 10 miles north of town, gives you public lakeside sites with 30 amp electric and an on-site dump station, plus a beach, fishing, and a boat launch. For a wooded state-park experience with electric sites, hot showers, and reservable spots up to a year out, we point people about 40 miles south to Wallace State Park near Cameron. You can book it through the Missouri State Parks system at mostateparks.com, and nightly rates there run a very reasonable $14 to $29.
So you've got the full spread here: private full-hookup convenience off the interstate, a public county lake, and a state park within an easy drive. Between them you can cover big-rig overnights, electric lake camping, and longer reservable stays with showers, all within about forty miles of one exit. Need to empty your tanks first? See our guide to RV dump stations in Bethany. Add in Dunn Ranch Prairie with its free-roaming bison herd about 20 miles west, the Northwest Missouri State Fairgrounds in town, and the Bethany Aquatic Center for hot summer afternoons, and this little Harrison County seat earns more than a single-night stop.
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Gear for Your Trip to Bethany
All Dump Stations Near Bethany
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Memorial Park | 0.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Quail Ridge Campground - Bethany, Mo | 1.0 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Country Estates | 1.2 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Peace Of The Land | 9.4 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Eagle Ridge RV Park | 12.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Buffalo Run RV Park | 13.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lake Paho Campground D | 21.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ethans Forrest | 21.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Blackberry RV Park | 21.9 mi | 3.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Crowder State Park | 22.7 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
Memorial Park
0.4 miQuail Ridge Campground - Bethany, Mo
1.0 miCountry Estates
1.2 miPeace Of The Land
9.4 miEagle Ridge RV Park
12.6 miBuffalo Run RV Park
13.9 miLake Paho Campground D
21.6 miEthans Forrest
21.8 miBlackberry RV Park
21.9 miCrowder State Park
22.7 miTraveling to Bethany by RV
Getting in and out is about as easy as RV travel gets. I-35 runs straight through Bethany, and Quail Ridge RV Park sits just off Exit 92 at the Highway 136 interchange, so there are no tight turns or low bridges to sweat on approach. Fuel, a Taco Bell, a Subway, and grocery stops are all clustered right at that exit, which is why so many big rigs treat this as a natural overnight between Kansas City and Des Moines. US-136 gives you the east-west option if you're crossing Missouri rather than running the interstate, and US-69 joins near Eagleville to the north.
If you're headed to Harrison County Lake, take Route W north about 10 miles then W222 Street west a half mile; the county roads are paved but narrow, so take them slow with a long trailer. Wallace State Park sits at 10621 MO-121 near Cameron, roughly 40 miles south on I-35 then a short hop east. Campground 2 there has the most spacious, big-rig-friendly sites. Kansas City International is the closest major airport if you're meeting family or swapping drivers.
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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 Bethany, Missouri, 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 Bethany
Camping here is cheap by RV standards, which is part of the appeal of stopping in this stretch of Missouri. Public options are the best value: Wallace State Park runs $14 to $29 a night depending on whether you take a basic or electric site, and Harrison County Lake's electric sites sit at the low end of that range too. For a state park with showers and a dump station, that's hard to beat.
Private full-hookup convenience costs more but not much. Quail Ridge RV Park lands in the typical rural-Missouri range of roughly $35 to $45 a night for a concrete full-hookup pull-through, and for a one-night interstate stop with 50 amp and sewer, most of us happily pay it. Buffalo Run up in Eagleville is a simpler water-and-electric setup at the lower end. Budget tip: if you're passing through and only need power, the county lake and state park save you real money over a week, while the private parks buy you speed and full hookups right off the exit.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Bethany by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
19F - 33F
Crowds: Low
Freezing with about 12in of snow a year; only year-round electric sites stay open and water spigots can freeze, so carry extra fresh water.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
Green and wet, June the rainiest month; Wallace State Park seasonal loops open April 15 and ground near the lake softens after rain.
Summer
Jun - Aug
65F - 85F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid; lake and state-fair weekends fill first-come sites fast, so arrive early and expect bugs near the water.
Fall
Sep - Oct
43F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp, comfortable camping with easy availability and prairie color at Dunn Ranch; our favorite season to stay a few nights.
Explore the Bethany Area
A few things we've learned rolling through here. Quail Ridge is your fast, reliable full-hookup card off I-35, but it's small, only about 10 pull-throughs, so if you're arriving late on a summer weekend when the state fair is running, have Harrison County Lake as your backup. The lake sites are electric-only, so top off your fresh water in town first and know that the on-site dump station is your friend on the way out.
June is the wettest month up here and the ground near the lake gets soft, so pick a pad site or a higher spot after heavy rain. If you want hot showers and a reservable spot, don't gamble on the first-come places, book Wallace State Park ahead through icampmo.com, especially for Friday-Saturday weekends where there's a two-night minimum. Time your trip around a Dunn Ranch bison tour if you can, it's genuinely worth the 20-mile drive west. And in winter, only the year-round electric sites stay open, so expect frozen spigots and bring extra fresh water aboard.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Bethany
Is there a full-hookup RV park right in Bethany?
Yes. Quail Ridge RV Park is the full-hookup option in Bethany itself, sitting an eighth of a mile east of I-35 off Highway 136. It has about 10 concrete pull-through pads with 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer, and several sites handle rigs over 40 feet. It operates first-come, first-served, so you can usually roll in without a reservation. Fuel, groceries, and fast food are right at the same exit, which makes it a genuinely convenient overnight stop for anyone running the I-35 corridor between Kansas City and Des Moines.
Where can I camp near a lake close to Bethany?
Harrison County Lake Campground is your lake option, about 10 miles north of town via Route W and W222 Street. It offers roughly 25 public sites with 30 amp electric service and an on-site dump station, plus a beach, fishing, and a boat launch. It's open year-round and runs first-come, first-served, so it's a solid backup when the in-town RV park fills up on a fair weekend. The sites are electric-only, so fill your fresh water tank in Bethany before you head out to the lake.
Is there a state park with RV camping near Bethany?
Wallace State Park near Cameron is the nearest state park with RV camping, about 40 miles south on I-35. It has basic and electric campsites, hot showers, modern restrooms, and a trailer dump station. Campground 2 has the most spacious, big-rig-friendly sites, and Campgrounds 1 and 2 stay open year-round while 3 and 4 run April 15 through October 31. You can reserve up to a year in advance through the Missouri State Parks system, and nightly rates are a very affordable $14 to $29.
Do I need reservations, or is first-come okay?
It depends on where you stay. Quail Ridge RV Park and Harrison County Lake Campground both run first-come, first-served, so you can usually just show up, which is handy for interstate travelers on a loose schedule. Wallace State Park, on the other hand, takes reservations up to a year out through icampmo.com or 877-422-6766, and weekend stays there carry a two-night minimum. Our rule of thumb: gamble on first-come for a quick overnight, but book the state park ahead if you want a guaranteed weekend spot with showers.
Can big rigs over 40 feet camp in Bethany?
Yes, and Quail Ridge RV Park is your best bet for a longer rig. It has concrete pull-through pads sized for campers over 40 feet, plus full hookups, so you don't have to unhitch or wrestle a tight back-in after a long driving day. Getting there is easy too, since it sits right off I-35 Exit 92 with no low bridges or sharp turns. At the public parks, sites are more compact, though Campground 2 at Wallace State Park has the roomiest spots if you want a state-park stay.
What hookups can I expect around Bethany?
You'll find the full range. Quail Ridge RV Park offers true full hookups, meaning 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer at concrete pull-throughs. Harrison County Lake Campground provides 30 amp electric with a dump station on site but no individual sewer. Wallace State Park has electric sites plus a shared trailer dump station and hot showers. Buffalo Run in Eagleville is a simpler water-and-electric setup. So if you need sewer at the site, aim for Quail Ridge; if electric-plus-dump-station works for you, the public options save money.
When is the best season to camp near Bethany?
Fall is our favorite. September and October bring crisp, comfortable nights, thinner crowds, and prairie color out at Dunn Ranch. Summer is the busiest stretch, warm and humid with highs in the mid-80s, and lake and fair-weekend sites fill up, so book or arrive early. Spring is green but wet, with June the rainiest month, and the state park's seasonal loops open April 15. Winter camping is possible at the year-round electric sites, but expect freezing temperatures, occasional snow, and frozen water spigots.
Is there a dump station near Bethany?
Yes, a few. Harrison County Lake Campground has a dump station on site, and Wallace State Park near Cameron has a trailer dump station as well. Quail Ridge RV Park offers full hookups, so you can empty tanks right at your site. If you're just passing through and need to dump without staying, the county lake and state park are your public options. For a fuller rundown of tank-emptying spots in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Bethany.
How far is Bethany from Kansas City and Des Moines?
Bethany sits almost exactly between the two on I-35. Kansas City is about 75 miles south, roughly an hour and 15 minutes, and Des Moines is about 90 miles north. That central position is exactly why the town works so well as an overnight stop, since it breaks up the drive at a natural halfway point. Kansas City International Airport is the closest major airport if you're picking up family or swapping drivers, and both cities offer big-city resupply if you need an RV parts store or a Camping World.
What is there to do around Bethany besides camp?
More than you'd guess for a small county seat. Dunn Ranch Prairie, about 20 miles west near Hatfield, is a restored tallgrass prairie with a free-roaming bison herd, hiking trails, and wildflowers, and it's a genuine highlight. The Northwest Missouri State Fairgrounds in town hosts a century-old fair with grandstand shows and rodeo events. Harrison County Lake is good for fishing and boating, the Bethany Aquatic Center cools you off on hot afternoons, and the historic district is a pleasant stroll if you like old refinished homes.
Are the RV parks open year-round?
Some are. Quail Ridge RV Park and Harrison County Lake Campground both operate year-round, and at Wallace State Park, Campgrounds 1 and 2 stay open all year while 3 and 4 close from November through mid-April. In winter, though, expect only electric hookups to be reliable, since water systems get shut off or freeze. If you're traveling the I-35 corridor in the cold months, Quail Ridge is the most dependable full-service stop, and you'll want extra fresh water aboard for any of the electric-only public sites.
Is Bethany a good overnight stop on I-35?
It's one of the better ones on this stretch. Quail Ridge RV Park sits just off Exit 92 with concrete full-hookup pull-throughs, so you can pull in late, hook up in minutes, and be back on the road early without ever fighting a tight turn. Fuel, groceries, and food are all right at the exit. For an interstate overnight between Kansas City and Des Moines, it checks every box RVers care about: easy access, full hookups, big-rig room, and no reservation gymnastics. Just have the county lake as a backup on busy weekends.
What are camping prices like around Bethany?
Refreshingly low. Public sites are the best value, with Wallace State Park at $14 to $29 a night and Harrison County Lake's electric sites near the bottom of that range. Private full-hookup convenience at Quail Ridge RV Park runs roughly $35 to $45 a night, which is normal for a rural-Missouri interstate park with 50 amp and sewer. Buffalo Run in Eagleville is a cheaper water-and-electric option. If you only need power, the public parks save real money over a week; if you want full hookups off the exit, the private rate is well worth it.
Is there a full-hookup RV park right in Bethany?
Yes. Quail Ridge RV Park is the full-hookup option in Bethany itself, sitting an eighth of a mile east of I-35 off Highway 136. It has about 10 concrete pull-through pads with 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer, and several sites handle rigs over 40 feet. It operates first-come, first-served, so you can usually roll in without a reservation. Fuel, groceries, and fast food are right at the same exit, which makes it a genuinely convenient overnight stop for anyone running the I-35 corridor between Kansas City and Des Moines.
Where can I camp near a lake close to Bethany?
Harrison County Lake Campground is your lake option, about 10 miles north of town via Route W and W222 Street. It offers roughly 25 public sites with 30 amp electric service and an on-site dump station, plus a beach, fishing, and a boat launch. It's open year-round and runs first-come, first-served, so it's a solid backup when the in-town RV park fills up on a fair weekend. The sites are electric-only, so fill your fresh water tank in Bethany before you head out to the lake.
Is there a state park with RV camping near Bethany?
Wallace State Park near Cameron is the nearest state park with RV camping, about 40 miles south on I-35. It has basic and electric campsites, hot showers, modern restrooms, and a trailer dump station. Campground 2 has the most spacious, big-rig-friendly sites, and Campgrounds 1 and 2 stay open year-round while 3 and 4 run April 15 through October 31. You can reserve up to a year in advance through the Missouri State Parks system, and nightly rates are a very affordable $14 to $29.
Do I need reservations, or is first-come okay?
It depends on where you stay. Quail Ridge RV Park and Harrison County Lake Campground both run first-come, first-served, so you can usually just show up, which is handy for interstate travelers on a loose schedule. Wallace State Park, on the other hand, takes reservations up to a year out through icampmo.com or 877-422-6766, and weekend stays there carry a two-night minimum. Our rule of thumb: gamble on first-come for a quick overnight, but book the state park ahead if you want a guaranteed weekend spot with showers.
Can big rigs over 40 feet camp in Bethany?
Yes, and Quail Ridge RV Park is your best bet for a longer rig. It has concrete pull-through pads sized for campers over 40 feet, plus full hookups, so you don't have to unhitch or wrestle a tight back-in after a long driving day. Getting there is easy too, since it sits right off I-35 Exit 92 with no low bridges or sharp turns. At the public parks, sites are more compact, though Campground 2 at Wallace State Park has the roomiest spots if you want a state-park stay.
What hookups can I expect around Bethany?
You'll find the full range. Quail Ridge RV Park offers true full hookups, meaning 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer at concrete pull-throughs. Harrison County Lake Campground provides 30 amp electric with a dump station on site but no individual sewer. Wallace State Park has electric sites plus a shared trailer dump station and hot showers. Buffalo Run in Eagleville is a simpler water-and-electric setup. So if you need sewer at the site, aim for Quail Ridge; if electric-plus-dump-station works for you, the public options save money.
When is the best season to camp near Bethany?
Fall is our favorite. September and October bring crisp, comfortable nights, thinner crowds, and prairie color out at Dunn Ranch. Summer is the busiest stretch, warm and humid with highs in the mid-80s, and lake and fair-weekend sites fill up, so book or arrive early. Spring is green but wet, with June the rainiest month, and the state park's seasonal loops open April 15. Winter camping is possible at the year-round electric sites, but expect freezing temperatures, occasional snow, and frozen water spigots.
Is there a dump station near Bethany?
Yes, a few. Harrison County Lake Campground has a dump station on site, and Wallace State Park near Cameron has a trailer dump station as well. Quail Ridge RV Park offers full hookups, so you can empty tanks right at your site. If you're just passing through and need to dump without staying, the county lake and state park are your public options. For a fuller rundown of tank-emptying spots in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Bethany.
How far is Bethany from Kansas City and Des Moines?
Bethany sits almost exactly between the two on I-35. Kansas City is about 75 miles south, roughly an hour and 15 minutes, and Des Moines is about 90 miles north. That central position is exactly why the town works so well as an overnight stop, since it breaks up the drive at a natural halfway point. Kansas City International Airport is the closest major airport if you're picking up family or swapping drivers, and both cities offer big-city resupply if you need an RV parts store or a Camping World.
What is there to do around Bethany besides camp?
More than you'd guess for a small county seat. Dunn Ranch Prairie, about 20 miles west near Hatfield, is a restored tallgrass prairie with a free-roaming bison herd, hiking trails, and wildflowers, and it's a genuine highlight. The Northwest Missouri State Fairgrounds in town hosts a century-old fair with grandstand shows and rodeo events. Harrison County Lake is good for fishing and boating, the Bethany Aquatic Center cools you off on hot afternoons, and the historic district is a pleasant stroll if you like old refinished homes.
Are the RV parks open year-round?
Some are. Quail Ridge RV Park and Harrison County Lake Campground both operate year-round, and at Wallace State Park, Campgrounds 1 and 2 stay open all year while 3 and 4 close from November through mid-April. In winter, though, expect only electric hookups to be reliable, since water systems get shut off or freeze. If you're traveling the I-35 corridor in the cold months, Quail Ridge is the most dependable full-service stop, and you'll want extra fresh water aboard for any of the electric-only public sites.
Is Bethany a good overnight stop on I-35?
It's one of the better ones on this stretch. Quail Ridge RV Park sits just off Exit 92 with concrete full-hookup pull-throughs, so you can pull in late, hook up in minutes, and be back on the road early without ever fighting a tight turn. Fuel, groceries, and food are all right at the exit. For an interstate overnight between Kansas City and Des Moines, it checks every box RVers care about: easy access, full hookups, big-rig room, and no reservation gymnastics. Just have the county lake as a backup on busy weekends.
What are camping prices like around Bethany?
Refreshingly low. Public sites are the best value, with Wallace State Park at $14 to $29 a night and Harrison County Lake's electric sites near the bottom of that range. Private full-hookup convenience at Quail Ridge RV Park runs roughly $35 to $45 a night, which is normal for a rural-Missouri interstate park with 50 amp and sewer. Buffalo Run in Eagleville is a cheaper water-and-electric option. If you only need power, the public parks save real money over a week; if you want full hookups off the exit, the private rate is well worth it.
Are there free dump stations in Bethany?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Bethany.
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