RV Parks In Auburn, Nebraska
40.3928° N, 95.8389° W
Quick Overview
Auburn sits in southeast Nebraska's Nemaha County, a friendly county-seat town close to the Missouri River and the historic river village of Brownville. For RVers it's an easy, low-key base with cheap camping, full-hookup options in town, and one of Nebraska's best state parks a short drive east. We like it as a quiet overnight or a two- or three-day stop for river bluffs, rail trails, and small-town history. You'll find both public and private camping here. On the public side, the Auburn RV Park & Campground at the city recreation complex is a genuine budget win: 30 and 50 amp electric sites near Optimist Lake, open April through October, with a modest nightly rate and a 10-day max. Twenty minutes east, Indian Cave State Park spreads 134 sites across the Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds, with Electric and Electric Plus pads, showers, and an on-site dump and fill station along the Missouri River bluffs. For full hookups, the private Long's Creek RV Park in Auburn has concrete pull-through and back-in pads with 30/50 amp electric, water, sewer, laundry, and trail access, and RU Lost RV Lots near Brownville adds a handful of full-hookup sites close to the state park. Reservations are simple here. The city park and the private parks are first-come or a quick phone call, while Indian Cave reserves about half its electric sites through the state system and keeps the rest first-come. You can book state sites through the Nebraska Game & Parks reservation portal, which fills on summer weekends and fall-color weekends. From your site you're 10 minutes to historic Brownville, with its museums, Brownville Village Theatre, the Meriwether Lewis Dredge, and Whiskey Run Creek Winery, plus the 22-mile Steamboat Trace Trail along the river. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Auburn. It's a low-stress corner of Nebraska with more to do than its size suggests.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Auburn
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Gear for Your Trip to Auburn
All Dump Stations Near Auburn
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auburn City Recreation Complex | 0.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Southside R.v. Park | 1.0 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Land N Park RV Park | 9.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| R U Lost RV Lots | 9.3 mi | 4.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lewis And Clark Camp Site | 9.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| All American Campground And RV Park | 14.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Kirkmans Cove Recreation Area | 16.2 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Indian Cave State Park | 16.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nishna Boat & RV | 17.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Victorian Acres RV Park & Campground | 18.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Auburn City Recreation Complex
0.7 miSouthside R.v. Park
1.0 miLand N Park RV Park
9.3 miR U Lost RV Lots
9.3 miLewis And Clark Camp Site
9.9 miAll American Campground And RV Park
14.5 miKirkmans Cove Recreation Area
16.2 miIndian Cave State Park
16.3 miNishna Boat & RV
17.2 miVictorian Acres RV Park & Campground
18.4 miTraveling to Auburn by RV
Auburn is easy to reach in any size rig. US-75 runs north to south right through town and is the main big-rig route, connecting you to Nebraska City about 30 minutes north and on toward Omaha in roughly an hour, or south to St. Joseph, Missouri in about 45 minutes. US-136 branches east from Auburn toward Brownville and the Missouri River. For in-town camping, the Auburn RV Park & Campground at the recreation complex and the private Long's Creek RV Park are both a quick turn off the main roads with level access, so big rigs won't fight tight streets. Heading to Indian Cave State Park, take US-136 east then the park spur south; the road is paved but hilly and winding as it drops toward the river, so take it slow with a long coach and check pad length when you reserve. Fuel, groceries, propane, and basic RV supplies are all available in Auburn, and larger service needs are covered in Nebraska City or across the river in St. Joseph. Cell coverage is solid in town and thins along the river bluffs at Indian Cave.
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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 Auburn, Nebraska, 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 Auburn
Camping around Auburn is a bargain compared with most RV destinations. The Auburn RV Park & Campground is the standout value, running about $20 a night for a 30/50 amp electric site through the city, with a 10-day stay limit. That's the cheapest reliable hookup in the area. Public state park sites at Indian Cave State Park generally run in the low-to-mid $20s to low $30s for Electric and Electric Plus pads, plus Nebraska's daily park entry permit and a small reservation fee on the sites you book ahead. Private full-hookup parks cost more for the sewer and concrete pads: Long's Creek RV Park and RU Lost RV Lots typically land in the $30 to $45 range depending on season and amp service. Summer weekends and Brownville event weekends are the busiest and priciest, so book those ahead, while spring and fall midweek stays are cheap and wide open.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Auburn
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Best Time to Visit Auburn by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
19F - 33F
Crowds: Low
Freezing and snowy; city RV park closed Nov-Mar and Indian Cave scaled back. Call private parks for open sites and guard against freezing. Very low crowds.
Spring
Mar - May
44F - 63F
Crowds: Medium
Mild; city RV park opens April 1. Trails can be muddy after rain. Weekends pick up but midweek is wide open and cheap.
Summer
Jun - Aug
66F - 86F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid; city and state park sites busiest. Reserve Indian Cave weekends and bring bug spray for the river bottoms.
Fall
Sep - Oct
43F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Prime season with river-bluff color at Indian Cave; foliage weekends book up. Cool, comfortable hiking on the Steamboat Trace Trail.
Explore the Auburn Area
Here's how we'd work Auburn. Use the town as a value base and day-trip to the river country so you're not moving the rig much. The Auburn RV Park & Campground is hard to beat on price for electric sites, while Long's Creek RV Park is the pick if you want full hookups and concrete pads for a bigger coach. If you want the scenic spot, camp at Indian Cave State Park for the Missouri River bluffs and miles of hiking, but plan around its reservation setup: about half the electric sites book ahead through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal and the rest are first-come, so roll in early on summer Fridays or during fall foliage weekends. Don't skip Brownville. It's tiny but packed, with seven museums, a repertory theatre in summer, riverboat dinner cruises, and Whiskey Run Creek Winery. Bikes are worth bringing for the Steamboat Trace Trail, a flat crushed-limestone rail trail hugging the river. In spring the trails can be muddy after rain, and in summer bring bug spray for the river bottoms. Come fall, the bluff color at Indian Cave is the best show around, so book early.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Auburn
Are there RV parks with full hookups in Auburn, NE?
Yes. The private Long's Creek RV Park in Auburn offers full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer on concrete pull-through and back-in pads, plus laundry and showers. A little south near Brownville, RU Lost RV Lots adds a handful of full-hookup sites with both 30 and 50 amp service close to Indian Cave State Park. If you only need electric, the city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground is a cheap option with 30/50 amp sites. So you have full-hookup choices right in town and a budget electric option through the city parks system.
What public campgrounds are near Auburn?
There are two strong public options. The Auburn RV Park & Campground at the city recreation complex offers budget 30/50 amp electric sites near Optimist Lake, open April through October. About 20 minutes east, Indian Cave State Park spreads 134 sites across its Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds, with Electric and Electric Plus pads, modern restrooms, showers, a laundry, and an on-site dump and fill station along the Missouri River bluffs. The state park reserves roughly half of its electric sites through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal and keeps the rest first-come, so you have both booking styles available.
Do I need reservations to camp near Auburn?
Not always, which is part of the appeal. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground is first-come, first-served, and the private parks in town are usually a quick phone call. Indian Cave State Park reserves about half of its electric sites through the Nebraska Game & Parks reservation system and leaves the other half first-come, so on quiet weekdays you can often just show up. For summer weekends and fall-foliage weekends at Indian Cave, though, we'd book ahead, because the reservable sites and the popular river-bluff loops fill up fast during peak season.
Can big rigs and 40-foot motorhomes camp near Auburn?
Yes, with a little planning. Long's Creek RV Park in Auburn has concrete pull-through and back-in pads sized for larger coaches with 30/50 amp full hookups, making it the easiest big-rig choice in town. The city's Auburn RV Park also handles larger rigs on level ground. At Indian Cave State Park the pad lengths vary, and the park road drops toward the river on hilly, winding grades, so a 40-footer is doable but check site length when you reserve and take the approach slowly. US-75 through Auburn is a straightforward big-rig route with easy access.
When is the best time to RV camp near Auburn?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots. May and September bring mild temperatures, lighter crowds, and comfortable hiking along the Missouri River bluffs. Fall is especially good because the bluff color at Indian Cave State Park is the best scenery in the region, though foliage weekends book up. Summer is warm, humid, and busiest, with the city and state park sites at their fullest, so reserve Indian Cave weekends ahead. Winter is freezing and snowy, the city RV park closes for the season, and only limited private options stay open, so plan around freezing temperatures if you visit off-season.
What is there to do near Auburn besides camping?
Plenty for a small area. Historic Brownville, 10 minutes away, packs in seven museums, the Brownville Village Theatre summer repertory season, riverboat dinner cruises on the Spirit of Brownville, the preserved Meriwether Lewis Dredge, and Whiskey Run Creek Vineyard & Winery. The 22-mile Steamboat Trace Trail runs along the Missouri River for hiking and biking. Indian Cave State Park adds miles of wooded bluff trails, historic petroglyphs, and a reconstructed cabin village. Optimist Lake near the city RV park is good for a quick fishing stop. It's an easy region to fill two or three days from one base.
Is Indian Cave State Park good for RV camping?
It is one of the better state parks in southeast Nebraska for RVs. Indian Cave State Park offers 134 sites across the Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds, including Electric and Electric Plus pads, with modern restrooms, showers, a laundry facility, and an on-site dump and fill station. The setting along the Missouri River bluffs is scenic, with wooded hiking trails and river access. About half the electric sites are reservable through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal and the rest are first-come. Pad lengths vary and the entrance road is hilly, so confirm site length for a big rig when booking.
How much does it cost to camp near Auburn?
Auburn is one of the cheaper places to camp in the region. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground runs about $20 a night for a 30/50 amp electric site. Indian Cave State Park sites generally run from the low-$20s to low-$30s for Electric and Electric Plus pads, plus a Nebraska park entry permit and a small reservation fee on booked sites. Private full-hookup parks like Long's Creek RV Park and RU Lost RV Lots typically fall in the $30 to $45 range depending on season and amp service. Midweek spring and fall stays are the best value and wide open.
Are there first-come, first-served sites near Auburn?
Yes, more than most areas. The Auburn RV Park & Campground at the city recreation complex is entirely first-come, first-served with a 10-day maximum stay. At Indian Cave State Park, about half of the electric sites in the Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds are held as first-come, with the other half reservable through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal. That mix makes Auburn a good option for RVers traveling without firm plans, especially midweek. On busy summer and fall weekends, though, the first-come sites at Indian Cave can fill by Friday afternoon, so arrive early if you're not reserving ahead.
What hookups can I expect at campgrounds near Auburn?
It depends on the park. The private Long's Creek RV Park and RU Lost RV Lots offer full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer at the site. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground provides 30/50 amp electric with water, but you'll use a dump station rather than a sewer connection at each site. Indian Cave State Park offers Electric and Electric Plus sites with a central dump and fill station rather than full hookups at every pad. If you want sewer at your site, choose Long's Creek or RU Lost; otherwise plan a dump-station stop.
How do I get to Auburn with an RV?
Auburn sits on US-75, the main north-south highway through southeast Nebraska, which makes it an easy big-rig route. From the north, take US-75 south from Nebraska City, about 30 minutes, with Omaha roughly an hour away. From Missouri, come up US-75 from the St. Joseph area, about 45 minutes south. US-136 branches east out of Auburn toward Brownville and the Missouri River. In-town campgrounds are a quick, level turn off the highway. The one road to take slowly is the spur down to Indian Cave State Park, which is paved but hilly and winding near the river.
Can I camp near Auburn in winter?
Winter camping is limited here. Auburn winters are freezing, snowy, and windy, with January highs around 33 and lows near 19, so the city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground closes for the season from November through March. Indian Cave State Park scales back its main camping season as well. Your best off-season bet is calling the private parks like Long's Creek RV Park to see what stays open, and if you do camp, protect your water hose and tanks against hard freezes. Crowds are essentially gone in winter, but so are most of the services, so plan carefully.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Auburn?
You have a few options. Indian Cave State Park has an on-site dump and fill station near its campgrounds, which is handy if you're touring the river bluffs. The private full-hookup parks in Auburn, like Long's Creek RV Park, let you empty tanks right at your site. If you're staying at the city electric park without a sewer hookup, plan a dump stop on your way out rather than mid-stay. For a full list of public and campground dump stations in the area with locations and any fees, see our RV dump stations guide for Auburn.
Is Auburn a good base for exploring the Missouri River area?
Yes, it's well placed. Auburn sits just west of the Missouri River with historic Brownville and Indian Cave State Park within a 20-minute drive, so you can base in town for cheap and day-trip to the river country. From Auburn you're also within an hour of Omaha, 30 minutes of Nebraska City and its orchards, and 45 minutes of St. Joseph, Missouri across the river. The town has fuel, groceries, and propane, so it makes a practical hub. We'd park a full-hookup or electric site in Auburn and use it as a launch pad for a few days of river-country exploring.
Are there RV parks with full hookups in Auburn, NE?
Yes. The private Long's Creek RV Park in Auburn offers full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer on concrete pull-through and back-in pads, plus laundry and showers. A little south near Brownville, RU Lost RV Lots adds a handful of full-hookup sites with both 30 and 50 amp service close to Indian Cave State Park. If you only need electric, the city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground is a cheap option with 30/50 amp sites. So you have full-hookup choices right in town and a budget electric option through the city parks system.
What public campgrounds are near Auburn?
There are two strong public options. The Auburn RV Park & Campground at the city recreation complex offers budget 30/50 amp electric sites near Optimist Lake, open April through October. About 20 minutes east, Indian Cave State Park spreads 134 sites across its Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds, with Electric and Electric Plus pads, modern restrooms, showers, a laundry, and an on-site dump and fill station along the Missouri River bluffs. The state park reserves roughly half of its electric sites through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal and keeps the rest first-come, so you have both booking styles available.
Do I need reservations to camp near Auburn?
Not always, which is part of the appeal. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground is first-come, first-served, and the private parks in town are usually a quick phone call. Indian Cave State Park reserves about half of its electric sites through the Nebraska Game & Parks reservation system and leaves the other half first-come, so on quiet weekdays you can often just show up. For summer weekends and fall-foliage weekends at Indian Cave, though, we'd book ahead, because the reservable sites and the popular river-bluff loops fill up fast during peak season.
Can big rigs and 40-foot motorhomes camp near Auburn?
Yes, with a little planning. Long's Creek RV Park in Auburn has concrete pull-through and back-in pads sized for larger coaches with 30/50 amp full hookups, making it the easiest big-rig choice in town. The city's Auburn RV Park also handles larger rigs on level ground. At Indian Cave State Park the pad lengths vary, and the park road drops toward the river on hilly, winding grades, so a 40-footer is doable but check site length when you reserve and take the approach slowly. US-75 through Auburn is a straightforward big-rig route with easy access.
When is the best time to RV camp near Auburn?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots. May and September bring mild temperatures, lighter crowds, and comfortable hiking along the Missouri River bluffs. Fall is especially good because the bluff color at Indian Cave State Park is the best scenery in the region, though foliage weekends book up. Summer is warm, humid, and busiest, with the city and state park sites at their fullest, so reserve Indian Cave weekends ahead. Winter is freezing and snowy, the city RV park closes for the season, and only limited private options stay open, so plan around freezing temperatures if you visit off-season.
What is there to do near Auburn besides camping?
Plenty for a small area. Historic Brownville, 10 minutes away, packs in seven museums, the Brownville Village Theatre summer repertory season, riverboat dinner cruises on the Spirit of Brownville, the preserved Meriwether Lewis Dredge, and Whiskey Run Creek Vineyard & Winery. The 22-mile Steamboat Trace Trail runs along the Missouri River for hiking and biking. Indian Cave State Park adds miles of wooded bluff trails, historic petroglyphs, and a reconstructed cabin village. Optimist Lake near the city RV park is good for a quick fishing stop. It's an easy region to fill two or three days from one base.
Is Indian Cave State Park good for RV camping?
It is one of the better state parks in southeast Nebraska for RVs. Indian Cave State Park offers 134 sites across the Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds, including Electric and Electric Plus pads, with modern restrooms, showers, a laundry facility, and an on-site dump and fill station. The setting along the Missouri River bluffs is scenic, with wooded hiking trails and river access. About half the electric sites are reservable through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal and the rest are first-come. Pad lengths vary and the entrance road is hilly, so confirm site length for a big rig when booking.
How much does it cost to camp near Auburn?
Auburn is one of the cheaper places to camp in the region. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground runs about $20 a night for a 30/50 amp electric site. Indian Cave State Park sites generally run from the low-$20s to low-$30s for Electric and Electric Plus pads, plus a Nebraska park entry permit and a small reservation fee on booked sites. Private full-hookup parks like Long's Creek RV Park and RU Lost RV Lots typically fall in the $30 to $45 range depending on season and amp service. Midweek spring and fall stays are the best value and wide open.
Are there first-come, first-served sites near Auburn?
Yes, more than most areas. The Auburn RV Park & Campground at the city recreation complex is entirely first-come, first-served with a 10-day maximum stay. At Indian Cave State Park, about half of the electric sites in the Ash Grove and Hackberry Hollow campgrounds are held as first-come, with the other half reservable through the Nebraska Game & Parks portal. That mix makes Auburn a good option for RVers traveling without firm plans, especially midweek. On busy summer and fall weekends, though, the first-come sites at Indian Cave can fill by Friday afternoon, so arrive early if you're not reserving ahead.
What hookups can I expect at campgrounds near Auburn?
It depends on the park. The private Long's Creek RV Park and RU Lost RV Lots offer full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer at the site. The city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground provides 30/50 amp electric with water, but you'll use a dump station rather than a sewer connection at each site. Indian Cave State Park offers Electric and Electric Plus sites with a central dump and fill station rather than full hookups at every pad. If you want sewer at your site, choose Long's Creek or RU Lost; otherwise plan a dump-station stop.
How do I get to Auburn with an RV?
Auburn sits on US-75, the main north-south highway through southeast Nebraska, which makes it an easy big-rig route. From the north, take US-75 south from Nebraska City, about 30 minutes, with Omaha roughly an hour away. From Missouri, come up US-75 from the St. Joseph area, about 45 minutes south. US-136 branches east out of Auburn toward Brownville and the Missouri River. In-town campgrounds are a quick, level turn off the highway. The one road to take slowly is the spur down to Indian Cave State Park, which is paved but hilly and winding near the river.
Can I camp near Auburn in winter?
Winter camping is limited here. Auburn winters are freezing, snowy, and windy, with January highs around 33 and lows near 19, so the city-run Auburn RV Park & Campground closes for the season from November through March. Indian Cave State Park scales back its main camping season as well. Your best off-season bet is calling the private parks like Long's Creek RV Park to see what stays open, and if you do camp, protect your water hose and tanks against hard freezes. Crowds are essentially gone in winter, but so are most of the services, so plan carefully.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Auburn?
You have a few options. Indian Cave State Park has an on-site dump and fill station near its campgrounds, which is handy if you're touring the river bluffs. The private full-hookup parks in Auburn, like Long's Creek RV Park, let you empty tanks right at your site. If you're staying at the city electric park without a sewer hookup, plan a dump stop on your way out rather than mid-stay. For a full list of public and campground dump stations in the area with locations and any fees, see our RV dump stations guide for Auburn.
Is Auburn a good base for exploring the Missouri River area?
Yes, it's well placed. Auburn sits just west of the Missouri River with historic Brownville and Indian Cave State Park within a 20-minute drive, so you can base in town for cheap and day-trip to the river country. From Auburn you're also within an hour of Omaha, 30 minutes of Nebraska City and its orchards, and 45 minutes of St. Joseph, Missouri across the river. The town has fuel, groceries, and propane, so it makes a practical hub. We'd park a full-hookup or electric site in Auburn and use it as a launch pad for a few days of river-country exploring.
All Dump Stations Near Auburn (78)
RV ParkAuburn City Recreation Complex
RV ParkSouthside R.v. Park
RV ParkLand N Park RV Park
RV ParkR U Lost RV Lots
RV ParkLewis And Clark Camp Site
RV ParkKirkmans Cove Recreation Area
RV ParkVictorian Acres RV Park & Campground
RV Park




