RV Parks In Harrison, Nebraska
42.6872° N, 103.8827° W
Quick Overview
Harrison is about as remote and quiet as RV camping gets, a tiny town of a couple hundred people perched high in the far northwest corner of the Nebraska panhandle. If you are planning a trip out here, set your expectations for wide-open high plains, big skies, and a short list of small, friendly places to park the rig rather than a row of sprawling RV resorts. The trade-off is solitude, dark skies, and easy access to some genuinely world-class fossil country. We love it as a low-key base for the kind of trip where the landscape is the point.
Your in-town options are simple. Pavement Ends Campground is a small private spot east of town with about eight full-hookup sites, 30/50 amp service, pull-throughs, and an on-site dump, run on the honor system, so bring cash. Harrison City Park has two electric and water pads right in town, free with a donation and first-come only. Neither is fancy, but both work for a self-sufficient traveler. For a comfortable, full-service public base with reservations and room for a big rig, Fort Robinson State Park sits about 50 miles east and is well worth the drive. You can plan a visit through the National Park Service for the nearby Agate Fossil Beds.
What brings people here is the scenery and the history. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument is about 22 miles south on Highway 29, with prairie trails and a visitor center. Fort Robinson State Park adds frontier history and a big campground, and Toadstool Geologic Park out in the national grassland delivers eerie badlands. Stock up on fuel, groceries, and propane in Scottsbluff or Chadron before you arrive, because services in Harrison are minimal. Come in summer for open sites or fall for crisp, uncrowded prairie, and plan on some of the best stargazing in the state.
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All Dump Stations Near Harrison
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harrison City Park | 0.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sioux RV Park & Campground | 0.4 mi | 2.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pavement Ends Campground | 19.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bj's Campground | 29.1 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lone Pine Campground | 29.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lone Pine Campground Llc | 29.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Prairie View Campgrounds | 31.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Roberts Trailhead Campground | 37.2 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Chadron State Park | 44.4 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Eagles Rest RV Park | 44.5 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
Harrison City Park
0.2 miSioux RV Park & Campground
0.4 miPavement Ends Campground
19.3 miBj's Campground
29.1 miLone Pine Campground
29.2 miLone Pine Campground Llc
29.2 miPrairie View Campgrounds
31.0 miRoberts Trailhead Campground
37.2 miChadron State Park
44.4 miEagles Rest RV Park
44.5 miTraveling to Harrison by RV
Harrison sits in the far northwest panhandle, reached by US-20, a two-lane east-west highway, and State Highway 29 running south toward the fossil beds. Both roads are fine for RVs, including big rigs, but they are remote with long gaps between services, so fuel up before you head out. There is no interstate nearby; the closest regional hubs are Scottsbluff about 55 miles south and Chadron about 50 miles east, and those are where you should handle groceries, propane, and any RV maintenance.
Drive in daylight when you can, since wildlife and strong crosswinds are real factors out here on the high plains. The in-town campgrounds are small and tight, so big rigs do better with the pull-throughs at Pavement Ends or by basing at Fort Robinson State Park to the east. If you are flying in to rent a rig, the nearest practical airports are at Scottsbluff and Chadron, with larger service out of Rapid City, South Dakota, a couple of hours north. Carry full propane and a topped-off water tank when you arrive.
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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 Harrison, 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 Harrison
Camping around Harrison is genuinely cheap, which suits the remote, low-amenity setting. Pavement Ends Campground runs roughly $10 to $25 a night depending on the site, paid on the honor system, so bring cash. Harrison City Park is free with a suggested donation, which is hard to beat for two simple electric-and-water pads, though it is first-come and fills in summer.
If you want full services and reservations, Fort Robinson State Park to the east costs more, typically in the mid-twenties to mid-thirties per night for electric sites, plus a Nebraska park entry permit. Factor in that you will likely drive 50-plus miles round trip to the larger towns for fuel, propane, and groceries, so build those costs and the extra mileage into your budget. Overall, this is one of the most affordable corners of the state to camp, with the real cost being self-sufficiency rather than nightly fees.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Harrison by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
14F - 38F
Crowds: Low
Cold, windy panhandle winters shut down nearly all camping. Pavement Ends and the city park close, and you would need a self-contained rig and grit to camp here now.
Spring
Mar - May
32F - 60F
Crowds: Low
Windy and variable with late snow possible into May. Sites open as weather allows, usually by late May; book nothing firm and watch the forecast.
Summer
Jun - Aug
54F - 85F
Crowds: Medium
Warm days, cool nights, and frequent afternoon thunderstorms. This is peak season for the handful of sites, and free Harrison City Park fills fast, so arrive early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
34F - 64F
Crowds: Low
Crisp, quiet, and our favorite time for the fossil beds and prairie. Cool nights call for good bedding, and some services start winding down by mid-October.
Explore the Harrison Area
Treat Harrison as a remote outpost and stage your supplies from the bigger regional towns. Fuel up, fill propane, and buy groceries in Scottsbluff or Chadron before you roll in, because in-town services are minimal and RV repair is essentially unavailable locally. Arrive with a full fresh-water tank and empty holding tanks so you are not dependent on the limited hookups.
If you want the free city park, get there early in the day during summer, since it has only two pads and fills fast. Pavement Ends runs on the honor system, so carry cash. Agate Fossil Beds, 22 miles south on Highway 29, is the must-do, and an early start beats the afternoon heat and thunderstorms. Do not miss the night sky out here; this is genuinely dark-sky country, so bring a reclining chair, warm layers, and a red flashlight for stargazing. For a longer, more comfortable stay with reservations and full hookups, base at Fort Robinson State Park and day-trip into Harrison and the fossil beds from there.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Harrison
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Harrison, Nebraska?
Harrison is a tiny high-plains town, so the options are few but workable. Pavement Ends Campground is a small private spot east of town with about eight full-hookup sites, 30/50 amp service, pull-throughs, and an on-site dump, run on the honor system. Harrison City Park offers two electric and water pads right in town, free with a donation and first-come only. For a full-service public base, Fort Robinson State Park sits about 50 miles east with hundreds of sites. We would treat Harrison as a quick overnight or fossil-beds base and Fort Robinson as the place for a longer, comfortable stay.
Do campgrounds near Harrison have full hookups?
Some do, but not many. Pavement Ends Campground offers full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and an on-site dump station across its handful of sites. Harrison City Park is more basic, with electric and water at 30 amp on just two pads and no sewer. For reliable full hookups with room to spread out, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east has electric sites and some full-hookup options plus a dump station. Because the in-town choices are so small, we suggest topping off water and dumping whenever you have the chance, since services are sparse across this stretch of the panhandle.
How much does RV camping cost around Harrison?
Camping here is cheap, which fits the remote setting. Pavement Ends runs roughly $10 to $25 a night depending on the site, paid on the honor system, so bring cash. Harrison City Park is free with a suggested donation, an unbeatable deal for two simple pads. Fort Robinson State Park, the full-service option to the east, runs in the moderate state-park range, typically the mid-twenties to mid-thirties for electric sites, plus a Nebraska park entry permit. Budget travelers do very well in this area; the trade-off is limited amenities and the need to be self-sufficient with supplies, fuel, and water.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Harrison?
In Harrison itself, you do not reserve at all. Both Pavement Ends and Harrison City Park are first-come, first-served, so there is no booking window, just show up and grab a spot. The catch is that the city park has only two pads and fills quickly in summer, so arrive early in the day. If you want certainty, book Fort Robinson State Park through the Nebraska Game and Parks reservation system instead, where summer weekends can fill weeks to months ahead. For a flexible traveler passing through, the first-come setup works fine outside peak summer weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Harrison, Nebraska?
Late spring through early fall is the window, with summer being the busiest and most reliable for open sites. Summer days are warm with cool nights and frequent afternoon thunderstorms, so watch the radar. Our personal favorite is fall, when the prairie is crisp and quiet, the fossil beds are uncrowded, and the light is gorgeous, though nights get cold. Spring is windy and unpredictable with late snow possible into May. Winter essentially shuts the area down, with the small campgrounds closed and brutal panhandle cold and wind, so plan around the warmer months.
Can big rigs camp near Harrison?
Yes, but choose carefully. The in-town options are tight: Harrison City Park has just two small pads better suited to shorter rigs, while Pavement Ends has some pull-through sites that can handle a bigger coach. For a true big-rig-friendly stay, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east is your best bet, with large campgrounds and room to maneuver. The roads in, US-20 and SH-29, are two-lane but fine for big rigs, just remote with long gaps between services. We recommend the pull-throughs at Pavement Ends for an overnight and Fort Robinson for anything longer in a 35-foot-plus rig.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Harrison?
Yes. Harrison City Park is free with a suggested donation and operates first-come, first-served, making it one of the better budget stops in the panhandle if you can grab one of its two pads. Pavement Ends is also first-come and very inexpensive, paid by honor system. Beyond developed sites, the surrounding Oglala National Grassland and remote public lands offer dispersed possibilities for self-contained rigs, though you should confirm rules locally and leave no trace. This is genuinely remote country, so any free camping means being fully self-sufficient with water, power, and waste handling.
Is Harrison a good base for visiting Agate Fossil Beds National Monument?
It is the closest town and a fine base for a fossil-beds visit. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument sits about 22 miles south of Harrison via State Highway 29, an easy drive on a quiet two-lane road. The monument protects world-class Miocene mammal fossils and has a visitor center plus more than four miles of prairie walking trails. Plan a half-day to a full day there. Stay overnight at Pavement Ends or Harrison City Park, or make it a day trip from Fort Robinson. Bring water, sun protection, and snacks, since services at the monument and in town are limited.
What is there to do around Harrison besides camping?
More than you would expect for such a small town. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument is the headliner, 22 miles south. Fort Robinson State Park, about 50 miles east, offers frontier history, tours, trails, and horseback riding. Toadstool Geologic Park in the Oglala National Grassland to the northeast has surreal badlands formations and fossil beds. History buffs and geology fans will be busy. The area also sits near Panorama Point, the highest spot in Nebraska. Add in superb dark-sky stargazing on clear nights, and a couple of days here fills easily with low-key outdoor exploring.
Are there RV services like propane and repairs in Harrison?
Very few, so plan ahead. Harrison is a tiny town with minimal services, and you should not count on finding RV repair, parts, or reliable propane refills locally. The practical move is to handle fuel, groceries, propane, and any maintenance in Scottsbluff, about 55 miles south, or Chadron, about 50 miles east, before you arrive. Carry spares and arrive with full propane and a topped-off fresh water tank. This is remote panhandle travel, so self-sufficiency is the rule. Treat Harrison as a scenic, low-service outpost and stage your supplies from the larger regional towns.
What are the roads like getting to Harrison?
Harrison sits in the far northwest corner of the Nebraska panhandle, reached mainly by US-20, a two-lane highway that runs east and west across the region, and State Highway 29 heading south toward the fossil beds. Both are perfectly drivable for RVs, including big rigs, but they are remote with long stretches and few services, so fuel up before you go. There are no major interstates close by; the nearest hub is Scottsbluff to the south. Drive in daylight if you can, watch for wildlife and strong crosswinds, and enjoy the wide-open high-plains scenery along the way.
Is the area around Harrison good for stargazing?
Outstanding, actually. Harrison is remote, high in elevation at over 4,800 feet, and far from any significant light pollution, which makes for some of the darkest skies in Nebraska. On clear nights the Milky Way is vivid and the star count is remarkable. Camping at Pavement Ends or out toward Agate Fossil Beds puts you under genuinely dark skies. Bring a reclining chair, a red flashlight to protect your night vision, and warm layers since nights cool off fast even in summer. If you enjoy astrophotography or just lying back to take in the stars, this corner of the panhandle delivers.
Should I stay in Harrison or at Fort Robinson State Park?
It depends on your trip. If you want to focus on Agate Fossil Beds and a quiet, ultra-low-key overnight, stay in Harrison at Pavement Ends or the free city park, both first-come and cheap. If you want a comfortable, full-service base with reservations, hookups, history, trails, and room for a big rig, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east is the better choice for a multi-night stay. Many travelers split the difference: base at Fort Robinson and day-trip to the fossil beds. We lean toward Fort Robinson for longer stays and Harrison for a fossil-focused quick stop.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Harrison, Nebraska?
Harrison is a tiny high-plains town, so the options are few but workable. Pavement Ends Campground is a small private spot east of town with about eight full-hookup sites, 30/50 amp service, pull-throughs, and an on-site dump, run on the honor system. Harrison City Park offers two electric and water pads right in town, free with a donation and first-come only. For a full-service public base, Fort Robinson State Park sits about 50 miles east with hundreds of sites. We would treat Harrison as a quick overnight or fossil-beds base and Fort Robinson as the place for a longer, comfortable stay.
Do campgrounds near Harrison have full hookups?
Some do, but not many. Pavement Ends Campground offers full hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and an on-site dump station across its handful of sites. Harrison City Park is more basic, with electric and water at 30 amp on just two pads and no sewer. For reliable full hookups with room to spread out, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east has electric sites and some full-hookup options plus a dump station. Because the in-town choices are so small, we suggest topping off water and dumping whenever you have the chance, since services are sparse across this stretch of the panhandle.
How much does RV camping cost around Harrison?
Camping here is cheap, which fits the remote setting. Pavement Ends runs roughly $10 to $25 a night depending on the site, paid on the honor system, so bring cash. Harrison City Park is free with a suggested donation, an unbeatable deal for two simple pads. Fort Robinson State Park, the full-service option to the east, runs in the moderate state-park range, typically the mid-twenties to mid-thirties for electric sites, plus a Nebraska park entry permit. Budget travelers do very well in this area; the trade-off is limited amenities and the need to be self-sufficient with supplies, fuel, and water.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Harrison?
In Harrison itself, you do not reserve at all. Both Pavement Ends and Harrison City Park are first-come, first-served, so there is no booking window, just show up and grab a spot. The catch is that the city park has only two pads and fills quickly in summer, so arrive early in the day. If you want certainty, book Fort Robinson State Park through the Nebraska Game and Parks reservation system instead, where summer weekends can fill weeks to months ahead. For a flexible traveler passing through, the first-come setup works fine outside peak summer weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Harrison, Nebraska?
Late spring through early fall is the window, with summer being the busiest and most reliable for open sites. Summer days are warm with cool nights and frequent afternoon thunderstorms, so watch the radar. Our personal favorite is fall, when the prairie is crisp and quiet, the fossil beds are uncrowded, and the light is gorgeous, though nights get cold. Spring is windy and unpredictable with late snow possible into May. Winter essentially shuts the area down, with the small campgrounds closed and brutal panhandle cold and wind, so plan around the warmer months.
Can big rigs camp near Harrison?
Yes, but choose carefully. The in-town options are tight: Harrison City Park has just two small pads better suited to shorter rigs, while Pavement Ends has some pull-through sites that can handle a bigger coach. For a true big-rig-friendly stay, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east is your best bet, with large campgrounds and room to maneuver. The roads in, US-20 and SH-29, are two-lane but fine for big rigs, just remote with long gaps between services. We recommend the pull-throughs at Pavement Ends for an overnight and Fort Robinson for anything longer in a 35-foot-plus rig.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Harrison?
Yes. Harrison City Park is free with a suggested donation and operates first-come, first-served, making it one of the better budget stops in the panhandle if you can grab one of its two pads. Pavement Ends is also first-come and very inexpensive, paid by honor system. Beyond developed sites, the surrounding Oglala National Grassland and remote public lands offer dispersed possibilities for self-contained rigs, though you should confirm rules locally and leave no trace. This is genuinely remote country, so any free camping means being fully self-sufficient with water, power, and waste handling.
Is Harrison a good base for visiting Agate Fossil Beds National Monument?
It is the closest town and a fine base for a fossil-beds visit. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument sits about 22 miles south of Harrison via State Highway 29, an easy drive on a quiet two-lane road. The monument protects world-class Miocene mammal fossils and has a visitor center plus more than four miles of prairie walking trails. Plan a half-day to a full day there. Stay overnight at Pavement Ends or Harrison City Park, or make it a day trip from Fort Robinson. Bring water, sun protection, and snacks, since services at the monument and in town are limited.
What is there to do around Harrison besides camping?
More than you would expect for such a small town. Agate Fossil Beds National Monument is the headliner, 22 miles south. Fort Robinson State Park, about 50 miles east, offers frontier history, tours, trails, and horseback riding. Toadstool Geologic Park in the Oglala National Grassland to the northeast has surreal badlands formations and fossil beds. History buffs and geology fans will be busy. The area also sits near Panorama Point, the highest spot in Nebraska. Add in superb dark-sky stargazing on clear nights, and a couple of days here fills easily with low-key outdoor exploring.
Are there RV services like propane and repairs in Harrison?
Very few, so plan ahead. Harrison is a tiny town with minimal services, and you should not count on finding RV repair, parts, or reliable propane refills locally. The practical move is to handle fuel, groceries, propane, and any maintenance in Scottsbluff, about 55 miles south, or Chadron, about 50 miles east, before you arrive. Carry spares and arrive with full propane and a topped-off fresh water tank. This is remote panhandle travel, so self-sufficiency is the rule. Treat Harrison as a scenic, low-service outpost and stage your supplies from the larger regional towns.
What are the roads like getting to Harrison?
Harrison sits in the far northwest corner of the Nebraska panhandle, reached mainly by US-20, a two-lane highway that runs east and west across the region, and State Highway 29 heading south toward the fossil beds. Both are perfectly drivable for RVs, including big rigs, but they are remote with long stretches and few services, so fuel up before you go. There are no major interstates close by; the nearest hub is Scottsbluff to the south. Drive in daylight if you can, watch for wildlife and strong crosswinds, and enjoy the wide-open high-plains scenery along the way.
Is the area around Harrison good for stargazing?
Outstanding, actually. Harrison is remote, high in elevation at over 4,800 feet, and far from any significant light pollution, which makes for some of the darkest skies in Nebraska. On clear nights the Milky Way is vivid and the star count is remarkable. Camping at Pavement Ends or out toward Agate Fossil Beds puts you under genuinely dark skies. Bring a reclining chair, a red flashlight to protect your night vision, and warm layers since nights cool off fast even in summer. If you enjoy astrophotography or just lying back to take in the stars, this corner of the panhandle delivers.
Should I stay in Harrison or at Fort Robinson State Park?
It depends on your trip. If you want to focus on Agate Fossil Beds and a quiet, ultra-low-key overnight, stay in Harrison at Pavement Ends or the free city park, both first-come and cheap. If you want a comfortable, full-service base with reservations, hookups, history, trails, and room for a big rig, Fort Robinson State Park about 50 miles east is the better choice for a multi-night stay. Many travelers split the difference: base at Fort Robinson and day-trip to the fossil beds. We lean toward Fort Robinson for longer stays and Harrison for a fossil-focused quick stop.
All Dump Stations Near Harrison (27)
RV ParkLingle RV
RV ParkRoberts Trailhead Campground
RV Park with Dump StationsPony Soldier RV Park
RV ParkHorsehead Campground
RV ParkLong's Trailer Park
RV ParkCascade Campground
RV ParkChuck Wagon RV Park
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