RV Parks In Bayville, New Jersey
39.9093° N, 74.1549° W
Quick Overview
Bayville sits along Barnegat Bay in Ocean County, roughly midway down the Jersey Shore and surrounded by the Pine Barrens. For RVers it is a genuinely useful base: you get bay-side quiet, quick Garden State Parkway and Route 9 access, and some of the best barrier-island beaches in the Northeast within a half-hour drive. The camping here splits cleanly between full-service private parks and quieter public land, so you can pick the experience that fits your rig and your budget.
For full hookups without leaving town, Cedar Creek Campground is the anchor. It sits right in Bayville on Route 9 with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer, and an on-site dump station, plus a pool, camp store, and laundry. The lots are large enough for big rigs, and it carries both nightly and seasonal campers, which means summer weekends book weeks ahead. If you want shore power and full amenities close to the beaches, this is your spot.
On the public side, Bass River State Forest near Tuckerton sits about a half-hour south and offers 176 tent and trailer sites that take RVs up to 35 feet for around twenty dollars a night. There are no hookups at the standard sites, so bring a self-contained rig, though the forest rents electric cabins along Lake Absegami. Reserve through the New Jersey state portal, since weekend inventory disappears fast in summer. Sea Pirate Campground on Route 9 in West Creek is another private full-hookup option a bit farther south.
Once you are set up, the area rewards you. Double Trouble State Park sits right in Bayville with Pine Barrens cranberry bogs, a historic village, and Cedar Creek paddling. Island Beach State Park is about 15 miles away, Barnegat Bay is at your doorstep for crabbing and kayaking, and Long Beach Island with the Barnegat Lighthouse is a short drive south. Between the Pine Barrens, the bay, and the beaches, Bayville makes an easy, well-connected home base for a week of Shore camping.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Bayville
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All Dump Stations Near Bayville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cedar Creek Campground | 2.5 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Surf & Stream Campground | 7.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Audubon Lodge | 9.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Byron Ct | 9.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping World | 10.3 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Princeton Beach Estates | 11.1 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Brookville Campgrounds | 11.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sun Retreats Long Beach Island | 13.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tip Tam Camping Resort | 14.6 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Varies |
| Butterfly Camping Resort | 15.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
Cedar Creek Campground
2.5 miSurf & Stream Campground
7.8 miAudubon Lodge
9.1 miByron Ct
9.9 miCamping World
10.3 miPrinceton Beach Estates
11.1 miBrookville Campgrounds
11.9 miSun Retreats Long Beach Island
13.3 miTip Tam Camping Resort
14.6 miButterfly Camping Resort
15.3 miTraveling to Bayville by RV
Getting to Bayville with a big rig is straightforward if you stick to the main roads. The Garden State Parkway runs the length of Ocean County, and its exits in the 74 to 80 range feed the Bayville and Toms River area. Route 9 parallels the Parkway and handles local access to the campgrounds and services along the corridor. Keep large motorhomes and fifth wheels on those two roads and off the narrow bay-side residential streets, which dead-end at the water with no room to turn around.
Fuel, propane, groceries, and RV supplies are all easy to find along Route 9 and in nearby Toms River, the county seat just north. If you are coming from the Philadelphia side, US-9 and the Parkway connect through the Pine Barrens; from New York, the Parkway brings you straight down the coast. Nearest full-service RV hubs are Toms River and Manahawkin. Once you are parked, most beach and Pine Barrens destinations sit within a 30-minute drive, so you can leave the rig hooked up and day-trip in the tow vehicle.
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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 Bayville, New Jersey, 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 Bayville
Camping costs near Bayville span a wide range, so match the park to your budget. The value end is Bass River State Forest at around twenty dollars a night for a no-hookup trailer site, which is a bargain for the region if you are self-contained. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Creek Campground run higher, typically in the fifty to eighty dollar range per night depending on season and site type, with premium or 50-amp sites near the top. Summer weekends and holidays command the highest rates, while shoulder-season and midweek stays cost noticeably less.
If you plan to stay all summer, ask about seasonal rates, which can save regular Shore campers real money compared with paying nightly. Expect to budget more here than for inland camping, since coastal demand keeps prices firm. Factor in beach parking or entry fees at Island Beach on top of your site cost, and remember that a self-contained state-forest site trades amenities for a much lower nightly bill.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Bayville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
28 F - 43 F
Crowds: Low
Most private parks including Cedar Creek Campground close for the season, and Bass River State Forest runs a bare-bones winter operation with no hookups. If you camp now, expect cold nights, empty sites, and the need for a fully self-contained rig.
Spring
Mar - May
44 F - 62 F
Crowds: Medium
Parks reopen through April and May, and this is a smart time to book before summer rates and crowds hit. Black flies pick up in late spring near the bogs, so pack repellent; weekend reservations still go quickly for Memorial Day.
Summer
Jun - Aug
66 F - 84 F
Crowds: High
Peak Jersey Shore season means Cedar Creek Campground and every full-hookup site nearby book weeks ahead. Reserve early, expect humidity and afternoon storms, and plan beach trips to Island Beach for early arrival before the entrance gate closes.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48 F - 66 F
Crowds: Medium
The best-kept secret for RVers: mild days, cool nights, thinning crowds, and open sites through October. Watch the tropical forecast into early fall, and note that many private parks wind down after Columbus Day weekend.
Explore the Bayville Area
Book early. Cedar Creek Campground and the other Route 9 parks fill their weekend inventory weeks ahead from Memorial Day through Labor Day, and Bass River State Forest weekends go fast on the state portal too. If your schedule is flexible, camp midweek or in the shoulder seasons of May and September for open sites and lower rates. Island Beach State Park caps vehicle entry on busy summer days, so arrive early or bike in from the lots rather than idling in the entrance line.
Use Route 9 for all your errands and keep the big rig off the tight residential streets that branch toward the bay. Barnegat Bay is right there for kayaking and crabbing, so pack the paddle craft. Watch the tropical forecast from August into early fall, since coastal storms can flood low areas. Many private parks wind down after Columbus Day, so confirm your park is still open if you are planning a late-October trip. Bring bug spray for late spring near the bogs.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Bayville
Are there RV parks with full hookups right in Bayville?
Yes. Cedar Creek Campground sits in Bayville on Route 9 and offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer, and an on-site dump station. It runs large lots that handle big rigs, plus a pool, camp store, and laundry. It carries both seasonal and nightly campers, so summer weekends fill early. If you want water and electric without leaving town, this is the primary option, and it keeps you minutes from Route 9 errands and the Barnegat Bay shoreline.
Is there public or state-park camping near Bayville?
Yes. Bass River State Forest near Tuckerton, about a half-hour south, offers 176 tent and trailer sites that take RVs up to 35 feet for roughly twenty dollars a night. The catch is there are no hookups at the standard sites, so you need a self-contained rig with fresh water and battery power. The forest also rents electric cabins along Lake Absegami. Reserve through the New Jersey state ReserveAmerica portal, especially for summer weekends when the beach and lake draw crowds.
Can big rigs get into the Bayville area easily?
Yes, with a little planning. The Garden State Parkway runs the length of Ocean County and its exits in the 74 to 80 range feed the Bayville and Toms River area. Route 9 parallels the Parkway for local access to campgrounds and services. Keep big rigs on those two roads and off the narrow bay-side residential streets, which dead-end at the water and offer nowhere to turn around. Cedar Creek Campground and the private parks along Route 9 are used to large motorhomes and fifth wheels.
When is the best time of year to RV in Bayville?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots. May and September through mid-October give you mild days, cool comfortable nights, thinner crowds, and easier reservations than the packed summer months. Summer is beautiful but busy and humid, with full-hookup sites booking weeks out and higher nightly rates. Winter is quiet but most private parks close and you lose hookup access, so unless you are fully self-contained and do not mind cold nights, aim for the shoulder seasons for the best balance of weather and availability.
How far is the beach from Bayville campgrounds?
Close. Island Beach State Park, one of the last undeveloped barrier beaches on the East Coast, sits roughly 15 miles from Bayville and makes an easy day trip from Cedar Creek Campground. The park limits vehicle entry on busy summer days, so arrive early or ride bikes in from the parking areas. Barnegat Bay itself is right at Bayville’s doorstep for kayaking, crabbing, and fishing. Long Beach Island and the Barnegat Lighthouse are about 25 miles south if you want a longer beach-and-lighthouse outing.
Do I need reservations, or can I just show up?
Reserve ahead, especially in summer. The Jersey Shore is one of the busiest camping corridors in the Northeast, and full-hookup sites at Cedar Creek Campground and the other Route 9 parks book weeks in advance for weekends from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Bass River State Forest also fills its weekend inventory through the state reservation portal. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are more flexible, but showing up without a reservation on a summer Friday is a gamble you will usually lose. Book early and confirm your rig length fits.
Is boondocking or free overnight parking allowed near Bayville?
Not really. Ocean County is densely developed and there is no town-sanctioned RV overnight parking in lots or on streets. Wharton State Forest and the broader Pine Barrens offer primitive canoe-in camping, but those are not RV sites. Plan on a reserved campground for any overnight stay. If you are passing through and need to rest, use a proper campground rather than a retail lot, since local ordinances and the tight coastal geography make stealth overnighting impractical and unwelcome here.
What hookups can I expect at parks near Bayville?
It splits by type. Private parks like Cedar Creek Campground offer the full package: 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer at the site, plus a dump station and amenities like a pool and laundry. Public land is more rustic. Bass River State Forest provides no hookups at its tent and trailer sites, though its cabins have electricity. So if you need shore power and sewer, book a private park; if you are self-contained and want a quieter, cheaper, tree-shaded site, the state forest works. Match your rig and power needs to the park before booking.
What is there to do besides the beach?
Plenty. Double Trouble State Park sits right in Bayville and protects Pine Barrens cranberry bogs, a historic cranberry-processing village, and miles of flat sand-road trails you can hike or bike. Cedar Creek winds through the park and is a favorite for kayaking and canoeing. Barnegat Bay offers crabbing, fishing, and paddling. The nearby towns of Toms River and Seaside Heights add boardwalk fun, restaurants, and shopping. Between the Pine Barrens, the bay, and the barrier beaches, you can easily fill a week without repeating an outing.
Are the campgrounds near Bayville pet friendly?
Generally yes. Cedar Creek Campground is pet friendly and welcomes dogs at RV sites, which is common for private Jersey Shore parks. New Jersey state forests including Bass River allow leashed pets in campgrounds, though pets are typically restricted from swimming beaches. Always keep dogs leashed, clean up, and check each park’s specific pet policy and any breed or number limits when you book. Summer heat and humidity can be rough on pets, so plan shaded sites and never leave animals in a closed rig during hot Jersey afternoons.
How much does it cost to camp near Bayville?
It ranges widely. Bass River State Forest is the budget end at around twenty dollars a night for a no-hookup trailer site. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Creek Campground run higher, typically in the fifty to eighty dollar range per night depending on season and site, with premium waterfront or 50-amp sites at the top. Summer weekends and holidays cost the most. Seasonal rates can save regulars money if you stay put all summer. Budget more for the Jersey Shore than for inland camping, since coastal demand keeps rates firm.
Can I dump my tanks and refill water near Bayville?
Yes. Cedar Creek Campground has an on-site dump station and full-hookup sites, so you can empty tanks and refill fresh water without leaving your site. Bass River State Forest also provides dump facilities for campers even though the individual sites lack hookups. If you are staying at a no-hookup site or passing through, plan your tank management around these dump stations rather than assuming public options exist, since Ocean County has few sanctioned spots. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Bayville.
Is Bayville a good home base for exploring the Jersey Shore?
Yes, it is a solid base. Bayville sits mid-coast in Ocean County with quick Garden State Parkway and Route 9 access, so you can reach Island Beach State Park, Long Beach Island, Seaside Heights, and Toms River in under 30 minutes, plus the Pine Barrens right at hand. Cedar Creek Campground keeps you in town with full hookups, and Bass River State Forest offers a quieter public option to the south. From here you can day-trip the beaches, bay, and boardwalks without repacking the rig, which makes for a relaxed week of Shore camping.
Are there RV parks with full hookups right in Bayville?
Yes. Cedar Creek Campground sits in Bayville on Route 9 and offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer, and an on-site dump station. It runs large lots that handle big rigs, plus a pool, camp store, and laundry. It carries both seasonal and nightly campers, so summer weekends fill early. If you want water and electric without leaving town, this is the primary option, and it keeps you minutes from Route 9 errands and the Barnegat Bay shoreline.
Is there public or state-park camping near Bayville?
Yes. Bass River State Forest near Tuckerton, about a half-hour south, offers 176 tent and trailer sites that take RVs up to 35 feet for roughly twenty dollars a night. The catch is there are no hookups at the standard sites, so you need a self-contained rig with fresh water and battery power. The forest also rents electric cabins along Lake Absegami. Reserve through the New Jersey state ReserveAmerica portal, especially for summer weekends when the beach and lake draw crowds.
Can big rigs get into the Bayville area easily?
Yes, with a little planning. The Garden State Parkway runs the length of Ocean County and its exits in the 74 to 80 range feed the Bayville and Toms River area. Route 9 parallels the Parkway for local access to campgrounds and services. Keep big rigs on those two roads and off the narrow bay-side residential streets, which dead-end at the water and offer nowhere to turn around. Cedar Creek Campground and the private parks along Route 9 are used to large motorhomes and fifth wheels.
When is the best time of year to RV in Bayville?
Late spring and early fall are the sweet spots. May and September through mid-October give you mild days, cool comfortable nights, thinner crowds, and easier reservations than the packed summer months. Summer is beautiful but busy and humid, with full-hookup sites booking weeks out and higher nightly rates. Winter is quiet but most private parks close and you lose hookup access, so unless you are fully self-contained and do not mind cold nights, aim for the shoulder seasons for the best balance of weather and availability.
How far is the beach from Bayville campgrounds?
Close. Island Beach State Park, one of the last undeveloped barrier beaches on the East Coast, sits roughly 15 miles from Bayville and makes an easy day trip from Cedar Creek Campground. The park limits vehicle entry on busy summer days, so arrive early or ride bikes in from the parking areas. Barnegat Bay itself is right at Bayville’s doorstep for kayaking, crabbing, and fishing. Long Beach Island and the Barnegat Lighthouse are about 25 miles south if you want a longer beach-and-lighthouse outing.
Do I need reservations, or can I just show up?
Reserve ahead, especially in summer. The Jersey Shore is one of the busiest camping corridors in the Northeast, and full-hookup sites at Cedar Creek Campground and the other Route 9 parks book weeks in advance for weekends from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Bass River State Forest also fills its weekend inventory through the state reservation portal. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are more flexible, but showing up without a reservation on a summer Friday is a gamble you will usually lose. Book early and confirm your rig length fits.
Is boondocking or free overnight parking allowed near Bayville?
Not really. Ocean County is densely developed and there is no town-sanctioned RV overnight parking in lots or on streets. Wharton State Forest and the broader Pine Barrens offer primitive canoe-in camping, but those are not RV sites. Plan on a reserved campground for any overnight stay. If you are passing through and need to rest, use a proper campground rather than a retail lot, since local ordinances and the tight coastal geography make stealth overnighting impractical and unwelcome here.
What hookups can I expect at parks near Bayville?
It splits by type. Private parks like Cedar Creek Campground offer the full package: 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer at the site, plus a dump station and amenities like a pool and laundry. Public land is more rustic. Bass River State Forest provides no hookups at its tent and trailer sites, though its cabins have electricity. So if you need shore power and sewer, book a private park; if you are self-contained and want a quieter, cheaper, tree-shaded site, the state forest works. Match your rig and power needs to the park before booking.
What is there to do besides the beach?
Plenty. Double Trouble State Park sits right in Bayville and protects Pine Barrens cranberry bogs, a historic cranberry-processing village, and miles of flat sand-road trails you can hike or bike. Cedar Creek winds through the park and is a favorite for kayaking and canoeing. Barnegat Bay offers crabbing, fishing, and paddling. The nearby towns of Toms River and Seaside Heights add boardwalk fun, restaurants, and shopping. Between the Pine Barrens, the bay, and the barrier beaches, you can easily fill a week without repeating an outing.
Are the campgrounds near Bayville pet friendly?
Generally yes. Cedar Creek Campground is pet friendly and welcomes dogs at RV sites, which is common for private Jersey Shore parks. New Jersey state forests including Bass River allow leashed pets in campgrounds, though pets are typically restricted from swimming beaches. Always keep dogs leashed, clean up, and check each park’s specific pet policy and any breed or number limits when you book. Summer heat and humidity can be rough on pets, so plan shaded sites and never leave animals in a closed rig during hot Jersey afternoons.
How much does it cost to camp near Bayville?
It ranges widely. Bass River State Forest is the budget end at around twenty dollars a night for a no-hookup trailer site. Private full-hookup parks like Cedar Creek Campground run higher, typically in the fifty to eighty dollar range per night depending on season and site, with premium waterfront or 50-amp sites at the top. Summer weekends and holidays cost the most. Seasonal rates can save regulars money if you stay put all summer. Budget more for the Jersey Shore than for inland camping, since coastal demand keeps rates firm.
Can I dump my tanks and refill water near Bayville?
Yes. Cedar Creek Campground has an on-site dump station and full-hookup sites, so you can empty tanks and refill fresh water without leaving your site. Bass River State Forest also provides dump facilities for campers even though the individual sites lack hookups. If you are staying at a no-hookup site or passing through, plan your tank management around these dump stations rather than assuming public options exist, since Ocean County has few sanctioned spots. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Bayville.
Is Bayville a good home base for exploring the Jersey Shore?
Yes, it is a solid base. Bayville sits mid-coast in Ocean County with quick Garden State Parkway and Route 9 access, so you can reach Island Beach State Park, Long Beach Island, Seaside Heights, and Toms River in under 30 minutes, plus the Pine Barrens right at hand. Cedar Creek Campground keeps you in town with full hookups, and Bass River State Forest offers a quieter public option to the south. From here you can day-trip the beaches, bay, and boardwalks without repacking the rig, which makes for a relaxed week of Shore camping.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Bayville?
The highest-rated station is Military Park - NJ National Guard Training Centre RV Sites with a rating of 4.3/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Bayville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Bayville.
All Dump Stations Near Bayville (93)
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