RV Dump Stations In Browns Mills, New Jersey
39.9726° N, 74.5829° W
Quick Overview
Browns Mills sits right on the edge of New Jersey's Pine Barrens in Pemberton Township, tucked between Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst and one of the largest stretches of protected pine forest on the East Coast. For RVers, this is a quiet, tree-shaded corner of South Jersey rather than a resort town, and that's exactly the appeal. We come here for the forest, not the strip malls.
The town itself is small. You've got gas, groceries and a pharmacy along Lakehurst Road, and that's about the extent of the commercial district. What makes Browns Mills worth a stop is what surrounds it: the 37,242-acre Brendan T. Byrne State Forest (the old Lebanon State Forest) starts just north of town, and it's where you'll actually park the rig, dump your tanks, and settle in.
Dump-station access here is straightforward if you know where to look. We currently track several dump location in the immediate area, and the reliable public option is the sanitary station inside the state forest. It's free when you're camping there, so most RVers just build a night or two at the forest into the plan. There's no interstate cutting through town, so getting here means two-lane county routes and NJ Route 70, which keeps the pace slow and the scenery pine-lined the whole way in.
If you've never RVed the Pinelands before, it's a different flavor of New Jersey than most people picture. Sandy soil, tannin-stained streams, cranberry bogs and endless pitch pine. Browns Mills is a practical, low-key base for all of it.
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All Dump Stations Near Browns Mills
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Military Park - Willow Pond Camp | 3.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Brendan T. Byrne State Forest | 5.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lebanon State Forest | 7.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Indian Rock RV Park | 12.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Surf and Stream Campground | 18.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Wading Pines Camping Resort | 19.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Brookville Campground | 19.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Long Beach Carefree RV Resort | 20.4 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Free |
| Turkey Swamp Park Campgrounds | 20.9 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Free |
| Chips Folly Campground | 23.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Free |
Military Park - Willow Pond Camp
3.0 miBrendan T. Byrne State Forest
5.6 miLebanon State Forest
7.7 miIndian Rock RV Park
12.5 miSurf and Stream Campground
18.5 miWading Pines Camping Resort
19.6 miBrookville Campground
19.9 miLong Beach Carefree RV Resort
20.4 miTurkey Swamp Park Campgrounds
20.9 miChips Folly Campground
23.9 miTraveling to Browns Mills by RV
There's no interstate in Browns Mills, so plan your route around NJ Route 70, the two-lane highway that runs across the Pine Barrens. The town's main arteries are Lakehurst Road, which ties into Route 70 about five miles north, and Pemberton-Browns Mills Road, which reaches US Route 206 roughly five miles west. From 206 you can work your way up to the NJ Turnpike (I-95) near Bordentown, about 25 miles northwest.
Stick to the paved county routes. The sugar-sand fire roads that branch off CR 563 and into the forest are soft and will bog down a heavy rig fast, so they're for exploring on foot or by bike, not by motorhome. Roads in town are narrow but manageable for most trailers and Class C rigs. If you're driving a big Class A, take the wider Route 70 approach rather than cutting through back roads.
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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 Browns Mills, 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.
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Dump Station Costs in Browns Mills
Camping is the main cost here and it's reasonable. A site at Brendan T. Byrne State Forest runs about $20 a night for New Jersey residents and $25 for non-residents, plus a $5 reservation fee. The sanitary dump station is included free when you're camping. If you just need to dump and aren't staying, out-of-state visitors pay $30 to use the station, so it's almost always cheaper to book a night than to pay the standalone fee.
Propane is easy to source through AmeriGas, the local U-Haul in the 08015 zip, or DDM Energy over toward Pemberton. Fuel prices in this part of Burlington County track the South Jersey average, and remember New Jersey is a full-service gas state, so an attendant pumps for you. Groceries in town cost a touch more than a full supermarket run toward Pemberton.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Browns Mills
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Best Time to Visit Browns Mills by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
25°F - 38°F
Crowds: Medium
Very cold and windy with around 14 inches of snow from December through March. Most campgrounds close for the season.
Spring
Mar - May
40°F - 62°F
Crowds: Low
The Pine Barrens greens up and the bugs pick up by May. Nice camping once nights stay above freezing, and the forest trails are quiet.
Summer
Jun - Aug
63°F - 86°F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, humid and wet with afternoon thunderstorms. Sandy soil drains fast so sites dry quickly, but greenhead flies and mosquitoes are heavy.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42°F - 64°F
Crowds: Medium
The best RV season in the Pines. Cool nights, dry days, fewer bugs and thinner crowds through October. Book sites early.
Explore the Browns Mills Area
Book the state forest campground early on New Jersey's reservation system. Only about 10 of the 82 sites here actually fit an RV or trailer, and those go quickly in fall, which is the best camping season in the Pines. Reservations run from two days to a year out with a two-night minimum.
Get the dump-station code at check-in. The sanitary station is often kept locked, and you don't want to discover that with full tanks on your way out. Top off fuel and groceries in town along Lakehurst Road before you head into the forest, because services thin out fast once you're in the trees. And if you're here in summer, pack bug spray. The greenhead flies and mosquitoes in the Pine Barrens are no joke from June through August.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Browns Mills
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Browns Mills?
The reliable public dump station in the area is the sanitary station inside Brendan T. Byrne State Forest, a few miles north of town. It's free when you're camping at the forest, which is the setup most RVers use. If you're not staying overnight, out-of-state visitors pay $30 to use it. The station is sometimes kept locked, so ask for the access code at the campground check-in office. We track several dump location in the immediate Browns Mills area, so plan your tank schedule around the state forest rather than expecting a station in the town center.
Is there RV camping right in Browns Mills?
Not in the town center itself, but Brendan T. Byrne State Forest sits just north of town and that's where you'll camp. It has 82 tent and trailer sites, about 10 of which are suitable for RVs and trailers, plus cabins and yurts near Pakim Pond. Sites include fire rings, picnic tables and access to showers and laundry. Because only a handful of sites fit larger rigs, reserve well ahead, especially in fall. Dispersed or boondocking camping is not allowed inside the forest, so you'll need a designated site.
What highways do I take to reach Browns Mills?
There's no interstate through town, so you'll travel two-lane roads. NJ Route 70 is the main east-west artery across the Pine Barrens and connects to US Route 206. Lakehurst Road links the town to Route 70 about five miles north, and Pemberton-Browns Mills Road reaches Route 206 roughly five miles west. From 206 you can reach the NJ Turnpike (I-95) near Bordentown, about 25 miles northwest. Stick to paved routes and avoid the soft sand fire roads in the forest with a heavy rig.
When is the best time to RV in Browns Mills?
Fall is the clear winner. From September through October you get cool nights, dry days, thinner crowds and far fewer bugs than summer. Spring is pleasant once nights warm past freezing, though the insects ramp up by May. Summer is warm, humid and stormy, with heavy greenhead flies and mosquitoes typical of the Pine Barrens. Winter is very cold and windy with light snow, and most campgrounds close, so it's not a practical RV season here unless you're fully self-contained and boondocking elsewhere.
Are there propane refill options nearby?
Yes. AmeriGas serves the Browns Mills area, there's a U-Haul propane refill station in the 08015 zip code right in town, and DDM Energy handles propane over toward Pemberton and the Fort Dix area. For a quick refill during a camping trip, the in-town U-Haul is usually the most convenient. If you burn a lot of propane, it's worth topping off before you head into the forest since there aren't any propane sources once you're inside the state land. Weekends can get busy at the U-Haul counter, so if you can refill on a weekday morning you'll be in and out faster. Keep your tank certification current too, since some counters won't refill an out-of-date bottle.
Can I park overnight for free in Browns Mills?
No, there's no free overnight RV parking on township streets or lots in Browns Mills, and Pemberton Township zoning restricts long-term RV occupancy on residential property. The practical and legal overnight option is a reserved site at Brendan T. Byrne State Forest. Dispersed camping is not permitted in the forest either, so plan on a designated campsite. If you need a free overnight elsewhere, you'd have to look further out, but for this area budgeting a state forest night is the simplest and cheapest reliable plan.
What is there to do around Browns Mills?
The big draw is the outdoors. Brendan T. Byrne State Forest has more than 25 miles of marked trails, including a stretch of the 50-mile Batona Trail that links three Pine Barrens forests. You can hike, mountain bike, fish, birdwatch and paddle at Pakim Pond. History buffs can visit the historic village of Whitesbog, where the first cultivated blueberry was developed, and the Dr. James Still Historic Site, New Jersey's first African American state historic site honoring the self-taught 'Black Doctor of the Pines.'
Are the Pine Barrens roads safe for a big RV?
The paved county routes and NJ Route 70 are fine for any rig. The trouble spots are the unpaved sugar-sand fire roads that branch off routes like CR 563 into the forest interior. That sand is soft and deep, and a heavy motorhome or trailer will dig in and get stuck fast. Explore those on foot, by bike or in a light 4x4, not in the RV. As long as you stay on the marked paved roads, driving around Browns Mills and to the state forest campground is straightforward.
Does the state forest campground have hookups?
Brendan T. Byrne State Forest is a fairly rustic campground, so don't expect full hookups at every site. Sites come with fire rings, picnic tables and lantern hooks, and the campground has flush toilets, showers and laundry. There's potable water available and a sanitary dump station on site. Plan to camp mostly self-contained, filling fresh water before or on arrival and using the dump station on your way out. This is a state forest experience, so it's more about the setting than resort-style amenities.
How far is Browns Mills from the Jersey Shore?
Browns Mills makes a reasonable inland base for shore trips. Long Beach Island is the closest stretch of coast, reachable by taking Route 70 east to Route 72, which runs out to Ship Bottom in about an hour depending on traffic. Because summer shore traffic on Route 72 can back up badly, many RVers prefer to camp inland at the state forest where it's cooler and quieter, then day-trip to the beach. It gives you Pine Barrens calm at night and ocean access during the day.
What are the winters like for RVers here?
Winters in Browns Mills are cold and windy, with temperatures often in the 20s and 30s and around 14 inches of snow spread from December through March. It's milder than northern New Jersey but still genuinely cold. The state forest campground and most area campgrounds close for the season, so winter isn't a practical time to RV here unless you're just passing through. If you do travel through in winter, watch for icy patches on the shaded two-lane forest roads and keep your rig's water systems protected from freezing.
Is Browns Mills a good base for exploring the Pinelands?
It's one of the better ones. You're right on the northern edge of the Pinelands National Reserve with immediate access to Brendan T. Byrne State Forest, and it's a short drive to Wharton State Forest, Batsto Village and the cranberry-bog country around Chatsworth. The town has enough basic services, gas, groceries and propane, to resupply between outings. If your goal is to slow down and explore the Pine Barrens by trail, bike and paddle over several days, Browns Mills puts you in the middle of it without the shore-town crowds.
Do I need reservations to camp near Browns Mills?
Yes, plan on it. Brendan T. Byrne State Forest takes reservations through New Jersey's online camping system, and they can be made from two days up to a year in advance. There's a two-night minimum and a 14-night maximum stay. Since only about 10 of the 82 sites fit RVs and trailers, the larger-rig sites fill quickly, especially on fall weekends when Pine Barrens camping is at its best. Booking ahead is the difference between a smooth trip and scrambling for a spot, so lock in your dates before you roll into the area.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Browns Mills?
The reliable public dump station in the area is the sanitary station inside Brendan T. Byrne State Forest, a few miles north of town. It's free when you're camping at the forest, which is the setup most RVers use. If you're not staying overnight, out-of-state visitors pay $30 to use it. The station is sometimes kept locked, so ask for the access code at the campground check-in office. We track {{stationCount}} dump location in the immediate Browns Mills area, so plan your tank schedule around the state forest rather than expecting a station in the town center.
Is there RV camping right in Browns Mills?
Not in the town center itself, but Brendan T. Byrne State Forest sits just north of town and that's where you'll camp. It has 82 tent and trailer sites, about 10 of which are suitable for RVs and trailers, plus cabins and yurts near Pakim Pond. Sites include fire rings, picnic tables and access to showers and laundry. Because only a handful of sites fit larger rigs, reserve well ahead, especially in fall. Dispersed or boondocking camping is not allowed inside the forest, so you'll need a designated site.
What highways do I take to reach Browns Mills?
There's no interstate through town, so you'll travel two-lane roads. NJ Route 70 is the main east-west artery across the Pine Barrens and connects to US Route 206. Lakehurst Road links the town to Route 70 about five miles north, and Pemberton-Browns Mills Road reaches Route 206 roughly five miles west. From 206 you can reach the NJ Turnpike (I-95) near Bordentown, about 25 miles northwest. Stick to paved routes and avoid the soft sand fire roads in the forest with a heavy rig.
When is the best time to RV in Browns Mills?
Fall is the clear winner. From September through October you get cool nights, dry days, thinner crowds and far fewer bugs than summer. Spring is pleasant once nights warm past freezing, though the insects ramp up by May. Summer is warm, humid and stormy, with heavy greenhead flies and mosquitoes typical of the Pine Barrens. Winter is very cold and windy with light snow, and most campgrounds close, so it's not a practical RV season here unless you're fully self-contained and boondocking elsewhere.
Are there propane refill options nearby?
Yes. AmeriGas serves the Browns Mills area, there's a U-Haul propane refill station in the 08015 zip code right in town, and DDM Energy handles propane over toward Pemberton and the Fort Dix area. For a quick refill during a camping trip, the in-town U-Haul is usually the most convenient. If you burn a lot of propane, it's worth topping off before you head into the forest since there aren't any propane sources once you're inside the state land. Weekends can get busy at the U-Haul counter, so if you can refill on a weekday morning you'll be in and out faster. Keep your tank certification current too, since some counters won't refill an out-of-date bottle.
Can I park overnight for free in Browns Mills?
No, there's no free overnight RV parking on township streets or lots in Browns Mills, and Pemberton Township zoning restricts long-term RV occupancy on residential property. The practical and legal overnight option is a reserved site at Brendan T. Byrne State Forest. Dispersed camping is not permitted in the forest either, so plan on a designated campsite. If you need a free overnight elsewhere, you'd have to look further out, but for this area budgeting a state forest night is the simplest and cheapest reliable plan.
What is there to do around Browns Mills?
The big draw is the outdoors. Brendan T. Byrne State Forest has more than 25 miles of marked trails, including a stretch of the 50-mile Batona Trail that links three Pine Barrens forests. You can hike, mountain bike, fish, birdwatch and paddle at Pakim Pond. History buffs can visit the historic village of Whitesbog, where the first cultivated blueberry was developed, and the Dr. James Still Historic Site, New Jersey's first African American state historic site honoring the self-taught 'Black Doctor of the Pines.'
Are the Pine Barrens roads safe for a big RV?
The paved county routes and NJ Route 70 are fine for any rig. The trouble spots are the unpaved sugar-sand fire roads that branch off routes like CR 563 into the forest interior. That sand is soft and deep, and a heavy motorhome or trailer will dig in and get stuck fast. Explore those on foot, by bike or in a light 4x4, not in the RV. As long as you stay on the marked paved roads, driving around Browns Mills and to the state forest campground is straightforward.
Does the state forest campground have hookups?
Brendan T. Byrne State Forest is a fairly rustic campground, so don't expect full hookups at every site. Sites come with fire rings, picnic tables and lantern hooks, and the campground has flush toilets, showers and laundry. There's potable water available and a sanitary dump station on site. Plan to camp mostly self-contained, filling fresh water before or on arrival and using the dump station on your way out. This is a state forest experience, so it's more about the setting than resort-style amenities.
How far is Browns Mills from the Jersey Shore?
Browns Mills makes a reasonable inland base for shore trips. Long Beach Island is the closest stretch of coast, reachable by taking Route 70 east to Route 72, which runs out to Ship Bottom in about an hour depending on traffic. Because summer shore traffic on Route 72 can back up badly, many RVers prefer to camp inland at the state forest where it's cooler and quieter, then day-trip to the beach. It gives you Pine Barrens calm at night and ocean access during the day.
What are the winters like for RVers here?
Winters in Browns Mills are cold and windy, with temperatures often in the 20s and 30s and around 14 inches of snow spread from December through March. It's milder than northern New Jersey but still genuinely cold. The state forest campground and most area campgrounds close for the season, so winter isn't a practical time to RV here unless you're just passing through. If you do travel through in winter, watch for icy patches on the shaded two-lane forest roads and keep your rig's water systems protected from freezing.
Is Browns Mills a good base for exploring the Pinelands?
It's one of the better ones. You're right on the northern edge of the Pinelands National Reserve with immediate access to Brendan T. Byrne State Forest, and it's a short drive to Wharton State Forest, Batsto Village and the cranberry-bog country around Chatsworth. The town has enough basic services, gas, groceries and propane, to resupply between outings. If your goal is to slow down and explore the Pine Barrens by trail, bike and paddle over several days, Browns Mills puts you in the middle of it without the shore-town crowds.
Do I need reservations to camp near Browns Mills?
Yes, plan on it. Brendan T. Byrne State Forest takes reservations through New Jersey's online camping system, and they can be made from two days up to a year in advance. There's a two-night minimum and a 14-night maximum stay. Since only about 10 of the 82 sites fit RVs and trailers, the larger-rig sites fill quickly, especially on fall weekends when Pine Barrens camping is at its best. Booking ahead is the difference between a smooth trip and scrambling for a spot, so lock in your dates before you roll into the area.
Are there free dump stations in Browns Mills?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Browns Mills.
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