RV Parks In Buffalo, New York
42.8865° N, 78.8784° W
Quick Overview
Buffalo is one of the best RV bases in western New York, mostly because it puts two big draws within an easy drive of one campsite: the revived waterfront city itself and Niagara Falls just up I-190. You will not camp downtown, but the ring of parks around the metro and out along Lake Erie gives you plenty of room to settle in and day-trip from there.
For full hookups, the standout is the Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday on Grand Island, about 15 minutes from the falls off I-190, with 30 and 50 amp service, water and sewer, pull-through and back-in sites, and resort extras like pools. Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground, roughly 25 miles east in Akron, spreads 104 acres of level grassy lots with pull-throughs and big-rig access for coaches up to 65 feet. Closer in, DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga is the nearest full-hookup park to downtown, and AA Royal Motel & Campground runs paved, level big-rig sites year-round. If you would rather trade sewer for a Lake Erie beach, Evangola State Park sits about 30 miles southwest near Irving with 80 electric sites, dump stations, and shoreline camping from late April into October.
Timing matters more here than in most regions. Summer is peak, warm and humid off the lake with the most festivals and the highest rates near the falls, so reserve ahead. September into early October is the quiet sweet spot, with crisp weather, foliage, and lower prices before parks close in mid-October. Winter is the hard stop: Buffalo's lake-effect snow can bury the area in a day and nearly every campground closes, so plan your visit for the warm months. Get in on I-90, the tolled New York State Thruway, or drop down I-190 across the Grand Island bridges, park the rig at your campground, and drive the tow vehicle into the city and to the falls. Between Canalside, the Frank Lloyd Wright houses, the food scene, and Niagara itself, Buffalo easily fills two or three days.
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All Dump Stations Near Buffalo
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shamrock Mobile Home Park | 6.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Shady Acres Mobile Home Park | 6.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Windmill Point Park | 6.4 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Windmill Point Park | 6.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Harmony Resorts - Crystal Beach | 9.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sky Harbor | 9.4 mi | 3.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Riverside Park Motel And Campground | 10.1 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping World | 10.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Koa Campground | 11.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ballard's Camping Center | 11.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Shamrock Mobile Home Park
6.0 miShady Acres Mobile Home Park
6.3 miWindmill Point Park
6.4 miWindmill Point Park
6.4 miHarmony Resorts - Crystal Beach
9.2 miSky Harbor
9.4 miRiverside Park Motel And Campground
10.1 miCamping World
10.5 miKoa Campground
11.0 miBallard's Camping Center
11.1 miTraveling to Buffalo by RV
Buffalo sits at a major highway crossroads. I-90, the New York State Thruway, is the main east-west route through the metro; it is a toll road, so budget for that. I-190, the Niagara Thruway, branches north from downtown across the North and South Grand Island bridges toward Niagara Falls, connecting straight to the Grand Island KOA. I-290 and US-219 loop the suburbs, and NY-5 traces the Lake Erie shore southwest toward Evangola. These are all full-height, big-rig-capable routes with no notable low clearances, so a 40-foot coach travels the region without drama as long as you avoid the tight downtown streets.
Do not try to sightsee downtown in the rig. Buffalo's core has metered street parking and low-clearance ramp garages, so park at your campground and drive the tow vehicle in, or use the larger lots near Canalside. Fuel up at Thruway service areas or truck-friendly stations along the interstates, and handle propane and groceries in the suburbs where the big stores cluster. For state-park stays, reserve Evangola through ReserveAmerica up to nine months ahead, and note the New York State Parks vehicle use fee applies in season on top of camping.
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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 Buffalo, New York, 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 Buffalo
Budget for tourist-region pricing near the falls and more moderate rates farther out. Private full-hookup parks like Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground quote roughly $58 to $84 a night depending on season, site, and whether you want a premium or lakefront spot, and the Grand Island KOA sits in a similar resort range with the highest numbers on summer weekends and holidays. That is the trade for being minutes from Niagara Falls in peak season.
Evangola State Park is the value play: nightly rates run well below the private resorts, though you add a New York State Parks vehicle use fee in season and give up sewer at the site. The real savings come from timing and length of stay. Shoulder-season rates in late spring and early fall drop noticeably, midweek is cheaper than weekends, and weekly bookings at the private parks pull the effective nightly cost down. Plan around the calendar and you can see both Buffalo and Niagara without paying peak-weekend prices the whole trip.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Buffalo by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
20F - 33F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy, and Buffalo's lake-effect bands can dump feet of snow in a day. Nearly every area campground closes, so plan on a winterized rig and a heated destination rather than camping the region this time of year.
Spring
Mar - May
38F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Cool, wet, and muddy through April, then improving fast by late May as Evangola and the private parks reopen. Rates are lowest and sites wide open, but pack rain gear and expect soft ground early.
Summer
Jun - Aug
62F - 80F
Crowds: High
Peak season. Warm humid days off Lake Erie, long evenings, and the busiest weekends around July 4th and the summer festivals. Reserve full-hookup and state-park sites well ahead, especially near Niagara Falls.
Fall
Sep - Oct
43F - 60F
Crowds: Medium
The quiet sweet spot. Crisp clear days, good foliage, and thinner crowds through September into early October. Book before parks close for the season in mid-October and watch for the first lake-effect squalls.
Explore the Buffalo Area
A few things we would tell a friend heading to Buffalo. First, base at the Grand Island KOA if you want both the city and Niagara Falls from one site without repositioning; it is central to both and cuts the falls to a 15-minute run. If Buffalo itself is your focus, DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga puts you closest to downtown and game-day traffic.
Second, book early for summer. The parks near Niagara Falls fill on weekends from late June through Labor Day, and Evangola's Lake Erie electric loops go fast, so lock in dates weeks ahead. Third, respect the calendar: come late May through early October and skip the winter entirely, because lake-effect snow shuts down roads and campgrounds alike. Fourth, cross onto Grand Island on I-190 rather than fighting downtown streets when you are headed to the northern parks. Finally, do your shopping and any repair runs in the tow vehicle from your campground base rather than dragging a long rig through city traffic.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Buffalo
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Buffalo, NY?
The strongest full-hookup options are the Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday on Grand Island, which offers 30 and 50 amp service with water and sewer on pull-through and back-in sites, and Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground about 25 miles east in Akron, with 30/50 amp, city water, and limited sewer sites for rigs up to 65 feet. DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga is the closest full-hookup park to downtown, and AA Royal Motel & Campground in the Buffalo/Niagara area runs level, paved, big-rig sites year-round. For a public, electric-only alternative, Evangola State Park sits on Lake Erie to the southwest.
Do I need reservations for RV parks around Buffalo?
For summer, yes, especially anywhere near Niagara Falls. The Grand Island KOA and Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground both fill on weekends from late June through Labor Day, so book online or by phone a few weeks ahead. Evangola State Park is reservable through the ReserveAmerica system up to nine months out, and its Lake Erie electric loops go fast for July and August weekends. Midweek and in the shoulder seasons of late spring and early fall you can often find space with a day or two of notice, but the region draws heavy tourist traffic, so do not count on rolling in blind during peak weekends.
Is there public or state-park RV camping near Buffalo?
Yes. Evangola State Park is the go-to public campground, about 30 miles southwest of the city on the Lake Erie shore near Irving. It has 80 sites across three loops with 20, 30, and 50 amp electric hookups, though no water or sewer at individual sites. There are potable water spigots throughout and dump stations at the entrance and in the campground loop. It runs late April through early October and books through ReserveAmerica. You will pay a New York State Parks vehicle use fee in season on top of the nightly camping rate, and you trade full hookups for a beach, fishing, and lakeside sites.
How far are the RV parks from Niagara Falls?
Very close, which is a big part of the appeal of basing near Buffalo. The Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday sits on Grand Island roughly 15 minutes from the falls via I-190, making it an easy morning or evening run to Niagara Falls State Park, the Maid of the Mist, and the Cave of the Winds. From the Buffalo side, most campgrounds put you within a 20 to 40 minute drive of the falls. That lets you park the rig once and day-trip to both Buffalo's waterfront and Niagara without repositioning, which is exactly how we like to work a region with two big draws this close together.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Buffalo?
Expect tourist-region pricing near the falls and more moderate rates farther out. Private full-hookup parks like Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground quote roughly $58 to $84 a night depending on season, site, and whether you want a premium or lakefront spot, and the Grand Island KOA runs in a similar resort range with higher rates on summer weekends and holidays. Evangola State Park is cheaper on a nightly basis but adds the state vehicle use fee. Shoulder-season rates in late spring and early fall drop noticeably, and weekly stays at the private parks bring the effective nightly cost down, so timing and length of stay matter a lot here.
Can I park my RV overnight at a store lot near Buffalo?
It is unreliable in this metro. Buffalo and its inner suburbs are not set up for RV street parking, and suburban retail-lot overnighting is entirely at the individual store manager's discretion, subject to local ordinances that often prohibit it. If you want to try, go inside and ask a manager rather than assuming, and treat it strictly as a last-resort rest stop, not a plan. With the Grand Island KOA, DINO RV Campground, and Sleepy Hollow all within easy reach and offering hookups, dump stations, and level sites, you are far better off booking a real campground for anything more than a quick nap between drives.
Are the RV parks near Buffalo big-rig friendly?
Several are. Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground in Akron takes rigs up to 65 feet on level grassy lots with pull-throughs and big-rig access, and it is one of the roomier options in the region. The Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday has pull-through and back-in full-hookup sites designed for larger coaches, and AA Royal Motel & Campground advertises large, level, paved lots that work for big rigs year-round. The catch is the drive: skip downtown Buffalo entirely in a long rig and stick to I-90 and I-190, which are full-height interstate routes with no low clearances and direct access to the campgrounds.
What is the best time of year to RV around Buffalo?
Late spring through early fall is the window, and it is a fairly short one. Summer, from late June through Labor Day, is peak season with warm humid days off Lake Erie, long evenings, and the most events, but also the highest rates and busiest campgrounds near Niagara Falls. September into early October is our favorite: crisp clear weather, good foliage, thinner crowds, and lower rates before parks close in mid-October. Avoid winter unless you are just passing through, because lake-effect snow can bury the region and nearly every campground shuts down. Spring is workable from late May once parks reopen and the ground dries out.
Which campground is closest to downtown Buffalo?
DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga is the closest full-hookup option to downtown, just minutes east of the city off the main highways, which makes it handy if Buffalo itself, Canalside, or a Bills or Sabres game is your main reason for the trip. It offers 30 and 50 amp full hookups, Wi-Fi, and is pet friendly with reservable sites. If you want to split your time between Buffalo and Niagara Falls, the Grand Island KOA is only slightly farther out and better positioned for the falls, so choose based on which draw matters more. Both keep you within a short drive of downtown attractions.
Can I get sewer hookups at Evangola State Park?
No. Evangola State Park offers electric-only sites with 20, 30, and 50 amp service, but there is no water or sewer at the individual sites. What you get instead are potable water spigots spread through the campground and dump stations at the entrance and within the loop, so you fill your fresh tank before setting up and dump on your way out. If full hookups including sewer at your site are a must, choose the Grand Island KOA, Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground, or DINO RV Campground instead, and treat Evangola as the scenic Lake Erie beach-camping alternative when you do not mind managing your own tanks.
What highways lead into Buffalo for an RV?
Buffalo sits at a major crossroads. I-90, the New York State Thruway, runs east to west through the metro and is the main long-haul route in, though it is a toll road, so budget for that. I-190, the Niagara Thruway, branches north from downtown across the Grand Island bridges toward Niagara Falls and connects directly to the Grand Island KOA. I-290 and US-219 handle the suburbs, and NY-5 traces the Lake Erie shoreline southwest toward Evangola. These are all big-rig-capable routes with no notable low clearances, so a 40-foot coach travels the region comfortably as long as you stay off the tight downtown streets.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and RV repair near Buffalo?
Yes, this is a full-size metro, so resupply is easy. You can refill propane at dealers and RV supply stores around Cheektowaga, Amherst, and Tonawanda, top off diesel or gas at Thruway service areas and truck-friendly stations along I-90 and I-190, and stock up at full-size supermarkets, warehouse clubs, and big-box stores in every suburb. Several RV dealers and service centers in the outer ring handle repairs, appliances, and parts if something breaks. Do your shopping and any repair runs from your campground base in the tow vehicle rather than dragging the rig through city traffic, and you will find everything within a short drive.
What is there to do around Buffalo besides Niagara Falls?
A lot for a multi-day stay. Downtown, Canalside is a 21-acre waterfront park at the historic end of the Erie Canal with concerts, festivals, kayaking, and winter ice biking. Architecture buffs should tour the Darwin D. Martin House, one of Frank Lloyd Wright's finest residential complexes, and the Buffalo Zoo in Delaware Park is one of the oldest in the country. Buffalo RiverWorks offers rock climbing on old grain silos plus kayaking on the Buffalo River. Add the region's famous food scene and easy day trips to Lake Erie beaches at Evangola, and Buffalo earns two or three days beyond the falls.
Where can I find RV parks with full hookups near Buffalo, NY?
The strongest full-hookup options are the Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday on Grand Island, which offers 30 and 50 amp service with water and sewer on pull-through and back-in sites, and Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground about 25 miles east in Akron, with 30/50 amp, city water, and limited sewer sites for rigs up to 65 feet. DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga is the closest full-hookup park to downtown, and AA Royal Motel & Campground in the Buffalo/Niagara area runs level, paved, big-rig sites year-round. For a public, electric-only alternative, Evangola State Park sits on Lake Erie to the southwest.
Do I need reservations for RV parks around Buffalo?
For summer, yes, especially anywhere near Niagara Falls. The Grand Island KOA and Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground both fill on weekends from late June through Labor Day, so book online or by phone a few weeks ahead. Evangola State Park is reservable through the ReserveAmerica system up to nine months out, and its Lake Erie electric loops go fast for July and August weekends. Midweek and in the shoulder seasons of late spring and early fall you can often find space with a day or two of notice, but the region draws heavy tourist traffic, so do not count on rolling in blind during peak weekends.
Is there public or state-park RV camping near Buffalo?
Yes. Evangola State Park is the go-to public campground, about 30 miles southwest of the city on the Lake Erie shore near Irving. It has 80 sites across three loops with 20, 30, and 50 amp electric hookups, though no water or sewer at individual sites. There are potable water spigots throughout and dump stations at the entrance and in the campground loop. It runs late April through early October and books through ReserveAmerica. You will pay a New York State Parks vehicle use fee in season on top of the nightly camping rate, and you trade full hookups for a beach, fishing, and lakeside sites.
How far are the RV parks from Niagara Falls?
Very close, which is a big part of the appeal of basing near Buffalo. The Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday sits on Grand Island roughly 15 minutes from the falls via I-190, making it an easy morning or evening run to Niagara Falls State Park, the Maid of the Mist, and the Cave of the Winds. From the Buffalo side, most campgrounds put you within a 20 to 40 minute drive of the falls. That lets you park the rig once and day-trip to both Buffalo's waterfront and Niagara without repositioning, which is exactly how we like to work a region with two big draws this close together.
What does it cost to camp in an RV around Buffalo?
Expect tourist-region pricing near the falls and more moderate rates farther out. Private full-hookup parks like Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground quote roughly $58 to $84 a night depending on season, site, and whether you want a premium or lakefront spot, and the Grand Island KOA runs in a similar resort range with higher rates on summer weekends and holidays. Evangola State Park is cheaper on a nightly basis but adds the state vehicle use fee. Shoulder-season rates in late spring and early fall drop noticeably, and weekly stays at the private parks bring the effective nightly cost down, so timing and length of stay matter a lot here.
Can I park my RV overnight at a store lot near Buffalo?
It is unreliable in this metro. Buffalo and its inner suburbs are not set up for RV street parking, and suburban retail-lot overnighting is entirely at the individual store manager's discretion, subject to local ordinances that often prohibit it. If you want to try, go inside and ask a manager rather than assuming, and treat it strictly as a last-resort rest stop, not a plan. With the Grand Island KOA, DINO RV Campground, and Sleepy Hollow all within easy reach and offering hookups, dump stations, and level sites, you are far better off booking a real campground for anything more than a quick nap between drives.
Are the RV parks near Buffalo big-rig friendly?
Several are. Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground in Akron takes rigs up to 65 feet on level grassy lots with pull-throughs and big-rig access, and it is one of the roomier options in the region. The Niagara Falls / Grand Island KOA Holiday has pull-through and back-in full-hookup sites designed for larger coaches, and AA Royal Motel & Campground advertises large, level, paved lots that work for big rigs year-round. The catch is the drive: skip downtown Buffalo entirely in a long rig and stick to I-90 and I-190, which are full-height interstate routes with no low clearances and direct access to the campgrounds.
What is the best time of year to RV around Buffalo?
Late spring through early fall is the window, and it is a fairly short one. Summer, from late June through Labor Day, is peak season with warm humid days off Lake Erie, long evenings, and the most events, but also the highest rates and busiest campgrounds near Niagara Falls. September into early October is our favorite: crisp clear weather, good foliage, thinner crowds, and lower rates before parks close in mid-October. Avoid winter unless you are just passing through, because lake-effect snow can bury the region and nearly every campground shuts down. Spring is workable from late May once parks reopen and the ground dries out.
Which campground is closest to downtown Buffalo?
DINO RV Campground in Cheektowaga is the closest full-hookup option to downtown, just minutes east of the city off the main highways, which makes it handy if Buffalo itself, Canalside, or a Bills or Sabres game is your main reason for the trip. It offers 30 and 50 amp full hookups, Wi-Fi, and is pet friendly with reservable sites. If you want to split your time between Buffalo and Niagara Falls, the Grand Island KOA is only slightly farther out and better positioned for the falls, so choose based on which draw matters more. Both keep you within a short drive of downtown attractions.
Can I get sewer hookups at Evangola State Park?
No. Evangola State Park offers electric-only sites with 20, 30, and 50 amp service, but there is no water or sewer at the individual sites. What you get instead are potable water spigots spread through the campground and dump stations at the entrance and within the loop, so you fill your fresh tank before setting up and dump on your way out. If full hookups including sewer at your site are a must, choose the Grand Island KOA, Sleepy Hollow Lake Campground, or DINO RV Campground instead, and treat Evangola as the scenic Lake Erie beach-camping alternative when you do not mind managing your own tanks.
What highways lead into Buffalo for an RV?
Buffalo sits at a major crossroads. I-90, the New York State Thruway, runs east to west through the metro and is the main long-haul route in, though it is a toll road, so budget for that. I-190, the Niagara Thruway, branches north from downtown across the Grand Island bridges toward Niagara Falls and connects directly to the Grand Island KOA. I-290 and US-219 handle the suburbs, and NY-5 traces the Lake Erie shoreline southwest toward Evangola. These are all big-rig-capable routes with no notable low clearances, so a 40-foot coach travels the region comfortably as long as you stay off the tight downtown streets.
Are there services like propane, groceries, and RV repair near Buffalo?
Yes, this is a full-size metro, so resupply is easy. You can refill propane at dealers and RV supply stores around Cheektowaga, Amherst, and Tonawanda, top off diesel or gas at Thruway service areas and truck-friendly stations along I-90 and I-190, and stock up at full-size supermarkets, warehouse clubs, and big-box stores in every suburb. Several RV dealers and service centers in the outer ring handle repairs, appliances, and parts if something breaks. Do your shopping and any repair runs from your campground base in the tow vehicle rather than dragging the rig through city traffic, and you will find everything within a short drive.
What is there to do around Buffalo besides Niagara Falls?
A lot for a multi-day stay. Downtown, Canalside is a 21-acre waterfront park at the historic end of the Erie Canal with concerts, festivals, kayaking, and winter ice biking. Architecture buffs should tour the Darwin D. Martin House, one of Frank Lloyd Wright's finest residential complexes, and the Buffalo Zoo in Delaware Park is one of the oldest in the country. Buffalo RiverWorks offers rock climbing on old grain silos plus kayaking on the Buffalo River. Add the region's famous food scene and easy day trips to Lake Erie beaches at Evangola, and Buffalo earns two or three days beyond the falls.
Are there free dump stations in Buffalo?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Buffalo.
All Dump Stations Near Buffalo (116)
RV ParkShamrock Mobile Home Park
RV ParkShady Acres Mobile Home Park
RV Park with Dump StationsWindmill Point Park
RV ParkWindmill Point Park
RV ParkCamping World
RV ParkBallard's Camping Center
RV ParkKoa Campground
RV Park



