RV Dump Stations In Cuddebackville, New York
41.4673° N, 74.5937° W
Quick Overview
Cuddebackville is a small hamlet in the Town of Deerpark, tucked along the Neversink River valley in the southeastern corner of New York. For RVers this is fly-fishing and foliage country, not a service town, so it pays to know where you can dump tanks and take on fresh water before you settle in. There are several dump options in the immediate area, and both are tied to private campgrounds rather than a public free site, so plan on being a registered guest to use them.
The most reliable spot is Oakland Valley Campground at 399 Oakland Valley Road, right on the Neversink with a dump station, potable water, and electric, water, and sewer sites for its guests. Neversink River Resort over on Guymard Turnpike in Godeffroy runs 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites across its villages, so tanks get emptied at your own pad there. The catch worth flagging: these campgrounds run seasonally and close roughly November through March, which means dump access in the valley dries up over winter. If you roll through in the cold months, take care of tanks before you arrive or plan to use a facility down in Port Jervis about 10 miles south.
Port Jervis is the practical resupply hub for this whole stretch. It has full fuel, a Hannaford grocery, pharmacies, and propane fills at Alpin Haus and Bottini Fuel, so we treat it as the staging point before heading up US-209 into the thinner-serviced valley. In-hamlet, you get a Dollar General at 1035 Route 209 and little else. The upside of coming here is the Neversink itself, the birthplace of American dry-fly fishing, plus the free D&H Canal Park and the 6,580-acre Neversink River Unique Area for hiking and river access. Get your tanks and water sorted first and the rest of the stay is easy.
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All Dump Stations Near Cuddebackville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deerpark NYC Campground | 1.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Tri-State RV Park | 9.3 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Free |
| Rockview Valley Campground Resort | 10.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Cedar Ridge Family Campgrounds | 13.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pleasant Acres Farm Campground | 13.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Black Bear Campground | 15.3 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Free |
| Tall Timbers POA Inc. | 17.1 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Free |
| Kittatinny Campgrounds | 18.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Harmony Ridge Farm | 20.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Beaver Hill Campground | 22.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Deerpark NYC Campground
1.9 miTri-State RV Park
9.3 miRockview Valley Campground Resort
10.3 miCedar Ridge Family Campgrounds
13.1 miPleasant Acres Farm Campground
13.3 miBlack Bear Campground
15.3 miTall Timbers POA Inc.
17.1 miKittatinny Campgrounds
18.6 miHarmony Ridge Farm
20.4 miBeaver Hill Campground
22.2 miTraveling to Cuddebackville by RV
US-209 is the sole through route, running north to south along the Neversink River valley, with NY-211 hitting its western terminus at US-209 right in Cuddebackville. It is a two-lane rural highway with river curves, and New York caps rigs at 40 feet single, 65 feet combination, and 13 feet 6 inches of height, so nothing here is a problem for a standard motorhome or trailer. The nearest interstate access is I-84 at Port Jervis about 10 miles south, with NY-17/I-86 up at Wurtsboro roughly 12 miles north.
Services thin out fast north of Port Jervis, so we fuel up, fill fresh water, and top off propane before turning into the valley. Cell coverage is unreliable along the river and inside the wooded campgrounds, so download offline maps and directions to Oakland Valley Campground ahead of time. The Town of Deerpark also prohibits parking within the driving lanes of any public road and bans camping on town property without a permit, so use the licensed campgrounds and skip any roadside overnight ideas. For public land rules and river access, the state DEC Neversink River Unique Area page is the authority.
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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 Cuddebackville, 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 Cuddebackville
Because there is no free public dump station in Cuddebackville, your cost of emptying tanks is basically the cost of a campground night. Oakland Valley Campground runs on a per-person nightly basis that tops out around $60 for a family, and its dump station and water come with a paid site. Neversink River Resort spans a wide range depending on the village and season, so call ahead for a quote if you only need a short stay.
If you are just passing and do not want to pay for a full night, the smarter play is to handle tanks at a service facility in Port Jervis, where fuel and propane are also cheaper and more plentiful than anything in the valley. Budget for that resupply stop as part of the trip. With a portion of the local dump options being paid, private sites, there is no dodging a fee here, but the fishing, the free D&H Canal Park, and the foliage make the stop worth it.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Cuddebackville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
21F - 35F
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy with around 19 inches of annual snow and February the snowiest. Valley campgrounds close November through March, so dump access disappears. Watch for ice on the US-209 river curves.
Spring
Mar - May
37F - 56F
Crowds: Low
Mud season runs through March, then trout season opens in April and the fly-fishing crowd arrives. Watch for spring flooding near the Neversink. Campgrounds reopen and dump stations come back online.
Summer
Jun - Aug
61F - 82F
Crowds: High
Warm and the peak camping season, with tubing and river recreation busy on weekends. Reserve full-hookup or dump-equipped sites ahead, and expect the small valley parks to book up.
Fall
Sep - Oct
39F - 60F
Crowds: Medium
The best RV weather of the year, with exceptional foliage peaking in mid-October. Book October weekends months out. Crisp nights and clear skies make for great stargazing.
Explore the Cuddebackville Area
A few things we would tell a friend running through here. First, stock up in Port Jervis before you climb into the valley, because in-hamlet you are down to a Dollar General and a couple of convenience stores. Second, both dump options are guest-only campground facilities that close for the winter, so if you are traveling November through March, empty your tanks somewhere with year-round service before you commit to the drive up US-209.
Third, book campgrounds months ahead for October weekends, because the mid-October foliage here is exceptional and the small parks fill fast. Fourth, if you fish, the Neversink is a genuine pilgrimage, but the Unique Area upstream is catch-and-release with artificial lures only, and there is no camping or fires there. Finally, kayakers should not put in at Bridgeville: there are dangerous Class IV rapids with no safe portage. Dark skies make this a great stargazing stop once you are parked and level.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Cuddebackville
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Cuddebackville, NY?
The two dump options in the immediate Cuddebackville area are both tied to private campgrounds. Oakland Valley Campground at 399 Oakland Valley Road has a dump station for registered guests, along with potable water and electric, water, and sewer hookups. Neversink River Resort on Guymard Turnpike in Godeffroy offers 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites where you empty tanks at your own pad. Neither is a free public station, so you will need to be a paying guest. If you need year-round or no-cost service, head about 10 miles south to Port Jervis instead.
Is there a free dump station near Cuddebackville?
Not in the hamlet itself. Both local dump options are guest-only facilities at private campgrounds, so the a portion free share reflects the reality that you will pay for access here. Your cheapest route to a free or low-cost dump is usually a fuel station or service facility down in Port Jervis, roughly 10 miles south on US-209, which is the regional hub with full services. In the valley, plan on a campground night if you want to empty tanks locally, and always call ahead in the off-season since the valley parks close over winter.
Can I get fresh water for my RV in Cuddebackville?
Yes, but through the campgrounds rather than a public spigot. Oakland Valley Campground and Neversink River Resort both provide potable water to their guests, so you fill up as part of a paid site. There is no municipal fill station in the hamlet, and in-town services are limited to a Dollar General and a couple of convenience stores. We top off fresh water in Port Jervis before heading up the valley, especially in the off-season when the campgrounds are closed and there is no easy fill point along US-209 between here and town.
Are the dump stations open year-round in Cuddebackville?
No. Both local dump options are at seasonal campgrounds that close roughly November through March. That means dump and fresh-water access in the Neversink valley effectively disappears over the winter. If you are traveling through in the cold months, empty your tanks and fill water before you arrive, or plan to use a service facility in Port Jervis about 10 miles south, which stays open year-round. Winter also brings ice to the US-209 river curves, so a cold-season trip here takes extra planning on both the road and the tank-service front.
What highways lead into Cuddebackville for an RV?
US-209 is the only through route, running north to south along the Neversink River valley, and NY-211 reaches its western terminus at US-209 right in the hamlet. US-209 is a two-lane rural highway with curves that follow the river, so take it easy but do not worry about clearance for a standard rig. New York limits vehicles to 40 feet single, 65 feet combination, and 13 feet 6 inches of height. The nearest interstate access is I-84 at Port Jervis about 10 miles south, and NY-17/I-86 at Wurtsboro roughly 12 miles north.
Can I park my RV overnight on the street in Cuddebackville?
No, and the Town of Deerpark is clear about it. Parking within the driving lanes of any public road is unlawful, and camping on town property is prohibited without a permit. After-hours parking between 9 PM and sunrise requires an application. In short, the town wants RVers using licensed campgrounds rather than pulling over on the road or in a public lot. Use Oakland Valley Campground or Neversink River Resort for an overnight, or drop down to Port Jervis where you have more options. Do not count on roadside boondocking here.
Where do I resupply fuel and propane near Cuddebackville?
Port Jervis, about 10 miles south on US-209, is your resupply hub. Fuel options in the hamlet are limited to small convenience stores, so we fill diesel or gas in Port Jervis, which has full-service stations. For propane, Alpin Haus in Port Jervis fills RV tanks, and Bottini Fuel at 6 Sleepy Hollow Road plus Suburban Propane in the area handle bottles and larger tanks. Groceries follow the same pattern: a Dollar General at 1035 Route 209 in the hamlet, a Hannaford in Port Jervis, and a ShopRite in Middletown about 25 miles east.
Is there RV repair near Cuddebackville?
Not in the hamlet. There is no RV repair in Cuddebackville itself, so for service you head to Port Jervis about 10 miles south or Middletown roughly 25 miles east, both of which have shops that can handle general repairs. Because this is a thin-service valley, we recommend arriving with your rig in good shape and tanks and systems checked. If something goes wrong, cell coverage is unreliable along the river, so note the shop locations and phone numbers before you lose signal. For serious RV-specific work you may need to reach a larger dealer toward Middletown.
What is the best time of year to bring an RV to Cuddebackville?
May, June, September, and October are the sweet spots. Late spring brings the trout season opener and green valley scenery, and early summer is warm and lively with tubing and river recreation, though weekends get busy. The real highlight is fall, when the mid-October foliage is exceptional and the RV weather is at its best. Book October weekends months ahead because the small campgrounds fill fast. Avoid deep winter unless you are prepared for closed campgrounds, cold, snow, and ice on the US-209 river curves. Summer weekends are the busiest for reservations.
Is the Neversink River worth a stop for RVers?
Absolutely, especially if you fish. The Neversink is the birthplace of American dry-fly fishing, where Theodore Gordon pioneered dry-fly techniques in the 1890s, and it remains a world-class trout fishery. Beyond fishing, there is tubing and kayaking, though water levels and rapids vary, so scout access points. The nearby Neversink River Unique Area covers 6,580 acres with a river gorge, waterfalls like Denton and High Falls, and more than 14 miles of trails, all free to access. The free D&H Canal Park and Neversink Valley Museum round out an easy, low-cost stay once your tanks are handled.
Are there rules for the Neversink River Unique Area?
Yes, and they are stricter than a typical state park. The Neversink River Unique Area is catch-and-release only with artificial lures, and it prohibits camping, fires, and swimming. It is a day-use conservation area, one of The Nature Conservancy 75 Last Great Places, so treat it accordingly and pack out everything. You cannot dump tanks or overnight there, so use it for hiking, fishing, and waterfall viewing during the day and return to a licensed campground for the night. The state DEC page is the authoritative source for current regulations and any seasonal closures before you go.
How reliable is cell service around Cuddebackville?
Not very. Cell service is unreliable throughout the Neversink River valley and at the wooded campgrounds, which is worth planning around when you rely on your phone for navigation, reservations, or tank-service directions. We download offline maps and save the addresses for Oakland Valley Campground, Port Jervis propane and fuel, and any dump facility before we lose signal. It also means letting people know you may be out of contact for stretches. On the upside, the same remoteness gives the area dark skies with minimal light pollution, which makes for excellent stargazing once you are parked.
What should I know about winter travel to Cuddebackville?
Winter here is cold and snowy, averaging around 19 inches of snow a year with February the snowiest month, and the valley campgrounds close from November through March. That means no local dump or fresh-water access during the cold season, so you must arrive with empty tanks and full water or plan to service in Port Jervis, which stays open year-round. Expect ice on the US-209 river curves and drive them slowly. Honestly, unless you have a specific winter reason to be here, the shoulder and warm seasons are far easier for RV travel and tank logistics.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Cuddebackville, NY?
The two dump options in the immediate Cuddebackville area are both tied to private campgrounds. Oakland Valley Campground at 399 Oakland Valley Road has a dump station for registered guests, along with potable water and electric, water, and sewer hookups. Neversink River Resort on Guymard Turnpike in Godeffroy offers 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites where you empty tanks at your own pad. Neither is a free public station, so you will need to be a paying guest. If you need year-round or no-cost service, head about 10 miles south to Port Jervis instead.
Is there a free dump station near Cuddebackville?
Not in the hamlet itself. Both local dump options are guest-only facilities at private campgrounds, so the {{freePct}} free share reflects the reality that you will pay for access here. Your cheapest route to a free or low-cost dump is usually a fuel station or service facility down in Port Jervis, roughly 10 miles south on US-209, which is the regional hub with full services. In the valley, plan on a campground night if you want to empty tanks locally, and always call ahead in the off-season since the valley parks close over winter.
Can I get fresh water for my RV in Cuddebackville?
Yes, but through the campgrounds rather than a public spigot. Oakland Valley Campground and Neversink River Resort both provide potable water to their guests, so you fill up as part of a paid site. There is no municipal fill station in the hamlet, and in-town services are limited to a Dollar General and a couple of convenience stores. We top off fresh water in Port Jervis before heading up the valley, especially in the off-season when the campgrounds are closed and there is no easy fill point along US-209 between here and town.
Are the dump stations open year-round in Cuddebackville?
No. Both local dump options are at seasonal campgrounds that close roughly November through March. That means dump and fresh-water access in the Neversink valley effectively disappears over the winter. If you are traveling through in the cold months, empty your tanks and fill water before you arrive, or plan to use a service facility in Port Jervis about 10 miles south, which stays open year-round. Winter also brings ice to the US-209 river curves, so a cold-season trip here takes extra planning on both the road and the tank-service front.
What highways lead into Cuddebackville for an RV?
US-209 is the only through route, running north to south along the Neversink River valley, and NY-211 reaches its western terminus at US-209 right in the hamlet. US-209 is a two-lane rural highway with curves that follow the river, so take it easy but do not worry about clearance for a standard rig. New York limits vehicles to 40 feet single, 65 feet combination, and 13 feet 6 inches of height. The nearest interstate access is I-84 at Port Jervis about 10 miles south, and NY-17/I-86 at Wurtsboro roughly 12 miles north.
Can I park my RV overnight on the street in Cuddebackville?
No, and the Town of Deerpark is clear about it. Parking within the driving lanes of any public road is unlawful, and camping on town property is prohibited without a permit. After-hours parking between 9 PM and sunrise requires an application. In short, the town wants RVers using licensed campgrounds rather than pulling over on the road or in a public lot. Use Oakland Valley Campground or Neversink River Resort for an overnight, or drop down to Port Jervis where you have more options. Do not count on roadside boondocking here.
Where do I resupply fuel and propane near Cuddebackville?
Port Jervis, about 10 miles south on US-209, is your resupply hub. Fuel options in the hamlet are limited to small convenience stores, so we fill diesel or gas in Port Jervis, which has full-service stations. For propane, Alpin Haus in Port Jervis fills RV tanks, and Bottini Fuel at 6 Sleepy Hollow Road plus Suburban Propane in the area handle bottles and larger tanks. Groceries follow the same pattern: a Dollar General at 1035 Route 209 in the hamlet, a Hannaford in Port Jervis, and a ShopRite in Middletown about 25 miles east.
Is there RV repair near Cuddebackville?
Not in the hamlet. There is no RV repair in Cuddebackville itself, so for service you head to Port Jervis about 10 miles south or Middletown roughly 25 miles east, both of which have shops that can handle general repairs. Because this is a thin-service valley, we recommend arriving with your rig in good shape and tanks and systems checked. If something goes wrong, cell coverage is unreliable along the river, so note the shop locations and phone numbers before you lose signal. For serious RV-specific work you may need to reach a larger dealer toward Middletown.
What is the best time of year to bring an RV to Cuddebackville?
May, June, September, and October are the sweet spots. Late spring brings the trout season opener and green valley scenery, and early summer is warm and lively with tubing and river recreation, though weekends get busy. The real highlight is fall, when the mid-October foliage is exceptional and the RV weather is at its best. Book October weekends months ahead because the small campgrounds fill fast. Avoid deep winter unless you are prepared for closed campgrounds, cold, snow, and ice on the US-209 river curves. Summer weekends are the busiest for reservations.
Is the Neversink River worth a stop for RVers?
Absolutely, especially if you fish. The Neversink is the birthplace of American dry-fly fishing, where Theodore Gordon pioneered dry-fly techniques in the 1890s, and it remains a world-class trout fishery. Beyond fishing, there is tubing and kayaking, though water levels and rapids vary, so scout access points. The nearby Neversink River Unique Area covers 6,580 acres with a river gorge, waterfalls like Denton and High Falls, and more than 14 miles of trails, all free to access. The free D&H Canal Park and Neversink Valley Museum round out an easy, low-cost stay once your tanks are handled.
Are there rules for the Neversink River Unique Area?
Yes, and they are stricter than a typical state park. The Neversink River Unique Area is catch-and-release only with artificial lures, and it prohibits camping, fires, and swimming. It is a day-use conservation area, one of The Nature Conservancy 75 Last Great Places, so treat it accordingly and pack out everything. You cannot dump tanks or overnight there, so use it for hiking, fishing, and waterfall viewing during the day and return to a licensed campground for the night. The state DEC page is the authoritative source for current regulations and any seasonal closures before you go.
How reliable is cell service around Cuddebackville?
Not very. Cell service is unreliable throughout the Neversink River valley and at the wooded campgrounds, which is worth planning around when you rely on your phone for navigation, reservations, or tank-service directions. We download offline maps and save the addresses for Oakland Valley Campground, Port Jervis propane and fuel, and any dump facility before we lose signal. It also means letting people know you may be out of contact for stretches. On the upside, the same remoteness gives the area dark skies with minimal light pollution, which makes for excellent stargazing once you are parked.
What should I know about winter travel to Cuddebackville?
Winter here is cold and snowy, averaging around 19 inches of snow a year with February the snowiest month, and the valley campgrounds close from November through March. That means no local dump or fresh-water access during the cold season, so you must arrive with empty tanks and full water or plan to service in Port Jervis, which stays open year-round. Expect ice on the US-209 river curves and drive them slowly. Honestly, unless you have a specific winter reason to be here, the shoulder and warm seasons are far easier for RV travel and tank logistics.
Are there free dump stations in Cuddebackville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Cuddebackville.
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