RV Dump Stations In Wagoner, Oklahoma
35.9595° N, 95.3694° W
Quick Overview
Wagoner sits on US-69 in the heart of Oklahoma green country, a small town whose real draw is Fort Gibson Lake just to the east. For RVers this is lake country, and the camping revolves around inexpensive Corps of Engineers and state-park sites on the water. There are several dump options in and around town, and nearly all of them are at the lake recreation areas. Sequoyah Bay State Park has two dump stations, and the Corps parks add several more, so a dump-and-fill is easy to fold into a fishing or camping stay.
Fort Gibson Lake is the reason most rigs roll through here. It is a nearly 20,000-acre Corps reservoir known for crappie, bass, and catfish, ringed with boat ramps, beaches, and dozens of campsites. Rocky Point offers 66 paved electric sites and closes for winter, while Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point stay open year-round with electric sites and dump stations. Sequoyah Bay State Park rounds it out with lake-view water and electric sites and swimming. This is affordable, water-focused camping rather than a full-hookup resort scene, so plan on electric sites and a dump station rather than a sewer pad.
Beyond the fishing, the area has real depth. Historic Fort Gibson, a reconstructed 1824 frontier military post, sits about 15 miles south, and Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge, where the Arkansas and Canadian rivers meet, draws migratory birds and wintering eagles. Tulsa and Muskogee are both an easy drive for bigger-city needs. For a working stop the plan is simple: dump and fill at Sequoyah Bay or a Corps park, stock up in town, and use the lake as a relaxed base. We like the year-round Corps parks for cold-season stops when the seasonal loops are closed.
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All Dump Stations Near Wagoner
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Long Bay Landing (Ft. Gibson Lake) | 3.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Taylor Ferry Campground | 5.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Rocky Point (Ft. Gibson) | 5.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Blue Bill Point Campground | 6.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Afton Landing Recreation Area | 6.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Sequoyah State Park | 7.0 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sequoyah Bay Recreation Area | 7.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Wildwood Campground | 9.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Dam Site (Fort Gibson Lake) | 9.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hatbox Field RV Campground | 14.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Long Bay Landing (Ft. Gibson Lake)
3.5 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Taylor Ferry Campground
5.1 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Rocky Point (Ft. Gibson)
5.9 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Blue Bill Point Campground
6.1 miAfton Landing Recreation Area
6.7 miSequoyah State Park
7.0 miSequoyah Bay Recreation Area
7.4 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Wildwood Campground
9.3 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Dam Site (Fort Gibson Lake)
9.9 miHatbox Field RV Campground
14.9 miTraveling to Wagoner by RV
Getting here is easy. US-69 is the fast four-lane divided corridor running north-south through eastern Oklahoma, and it carries no RV restrictions. SH-51 runs west toward Broken Arrow and Tulsa, and SH-16 heads east to Fort Gibson Lake. The nearest interstate connection is I-44 via the Muskogee Turnpike near Tulsa, about 45 miles northwest, though US-69 moves traffic quickly on its own. To reach Rocky Point, travel about 4.5 miles north on US-69, turn east at the light onto East 690 Road, and go three miles east. For repairs, bigger grocery runs, or hard-to-find RV parts, Broken Arrow, Tulsa, and Muskogee all sit a short drive away. See Rocky Point on Recreation.gov for the Corps campground details before you roll in.
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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 Wagoner, Oklahoma, 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 Wagoner
Camping and dumping around Wagoner are affordable, which is the whole appeal of these Corps and state-park sites. Non-guest day-use dumping typically carries a modest fee, and some free options may show in the current listings, while dumping is included when you camp overnight. Corps electric sites at Fort Gibson Lake are inexpensive to begin with, so an overnight that includes your dump is usually the best value. Sequoyah Bay State Park runs standard Oklahoma state-park rates. Because most sites are electric-and-water rather than full hookup, you save on the nightly rate but plan a dump-and-fill around your stay. Fuel and groceries are cheaper here than in Tulsa, so restock before a longer lake stint.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Wagoner
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Best Time to Visit Wagoner by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
30F - 49F
Crowds: Low
Mild with occasional cold snaps and brief ice, rarely a hard sustained freeze. Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point stay open year-round, so cold-season dumping is still possible.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 72F
Crowds: Medium
Green, pleasant, and the peak severe-weather season. Crappie and bass fishing heats up, but watch watches for high wind, hail, and tornadoes and know your shelter.
Summer
Jun - Aug
71F - 93F
Crowds: High
Hot, humid, and busy with lake traffic near 90-plus degrees. Weekend sites at the state park and COE parks fill fast, and afternoon thunderstorms build.
Fall
Sep - Oct
52F - 75F
Crowds: Medium
Warm, settled, and our favorite time on Fort Gibson Lake, with lower humidity, cool nights, and thinning crowds. Rocky Point closes September 30, so shift to the year-round parks.
Explore the Wagoner Area
Sequoyah Bay State Park has two dump stations and is the most reliable public option; the Corps parks add more, some right on the entrance roads, so you can dump on your way out. Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point stay open year-round, making them your cold-season fallback when Rocky Point closes September 30. Fort Gibson Lake is a serious crappie and bass fishery, so time a spring trip around the spawn, but keep a close eye on severe-weather watches, since the best fishing weeks overlap eastern Oklahoma stormy season and you will want to know where the campground shelter is. Fill fresh water and stock groceries before settling into a first-come loop, because services at the lake are minimal once you are camped and the nearest full store is back toward Broken Arrow or Muskogee.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Wagoner
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Wagoner, Oklahoma?
Wagoner has several dump options, and nearly all of them sit on Fort Gibson Lake just east of town. Sequoyah Bay State Park has two dump stations, and the Corps of Engineers parks add more: Rocky Point has two, Taylor Ferry South has one in the campground plus another on the entrance road, and Blue Bill Point has one as well. These are camper-first, and day-use dumping may carry a fee. Because the lake recreation areas hold most of the stations, plan your dump around a camping night or a day-use stop rather than expecting a downtown option.
Are any of the dump stations in Wagoner free?
Availability shifts, so check the current listings for the some free options showing right now. The Corps of Engineers and state park stations generally carry a modest day-use fee if you are not a registered camper, and dumping is included when you camp overnight. The COE electric sites at Fort Gibson Lake are inexpensive to begin with, so an overnight stay that includes your dump is usually the best value. Because this is a lake-recreation area rather than an interstate crossroads, there are few free travel-center-style stations, so budget a small fee or plan around a camping night.
Is there potable water available at the dump stations?
Yes at the lake parks. Sequoyah Bay State Park and the Corps campgrounds provide drinking water alongside their dump stations and electric sites. We always recommend filling your fresh tank before you settle into a first-come loop, since services at the lake are minimal once you are set up. Keep your potable and flush hoses clearly separated and color coded so there is never any mix-up. Wagoner itself has basic services, but for a big water, grocery, and propane run, Broken Arrow and Muskogee have fuller options a short drive away.
What highways lead into Wagoner for RVs?
Wagoner sits on US-69, the fast four-lane divided corridor running north-south through eastern Oklahoma, so access is easy for a big rig. SH-51 runs west toward Broken Arrow and Tulsa, and SH-16 heads east to Fort Gibson Lake. The nearest interstate connection is I-44 via the Muskogee Turnpike near Tulsa, roughly 45 miles northwest, though US-69 itself moves traffic quickly. None of these routes carry RV-specific restrictions. To reach Rocky Point, travel about 4.5 miles north on US-69, turn east at the light onto East 690 Road, and go three miles east to the campground.
Can I park my RV overnight in downtown Wagoner?
Wagoner is a small town with easy road access, but the place for rigs to overnight is the lake, not downtown. There is no blanket overnight-parking ban in town, but the Corps of Engineers parks and Sequoyah Bay State Park are set up for RVs and priced affordably. Overnight parking outside designated sites is not allowed at the recreation areas. If you want a quick stop in town for fuel or groceries, that is fine, but for a night plan on one of the Fort Gibson Lake campgrounds, several of which stay open year-round.
What is the best season to visit Wagoner in an RV?
Late April through June and again in September and October are the sweet spots on Fort Gibson Lake. Spring is green and lively with strong crappie and bass fishing, though it overlaps the peak severe-weather season, so watch watches and know your shelter. Fall is our favorite: warm, settled days, cool nights, lower humidity, and thinning crowds. Summer is hot and humid, often mid-90s, and busy with weekend lake traffic that fills sites fast. Winter is mild enough that the year-round COE parks stay open, making Wagoner a workable cool-season lake stop.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near the dump stations?
Most sites here are electric-and-water rather than full hookup, which is typical of Corps and state-park lakes. Sequoyah Bay State Park offers water and 30/50-amp electric with two dump stations. Rocky Point has 66 paved electric sites with drinking water and two dump stations, open April through September. Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point provide electric sites and dump stations and stay open year-round. You dump at the station rather than at a full-hookup pad, so plan a dump-and-fill around your stay. For full hookups, private parks toward Broken Arrow and Muskogee fill the gap.
How is the fishing on Fort Gibson Lake?
Fort Gibson Lake is one of eastern Oklahoma green country favorite fisheries, a nearly 20,000-acre Corps reservoir known for crappie, largemouth and white bass, and catfish. Spring draws anglers for the crappie spawn, and the lake stays productive into fall. The campgrounds put you right on the water with boat ramps and courtesy docks, so many RVers come specifically to fish. If you time a spring trip around the spawn, reserve early and keep an eye on severe-weather watches, since the best fishing weeks overlap eastern Oklahoma stormy season.
What should I know about the climate before visiting?
Wagoner sits in Oklahoma green country, with hot, humid summers often into the mid-90s and afternoon thunderstorms tempered by lake breezes. Winters are mild with only occasional cold snaps and brief ice, so several lake campgrounds stay open year-round. The season to respect is spring, which is both the greenest camping window and the peak for severe weather across eastern Oklahoma, including high wind, hail, and the occasional tornado warning. Always know where the campground storm shelter is, monitor watches, and be ready to move to a sturdy building if a warning is issued.
Are there grocery and propane services in Wagoner?
Wagoner covers the basics with local grocery, farm-supply, and fuel outlets that handle propane and everyday needs. For a bigger provisioning run, more RV parts, or full RV repair, Broken Arrow and Tulsa to the northwest and Muskogee to the south all have fuller options a short drive away on US-69 and SH-51. We recommend stocking groceries, propane, and fresh water before you settle into a first-come Corps loop on Fort Gibson Lake, since services at the recreation areas are minimal once you are camped and the nearest full store is back toward town.
Is boondocking or free camping available near Wagoner?
There is little developed free camping right around the Fort Gibson Lake recreation areas, but the Corps electric sites are cheap enough that most travelers just pay for a spot. Self-contained rigs can look toward the wildlife management areas on the Fort Gibson watershed for primitive shoreline camping, though facilities are bare-bones or nonexistent. For most RVers, the practical plan is an inexpensive COE or state-park electric site with a dump station on hand, then a single dump-and-fill. Remember that primitive areas have no services, so keep a dump plan even if you head that way.
What are the must-see attractions right around Wagoner?
Fort Gibson Lake is the main draw, a big Corps reservoir with beaches, boat ramps, and top-tier crappie and bass fishing. Sequoyah Bay State Park adds swimming and lakeside camping. History buffs can visit reconstructed Historic Fort Gibson, an 1824 frontier military post about 15 miles south, and birders should head to Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge, where the Arkansas and Canadian rivers meet and eagles winter. With Tulsa and Muskogee both within an easy drive, Wagoner works as a relaxed lake base with enough nearby history and wildlife to fill a few days beyond the fishing.
Do the campground dump stations stay open all year?
Some do, some do not. On Fort Gibson Lake, Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point stay open year-round, so they are your reliable cold-season dump-and-fill option. Rocky Point runs seasonally, roughly April 1 to September 30, and closes for winter. Sequoyah Bay State Park operates on a state-park calendar, so confirm current hours in the off-season. Because eastern Oklahoma winters are mild, the year-round Corps parks remain workable through the cold months. If you travel December through February, call ahead or default to Taylor Ferry South or Blue Bill Point for a dependable station.
Is Wagoner a good base for exploring the Fort Gibson Lake area?
We think it is a solid, affordable one. Wagoner sits right on US-69 with quick access to Fort Gibson Lake, several inexpensive Corps and state-park campgrounds, and dump stations at the recreation areas. From here you can fish the lake, tour Historic Fort Gibson, bird the Sequoyah refuge, and day-trip to Tulsa or Muskogee for bigger-city needs. The lake camping is the appeal: cheap electric sites on the water with dump stations close by. Set up at Sequoyah Bay or a COE park, dump and fill on arrival, and use the lake as a relaxed green-country base.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Wagoner, Oklahoma?
Wagoner has {{stationCount}} dump options, and nearly all of them sit on Fort Gibson Lake just east of town. Sequoyah Bay State Park has two dump stations, and the Corps of Engineers parks add more: Rocky Point has two, Taylor Ferry South has one in the campground plus another on the entrance road, and Blue Bill Point has one as well. These are camper-first, and day-use dumping may carry a fee. Because the lake recreation areas hold most of the stations, plan your dump around a camping night or a day-use stop rather than expecting a downtown option.
Are any of the dump stations in Wagoner free?
Availability shifts, so check the current listings for the {{freeCount}} free options showing right now. The Corps of Engineers and state park stations generally carry a modest day-use fee if you are not a registered camper, and dumping is included when you camp overnight. The COE electric sites at Fort Gibson Lake are inexpensive to begin with, so an overnight stay that includes your dump is usually the best value. Because this is a lake-recreation area rather than an interstate crossroads, there are few free travel-center-style stations, so budget a small fee or plan around a camping night.
Is there potable water available at the dump stations?
Yes at the lake parks. Sequoyah Bay State Park and the Corps campgrounds provide drinking water alongside their dump stations and electric sites. We always recommend filling your fresh tank before you settle into a first-come loop, since services at the lake are minimal once you are set up. Keep your potable and flush hoses clearly separated and color coded so there is never any mix-up. Wagoner itself has basic services, but for a big water, grocery, and propane run, Broken Arrow and Muskogee have fuller options a short drive away.
What highways lead into Wagoner for RVs?
Wagoner sits on US-69, the fast four-lane divided corridor running north-south through eastern Oklahoma, so access is easy for a big rig. SH-51 runs west toward Broken Arrow and Tulsa, and SH-16 heads east to Fort Gibson Lake. The nearest interstate connection is I-44 via the Muskogee Turnpike near Tulsa, roughly 45 miles northwest, though US-69 itself moves traffic quickly. None of these routes carry RV-specific restrictions. To reach Rocky Point, travel about 4.5 miles north on US-69, turn east at the light onto East 690 Road, and go three miles east to the campground.
Can I park my RV overnight in downtown Wagoner?
Wagoner is a small town with easy road access, but the place for rigs to overnight is the lake, not downtown. There is no blanket overnight-parking ban in town, but the Corps of Engineers parks and Sequoyah Bay State Park are set up for RVs and priced affordably. Overnight parking outside designated sites is not allowed at the recreation areas. If you want a quick stop in town for fuel or groceries, that is fine, but for a night plan on one of the Fort Gibson Lake campgrounds, several of which stay open year-round.
What is the best season to visit Wagoner in an RV?
Late April through June and again in September and October are the sweet spots on Fort Gibson Lake. Spring is green and lively with strong crappie and bass fishing, though it overlaps the peak severe-weather season, so watch watches and know your shelter. Fall is our favorite: warm, settled days, cool nights, lower humidity, and thinning crowds. Summer is hot and humid, often mid-90s, and busy with weekend lake traffic that fills sites fast. Winter is mild enough that the year-round COE parks stay open, making Wagoner a workable cool-season lake stop.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near the dump stations?
Most sites here are electric-and-water rather than full hookup, which is typical of Corps and state-park lakes. Sequoyah Bay State Park offers water and 30/50-amp electric with two dump stations. Rocky Point has 66 paved electric sites with drinking water and two dump stations, open April through September. Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point provide electric sites and dump stations and stay open year-round. You dump at the station rather than at a full-hookup pad, so plan a dump-and-fill around your stay. For full hookups, private parks toward Broken Arrow and Muskogee fill the gap.
How is the fishing on Fort Gibson Lake?
Fort Gibson Lake is one of eastern Oklahoma green country favorite fisheries, a nearly 20,000-acre Corps reservoir known for crappie, largemouth and white bass, and catfish. Spring draws anglers for the crappie spawn, and the lake stays productive into fall. The campgrounds put you right on the water with boat ramps and courtesy docks, so many RVers come specifically to fish. If you time a spring trip around the spawn, reserve early and keep an eye on severe-weather watches, since the best fishing weeks overlap eastern Oklahoma stormy season.
What should I know about the climate before visiting?
Wagoner sits in Oklahoma green country, with hot, humid summers often into the mid-90s and afternoon thunderstorms tempered by lake breezes. Winters are mild with only occasional cold snaps and brief ice, so several lake campgrounds stay open year-round. The season to respect is spring, which is both the greenest camping window and the peak for severe weather across eastern Oklahoma, including high wind, hail, and the occasional tornado warning. Always know where the campground storm shelter is, monitor watches, and be ready to move to a sturdy building if a warning is issued.
Are there grocery and propane services in Wagoner?
Wagoner covers the basics with local grocery, farm-supply, and fuel outlets that handle propane and everyday needs. For a bigger provisioning run, more RV parts, or full RV repair, Broken Arrow and Tulsa to the northwest and Muskogee to the south all have fuller options a short drive away on US-69 and SH-51. We recommend stocking groceries, propane, and fresh water before you settle into a first-come Corps loop on Fort Gibson Lake, since services at the recreation areas are minimal once you are camped and the nearest full store is back toward town.
Is boondocking or free camping available near Wagoner?
There is little developed free camping right around the Fort Gibson Lake recreation areas, but the Corps electric sites are cheap enough that most travelers just pay for a spot. Self-contained rigs can look toward the wildlife management areas on the Fort Gibson watershed for primitive shoreline camping, though facilities are bare-bones or nonexistent. For most RVers, the practical plan is an inexpensive COE or state-park electric site with a dump station on hand, then a single dump-and-fill. Remember that primitive areas have no services, so keep a dump plan even if you head that way.
What are the must-see attractions right around Wagoner?
Fort Gibson Lake is the main draw, a big Corps reservoir with beaches, boat ramps, and top-tier crappie and bass fishing. Sequoyah Bay State Park adds swimming and lakeside camping. History buffs can visit reconstructed Historic Fort Gibson, an 1824 frontier military post about 15 miles south, and birders should head to Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge, where the Arkansas and Canadian rivers meet and eagles winter. With Tulsa and Muskogee both within an easy drive, Wagoner works as a relaxed lake base with enough nearby history and wildlife to fill a few days beyond the fishing.
Do the campground dump stations stay open all year?
Some do, some do not. On Fort Gibson Lake, Taylor Ferry South and Blue Bill Point stay open year-round, so they are your reliable cold-season dump-and-fill option. Rocky Point runs seasonally, roughly April 1 to September 30, and closes for winter. Sequoyah Bay State Park operates on a state-park calendar, so confirm current hours in the off-season. Because eastern Oklahoma winters are mild, the year-round Corps parks remain workable through the cold months. If you travel December through February, call ahead or default to Taylor Ferry South or Blue Bill Point for a dependable station.
Is Wagoner a good base for exploring the Fort Gibson Lake area?
We think it is a solid, affordable one. Wagoner sits right on US-69 with quick access to Fort Gibson Lake, several inexpensive Corps and state-park campgrounds, and dump stations at the recreation areas. From here you can fish the lake, tour Historic Fort Gibson, bird the Sequoyah refuge, and day-trip to Tulsa or Muskogee for bigger-city needs. The lake camping is the appeal: cheap electric sites on the water with dump stations close by. Set up at Sequoyah Bay or a COE park, dump and fill on arrival, and use the lake as a relaxed green-country base.
Are there free dump stations in Wagoner?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Wagoner.
All Dump Stations Near Wagoner (58)
RV Dump StationsLong Bay Landing (Ft. Gibson Lake)
RV Dump StationsU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Taylor Ferry Campground
RV Dump StationsU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Blue Bill Point Campground
RV Dump StationsU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Rocky Point (Ft. Gibson)
RV Dump StationsAfton Landing Recreation Area
RV Dump StationsSequoyah Bay Recreation Area
RV Dump StationsSequoyah State Park
RV Dump Stations




