RV Parks In Albany, Oregon
44.6365° N, 123.1059° W
Quick Overview
Albany sits right on Interstate 5 in the heart of Oregon's Willamette Valley, a historic mill town turned easy RV crossroads between Salem and Eugene. For campers, this is one of the more convenient bases in the state: flat valley driving, full-hookup parks a minute off the freeway, world-class wine country at the doorstep, and the Cascade lakes and rivers a short drive east. The camping here gives you a real choice between polished private full-hookup parks in town and public state-park sites in the mountains, so you can plan a stay around either convenience and wine touring or a scenic lakeside getaway.
The in-town anchor is Blue Ox RV Park, a large full-hookup park with 149 sites, 68 pull-throughs, paved pads, and an indoor pool right off I-5, making it an easy big-rig choice. The Albany / Corvallis KOA and Knox Butte RV Park are solid full-hookup alternatives with pools and level concrete pads. For a mountain-lake trip, Detroit Lake State Recreation Area lies about an hour east on Highway 22 with 300 reservable sites, full hookups, and lake views, while Cascadia State Park offers primitive forest camping on the South Santiam River. That private-versus-public spread is the key to planning your trip here.
Big rigs have it easy in Albany, which sits on flat valley ground with interstate access and no grades or tight roads to town. Blue Ox and Knox Butte both offer paved or concrete big-rig sites, while Detroit Lake takes larger rigs if you do not mind the climb up Highway 22 into the Cascades. Albany has full services right off the freeway, with Portland about 70 miles north for a major airport. Come for the wine country, the four historic districts and 700-plus heritage buildings, and the Linn County covered bridges, plan around the busy summer weekends, and Albany makes a rewarding, flexible hub for touring the mid-Willamette Valley by RV.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Albany
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Albany
All Dump Stations Near Albany
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albany RV And Trailer Park | 2.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Knox Butte RV Park | 2.5 mi | 4.5 | RV Park | Varies |
| Blue Ox RV Park | 2.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Albany / Corvallis Koa Journey | 5.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| South Corvallis Trailer Court | 9.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Benton Oaks RV Park | 11.1 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Corvallis Mobile Home Park | 11.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Benton Oaks RV Campground | 11.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Emerald Valley RV Park | 11.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Woods Trailer-rv Park | 12.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Albany RV And Trailer Park
2.5 miKnox Butte RV Park
2.5 miBlue Ox RV Park
2.7 miAlbany / Corvallis Koa Journey
5.5 miSouth Corvallis Trailer Court
9.8 miBenton Oaks RV Park
11.1 miCorvallis Mobile Home Park
11.2 miBenton Oaks RV Campground
11.2 miEmerald Valley RV Park
11.3 miWoods Trailer-rv Park
12.2 miTraveling to Albany by RV
Getting to Albany with an RV is refreshingly simple. The town sits directly on Interstate 5 in the flat Willamette Valley, midway between Salem to the north and Eugene to the south, with no grades or low bridges on the main approach. US-20 crosses east to west, connecting the Cascades to the coast, and OR-99E offers a scenic two-lane alternative up the valley. For the mountain parks, Highway 22 climbs east to Detroit Lake and US-20 heads to Cascadia, both genuine Cascade grades where you should check brakes and fuel before starting up.
Once you are here, the valley private parks like Blue Ox RV Park, the KOA, and Knox Butte all sit within a minute or two of the interstate and handle big rigs with paved or concrete pull-through pads. Albany has full services right off the freeway for fuel, groceries, and RV supplies, so there is no need to detour. Portland, about 70 miles north, is your nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent a motorhome, while Salem and Eugene are each within about a half-hour drive for anything else you might need.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Albany
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Oregon
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Albany, OR
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Albany, Oregon, 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 Albany
Costs here depend on whether you stay in a valley private park or a Cascade state park. The private full-hookup parks like Blue Ox and the Albany / Corvallis KOA sit in the mid-to-upper range, reflecting paved sites, pools, and full services, and they charge a premium on summer weekends. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area spans a wide band, roughly $15 to $59 a night depending on hookup level and whether you land a lake-view site, plus reservation fees. Cascadia State Park is the budget primitive pick.
To save money, aim for midweek or the spring and fall shoulders, when both the private parks and the state parks are easier to book and often cheaper. At Detroit Lake, an interior site costs less than a lake-view spot, so book inland if the view matters less than the price. Albany's year-round private parks rarely spike outside peak summer, making the off-season an affordable time to use the town as a valley touring base while higher-elevation parks are closed.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Albany
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Albany by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
35F - 48F
Crowds: Low
Mild but wet valley winters keep crowds away. The private parks like Blue Ox, the KOA, and Knox Butte stay open year-round with full hookups, while mountain campgrounds like Cascadia close. Detroit Lake stays open but runs cold and quiet. Good for a rainy-season wine-country base with easy availability.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 62F
Crowds: Low
Green and rainy with wildflowers and rising rivers. The valley private parks are easy to book right now, so this is the time to reserve summer sites at Detroit Lake before they fill. Pack rain gear and expect soft ground at the mountain and forest sites as they thaw and dry out.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52F - 82F
Crowds: High
Peak Willamette Valley season with dry, warm days, wine touring, and festivals. Private parks and Detroit Lake fill on weekends, so reserve Blue Ox and lake-view Detroit Lake sites months ahead. Warm afternoons and cool nights make this the classic time to camp the valley and the Cascades.
Fall
Sep - Oct
44F - 66F
Crowds: Medium
Harvest and crush season in wine country, with mild days, fall color, and thinning crowds, our favorite value window. Cascadia State Park closes at the end of September, so confirm dates for mountain trips, while the valley private parks stay open and easy to book into the fall.
Explore the Albany Area
Base smart and Albany opens up the whole valley. For an easy big-rig stay with full hookups, Blue Ox RV Park right off I-5 is hard to beat, and it stays open year-round. If you want a mountain-lake trip, reserve Detroit Lake State Recreation Area months ahead through the Oregon State Parks system for summer lake-view sites, since those go first.
Our favorite move is to leave the rig plugged in and day-trip. Tour the four historic districts and the 1849 Monteith House, ride the downtown Historic Carousel, and drive the Linn County covered bridges, five of which sit in or near Albany. Wine country is at your doorstep, so plan a designated-driver day through the Willamette Valley Pinot Noir tasting rooms, especially during fall harvest. For quieter, cheaper camping, head east on US-20 to Cascadia State Park or the Willamette National Forest, but come self-contained since services thin fast in the mountains.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Albany
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Albany, Oregon?
Albany sits right on I-5 in the heart of the Willamette Valley, so it has strong private full-hookup parks in town plus public state parks out in the Cascades. The standout in-town option is Blue Ox RV Park, a large full-hookup park with pull-throughs, paved pads, and an indoor pool just off the interstate. The Albany / Corvallis KOA and Knox Butte RV Park are solid full-hookup alternatives. For a mountain-lake trip, Detroit Lake State Recreation Area lies about an hour east with reservable RV sites, and Cascadia State Park offers primitive forest camping. Between them you can match a convenient valley base or a scenic getaway.
Do RV parks in Albany have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, the Albany-area private parks are built for it. Blue Ox RV Park offers full hookups with water, electric, and sewer, 30 and 50-amp service, and 68 pull-through sites on paved pads, making it an easy big-rig choice right off I-5. The Albany / Corvallis KOA and Knox Butte RV Park also provide full-hookup sites, with Knox Butte featuring level concrete pads. Out in the Cascades, Detroit Lake State Recreation Area has full-hookup and electric sites, while Cascadia State Park is primitive with no hookups. If you want full hookups, stick to the valley private parks or the developed loops at Detroit Lake.
How much does RV camping cost in Albany?
Costs depend on whether you stay in a valley private park or a public state park. The private full-hookup parks like Blue Ox and the KOA sit in the mid-to-upper range, reflecting paved sites, pools, and full services, with a premium on summer weekends. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area spans a wide range, roughly $15 to $59 a night depending on hookup level and lake-view location, plus reservation fees. Cascadia State Park is the budget primitive option. To save, camp midweek or in the spring and fall shoulders, and book interior rather than lake-view sites at Detroit Lake if the view matters less than the price.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Albany?
For summer, reserve early. The valley private parks like Blue Ox fill on summer weekends thanks to Albany's spot on I-5 and the wine-country draw, so book weeks ahead for July and August. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area is the tighter one: its 300 sites, especially the lake-view spots, book months in advance for summer and holiday weekends through the Oregon State Parks reservation system. Cascadia and the national-forest campgrounds offer more first-come flexibility. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier. If you want a lake-view site at Detroit Lake in summer, reserve as early as the window allows.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Albany?
Summer is the classic season, with the Willamette Valley's dry, warm weather perfect for wine touring, festivals, and Detroit Lake boating, though it is the busiest and priciest. Our favorite window is fall, during wine-country harvest and crush, with mild days, thinner crowds, and better value, though mountain parks like Cascadia close at the end of September. Spring is green, rainy, and quiet, ideal for the historic districts and easy bookings. Winter is mild but wet in the valley, and the private parks stay open year-round, making Albany a rare Northwest spot you can camp comfortably in any season.
Can big rigs camp in Albany?
Yes, Albany is one of the easier Oregon towns for a big rig. It sits right on I-5 in the flat Willamette Valley, so getting a large motorhome or fifth-wheel to town involves no grades or tight roads. Blue Ox RV Park is purpose-built for big rigs, with 68 pull-through sites, paved pads, and 50-amp service, and Knox Butte RV Park offers level concrete pads. The KOA also handles larger rigs. Detroit Lake takes RVs too, though the drive east on Highway 22 climbs into the Cascades. For the simplest big-rig stay, the valley private parks right off the interstate are your best bet.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Albany?
Yes, though you head into the mountains for them. The valley private parks are reservation-based, but east of Albany on US-20 and Highway 22, the Cascades open up more options. Cascadia State Park offers primitive first-come-friendly camping along the South Santiam River from May through September, and the surrounding Willamette National Forest has dispersed camping and first-come campgrounds. There is little free camping on the valley floor itself, since it is developed farmland and towns. If you want first-come or free sites, plan to drive east into the national forest and come self-contained, since services thin quickly in the mountains.
Is there a state park with camping near Albany?
Yes, two good ones, both in the Cascades east of town. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area is the bigger draw, about an hour east on Highway 22, with 300 campsites including full-hookup and electric RV sites, lake-view spots, showers, and a dump station on a Cascade reservoir known for boating and fishing. Reservations run through the Oregon State Parks system months ahead. Cascadia State Park, 15 miles east of Sweet Home on US-20, is smaller and primitive with no hookups but has restrooms, showers, and river access, open May through September. Both make scenic mountain complements to a valley-based trip.
What is there to do in Albany besides camp?
Plenty, and it is a big reason to linger. Albany has four historic districts with more than 700 buildings, including the 1849 Monteith House, one of Oregon's oldest pioneer homes, and the world-class Historic Carousel and Museum downtown with over 40 hand-carved animals. Linn County holds nine of Oregon's covered bridges, five in or near Albany, making for a great driving tour. The surrounding Willamette Valley is famous wine country, with Pinot Noir tasting rooms at your doorstep. Add river paths, biking, and Detroit Lake to the east, and you can easily fill several days from an Albany base.
Can I visit wine country from an Albany RV park?
Absolutely, that is one of Albany's best features for RVers. The town sits squarely in the Willamette Valley, Oregon's premier wine region and one of the world's great Pinot Noir areas, so tasting rooms and vineyards are a short drive in almost every direction. Basing at a full-hookup park like Blue Ox or the Albany / Corvallis KOA lets you leave the rig plugged in and tour wineries by car for the day. Plan a designated driver or a tour service, since the valley's roads wind between vineyards. Fall harvest and crush season is especially rewarding, pairing perfectly with a cool-weather camping trip.
How do I get to Albany with an RV?
Getting to Albany is about as easy as Oregon gets. The town sits directly on Interstate 5 in the flat Willamette Valley, midway between Salem and Eugene, with no grades or low bridges on the main approach. US-20 crosses east to west, and OR-99E offers a scenic alternative up the valley. For the mountain parks, Highway 22 climbs east to Detroit Lake and US-20 heads to Cascadia, both real Cascade grades worth planning fuel and brakes for. Albany has full services right off the interstate, and Portland, about 70 miles north, is your nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent a motorhome.
Are the campgrounds near Albany open in winter?
Many are, which sets Albany apart from most of Oregon. The valley private parks, including Blue Ox, the Albany / Corvallis KOA, and Knox Butte, stay open year-round with full hookups, and the mild, wet valley winters make off-season camping comfortable if you do not mind rain. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area also stays open year-round, though it runs cold and quiet in winter. The mountain parks like Cascadia close for the season, roughly October through April. If you are traveling the I-5 corridor in winter, Albany is a reliable place to find an open full-hookup site when higher-elevation parks are shut.
Are the Albany RV parks good for exploring the region?
Very much so, and location is the reason. Albany sits at a crossroads: I-5 runs north to south, US-20 heads east to the Cascades and west toward the coast, and the town is within an hour of Salem, Corvallis, Eugene, and Detroit Lake. A full-hookup base like Blue Ox RV Park or the KOA lets you leave the rig set up and make day trips to wine country, the covered bridges, the coast, or the mountains without breaking camp. That central position, combined with year-round availability and easy interstate access, makes Albany one of the better hub towns for touring the mid-Willamette Valley by RV.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Albany, Oregon?
Albany sits right on I-5 in the heart of the Willamette Valley, so it has strong private full-hookup parks in town plus public state parks out in the Cascades. The standout in-town option is Blue Ox RV Park, a large full-hookup park with pull-throughs, paved pads, and an indoor pool just off the interstate. The Albany / Corvallis KOA and Knox Butte RV Park are solid full-hookup alternatives. For a mountain-lake trip, Detroit Lake State Recreation Area lies about an hour east with reservable RV sites, and Cascadia State Park offers primitive forest camping. Between them you can match a convenient valley base or a scenic getaway.
Do RV parks in Albany have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, the Albany-area private parks are built for it. Blue Ox RV Park offers full hookups with water, electric, and sewer, 30 and 50-amp service, and 68 pull-through sites on paved pads, making it an easy big-rig choice right off I-5. The Albany / Corvallis KOA and Knox Butte RV Park also provide full-hookup sites, with Knox Butte featuring level concrete pads. Out in the Cascades, Detroit Lake State Recreation Area has full-hookup and electric sites, while Cascadia State Park is primitive with no hookups. If you want full hookups, stick to the valley private parks or the developed loops at Detroit Lake.
How much does RV camping cost in Albany?
Costs depend on whether you stay in a valley private park or a public state park. The private full-hookup parks like Blue Ox and the KOA sit in the mid-to-upper range, reflecting paved sites, pools, and full services, with a premium on summer weekends. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area spans a wide range, roughly $15 to $59 a night depending on hookup level and lake-view location, plus reservation fees. Cascadia State Park is the budget primitive option. To save, camp midweek or in the spring and fall shoulders, and book interior rather than lake-view sites at Detroit Lake if the view matters less than the price.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Albany?
For summer, reserve early. The valley private parks like Blue Ox fill on summer weekends thanks to Albany's spot on I-5 and the wine-country draw, so book weeks ahead for July and August. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area is the tighter one: its 300 sites, especially the lake-view spots, book months in advance for summer and holiday weekends through the Oregon State Parks reservation system. Cascadia and the national-forest campgrounds offer more first-come flexibility. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are far easier. If you want a lake-view site at Detroit Lake in summer, reserve as early as the window allows.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Albany?
Summer is the classic season, with the Willamette Valley's dry, warm weather perfect for wine touring, festivals, and Detroit Lake boating, though it is the busiest and priciest. Our favorite window is fall, during wine-country harvest and crush, with mild days, thinner crowds, and better value, though mountain parks like Cascadia close at the end of September. Spring is green, rainy, and quiet, ideal for the historic districts and easy bookings. Winter is mild but wet in the valley, and the private parks stay open year-round, making Albany a rare Northwest spot you can camp comfortably in any season.
Can big rigs camp in Albany?
Yes, Albany is one of the easier Oregon towns for a big rig. It sits right on I-5 in the flat Willamette Valley, so getting a large motorhome or fifth-wheel to town involves no grades or tight roads. Blue Ox RV Park is purpose-built for big rigs, with 68 pull-through sites, paved pads, and 50-amp service, and Knox Butte RV Park offers level concrete pads. The KOA also handles larger rigs. Detroit Lake takes RVs too, though the drive east on Highway 22 climbs into the Cascades. For the simplest big-rig stay, the valley private parks right off the interstate are your best bet.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Albany?
Yes, though you head into the mountains for them. The valley private parks are reservation-based, but east of Albany on US-20 and Highway 22, the Cascades open up more options. Cascadia State Park offers primitive first-come-friendly camping along the South Santiam River from May through September, and the surrounding Willamette National Forest has dispersed camping and first-come campgrounds. There is little free camping on the valley floor itself, since it is developed farmland and towns. If you want first-come or free sites, plan to drive east into the national forest and come self-contained, since services thin quickly in the mountains.
Is there a state park with camping near Albany?
Yes, two good ones, both in the Cascades east of town. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area is the bigger draw, about an hour east on Highway 22, with 300 campsites including full-hookup and electric RV sites, lake-view spots, showers, and a dump station on a Cascade reservoir known for boating and fishing. Reservations run through the Oregon State Parks system months ahead. Cascadia State Park, 15 miles east of Sweet Home on US-20, is smaller and primitive with no hookups but has restrooms, showers, and river access, open May through September. Both make scenic mountain complements to a valley-based trip.
What is there to do in Albany besides camp?
Plenty, and it is a big reason to linger. Albany has four historic districts with more than 700 buildings, including the 1849 Monteith House, one of Oregon's oldest pioneer homes, and the world-class Historic Carousel and Museum downtown with over 40 hand-carved animals. Linn County holds nine of Oregon's covered bridges, five in or near Albany, making for a great driving tour. The surrounding Willamette Valley is famous wine country, with Pinot Noir tasting rooms at your doorstep. Add river paths, biking, and Detroit Lake to the east, and you can easily fill several days from an Albany base.
Can I visit wine country from an Albany RV park?
Absolutely, that is one of Albany's best features for RVers. The town sits squarely in the Willamette Valley, Oregon's premier wine region and one of the world's great Pinot Noir areas, so tasting rooms and vineyards are a short drive in almost every direction. Basing at a full-hookup park like Blue Ox or the Albany / Corvallis KOA lets you leave the rig plugged in and tour wineries by car for the day. Plan a designated driver or a tour service, since the valley's roads wind between vineyards. Fall harvest and crush season is especially rewarding, pairing perfectly with a cool-weather camping trip.
How do I get to Albany with an RV?
Getting to Albany is about as easy as Oregon gets. The town sits directly on Interstate 5 in the flat Willamette Valley, midway between Salem and Eugene, with no grades or low bridges on the main approach. US-20 crosses east to west, and OR-99E offers a scenic alternative up the valley. For the mountain parks, Highway 22 climbs east to Detroit Lake and US-20 heads to Cascadia, both real Cascade grades worth planning fuel and brakes for. Albany has full services right off the interstate, and Portland, about 70 miles north, is your nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent a motorhome.
Are the campgrounds near Albany open in winter?
Many are, which sets Albany apart from most of Oregon. The valley private parks, including Blue Ox, the Albany / Corvallis KOA, and Knox Butte, stay open year-round with full hookups, and the mild, wet valley winters make off-season camping comfortable if you do not mind rain. Detroit Lake State Recreation Area also stays open year-round, though it runs cold and quiet in winter. The mountain parks like Cascadia close for the season, roughly October through April. If you are traveling the I-5 corridor in winter, Albany is a reliable place to find an open full-hookup site when higher-elevation parks are shut.
Are the Albany RV parks good for exploring the region?
Very much so, and location is the reason. Albany sits at a crossroads: I-5 runs north to south, US-20 heads east to the Cascades and west toward the coast, and the town is within an hour of Salem, Corvallis, Eugene, and Detroit Lake. A full-hookup base like Blue Ox RV Park or the KOA lets you leave the rig set up and make day trips to wine country, the covered bridges, the coast, or the mountains without breaking camp. That central position, combined with year-round availability and easy interstate access, makes Albany one of the better hub towns for touring the mid-Willamette Valley by RV.
Are there free dump stations in Albany?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Albany.
All Dump Stations Near Albany (90)
RV ParkAlbany RV And Trailer Park
RV Park with Dump StationsKnox Butte RV Park
RV ParkBlue Ox RV Park
RV ParkAlbany / Corvallis Koa Journey
RV ParkEmerald Valley RV Park
RV ParkSouth Corvallis Trailer Court
RV ParkBenton Oaks RV Park
RV Park





