RV Parks In Brookings, Oregon
42.0526° N, 124.2840° W
Quick Overview
Brookings sits at the far southern end of the Oregon coast, a few miles above the California line, and it has a reputation among RVers for two things: warm weather and full hookups. Local geography gives the town a banana-belt climate, the warmest and least-foggy stretch on the entire coast, so summer here is genuinely pleasant rather than gray. Better still, this is one of the rare places on the coast where you can get full hookups on both the public and private side, which takes the usual Oregon-coast guesswork out of planning.
The public anchor is Harris Beach State Park on the north edge of town, with 90 RV sites, 65 of them full hookup with 50, 30, and 20-amp service, perched on a bluff above sea stacks, tidepools, and Bird Island. It is open year-round and books months ahead for summer. On the private side, Beachfront RV Park sits oceanfront at the harbor jetty, At Rivers Edge RV Resort lines the Chetco River with big-rig pull-throughs, and Whaleshead Beach Resort tucks into the forest above the Boardman corridor. The trade is the familiar one: state-park scenery versus private-park convenience, but here both come with hookups.
Whichever you choose, Brookings rewards a multi-night stay. The Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor just north of town strings together twelve miles of sea stacks, arches, and clifftop trails, the Port of Brookings Harbor offers fishing and crabbing, and the Chetco River draws salmon and steelhead anglers. Twenty-five miles south, the old-growth redwoods of Jedediah Smith make an easy day trip across the California line. Add gray-whale watching offshore in spring, crabbing off the harbor jetty, and the native blooms at Azalea Park in town, and you have days of exploring within a short drive of camp rather than a one-night stopover on the coast.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Brookings
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Brookings
All Dump Stations Near Brookings
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Riverside RV Resort | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sea Bird RV Park | 1.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Beachfront RV Park | 1.1 mi | 4.1 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Brookings RV Park | 1.8 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ramblin' Redwoods Campground And RV Park | 14.9 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Crescent City / Redwoods Koa Holiday | 17.6 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Redwood Meadows RV Resort | 21.0 mi | 4.2 | RV Park | Varies |
| Lighthouse Cove RV Park | 21.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunset Harbor RV Park | 21.4 mi | 3.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Turtle Rock RV Resort | 24.2 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
Riverside RV Resort
0.9 miSea Bird RV Park
1.1 miBeachfront RV Park
1.1 miBrookings RV Park
1.8 miRamblin' Redwoods Campground And RV Park
14.9 miCrescent City / Redwoods Koa Holiday
17.6 miRedwood Meadows RV Resort
21.0 miLighthouse Cove RV Park
21.3 miSunset Harbor RV Park
21.4 miTurtle Rock RV Resort
24.2 miTraveling to Brookings by RV
Getting to Brookings is easier than most of the Oregon coast. US-101 is the only through route and it runs right through town, with the usual coastal curves but no big sustained mountain grades. From the south, Crescent City, California is about 25 miles away; from the north, Coos Bay is roughly 95 miles up the coast. The harbor and Chetco River private parks have easy, level big-rig access, while Harris Beach takes rigs up to 57 feet on tighter loop roads, so choose your site with care.
The nearest inland hub for major repairs, supplies, and an airport is Medford, about 115 miles east over the Siskiyou Mountains via US-199 and OR-99. That route has real grades and curves, so plan it in daylight and take the descents in lower gears with a big rig. In Brookings itself, fuel, groceries, and propane are all easy to find. Stock up here before heading north up the coast, where services thin out quickly between the small coastal towns.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Brookings
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Oregon
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Brookings, 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 Brookings, 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 Brookings
Brookings is one of the better-value full-hookup destinations on the Oregon coast. Harris Beach State Park is the standout deal, with hookup sites generally in the low $30s per night for an oceanfront bluff setting that private resorts would charge double for. Private full-hookup parks at the harbor and on the Chetco River typically run from the high $40s into the $60s, climbing during the July and August peak when demand is highest and the weather is best.
Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks bring the nightly cost down for longer stays, which suits snowbirds and anglers basing here for a week or more. Budget a little extra for peak summer, when both rates and availability tighten. The best value is the shoulder season, September into October, when private rates ease off the summer high but the banana-belt weather often stays warm and clear well into fall.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Brookings
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Brookings by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
42F - 55F
Crowds: Low
Rainy and windy but rarely freezing thanks to the banana-belt climate. Parks stay open year-round, so winter is quiet storm-watching season with low rates. Watch US-101 for occasional slide closures after big storms.
Spring
Mar - May
46F - 60F
Crowds: Medium
Gray whales migrate north and the bluffs bloom with wildflowers. Weather swings between sun and squalls, so pack layers and rain gear and check the forecast before committing to beachfront sites.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52F - 68F
Crowds: High
The warmest, driest, and busiest season on the southern coast. Book Harris Beach up to six months ahead, and reserve the harbor private parks early for July and August weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Often the clearest, calmest weather of the year and the best value. Crowds thin after Labor Day while the ocean stays swimmable-cool and the fishing stays strong on the Chetco.
Explore the Brookings Area
A few pointers make a Brookings trip smoother. Book Harris Beach on ReserveAmerica six months out for any summer weekend, and have backup dates ready before the window opens, since the full-hookup sites go fast. Take advantage of the banana-belt weather: Brookings beats foggier coastal towns farther north all summer, so it is worth the drive for reliable sun. Day-trip the Boardman corridor pullouts at low tide for the best tidepools and photos, and cross the California line to walk among the redwoods at Jedediah Smith.
Stock up on fuel and groceries in town, because coastal services get sparse north of here. If you fish, the Chetco runs strong with salmon and steelhead in season, and the harbor has charters and crabbing. In winter, watch US-101 for occasional slide closures after big storms, and pack rain gear year-round even though hard freezes are rare. For the best weather and value, target September and October, when the crowds thin but the warm, clear days often linger on this stretch of coast.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Brookings
What are the best RV parks in Brookings, OR?
Brookings is unusual on the Oregon coast because you can get full hookups on both the public and private side. Harris Beach State Park, on the north edge of town, is the scenic standout with 90 RV sites, 65 of them full hookup, perched above sea stacks and tidepools. For easy big-rig access, the private parks win: Beachfront RV Park sits oceanfront at the harbor jetty, At Rivers Edge RV Resort lines the Chetco River, and Whaleshead Beach Resort tucks into the forest above the Boardman corridor. Pick Harris Beach for setting, a harbor park for convenience.
Do Brookings campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, and that is what makes Brookings special on this coast. Harris Beach State Park offers 65 full-hookup sites with 50, 30, and 20-amp service plus another 25 water-and-electric sites and a dump station near the entrance. The private parks in town, including Beachfront RV Park and At Rivers Edge, all provide full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power and Wi-Fi. Unlike many Oregon coast campgrounds that are electric-and-water only or dry, Brookings lets most RVers find a true full-hookup site even in peak season if they book ahead.
How much does RV camping cost in Brookings?
Harris Beach State Park is the value choice, with hookup sites generally in the low $30s per night, which is a bargain for an oceanfront state park. Private full-hookup parks at the harbor and on the Chetco River typically run from the high $40s into the $60s, climbing in the July and August peak when demand is highest. Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks bring the nightly cost down for longer stays. Overall, Brookings is one of the better-value full-hookup destinations on the Oregon coast, especially if you can land a state-park site.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Brookings?
For Harris Beach in summer, book the day your date opens. Oregon State Parks releases sites on ReserveAmerica on a six-month rolling window, and the full-hookup sites at this popular park go quickly for July and August weekends. The private harbor and river parks are easier and can sometimes be found a few weeks out, especially midweek, but holiday weekends still fill. If your trip is locked in for peak summer, treat the six-month mark as a hard deadline, set a reminder, and have backup dates ready before the window opens.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Brookings?
July through October is the sweet spot. Brookings sits in a coastal banana belt that makes it the warmest and least-foggy town on the Oregon coast, so summer here is genuinely pleasant rather than gray. Fall, from September into October, often brings the clearest and calmest weather of the entire year along with thinner crowds and lower rates. Spring brings whale migration and wildflowers but unsettled weather. Winter is mild but rainy, good for storm-watchers who want the coast to themselves. For the best mix, aim for late summer into early fall.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Brookings?
Yes. Harris Beach State Park accepts rigs up to 57 feet, though the loop roads are tight, so choose your site carefully when you reserve. For the easiest big-rig experience, the private parks are the better bet: Beachfront RV Park and At Rivers Edge have big-rig pull-throughs with full hookups and level pads. Getting to Brookings is straightforward, since US-101 runs right through town with curves but no major mountain grades. Take the highway curves at a steady pace and you will have no trouble bringing a large motorhome or fifth-wheel into the area.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Brookings?
A few, but not on the coast itself. The Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest inland has some dispersed and primitive campsites that allow self-contained RVs, though access roads can be narrow and rough for big rigs. There is no legal free overnight RV parking along the Brookings waterfront, and the city enforces no-camping rules. Most RVers here use Harris Beach for affordable hookup camping or a private park at the harbor. If you want free dispersed camping, plan to head into the national forest and drive into town for fuel, water, and groceries.
Is Harris Beach State Park worth staying at?
For most RVers, it is the highlight of the area. The campground sits on a bluff above one of the most photographed beaches in Oregon, with offshore sea stacks, tidepools, and Bird Island in view, and trails drop right to the sand. Unlike most Oregon coast state parks, it offers true full hookups, so you get the scenery without giving up power and sewer. The catch is popularity: it books months ahead and the loop roads are tight for big rigs. Reserve early, pick your site with care, and it is hard to beat.
What is there to do around Brookings while camping?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Walk or drive the Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor just north of town, twelve miles of sea stacks, arches, and clifftop trails that rank among the best on the West Coast. Fish or crab at the Port of Brookings Harbor, cast for salmon and steelhead on the Chetco River, and beachcomb the coves at low tide. Just 25 miles south across the California line, Jedediah Smith Redwoods puts you among towering old-growth coast redwoods. Add whale watching and Azalea Park in town and you have days of exploring.
Why is Brookings called the banana belt of Oregon?
Local geography gives Brookings a freak of mild weather. Coastal mountains and offshore winds combine to produce periodic warm, dry spells, sometimes pushing temperatures into the 80s in winter when the rest of the Oregon coast is cold and wet. The town is consistently the warmest and least-foggy spot on the coast, which is a real advantage for RVers escaping the gray summers farther north. It will not feel tropical, but compared with Newport or Astoria you can expect more sun, less fog, and more comfortable camping weather across the year.
Do Brookings RV parks stay open in winter?
Yes. Harris Beach State Park and the main private parks at the harbor and on the Chetco River all operate year-round, which makes Brookings a viable cool-season coastal base. Thanks to the banana-belt climate, winters are mild and rarely freeze, though they are rainy and windy. Expect the occasional US-101 slide closure after major storms and shorter daylight hours, but full hookups, laundry, and showers keep winter camping comfortable. Rates drop from the summer peak, and you will often have the beaches, tidepools, and Boardman corridor trails nearly to yourself.
How is the drive into Brookings for an RV?
Easier than most of the Oregon coast. US-101 is the only through route and it runs right past town, with the usual coastal curves but no big sustained mountain grades like you find farther inland. From the south, Crescent City, California is about 25 miles away; from the north, Coos Bay is roughly 95 miles up the coast. The nearest inland hub for major services and an airport is Medford, about 115 miles east over the Siskiyous on US-199 and OR-99, a route with real grades, so plan that leg in daylight. In town, parking and services are RV-friendly.
What are the best RV parks in Brookings, OR?
Brookings is unusual on the Oregon coast because you can get full hookups on both the public and private side. Harris Beach State Park, on the north edge of town, is the scenic standout with 90 RV sites, 65 of them full hookup, perched above sea stacks and tidepools. For easy big-rig access, the private parks win: Beachfront RV Park sits oceanfront at the harbor jetty, At Rivers Edge RV Resort lines the Chetco River, and Whaleshead Beach Resort tucks into the forest above the Boardman corridor. Pick Harris Beach for setting, a harbor park for convenience.
Do Brookings campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, and that is what makes Brookings special on this coast. Harris Beach State Park offers 65 full-hookup sites with 50, 30, and 20-amp service plus another 25 water-and-electric sites and a dump station near the entrance. The private parks in town, including Beachfront RV Park and At Rivers Edge, all provide full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power and Wi-Fi. Unlike many Oregon coast campgrounds that are electric-and-water only or dry, Brookings lets most RVers find a true full-hookup site even in peak season if they book ahead.
How much does RV camping cost in Brookings?
Harris Beach State Park is the value choice, with hookup sites generally in the low $30s per night, which is a bargain for an oceanfront state park. Private full-hookup parks at the harbor and on the Chetco River typically run from the high $40s into the $60s, climbing in the July and August peak when demand is highest. Weekly and monthly rates at the private parks bring the nightly cost down for longer stays. Overall, Brookings is one of the better-value full-hookup destinations on the Oregon coast, especially if you can land a state-park site.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Brookings?
For Harris Beach in summer, book the day your date opens. Oregon State Parks releases sites on ReserveAmerica on a six-month rolling window, and the full-hookup sites at this popular park go quickly for July and August weekends. The private harbor and river parks are easier and can sometimes be found a few weeks out, especially midweek, but holiday weekends still fill. If your trip is locked in for peak summer, treat the six-month mark as a hard deadline, set a reminder, and have backup dates ready before the window opens.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Brookings?
July through October is the sweet spot. Brookings sits in a coastal banana belt that makes it the warmest and least-foggy town on the Oregon coast, so summer here is genuinely pleasant rather than gray. Fall, from September into October, often brings the clearest and calmest weather of the entire year along with thinner crowds and lower rates. Spring brings whale migration and wildflowers but unsettled weather. Winter is mild but rainy, good for storm-watchers who want the coast to themselves. For the best mix, aim for late summer into early fall.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet) camp in Brookings?
Yes. Harris Beach State Park accepts rigs up to 57 feet, though the loop roads are tight, so choose your site carefully when you reserve. For the easiest big-rig experience, the private parks are the better bet: Beachfront RV Park and At Rivers Edge have big-rig pull-throughs with full hookups and level pads. Getting to Brookings is straightforward, since US-101 runs right through town with curves but no major mountain grades. Take the highway curves at a steady pace and you will have no trouble bringing a large motorhome or fifth-wheel into the area.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Brookings?
A few, but not on the coast itself. The Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest inland has some dispersed and primitive campsites that allow self-contained RVs, though access roads can be narrow and rough for big rigs. There is no legal free overnight RV parking along the Brookings waterfront, and the city enforces no-camping rules. Most RVers here use Harris Beach for affordable hookup camping or a private park at the harbor. If you want free dispersed camping, plan to head into the national forest and drive into town for fuel, water, and groceries.
Is Harris Beach State Park worth staying at?
For most RVers, it is the highlight of the area. The campground sits on a bluff above one of the most photographed beaches in Oregon, with offshore sea stacks, tidepools, and Bird Island in view, and trails drop right to the sand. Unlike most Oregon coast state parks, it offers true full hookups, so you get the scenery without giving up power and sewer. The catch is popularity: it books months ahead and the loop roads are tight for big rigs. Reserve early, pick your site with care, and it is hard to beat.
What is there to do around Brookings while camping?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Walk or drive the Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor just north of town, twelve miles of sea stacks, arches, and clifftop trails that rank among the best on the West Coast. Fish or crab at the Port of Brookings Harbor, cast for salmon and steelhead on the Chetco River, and beachcomb the coves at low tide. Just 25 miles south across the California line, Jedediah Smith Redwoods puts you among towering old-growth coast redwoods. Add whale watching and Azalea Park in town and you have days of exploring.
Why is Brookings called the banana belt of Oregon?
Local geography gives Brookings a freak of mild weather. Coastal mountains and offshore winds combine to produce periodic warm, dry spells, sometimes pushing temperatures into the 80s in winter when the rest of the Oregon coast is cold and wet. The town is consistently the warmest and least-foggy spot on the coast, which is a real advantage for RVers escaping the gray summers farther north. It will not feel tropical, but compared with Newport or Astoria you can expect more sun, less fog, and more comfortable camping weather across the year.
Do Brookings RV parks stay open in winter?
Yes. Harris Beach State Park and the main private parks at the harbor and on the Chetco River all operate year-round, which makes Brookings a viable cool-season coastal base. Thanks to the banana-belt climate, winters are mild and rarely freeze, though they are rainy and windy. Expect the occasional US-101 slide closure after major storms and shorter daylight hours, but full hookups, laundry, and showers keep winter camping comfortable. Rates drop from the summer peak, and you will often have the beaches, tidepools, and Boardman corridor trails nearly to yourself.
How is the drive into Brookings for an RV?
Easier than most of the Oregon coast. US-101 is the only through route and it runs right past town, with the usual coastal curves but no big sustained mountain grades like you find farther inland. From the south, Crescent City, California is about 25 miles away; from the north, Coos Bay is roughly 95 miles up the coast. The nearest inland hub for major services and an airport is Medford, about 115 miles east over the Siskiyous on US-199 and OR-99, a route with real grades, so plan that leg in daylight. In town, parking and services are RV-friendly.
Are there free dump stations in Brookings?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Brookings.
All Dump Stations Near Brookings (32)
RV ParkRiverside RV Resort
RV ParkBeachfront RV Park
RV ParkSea Bird RV Park
RV ParkBrookings RV Park
RV ParkRamblin' Redwoods Campground And RV Park
RV ParkCrescent City / Redwoods Koa Holiday
RV ParkLighthouse Cove RV Park
RV Park





