RV Parks In Chiloquin, Oregon
42.5780° N, 121.8650° W
Quick Overview
Chiloquin is one of those south-central Oregon towns we keep coming back to, mostly because it puts us within a short drive of Crater Lake without the national park crowds and prices. It sits at about 4,178 feet in the Klamath Basin, where high desert flattens out against the southern Cascades and two spring-fed rivers, the Williamson and the Wood, run cold and clear through town. If you fish, you already know those names. If you don't, you'll still find plenty of reasons to park the rig here for a few nights.
The camping around Chiloquin is overwhelmingly public, which we like. The anchor is Collier Memorial State Park about five miles north of town, with 46 full-hookup sites (nine of them pull-through), 18 non-hookup sites with water nearby, and a free outdoor logging museum right on the grounds. Heads up for 2026: the B loop is closed for maintenance from mid-May through at least July, so book early and confirm which loop you're getting. A few minutes further up US-97, Williamson River Campground in the Fremont-Winema National Forest gives you 19 primitive, first-come sites with vault toilets and hand pumps, and a 1.3-mile trail links it back to Collier. For the full Crater Lake experience, Mazama Village Campground inside the park has 214 mostly tent-and-small-rig sites, open summer only.
Truly private RV resorts are thin right in Chiloquin; most cluster south around Agency Lake and Klamath Falls, so a lot of us run a hookup base in town or Klamath Falls and day-trip from there. Reservations matter in summer. Oregon State Parks takes bookings up to six months ahead through reserveamerica.com, and Mazama Village runs through recreation.gov, where the good summer sites go months in advance. Getting here is easy: US-97 is a wide, big-rig-friendly highway, and OR-62 peels off toward Crater Lake's south entrance. Between the rivers, the logging history, the Klamath wildlife refuges, and the miniature railroad at Train Mountain, Chiloquin earns more than a one-night stop.
One more thing worth saying up front: this is a high-elevation, weather-driven place, and that shapes how you camp. Most of the public campgrounds run on a seasonal calendar, so the same site that's perfect in July may be gated by snow in May or October. We treat summer as the main window, late spring and fall as quieter bonus time, and winter as off-limits unless we're truly set up for cold. If you build your trip around that rhythm and reserve the state and national park sites early, Chiloquin rewards you with rivers, history, and an easy back door into one of the best national parks in the country.
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Gear for Your Trip to Chiloquin
All Dump Stations Near Chiloquin
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waterwheel RV Park & Campground | 3.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Potter's Park | 9.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Klamath Falls RV Resort, Llc | 22.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Klamath Falls Koa Journey | 25.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Klamath Falls KOA | 25.9 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Wiseman's RV And Mobile Home Park | 27.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tingley Lake Estates | 32.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Medford Oaks RV Park | 45.1 mi | 3.7 | RV Park | Varies |
| Bear Mountain RV Park | 45.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ashland's Creekside Campground And RV Park | 48.7 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
Waterwheel RV Park & Campground
3.8 miPotter's Park
9.7 miKlamath Falls RV Resort, Llc
22.5 miKlamath Falls Koa Journey
25.9 miKlamath Falls KOA
25.9 miWiseman's RV And Mobile Home Park
27.3 miTingley Lake Estates
32.2 miMedford Oaks RV Park
45.1 miBear Mountain RV Park
45.9 miAshland's Creekside Campground And RV Park
48.7 miTraveling to Chiloquin by RV
Getting to Chiloquin is straightforward for any size rig. US-97 runs right through town on a north-south line, connecting Klamath Falls about 25 to 30 miles south with Chemult and Bend to the north. It's a well-graded highway with no low bridges or weight traps we worry about, so towing or driving a big motorhome through is no problem. The catch is the climb up to Crater Lake: OR-62 branches northwest toward the park's south entrance, and both that road and the park's Rim Drive are steep and snow-gated for much of the year. Check the park's road status before you point the rig uphill, because conditions change fast at elevation. Most public campgrounds here run reservations or first-come systems through reserveamerica.com, recreation.gov, or the Chiloquin Ranger District, and full hookups exist mainly at Collier Memorial State Park. For fuel, propane, groceries, and any RV repairs, plan on Klamath Falls; town services in Chiloquin itself are limited. Bend sits about 110 miles north if you're coming from that direction and want a bigger resupply before heading in. Timing matters more than the roads themselves here: arrive with a clear plan for which campground you're targeting and whether its season is actually open, because the difference between a smooth arrival and a long backtrack is usually whether you checked road and campground status the morning you roll out.
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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 Chiloquin, 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 Chiloquin
Camping costs around Chiloquin stay reasonable because the options are mostly public. Oregon State Parks sets nightly rates at Collier Memorial that vary by hookup level, with full-hookup sites running more than the non-hookup spots, and there's a $10-per-use dump station fee as of 2026 plus firewood at about $5 a bundle. National forest sites at Williamson River are the cheap end, primitive and first-come with no hookups. Mazama Village inside Crater Lake books through recreation.gov at park rates that climb in peak summer. Private resorts down around Klamath Falls and Agency Lake cost more but add laundry, showers, and longer-stay options. Budget for Crater Lake's park entrance fee on top of camping, and figure fuel and propane into the math since the nearest full services are a 25-to-30-mile round trip to Klamath Falls. Our rule of thumb is that a public-campground week here lands well under what a private resort closer to a major town would run, especially if you mix a hookup base with a couple of cheap forest nights.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Chiloquin
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Best Time to Visit Chiloquin by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
25 - 36
Crowds: Medium
Cold and snowy at 4,178 feet, averaging part of roughly 70 inches of annual snow. Most public campgrounds are closed and Crater Lake's roads are gated, so winter camping is for the well-prepared only.
Spring
Mar - May
32 - 50
Crowds: Low
Snow lingers into spring and nights stay near freezing. Collier reopens but its B loop is closed for maintenance from mid-May 2026, and Crater Lake's high roads usually stay buried into late spring.
Summer
Jun - Aug
47 - 78
Crowds: High
The prime window: warm days, cool nights, open rivers, and Crater Lake fully accessible with Mazama Village open. Reserve Collier and Mazama months ahead. Frost can still surprise you on clear nights.
Fall
Sep - Oct
35 - 60
Crowds: Medium
Crowds thin, fishing stays good, and the basin cools quickly. Crater Lake's roads can close with the first heavy snow, and forest campgrounds wind down as nights turn cold.
Explore the Chiloquin Area
A few things we've learned camping around here. First, treat Chiloquin or Klamath Falls as your hookup base and day-trip to Crater Lake rather than chasing the park's limited and hookup-free sites; the drive up is part of the fun and you keep your electricity. Second, Collier's dump station now charges $10 per use as of spring 2026, so empty tanks deliberately and don't count on a free top-off. Third, watch your overnight lows even in July. At 4,178 feet, frost shows up in summer and the shoulder seasons get genuinely cold, so pack the propane and a warm sleeping setup. Fourth, fill propane and stock groceries in Klamath Falls before you settle in, since options in town are thin. Finally, if you fish, the Williamson and Wood rivers are the reason a lot of RVers come here at all, so bring the gear and check local regulations. One last tip: if you want a pull-through at Collier in 2026, confirm the B loop status before you book, since the maintenance closure runs from mid-May through at least July and that's exactly where the pull-throughs live.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Chiloquin
Where can I find full RV hookups in Chiloquin, Oregon?
Your best bet for full hookups right around Chiloquin is Collier Memorial State Park, about five miles north of town off US-97. It has 46 full-hookup sites split between the A and B loops, with nine pull-throughs that make life easy for big rigs and trailers. There are also 18 non-hookup sites with water nearby if you don't need the full setup. One important note for 2026: the B loop is closed for maintenance from mid-May through at least July, so confirm which loop your reservation lands in. Beyond Collier, full hookups in town are scarce, and most travelers needing them long-term head south toward Klamath Falls or Agency Lake.
How do I make reservations at campgrounds near Chiloquin?
It depends on which campground you want. Collier Memorial State Park books through Oregon State Parks at oregonstateparks.reserveamerica.com or by calling 800-452-5687, and you can reserve up to six months in advance or grab a same-day site when available. Mazama Village Campground inside Crater Lake National Park books through recreation.gov, and the good summer sites fill months ahead, so don't wait. Williamson River Campground in the Fremont-Winema National Forest is first-come, first-served through the Chiloquin Ranger District, so you just show up and grab a site. In peak summer we always reserve the state and national park sites early and keep the forest campground as a backup.
Are there RV campgrounds with hookups inside Crater Lake National Park?
Not really, and this trips up a lot of RVers. Mazama Village Campground is the park's main campground with 214 sites, but it's built mostly for tents and smaller rigs, and there are no full hookups. Only a handful of sites have electrical, mainly among the accessible spots, and the rest are dry. There are showers in the F loop and at Mazama Village, plus a store and fuel. Because of that, most of us with bigger rigs or a need for hookups base in Chiloquin at Collier Memorial State Park or down in Klamath Falls and day-trip up to the rim instead. It keeps your electricity and avoids the park's tighter, pricier summer-only sites.
How far is Crater Lake from Chiloquin and how do I get there?
Crater Lake National Park sits roughly 30 to 40 miles north of Chiloquin depending on which entrance and viewpoint you're after. The usual route is US-97 north out of town to OR-62, which branches northwest toward the park's south entrance and Mazama Village. US-97 is wide and easy for any rig, but the climb up OR-62 and the park's Rim Drive are steep and snow-gated for much of the year. We always check the park's road status before towing up, since the high roads often stay closed into late spring and can shut again with the first big fall snow. In summer it's an easy day trip from a Chiloquin base.
Is Collier Memorial State Park good for big rigs?
Yes, it works well for big rigs. Collier Memorial State Park has 46 full-hookup sites, and nine of them in the B loop are pull-through, which is exactly what you want when you're hauling a long trailer or driving a large motorhome and don't feel like backing into a tight spot. The access road is US-97, a wide and well-graded highway with no low bridges or weight restrictions to worry about. The one catch for 2026 is that the B loop, which has the pull-throughs, is closed for maintenance from mid-May through at least July, so if you need a pull-through during that window you'll want to call ahead or look at alternatives in Klamath Falls.
Is there a dump station near Chiloquin?
Yes. Collier Memorial State Park has a dump station that's open when the campground is operating, and as of spring 2026 it charges a $10-per-use fee, so plan your tank stops rather than counting on a free dump. If you're staying at the full-hookup sites at Collier you can handle waste right at your site. The national forest campgrounds like Williamson River are primitive with vault toilets and no dump facilities, so you'll need to carry your waste out to Collier or down to Klamath Falls. We usually time our dumps around a grocery and propane run into Klamath Falls so we knock everything out in one trip.
What's the fishing like around Chiloquin?
Fishing is one of the main reasons RVers come to Chiloquin at all. The Williamson and Wood rivers are spring-fed, cold, and clear, and they're well known among fly anglers for trout. The Williamson runs right past Collier Memorial State Park and the Williamson River Campground, so you can camp within walking distance of the water. Both rivers fish best in the warmer months when access is easy and the campgrounds are open. Always check current Oregon fishing regulations and any seasonal restrictions before you cast, since rules on these rivers can be specific. Bring your own gear, because services in town are limited and the nearest tackle shops are mostly in Klamath Falls.
What is there to do in Chiloquin besides Crater Lake?
Plenty, which is why we don't treat Chiloquin as just a Crater Lake parking lot. The free outdoor logging museum at Collier Memorial State Park has antique logging equipment and a relocated pioneer village, open daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Train Mountain, right in town, is a Guinness-recognized miniature hobby railroad with miles of 7.5-inch-gauge track and scheduled visitor days. The Williamson and Wood rivers draw anglers, and the Klamath Basin to the south offers wildlife and bird watching along the Pacific Flyway. Between the museums, the rivers, and the refuges, you can easily fill a few days here without ever driving up to the rim.
When is the best time to RV camp in Chiloquin?
Summer is the clear winner. From roughly late June through September the days are warm with highs near 78, the nights are cool, the rivers fish well, and Crater Lake's roads and Mazama Village are fully open. That's also the busy season, so reserve Collier and Mazama months ahead. Late spring and fall are quieter and still pleasant during the day, but at 4,178 feet the nights get cold and frost is common, plus Crater Lake's high roads may be snow-gated. Winter is for the well-prepared only, with most public campgrounds closed and heavy snow on the way to the park. We aim for July and August and book early.
How cold does it get camping near Chiloquin?
Colder than a lot of people expect for what looks like high desert. Chiloquin sits at about 4,178 feet, and even in July overnight lows average around 47 with clear-night frost a real possibility. December highs only reach the mid-30s with lows in the mid-20s, and the area picks up roughly 70 inches of snow a year. What that means for RVers is simple: even in summer, bring good insulation and a propane setup you trust, and don't assume warm days mean warm nights. In the shoulder seasons of spring and fall, expect to wake up to frost regularly, and in winter, only camp if your rig and you are genuinely set up for cold.
Are there first-come, first-served campgrounds near Chiloquin?
Yes, and they're a good backup when reservations are full. Williamson River Campground in the Fremont-Winema National Forest is first-come, first-served, with 19 primitive sites, picnic tables, fire grates, vault toilets, and two hand water pumps. It sits about four miles north of town off US-97 and connects to Collier Memorial State Park by a 1.3-mile trail. There are no hookups and one site is ADA-accessible. Because it's first-come, we like to roll in earlier in the day, especially on summer weekends, since the quiet riverside sites are popular. It's a solid, cheap option if the reservable state and national park sites are booked out.
Where do I get fuel, propane, and groceries near Chiloquin?
Plan on Klamath Falls for anything substantial. Chiloquin is a small town with limited services, so for reliable fuel, propane refills, full grocery shopping, and any RV parts or repairs, you'll want to head about 25 to 30 miles south to Klamath Falls. We usually combine a grocery and propane run with a dump-station stop so we handle everything in one trip rather than driving back and forth. Mazama Village inside Crater Lake has a small store and fuel during the summer season, but prices reflect the remote location, so it's better for topping off than for a real resupply. Stock up before you settle in around Chiloquin.
Can I camp near Chiloquin in winter?
You can, but it takes real preparation and your options are limited. At 4,178 feet the area gets roughly 70 inches of snow a year, with December highs only in the mid-30s and lows in the mid-20s. Most public campgrounds, including the national forest sites and Mazama Village inside Crater Lake, are closed for the season, and the roads up to the park's rim are gated by snow. If you're determined to camp here in winter, you'll need a four-season-capable rig, a reliable heating setup, and a plan for water and waste since dump stations and hookups may be unavailable. For most RVers, the practical season runs late spring through fall, and we save Chiloquin for the warmer months.
Where can I find full RV hookups in Chiloquin, Oregon?
Your best bet for full hookups right around Chiloquin is Collier Memorial State Park, about five miles north of town off US-97. It has 46 full-hookup sites split between the A and B loops, with nine pull-throughs that make life easy for big rigs and trailers. There are also 18 non-hookup sites with water nearby if you don't need the full setup. One important note for 2026: the B loop is closed for maintenance from mid-May through at least July, so confirm which loop your reservation lands in. Beyond Collier, full hookups in town are scarce, and most travelers needing them long-term head south toward Klamath Falls or Agency Lake.
How do I make reservations at campgrounds near Chiloquin?
It depends on which campground you want. Collier Memorial State Park books through Oregon State Parks at oregonstateparks.reserveamerica.com or by calling 800-452-5687, and you can reserve up to six months in advance or grab a same-day site when available. Mazama Village Campground inside Crater Lake National Park books through recreation.gov, and the good summer sites fill months ahead, so don't wait. Williamson River Campground in the Fremont-Winema National Forest is first-come, first-served through the Chiloquin Ranger District, so you just show up and grab a site. In peak summer we always reserve the state and national park sites early and keep the forest campground as a backup.
Are there RV campgrounds with hookups inside Crater Lake National Park?
Not really, and this trips up a lot of RVers. Mazama Village Campground is the park's main campground with 214 sites, but it's built mostly for tents and smaller rigs, and there are no full hookups. Only a handful of sites have electrical, mainly among the accessible spots, and the rest are dry. There are showers in the F loop and at Mazama Village, plus a store and fuel. Because of that, most of us with bigger rigs or a need for hookups base in Chiloquin at Collier Memorial State Park or down in Klamath Falls and day-trip up to the rim instead. It keeps your electricity and avoids the park's tighter, pricier summer-only sites.
How far is Crater Lake from Chiloquin and how do I get there?
Crater Lake National Park sits roughly 30 to 40 miles north of Chiloquin depending on which entrance and viewpoint you're after. The usual route is US-97 north out of town to OR-62, which branches northwest toward the park's south entrance and Mazama Village. US-97 is wide and easy for any rig, but the climb up OR-62 and the park's Rim Drive are steep and snow-gated for much of the year. We always check the park's road status before towing up, since the high roads often stay closed into late spring and can shut again with the first big fall snow. In summer it's an easy day trip from a Chiloquin base.
Is Collier Memorial State Park good for big rigs?
Yes, it works well for big rigs. Collier Memorial State Park has 46 full-hookup sites, and nine of them in the B loop are pull-through, which is exactly what you want when you're hauling a long trailer or driving a large motorhome and don't feel like backing into a tight spot. The access road is US-97, a wide and well-graded highway with no low bridges or weight restrictions to worry about. The one catch for 2026 is that the B loop, which has the pull-throughs, is closed for maintenance from mid-May through at least July, so if you need a pull-through during that window you'll want to call ahead or look at alternatives in Klamath Falls.
Is there a dump station near Chiloquin?
Yes. Collier Memorial State Park has a dump station that's open when the campground is operating, and as of spring 2026 it charges a $10-per-use fee, so plan your tank stops rather than counting on a free dump. If you're staying at the full-hookup sites at Collier you can handle waste right at your site. The national forest campgrounds like Williamson River are primitive with vault toilets and no dump facilities, so you'll need to carry your waste out to Collier or down to Klamath Falls. We usually time our dumps around a grocery and propane run into Klamath Falls so we knock everything out in one trip.
What's the fishing like around Chiloquin?
Fishing is one of the main reasons RVers come to Chiloquin at all. The Williamson and Wood rivers are spring-fed, cold, and clear, and they're well known among fly anglers for trout. The Williamson runs right past Collier Memorial State Park and the Williamson River Campground, so you can camp within walking distance of the water. Both rivers fish best in the warmer months when access is easy and the campgrounds are open. Always check current Oregon fishing regulations and any seasonal restrictions before you cast, since rules on these rivers can be specific. Bring your own gear, because services in town are limited and the nearest tackle shops are mostly in Klamath Falls.
What is there to do in Chiloquin besides Crater Lake?
Plenty, which is why we don't treat Chiloquin as just a Crater Lake parking lot. The free outdoor logging museum at Collier Memorial State Park has antique logging equipment and a relocated pioneer village, open daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Train Mountain, right in town, is a Guinness-recognized miniature hobby railroad with miles of 7.5-inch-gauge track and scheduled visitor days. The Williamson and Wood rivers draw anglers, and the Klamath Basin to the south offers wildlife and bird watching along the Pacific Flyway. Between the museums, the rivers, and the refuges, you can easily fill a few days here without ever driving up to the rim.
When is the best time to RV camp in Chiloquin?
Summer is the clear winner. From roughly late June through September the days are warm with highs near 78, the nights are cool, the rivers fish well, and Crater Lake's roads and Mazama Village are fully open. That's also the busy season, so reserve Collier and Mazama months ahead. Late spring and fall are quieter and still pleasant during the day, but at 4,178 feet the nights get cold and frost is common, plus Crater Lake's high roads may be snow-gated. Winter is for the well-prepared only, with most public campgrounds closed and heavy snow on the way to the park. We aim for July and August and book early.
How cold does it get camping near Chiloquin?
Colder than a lot of people expect for what looks like high desert. Chiloquin sits at about 4,178 feet, and even in July overnight lows average around 47 with clear-night frost a real possibility. December highs only reach the mid-30s with lows in the mid-20s, and the area picks up roughly 70 inches of snow a year. What that means for RVers is simple: even in summer, bring good insulation and a propane setup you trust, and don't assume warm days mean warm nights. In the shoulder seasons of spring and fall, expect to wake up to frost regularly, and in winter, only camp if your rig and you are genuinely set up for cold.
Are there first-come, first-served campgrounds near Chiloquin?
Yes, and they're a good backup when reservations are full. Williamson River Campground in the Fremont-Winema National Forest is first-come, first-served, with 19 primitive sites, picnic tables, fire grates, vault toilets, and two hand water pumps. It sits about four miles north of town off US-97 and connects to Collier Memorial State Park by a 1.3-mile trail. There are no hookups and one site is ADA-accessible. Because it's first-come, we like to roll in earlier in the day, especially on summer weekends, since the quiet riverside sites are popular. It's a solid, cheap option if the reservable state and national park sites are booked out.
Where do I get fuel, propane, and groceries near Chiloquin?
Plan on Klamath Falls for anything substantial. Chiloquin is a small town with limited services, so for reliable fuel, propane refills, full grocery shopping, and any RV parts or repairs, you'll want to head about 25 to 30 miles south to Klamath Falls. We usually combine a grocery and propane run with a dump-station stop so we handle everything in one trip rather than driving back and forth. Mazama Village inside Crater Lake has a small store and fuel during the summer season, but prices reflect the remote location, so it's better for topping off than for a real resupply. Stock up before you settle in around Chiloquin.
Can I camp near Chiloquin in winter?
You can, but it takes real preparation and your options are limited. At 4,178 feet the area gets roughly 70 inches of snow a year, with December highs only in the mid-30s and lows in the mid-20s. Most public campgrounds, including the national forest sites and Mazama Village inside Crater Lake, are closed for the season, and the roads up to the park's rim are gated by snow. If you're determined to camp here in winter, you'll need a four-season-capable rig, a reliable heating setup, and a plan for water and waste since dump stations and hookups may be unavailable. For most RVers, the practical season runs late spring through fall, and we save Chiloquin for the warmer months.
Are there free dump stations in Chiloquin?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Chiloquin.
All Dump Stations Near Chiloquin (11)
RV ParkWaterwheel RV Park & Campground
RV ParkPotter's Park
RV ParkKlamath Falls RV Resort, Llc
RV ParkKlamath Falls Koa Journey
RV ParkKlamath Falls KOA
RV ParkWiseman's RV And Mobile Home Park
RV ParkTingley Lake Estates
RV Park





