RV Parks In Tillamook, Oregon
45.4564° N, 123.8455° W
Quick Overview
Tillamook is the hub of Oregon's north coast dairy country, a green, misty stretch of US-101 famous for its cheese, its bays, and some of the best Dungeness crabbing on the coast. For RVers it offers a strong coastal mix: a marquee state park on a dramatic sand spit, bayfront private parks built for crabbers, and easy access to the Three Capes Scenic Loop. Pack rain gear and you have a memorable coastal base.
The public anchor is Cape Lookout State Park, about 12 miles out, with 38 full-hookup sites (plus tent sites, yurts, and cabins) on a sand spit between Netarts Bay and the ocean, select sites taking rigs up to 60 feet, with a dump station, showers, and the old-growth Cape Lookout Trail. It is part of Oregon's excellent state-park system and books through Oregon State Parks on a rolling 6-month window.
The private parks fill in along the bays and US-101. Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina sits right on Netarts Bay for crabbing and clamming, Kelly's Brighton Marina on Nehalem Bay (about 25 minutes north) has full-hookup riverfront pull-throughs and crabbing right off the dock, Pleasant Valley RV Park is a quiet creekside park just south in Beaver, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City (about 30 minutes south) sits across from the dory beach. Most handle big rigs, but the Three Capes Scenic Loop narrows in spots, so big rigs should stick to US-101 and drive the loop in a tow vehicle. Summer is intense, with Cape Lookout and the bayfront parks booking months ahead, while fall brings peak Dungeness crabbing and much easier booking after Labor Day. The sections below cover how far ahead to book each park, what a site costs by season, the public-versus-private trade-offs, and which campground fits the kind of trip you have in mind.
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All Dump Stations Near Tillamook
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tillamook RV Park | 2.2 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Misty River RV Park And Glamping | 4.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tillamook, Or Elks RV Park & Picnic Area | 5.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pleasant Valley RV Park | 6.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Old Mill RV Resort | 7.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Port Of Garibaldi RV Park | 7.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camper Cove RV Park & Campground | 10.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Cape Kiwanda RV Park | 17.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pacific City Trailer Park | 18.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nehalem Shores RV Park | 18.9 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
Tillamook RV Park
2.2 miMisty River RV Park And Glamping
4.8 miTillamook, Or Elks RV Park & Picnic Area
5.1 miPleasant Valley RV Park
6.2 miOld Mill RV Resort
7.6 miPort Of Garibaldi RV Park
7.7 miCamper Cove RV Park & Campground
10.0 miCape Kiwanda RV Park
17.7 miPacific City Trailer Park
18.4 miNehalem Shores RV Park
18.9 miTraveling to Tillamook by RV
US-101 runs through Tillamook along the coast and is the main route, straightforward for big rigs. From the Portland area, OR-6 connects over the Coast Range, paved with some grades, so check your brakes on the descent. The Three Capes Scenic Loop (OR-131 toward Netarts and Cape Lookout) is scenic but narrows in spots, so big rigs should plan routes and lean on US-101 rather than threading a long coach through the tight sections.
Portland is about 1.5 to 2 hours away for the nearest major airport and big-box services, so it is your best bet for a fly-and-rent trip and major resupply. Fuel and groceries are available in Tillamook itself, but plan ahead for the smaller coastal stretches. Once you are set up, the Tillamook Creamery, the bays, and the Three Capes are all close, and a tow vehicle is the smart way to explore the narrow scenic loop while the rig stays at camp.
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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 Tillamook, 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 Tillamook
Camping costs run mostly moderate here. Cape Lookout State Park sits in the moderate band for its full-hookup sites on the sand spit, an excellent value for the location and part of Oregon's well-run state-park system. The private bayfront parks, Netarts Bay RV Park, Kelly's Brighton Marina, and Pleasant Valley, also land in the moderate band. Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City runs higher in the upper band for its oceanfront resort setting across from the dory beach and Haystack Rock.
Timing drives price as much as the park. Summer and holiday weekends push rates to their peak with the tightest availability; winter and the shoulder seasons are cheaper and quieter. Budget travelers should target the state park or the bayfront parks midweek, or come in spring or fall for lower rates and easier booking. Fall in particular pairs lower demand with peak crabbing, so it is a strong value window. For an oceanfront resort feel, plan for the Cape Kiwanda rates and book ahead in summer.
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Best Time to Visit Tillamook by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38F - 50F
Crowds: Low
Wet and windy storm-watching season, classic Oregon coast winter. Cape Lookout State Park and several private parks stay open year-round, so you can camp if you come prepared for rain and wind. Quiet and cheap, with dramatic surf, but pack good rain gear and a rig you can keep dry and warm.
Spring
Mar - May
42F - 57F
Crowds: Medium
Showery with sunny breaks; gray whales migrate offshore and sites are easier to get than summer. A good shoulder window for crabbing, the Creamery, and the Three Capes, with fewer crowds. Bring rain gear year-round on this coast and watch the weather, which can turn quickly.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52F - 67F
Crowds: High
The driest and busiest season. Cape Lookout State Park and the bayfront private parks book months ahead for July, August, and holiday weekends. Oregon State Parks open a rolling 6-month window, so reserve early. Comfortable, mild days, but the popular sites go fast, so plan ahead and book midweek if you can.
Fall
Sep - Oct
46F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
Crabbing peaks on Netarts and Nehalem bays and the weather often stays pleasant into early fall, with easier booking after Labor Day. One of our favorite times here for crab, the Creamery, and quieter beaches before the winter storms set in. A real shoulder-season sweet spot.
Explore the Tillamook Area
A few things we have learned camping around Tillamook. Book Cape Lookout State Park and the bayfront private parks months ahead for summer; Oregon State Parks open a rolling 6-month window, so reserve the morning your dates release. Bring crab gear if you have it: Netarts and Nehalem bays are among the best Dungeness crabbing on the coast, and Netarts Bay RV Park and Kelly's Brighton Marina put you right on the water for it.
Pack rain gear year-round; this is a wet coast in every season, and full hookups help so you can run a heater and dehumidifier in the damp. Stick to US-101 with a big rig rather than threading the narrowest Three Capes sections, and drive the scenic loop in a tow vehicle instead. Fall is a sweet spot, with peak crabbing and easier booking after Labor Day, so consider timing your trip for the shoulder season rather than the summer crush.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Tillamook
What are the best RV parks in Tillamook, OR?
The public anchor is Cape Lookout State Park about 12 miles out, with 38 full-hookup sites on a dramatic sand spit between Netarts Bay and the ocean, part of Oregon's excellent state-park system. For private full-hookup and bayfront camping, the best picks are Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina on Netarts Bay (great for crabbing), Kelly's Brighton Marina on Nehalem Bay about 25 minutes north with riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley RV Park just south in Beaver, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City about 30 minutes south, across from the dory beach. Together they cover the Three Capes area and US-101.
Do Tillamook RV parks have full hookups?
Many do. Cape Lookout State Park has 38 full-hookup sites with a dump station and showers, with select sites taking rigs up to 60 feet. On the private side, Kelly's Brighton Marina has full hookups with 30/50-amp and riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley RV Park has full hookups with 30/50-amp, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort has full hookups. Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina has water and electric hookups with larger-rig sites. So between the state park's full-hookup loop and the private parks, full hookups are widely available here, which is welcome on a damp, cool coast.
How much does RV camping cost in Tillamook?
Costs run mostly moderate. Cape Lookout State Park sits in the moderate band for its full-hookup sites on the sand spit, an excellent value for the location and part of Oregon's well-run state-park system. The private bayfront parks, Netarts Bay RV Park, Kelly's Brighton Marina, and Pleasant Valley, also land in the moderate band. Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City runs higher in the upper band for its oceanfront resort setting across from the dory beach. Summer and holiday weekends push rates up; winter and shoulder seasons are cheaper. The state park and bayfront parks are the value picks for a crabbing-focused trip.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Tillamook?
For summer, book months ahead. The Oregon coast summer is intense, and Cape Lookout State Park and the bayfront private parks fill for July, August, and holiday weekends. Oregon State Parks open a rolling 6-month reservation window, so set a reminder and book Cape Lookout the morning your dates release. The private parks (Netarts Bay, Kelly's Brighton, Pleasant Valley, Cape Kiwanda) also book ahead for peak summer. Midweek and the spring, fall, and winter shoulder seasons are far easier and often available on shorter notice. Crabbing season in fall brings demand too, but it is more relaxed than summer.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Tillamook?
Fall is a favorite: crabbing peaks on Netarts and Nehalem bays, the weather often stays pleasant into early fall, and booking is easier after Labor Day. Summer is the driest and busiest season, comfortable but with months-ahead booking required. Spring is showery with sunny breaks, good for gray-whale watching offshore and easier sites. Winter is wet, windy storm-watching season, quiet and cheap if you come prepared for the rain. For the best mix of weather, crabbing, and availability, target early fall or a summer weekday. Pack rain gear no matter when you come.
Can big rigs camp in Tillamook?
Yes, with a route note. Cape Lookout State Park has select sites that take rigs up to 60 feet, and the private parks handle big rigs: Kelly's Brighton Marina has riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley has pull-through big-rig sites, Netarts Bay accommodates larger RVs, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort has resort big-rig sites. The key caution is the Three Capes Scenic Loop (OR-131 toward Netarts and Cape Lookout), which narrows and winds in spots, so big rigs should plan their route and stick to US-101 where possible rather than threading the narrowest scenic sections with a long coach.
What is the best campground for crabbing in Tillamook?
The bayfront parks are built for it. Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina sits right on Netarts Bay, which is famous for Dungeness crabbing and clamming, and Kelly's Brighton Marina on Nehalem Bay (about 25 minutes north) lets you crab and fish right off the dock. Both put you on the water with easy access to gear and bait. Bring your own crab gear if you have it; Netarts and Nehalem bays are among the best Dungeness crabbing on the Oregon coast. Cape Lookout State Park also sits on the Netarts Bay sand spit, so it puts you close to the crabbing too.
What public-land camping is there around Tillamook?
Cape Lookout State Park is the public anchor, with 38 full-hookup sites (plus tent sites, yurts, and cabins) on a dramatic sand spit between Netarts Bay and the ocean, about 12 miles from town. It has a dump station, showers, and the old-growth Cape Lookout Trail, and it is part of Oregon's excellent state-park system, bookable through Oregon State Parks on a rolling 6-month window. Beyond Cape Lookout, the broader Oregon coast and the Coast Range hold additional state parks and forest options, but Cape Lookout is the marquee public campground right in the Tillamook area for full-hookup coastal camping.
What is there to do in Tillamook besides camp?
Start with the Tillamook Creamery, the famous cheese factory with tours, tastings, and ice cream, the area's top stop. For the outdoors, crab and clam on Netarts and Nehalem bays, beachcomb the Three Capes, and hike the five-mile round-trip Cape Lookout Trail to the headland's tip for big ocean views. Drive the Three Capes Scenic Loop past Cape Meares, Cape Lookout, and Cape Kiwanda, the last with a big dune, the dory fishing fleet, and Haystack Rock views at Pacific City. Add fishing and seasonal whale watching, and you have a full coastal itinerary.
Are Tillamook campgrounds open year-round?
Many are. Cape Lookout State Park is open year-round, and the private parks (Kelly's Brighton Marina, Netarts Bay, Pleasant Valley, Cape Kiwanda) all operate year-round too. What changes is the weather and the crowds: summer is the dry, busy peak, fall brings peak crabbing and easier booking, spring is showery with whale migration, and winter is wet, windy storm-watching season with the lowest rates and smallest crowds. Because the main parks stay open, you can camp the Tillamook coast in any season as long as you pack rain gear and pick a rig you can keep dry and warm in the off-season.
Do I need to worry about rain camping in Tillamook?
Plan for it year-round. The Oregon coast is wet, and Tillamook sits in one of the rainier stretches, so pack good rain gear no matter the season. Summer is the driest window but still sees showers; winter is the wettest, with storm-watching as a genuine draw. None of that should stop you, the coast is beautiful in any weather, but bring layers, waterproof shoes, and a rig you can keep dry and warm. Full hookups help in the damp, since you can run a heater and dehumidifier. Just set expectations: this is not a sunbathing destination, it is a green, misty, dramatic coast.
How do I drive the Three Capes Loop with an RV?
Carefully, and ideally not with the biggest rigs on the narrowest sections. The Three Capes Scenic Loop strings together Cape Meares, Cape Lookout, and Cape Kiwanda along OR-131 and connecting roads, and it is genuinely scenic, but it narrows and winds in spots that are tight for a long coach. The smart play is to base at a campground, then drive the loop in a tow vehicle or smaller rig rather than threading a 40-footer through the narrow sections. If you are moving the RV between parks, stick to US-101, the main coastal highway, which is straightforward for big rigs.
How do I get to Tillamook with an RV?
US-101 runs through Tillamook along the coast and is the main route, straightforward for big rigs. From the Portland area, OR-6 connects over the Coast Range, paved with some grades, so check your brakes on the descent. The Three Capes Loop (OR-131 toward Netarts and Cape Lookout) is scenic but narrows in spots, so big rigs should plan routes and lean on US-101. Portland is about 1.5 to 2 hours away for the nearest major airport and big-box services, so stock up there or in town. Fuel and groceries are available in Tillamook, but plan ahead for the smaller coastal stretches.
What are the best RV parks in Tillamook, OR?
The public anchor is Cape Lookout State Park about 12 miles out, with 38 full-hookup sites on a dramatic sand spit between Netarts Bay and the ocean, part of Oregon's excellent state-park system. For private full-hookup and bayfront camping, the best picks are Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina on Netarts Bay (great for crabbing), Kelly's Brighton Marina on Nehalem Bay about 25 minutes north with riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley RV Park just south in Beaver, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City about 30 minutes south, across from the dory beach. Together they cover the Three Capes area and US-101.
Do Tillamook RV parks have full hookups?
Many do. Cape Lookout State Park has 38 full-hookup sites with a dump station and showers, with select sites taking rigs up to 60 feet. On the private side, Kelly's Brighton Marina has full hookups with 30/50-amp and riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley RV Park has full hookups with 30/50-amp, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort has full hookups. Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina has water and electric hookups with larger-rig sites. So between the state park's full-hookup loop and the private parks, full hookups are widely available here, which is welcome on a damp, cool coast.
How much does RV camping cost in Tillamook?
Costs run mostly moderate. Cape Lookout State Park sits in the moderate band for its full-hookup sites on the sand spit, an excellent value for the location and part of Oregon's well-run state-park system. The private bayfront parks, Netarts Bay RV Park, Kelly's Brighton Marina, and Pleasant Valley, also land in the moderate band. Cape Kiwanda RV Resort in Pacific City runs higher in the upper band for its oceanfront resort setting across from the dory beach. Summer and holiday weekends push rates up; winter and shoulder seasons are cheaper. The state park and bayfront parks are the value picks for a crabbing-focused trip.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Tillamook?
For summer, book months ahead. The Oregon coast summer is intense, and Cape Lookout State Park and the bayfront private parks fill for July, August, and holiday weekends. Oregon State Parks open a rolling 6-month reservation window, so set a reminder and book Cape Lookout the morning your dates release. The private parks (Netarts Bay, Kelly's Brighton, Pleasant Valley, Cape Kiwanda) also book ahead for peak summer. Midweek and the spring, fall, and winter shoulder seasons are far easier and often available on shorter notice. Crabbing season in fall brings demand too, but it is more relaxed than summer.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Tillamook?
Fall is a favorite: crabbing peaks on Netarts and Nehalem bays, the weather often stays pleasant into early fall, and booking is easier after Labor Day. Summer is the driest and busiest season, comfortable but with months-ahead booking required. Spring is showery with sunny breaks, good for gray-whale watching offshore and easier sites. Winter is wet, windy storm-watching season, quiet and cheap if you come prepared for the rain. For the best mix of weather, crabbing, and availability, target early fall or a summer weekday. Pack rain gear no matter when you come.
Can big rigs camp in Tillamook?
Yes, with a route note. Cape Lookout State Park has select sites that take rigs up to 60 feet, and the private parks handle big rigs: Kelly's Brighton Marina has riverfront pull-throughs, Pleasant Valley has pull-through big-rig sites, Netarts Bay accommodates larger RVs, and Cape Kiwanda RV Resort has resort big-rig sites. The key caution is the Three Capes Scenic Loop (OR-131 toward Netarts and Cape Lookout), which narrows and winds in spots, so big rigs should plan their route and stick to US-101 where possible rather than threading the narrowest scenic sections with a long coach.
What is the best campground for crabbing in Tillamook?
The bayfront parks are built for it. Netarts Bay RV Park & Marina sits right on Netarts Bay, which is famous for Dungeness crabbing and clamming, and Kelly's Brighton Marina on Nehalem Bay (about 25 minutes north) lets you crab and fish right off the dock. Both put you on the water with easy access to gear and bait. Bring your own crab gear if you have it; Netarts and Nehalem bays are among the best Dungeness crabbing on the Oregon coast. Cape Lookout State Park also sits on the Netarts Bay sand spit, so it puts you close to the crabbing too.
What public-land camping is there around Tillamook?
Cape Lookout State Park is the public anchor, with 38 full-hookup sites (plus tent sites, yurts, and cabins) on a dramatic sand spit between Netarts Bay and the ocean, about 12 miles from town. It has a dump station, showers, and the old-growth Cape Lookout Trail, and it is part of Oregon's excellent state-park system, bookable through Oregon State Parks on a rolling 6-month window. Beyond Cape Lookout, the broader Oregon coast and the Coast Range hold additional state parks and forest options, but Cape Lookout is the marquee public campground right in the Tillamook area for full-hookup coastal camping.
What is there to do in Tillamook besides camp?
Start with the Tillamook Creamery, the famous cheese factory with tours, tastings, and ice cream, the area's top stop. For the outdoors, crab and clam on Netarts and Nehalem bays, beachcomb the Three Capes, and hike the five-mile round-trip Cape Lookout Trail to the headland's tip for big ocean views. Drive the Three Capes Scenic Loop past Cape Meares, Cape Lookout, and Cape Kiwanda, the last with a big dune, the dory fishing fleet, and Haystack Rock views at Pacific City. Add fishing and seasonal whale watching, and you have a full coastal itinerary.
Are Tillamook campgrounds open year-round?
Many are. Cape Lookout State Park is open year-round, and the private parks (Kelly's Brighton Marina, Netarts Bay, Pleasant Valley, Cape Kiwanda) all operate year-round too. What changes is the weather and the crowds: summer is the dry, busy peak, fall brings peak crabbing and easier booking, spring is showery with whale migration, and winter is wet, windy storm-watching season with the lowest rates and smallest crowds. Because the main parks stay open, you can camp the Tillamook coast in any season as long as you pack rain gear and pick a rig you can keep dry and warm in the off-season.
Do I need to worry about rain camping in Tillamook?
Plan for it year-round. The Oregon coast is wet, and Tillamook sits in one of the rainier stretches, so pack good rain gear no matter the season. Summer is the driest window but still sees showers; winter is the wettest, with storm-watching as a genuine draw. None of that should stop you, the coast is beautiful in any weather, but bring layers, waterproof shoes, and a rig you can keep dry and warm. Full hookups help in the damp, since you can run a heater and dehumidifier. Just set expectations: this is not a sunbathing destination, it is a green, misty, dramatic coast.
How do I drive the Three Capes Loop with an RV?
Carefully, and ideally not with the biggest rigs on the narrowest sections. The Three Capes Scenic Loop strings together Cape Meares, Cape Lookout, and Cape Kiwanda along OR-131 and connecting roads, and it is genuinely scenic, but it narrows and winds in spots that are tight for a long coach. The smart play is to base at a campground, then drive the loop in a tow vehicle or smaller rig rather than threading a 40-footer through the narrow sections. If you are moving the RV between parks, stick to US-101, the main coastal highway, which is straightforward for big rigs.
How do I get to Tillamook with an RV?
US-101 runs through Tillamook along the coast and is the main route, straightforward for big rigs. From the Portland area, OR-6 connects over the Coast Range, paved with some grades, so check your brakes on the descent. The Three Capes Loop (OR-131 toward Netarts and Cape Lookout) is scenic but narrows in spots, so big rigs should plan routes and lean on US-101. Portland is about 1.5 to 2 hours away for the nearest major airport and big-box services, so stock up there or in town. Fuel and groceries are available in Tillamook, but plan ahead for the smaller coastal stretches.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Tillamook?
The highest-rated station is Kilchis Park with a rating of 4.6/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Tillamook?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Tillamook.
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