RV Parks In Aliquippa, Pennsylvania
40.6367° N, 80.2401° W
Quick Overview
Aliquippa itself is a former steel town in Beaver County without campgrounds inside the city, so the smart play for RVers is to base a short drive out and use the area as an affordable launch pad for Pittsburgh and the lake country to the north. About 30 miles northwest of downtown, this corner of western Pennsylvania trades city prices and tight streets for quieter, cheaper camping with easy interstate reach. Pick one good site, settle in, and let the tow vehicle handle the city days.
The standout private park is Bear Run Campground in Portersville, a 300-site family park with full hookups, 30 and 50-amp service, pull-thru sites, a pool, and laundry, sitting right beside Lake Arthur and Moraine State Park yet only about half an hour from the city. Full hookups are the real draw in an area where a lot of options stay basic, so it is our first recommendation for anyone who wants sewer at the pad and room for a big rig. From there you can string together lake-and-trail mornings to the north with museum-and-ballgame afternoons to the southeast.
For a public alternative, Raccoon Creek State Park sits about 15 miles south in Beaver County with 172 modern campsites offering 15, 20, 30, or 50-amp electric, flush restrooms, and hot showers, and it takes trailers up to 50 feet. Reservations run through Pennsylvania's DCNR system, from three days out to eleven months ahead. You give up sewer hookups but gain a lake, a wildflower reserve, and miles of trails, plus lower nightly rates. It is a fine place to slow down between city trips.
Below we cover which park fits your rig, how the reservations work, what public and private sites actually cost, the season to aim for, and the mix of nature and city that makes Beaver County a rewarding, budget-friendly base. Whether you are here for a Steelers weekend, the Carnegie museums, or a few quiet days on Lake Arthur, staying out of the city core makes the whole trip easier.
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All Dump Stations Near Aliquippa
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forest Brook Mobile Home Park | 0.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Holly Hill Mobile Home Community | 3.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Center Manor | 4.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| 19 Shady Side RV Park | 7.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hotel RV Beaver | 7.7 mi | 3.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Morgan's Country Setting | 9.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Oak Springs Mobile Home Park | 9.6 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hart's Content Campground | 10.2 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fombell Landing Campground | 12.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Indian Brave Campground | 12.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Forest Brook Mobile Home Park
0.8 miHolly Hill Mobile Home Community
3.0 miCenter Manor
4.2 mi19 Shady Side RV Park
7.6 miHotel RV Beaver
7.7 miMorgan's Country Setting
9.1 miOak Springs Mobile Home Park
9.6 miHart's Content Campground
10.2 miFombell Landing Campground
12.1 miIndian Brave Campground
12.8 miTraveling to Aliquippa by RV
Aliquippa sits on PA-51 with PA-18 close by, in the hilly, winding terrain typical of western Pennsylvania. For the longer hauls, I-376 runs about 10 miles south and links you toward Pittsburgh and the airport, while the Pennsylvania Turnpike, I-76, is roughly 20 miles north. Use the interstates for the miles and the state routes for the final approach to your campground; Bear Run near Lake Arthur makes an easy launch point for both the city and Moraine State Park.
The one firm rule here is to keep the RV out of Pittsburgh. The city's steep streets, narrow lanes, bridges, and inclines are genuinely tough on a big rig, and parking is a headache, so day-trip in with the tow vehicle instead. For fly-and-rent travelers, Pittsburgh International Airport is close, just south via I-376. Fuel and propane are available in Aliquippa and Beaver Falls, RV repair is best handled in the Pittsburgh metro, and you should stock up on groceries in Beaver Falls or the suburbs before settling in 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 Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, 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 Aliquippa
Beaver County is one of the more affordable bases within reach of a major city, which is exactly why we camp out here and drive in. At Bear Run Campground, full-hookup sites run typical mid-range family-park rates, generally the mid-thirties to mid-forties a night in peak season, and because you get sewer at the site you skip any separate dump fee during your stay. Staying here rather than in the Pittsburgh suburbs usually saves a meaningful amount per night.
The budget option is the state park. Raccoon Creek's electric sites price well below the private full-hookup rate, often in the twenties to low thirties depending on amp service and season, and you trade sewer hookups for a lake, trails, and quiet. Fuel and propane sit at standard regional prices in Aliquippa and Beaver Falls. To stretch the budget further, travel midweek or in the shoulder seasons when rates ease and sites open up, do your big grocery runs in Beaver Falls or the suburbs where selection and prices beat the in-town shops, and budget separately for city parking and museum admissions on your Pittsburgh days.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Aliquippa
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Best Time to Visit Aliquippa by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
22F - 37F
Crowds: Low
Cold, gray, and snowy; the private and state-park campgrounds close for the season. Not a winter camping destination; plan around it.
Spring
Mar - May
40F - 60F
Crowds: Medium
Parks reopen through spring; cool, green, and quiet with rivers running high. Good weekday availability before the summer rush.
Summer
Jun - Aug
62F - 82F
Crowds: High
Warm, humid, and busy on the lake. Reserve Bear Run weekends ahead; Lake Arthur boating and swimming are at their best.
Fall
Sep - Oct
42F - 62F
Crowds: Medium
The prettiest season: crisp days and peak October color across western PA. Book fall weekends; pack layers for cool nights.
Explore the Aliquippa Area
Our top tip is simple: stay in Beaver County, not the city. Basing at Bear Run gives you full-hookup convenience and a handy position between Moraine State Park and Pittsburgh, and it usually costs less than camping in the Pittsburgh suburbs. Reserve summer weekends ahead, because this family park with its pool and kayaking books up, but midweek and shoulder-season nights are easy to grab.
Split your days between nature and city. Give Pittsburgh a full day for the Carnegie and Andy Warhol museums, the incline railways, and a game if the schedule lines up, then balance it with an outdoor day at Lake Arthur, where the boating, swimming, and shoreline trails at Moraine State Park are excellent. If you want a quieter, cheaper night or two, drop down to Raccoon Creek State Park for electric sites by the lake and its wildflower reserve. Time the trip for October if you can, when the western Pennsylvania color peaks and the days turn crisp; pack layers for cool nights and handle big grocery runs in Beaver Falls on the way in, since the small in-town shops are limited.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Aliquippa
What are the best RV parks near Aliquippa, Pennsylvania?
Because Aliquippa has no campgrounds in the city itself, the two options worth planning around sit a short drive out. Bear Run Campground in Portersville is the standout private park, a 300-site family campground with full hookups, 30 and 50-amp service, pull-thrus, a pool, and laundry, right by Lake Arthur and Moraine State Park yet only about 30 minutes from Pittsburgh. For a public alternative, Raccoon Creek State Park about 15 miles south offers 172 modern sites with electric hookups, flush restrooms, and showers in a lake-and-trail setting. Together they give you a full-service private base and a quieter, cheaper state-park option within easy reach of the city.
Do RV parks near Aliquippa have full hookups?
Yes, at the private park. Bear Run Campground offers true full hookups with sewer, water, and both 30 and 50-amp electric across its 300 sites, including pull-thru sites that make setting up a big rig simple, so you can dump and fill right at the pad. The public option, Raccoon Creek State Park, provides modern sites with 15, 20, 30, or 50-amp electric plus flush restrooms and hot showers, but no sewer hookups at the site, so you handle tanks at the campground dump station. If full hookups matter to you, base at Bear Run; if you are happy with electric and a lake setting, Raccoon Creek is the budget pick.
How much does it cost to camp near Aliquippa?
Camping here is affordable for a major-metro area, which is a big reason to base in Beaver County. Full-hookup sites at Bear Run Campground run typical mid-range family-park rates, generally the mid-thirties to mid-forties a night in peak season, with sewer included so there is no separate dump fee during your stay. Raccoon Creek State Park is cheaper, with electric sites often in the twenties to low thirties depending on amp service and season. Staying out here rather than in the Pittsburgh suburbs usually saves money per night. Travel midweek or in the shoulder seasons for lower rates, and budget separately for city parking and museum admission on Pittsburgh days.
How far ahead should I reserve near Aliquippa?
For summer weekends at Bear Run Campground, reserve at least a few weeks out, since this family park with its pool and lake access fills during peak season. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often available on short notice. Raccoon Creek State Park books through Pennsylvania's DCNR reservation system, which requires reservations at least three days ahead and takes them up to eleven months in advance, and its electric sites go quickly for summer and fall color weekends. Unreserved state-park sites release first-come at noon when advance booking closes, which can help a last-minute plan. For any weekend in July, August, or October, we would lock in a site early.
When is the best time to RV camp near Aliquippa?
Late spring through October is the reliable window, with fall the standout. October brings peak color across the western Pennsylvania hills and crisp, comfortable days that are ideal for both lake outings and city walking. Summer is warm, humid, and the busiest season, perfect for boating and swimming on Lake Arthur but the priciest and most crowded time, so book ahead. Spring reopens the parks and stays quiet and green, good for weekday stays before the rush. Winter is the one to skip, since the campgrounds close and the region turns cold, gray, and snowy. For the best mix of weather and value, aim for late spring or fall.
Can big rigs camp near Aliquippa?
Yes, mainly at Bear Run Campground, which caters to larger units with full-hookup pull-thru sites, 50-amp service, and the room to maneuver a 40-foot motorhome or big fifth wheel, so setup is straightforward once you are off the highway. Raccoon Creek State Park takes trailers up to 50 feet on its modern sites, though the approach roads and loops are more wooded and winding, so go slow. The main caution in this area is not the campgrounds but the terrain and the city: western Pennsylvania roads are hilly and winding, and Pittsburgh's streets, bridges, and inclines are no place for a big rig. Use the interstates for the hauls and day-trip the city in the tow vehicle.
Is Aliquippa a good base for visiting Pittsburgh?
It is a good, budget-friendly one, as long as you leave the rig at camp. From a Beaver County campground you are only about 30 minutes to half an hour from downtown Pittsburgh via I-376, close enough to make the Carnegie and Andy Warhol museums, the incline railways, and a Steelers or Pirates game comfortable day trips. Camping out here costs less than staying in the Pittsburgh suburbs, and you avoid the city's tough terrain entirely by driving in with the tow vehicle. Base at Bear Run, spend one day in the city and the next on Lake Arthur, and you get the best of both without paying city rates or fighting big-rig traffic downtown.
Are there state park campgrounds near Aliquippa?
Yes. Raccoon Creek State Park sits about 15 miles south in southern Beaver County and is the main public camping option, with 172 modern campsites offering 15, 20, 30, or 50-amp electric, flush restrooms, hot showers, and room for trailers up to 50 feet. The park wraps around a lake and includes a well-known wildflower reserve and miles of hiking trails, making it a peaceful counterpoint to the city days. Reservations run through Pennsylvania's DCNR system from three days to eleven months out, with unreserved sites released first-come at noon. It is cheaper than the private park and a fine place to unwind between Pittsburgh trips, as long as you can live without a sewer hookup at the site.
Can I camp near Moraine State Park and Lake Arthur?
Yes, and it is one of the best reasons to camp up here. Moraine State Park itself does not have an RV campground, but Bear Run Campground in Portersville sits right beside the park with immediate access to Lake Arthur's shoreline and the trail network, so you can boat, swim, and fish by day and return to a full-hookup site by night. The 3,225-acre lake is a genuine draw for boating and paddling, and the surrounding trails are excellent. This location is what lets you split your trip cleanly between outdoor days at the lake and city days in Pittsburgh, all from a single base about 30 minutes from downtown.
Are campgrounds near Aliquippa open in winter?
Generally no. Both the private and public campgrounds in this part of western Pennsylvania close for the winter, and the region turns cold, gray, and snowy from late fall through early spring, so this is not a cold-weather camping destination. If your travels bring you through in the off-season, you will need to plan around closed campgrounds and dump in a larger nearby city instead. The camping season here effectively runs late spring through October, with the parks reopening as the weather warms. For a winter trip toward Pittsburgh, look at year-round options in the broader metro rather than counting on the Beaver County parks being open.
What is there to do around Aliquippa besides Pittsburgh?
The nature side of Beaver County balances the city nicely. Moraine State Park and its 3,225-acre Lake Arthur, about 30 miles north, are the highlight, with boating, swimming, fishing, and miles of shoreline trails. Raccoon Creek State Park to the south adds a lake, a noted wildflower reserve, and quiet hiking. The Ohio River runs through the county with riverfront paths, and Beaver Falls offers everyday shopping and services. Between the two state parks and the river, you can fill several days outdoors without ever driving into the city, which makes the area work as more than just a Pittsburgh dormitory. Come in October and the fall color makes the trails especially worthwhile.
Does Bear Run Campground take big rigs and offer amenities?
Yes. Bear Run is a full-service family campground with 300 sites, full hookups, 30 and 50-amp electric, pull-thru sites for easy big-rig setup, water, sewer, WiFi, and cell coverage, plus a swimming pool, restrooms and showers, laundry, and a camp store. Its position beside Lake Arthur and Moraine State Park, about 30 minutes from Pittsburgh, makes it the practical hub for the whole area. Because it is popular and family-oriented, summer weekends fill, so reserve ahead, but midweek and shoulder-season stays are usually easy to get. For most RVers wanting hookups and amenities near both the lake and the city, it is the clear first choice in Beaver County.
Where do I dump tanks and get water near Aliquippa?
If you are staying at Bear Run Campground, you have full hookups with sewer and potable water right at your site, so tank management is handled through your stay with no separate dump stop needed. At Raccoon Creek State Park, the modern sites are electric only, so fill fresh water on arrival and use the campground dump station when you break camp. For travelers passing through without camping, standalone public dump stations are scarce in this metro-adjacent area, so the practical options are the campgrounds or a larger facility in the Pittsburgh metro. See our companion Aliquippa RV dump stations guide for the specific local options and whether any accept non-guests for a fee.
What are the best RV parks near Aliquippa, Pennsylvania?
Because Aliquippa has no campgrounds in the city itself, the two options worth planning around sit a short drive out. Bear Run Campground in Portersville is the standout private park, a 300-site family campground with full hookups, 30 and 50-amp service, pull-thrus, a pool, and laundry, right by Lake Arthur and Moraine State Park yet only about 30 minutes from Pittsburgh. For a public alternative, Raccoon Creek State Park about 15 miles south offers 172 modern sites with electric hookups, flush restrooms, and showers in a lake-and-trail setting. Together they give you a full-service private base and a quieter, cheaper state-park option within easy reach of the city.
Do RV parks near Aliquippa have full hookups?
Yes, at the private park. Bear Run Campground offers true full hookups with sewer, water, and both 30 and 50-amp electric across its 300 sites, including pull-thru sites that make setting up a big rig simple, so you can dump and fill right at the pad. The public option, Raccoon Creek State Park, provides modern sites with 15, 20, 30, or 50-amp electric plus flush restrooms and hot showers, but no sewer hookups at the site, so you handle tanks at the campground dump station. If full hookups matter to you, base at Bear Run; if you are happy with electric and a lake setting, Raccoon Creek is the budget pick.
How much does it cost to camp near Aliquippa?
Camping here is affordable for a major-metro area, which is a big reason to base in Beaver County. Full-hookup sites at Bear Run Campground run typical mid-range family-park rates, generally the mid-thirties to mid-forties a night in peak season, with sewer included so there is no separate dump fee during your stay. Raccoon Creek State Park is cheaper, with electric sites often in the twenties to low thirties depending on amp service and season. Staying out here rather than in the Pittsburgh suburbs usually saves money per night. Travel midweek or in the shoulder seasons for lower rates, and budget separately for city parking and museum admission on Pittsburgh days.
How far ahead should I reserve near Aliquippa?
For summer weekends at Bear Run Campground, reserve at least a few weeks out, since this family park with its pool and lake access fills during peak season. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often available on short notice. Raccoon Creek State Park books through Pennsylvania's DCNR reservation system, which requires reservations at least three days ahead and takes them up to eleven months in advance, and its electric sites go quickly for summer and fall color weekends. Unreserved state-park sites release first-come at noon when advance booking closes, which can help a last-minute plan. For any weekend in July, August, or October, we would lock in a site early.
When is the best time to RV camp near Aliquippa?
Late spring through October is the reliable window, with fall the standout. October brings peak color across the western Pennsylvania hills and crisp, comfortable days that are ideal for both lake outings and city walking. Summer is warm, humid, and the busiest season, perfect for boating and swimming on Lake Arthur but the priciest and most crowded time, so book ahead. Spring reopens the parks and stays quiet and green, good for weekday stays before the rush. Winter is the one to skip, since the campgrounds close and the region turns cold, gray, and snowy. For the best mix of weather and value, aim for late spring or fall.
Can big rigs camp near Aliquippa?
Yes, mainly at Bear Run Campground, which caters to larger units with full-hookup pull-thru sites, 50-amp service, and the room to maneuver a 40-foot motorhome or big fifth wheel, so setup is straightforward once you are off the highway. Raccoon Creek State Park takes trailers up to 50 feet on its modern sites, though the approach roads and loops are more wooded and winding, so go slow. The main caution in this area is not the campgrounds but the terrain and the city: western Pennsylvania roads are hilly and winding, and Pittsburgh's streets, bridges, and inclines are no place for a big rig. Use the interstates for the hauls and day-trip the city in the tow vehicle.
Is Aliquippa a good base for visiting Pittsburgh?
It is a good, budget-friendly one, as long as you leave the rig at camp. From a Beaver County campground you are only about 30 minutes to half an hour from downtown Pittsburgh via I-376, close enough to make the Carnegie and Andy Warhol museums, the incline railways, and a Steelers or Pirates game comfortable day trips. Camping out here costs less than staying in the Pittsburgh suburbs, and you avoid the city's tough terrain entirely by driving in with the tow vehicle. Base at Bear Run, spend one day in the city and the next on Lake Arthur, and you get the best of both without paying city rates or fighting big-rig traffic downtown.
Are there state park campgrounds near Aliquippa?
Yes. Raccoon Creek State Park sits about 15 miles south in southern Beaver County and is the main public camping option, with 172 modern campsites offering 15, 20, 30, or 50-amp electric, flush restrooms, hot showers, and room for trailers up to 50 feet. The park wraps around a lake and includes a well-known wildflower reserve and miles of hiking trails, making it a peaceful counterpoint to the city days. Reservations run through Pennsylvania's DCNR system from three days to eleven months out, with unreserved sites released first-come at noon. It is cheaper than the private park and a fine place to unwind between Pittsburgh trips, as long as you can live without a sewer hookup at the site.
Can I camp near Moraine State Park and Lake Arthur?
Yes, and it is one of the best reasons to camp up here. Moraine State Park itself does not have an RV campground, but Bear Run Campground in Portersville sits right beside the park with immediate access to Lake Arthur's shoreline and the trail network, so you can boat, swim, and fish by day and return to a full-hookup site by night. The 3,225-acre lake is a genuine draw for boating and paddling, and the surrounding trails are excellent. This location is what lets you split your trip cleanly between outdoor days at the lake and city days in Pittsburgh, all from a single base about 30 minutes from downtown.
Are campgrounds near Aliquippa open in winter?
Generally no. Both the private and public campgrounds in this part of western Pennsylvania close for the winter, and the region turns cold, gray, and snowy from late fall through early spring, so this is not a cold-weather camping destination. If your travels bring you through in the off-season, you will need to plan around closed campgrounds and dump in a larger nearby city instead. The camping season here effectively runs late spring through October, with the parks reopening as the weather warms. For a winter trip toward Pittsburgh, look at year-round options in the broader metro rather than counting on the Beaver County parks being open.
What is there to do around Aliquippa besides Pittsburgh?
The nature side of Beaver County balances the city nicely. Moraine State Park and its 3,225-acre Lake Arthur, about 30 miles north, are the highlight, with boating, swimming, fishing, and miles of shoreline trails. Raccoon Creek State Park to the south adds a lake, a noted wildflower reserve, and quiet hiking. The Ohio River runs through the county with riverfront paths, and Beaver Falls offers everyday shopping and services. Between the two state parks and the river, you can fill several days outdoors without ever driving into the city, which makes the area work as more than just a Pittsburgh dormitory. Come in October and the fall color makes the trails especially worthwhile.
Does Bear Run Campground take big rigs and offer amenities?
Yes. Bear Run is a full-service family campground with 300 sites, full hookups, 30 and 50-amp electric, pull-thru sites for easy big-rig setup, water, sewer, WiFi, and cell coverage, plus a swimming pool, restrooms and showers, laundry, and a camp store. Its position beside Lake Arthur and Moraine State Park, about 30 minutes from Pittsburgh, makes it the practical hub for the whole area. Because it is popular and family-oriented, summer weekends fill, so reserve ahead, but midweek and shoulder-season stays are usually easy to get. For most RVers wanting hookups and amenities near both the lake and the city, it is the clear first choice in Beaver County.
Where do I dump tanks and get water near Aliquippa?
If you are staying at Bear Run Campground, you have full hookups with sewer and potable water right at your site, so tank management is handled through your stay with no separate dump stop needed. At Raccoon Creek State Park, the modern sites are electric only, so fill fresh water on arrival and use the campground dump station when you break camp. For travelers passing through without camping, standalone public dump stations are scarce in this metro-adjacent area, so the practical options are the campgrounds or a larger facility in the Pittsburgh metro. See our companion Aliquippa RV dump stations guide for the specific local options and whether any accept non-guests for a fee.
Are there free dump stations in Aliquippa?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Aliquippa.
All Dump Stations Near Aliquippa (147)
RV ParkForest Brook Mobile Home Park
RV ParkHolly Hill Mobile Home Community
RV ParkCenter Manor
RV Park19 Shady Side RV Park
RV ParkHotel RV Beaver
RV ParkHart's Content Campground
RV ParkMorgan's Country Setting
RV Park



