RV Parks In Central City, Pennsylvania
40.1106° N, 78.8020° W
Quick Overview
Central City sits high in the Allegheny Mountains of Somerset County, in the heart of Pennsylvania's Laurel Highlands, and it is best known as the nearest town to the Flight 93 National Memorial just up the road near Shanksville. It is a small mountain borough with no RV park inside town, so for RVers this is a "park near Central City" trip: you base at one of the private resorts or state park campgrounds that ring the area, then use Central City as your jumping-off point for the memorial, Indian Lake, and the ridge country around it.
On the private side, Hickory Hollow Campground near Rockwood is the closest full-service pick, a family-run park with 107 sites, 86 of them full hookup, 29 pull-throughs, and wide interior roads built for today's larger motorhomes, open from mid-April through October. A bit farther out toward Bedford, Friendship Village Campground and RV Park lays out 210 full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp service, cable, and pull-throughs that swallow rigs up to 70 feet, plus a pool and mini golf for families. Both let you book direct and give you sewer at the site, which the public campgrounds generally do not.
For state-park camping and lower rates, Shawnee State Park sits about 30 minutes south near Schellsburg with 211 sites, 94 modern electric and 16 full hookup, a swimming beach, and a dump station, all bookable through ReserveAmerica. Laurel Hill State Park, roughly 10 miles west of Somerset, wraps a 63-acre lake with 264 wooded electric sites and its own beach. Big rigs do well at the private resorts and at many of the developed state-park loops, though a few older loops run tighter, and PA-160 between Windber and Central City can be rough, so favor US-30 and US-219 for the approach. Whether you want a full-hookup pad with a pool or an electric site by a mountain lake, the Laurel Highlands give you the range. Need to empty your tanks in town? See our guide to RV dump stations in Central City for the local options.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Central City
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Gear for Your Trip to Central City
All Dump Stations Near Central City
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boyers Pond Campground | 4.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Stonycreek Launch | 8.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Quemahoning Family Recreation Area | 9.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pine Oaks Camp Ground | 9.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Shawnee State Park Campground | 10.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nature's Getaway RV Park | 10.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Shellbark Campground | 11.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Choice Camping Court | 13.0 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Camoset Village | 14.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Woodland Campsites | 14.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Boyers Pond Campground
4.6 miThe Stonycreek Launch
8.9 miQuemahoning Family Recreation Area
9.5 miPine Oaks Camp Ground
9.6 miShawnee State Park Campground
10.5 miNature's Getaway RV Park
10.9 miShellbark Campground
11.4 miChoice Camping Court
13.0 miCamoset Village
14.1 miWoodland Campsites
14.8 miTraveling to Central City by RV
Getting a big rig into this corner of the Laurel Highlands is manageable with a little route planning. PA-160 is the local artery straight through Central City, but the stretch between Windber and Central City has been reported in rough condition with potholes, so we would favor US-30, the old Lincoln Highway, across the south and US-219, the main four-lane running north to Johnstown, for the smoothest towing. The Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76) is the fast east-west route through the region, and the Somerset and Bedford interchanges are the closest on-ramps for anyone coming from Pittsburgh or Harrisburg.
Once you are off the main roads, the private resorts and the state park campgrounds all sit near paved county routes with reasonable approaches, and Hickory Hollow in particular is known for wide interior roads built for larger motorhomes. Shawnee State Park is an easy run down US-30 near Schellsburg, and Friendship Village is right off Route 30 west of Bedford. Fuel, propane, and groceries are all easy to find in Windber, Somerset, and Bedford, with RV service around Johnstown and Somerset if you need it. There is no major commercial airport right here; Pittsburgh and its airport are roughly 90 minutes west for a fly-and-rent trip into the mountains.
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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 Central City, 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 Central City
Camping near Central City runs affordable to mid-range, and the split is the usual public-versus-private one. Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park are the budget picks, with electric sites at low state-park nightly rates, though they generally offer electric rather than full hookups and close by late fall or early winter. The private resorts sit a step up: Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village land in the moderate range for a nightly full-hookup site, and both run higher on summer and fall-color weekends when demand peaks. Weekly and monthly discounts at the private parks can lower the effective nightly cost if you settle in for a while. Because there is no in-town park, factor a few extra miles of driving to the memorial and the lakes into your fuel budget. Overall you can camp cheaply by a mountain lake in shoulder season or pay a fair mid-range price for full hookups and family amenities, and groceries stay reasonable in nearby Windber, Somerset, and Bedford.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Central City
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Best Time to Visit Central City by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
19F - 31F
Crowds: Low
The public campgrounds close and most private parks shut down; with roughly 105 inches of annual snow, winter RV camping here is essentially off the table until spring.
Spring
Mar - May
39F - 57F
Crowds: Low
Parks open mid-April and it is a quiet, green window, though thawing mountains can leave lakeside and low sites muddy early on.
Summer
Jun - Aug
59F - 80F
Crowds: High
Prime season with warm days and cool mountain nights; Hickory Hollow and the state park loops fill on weekends, so reserve well ahead through ReserveAmerica or by booking direct.
Fall
Sep - Oct
40F - 60F
Crowds: High
Ridge color pulls crowds through late September and October; book those weekends early before the state parks close for the season.
Explore the Central City Area
Here is how we would plan a Central City stay. Set up at Hickory Hollow for full hookups close in, or drop into Shawnee or Laurel Hill State Park for a lakeside site and lower rates, then make the short drive to the Flight 93 National Memorial, which really deserves a couple of unhurried hours at the visitor center, the Tower of Voices, and the Wall of Names. For big rigs, steer around PA-160 between Windber and Central City where you can, since that stretch is rough, and lean on US-30 and US-219 instead. Fall color across the Laurel Highlands ridges is genuinely spectacular in late September and October, and it draws crowds, so reserve those weekends early through ReserveAmerica or by booking the private parks direct. Remember that this is high, snowy country: the public campgrounds and most private parks close by late fall, so a summer or early-autumn trip is the sweet spot. And build in time for Indian Lake, Blue Knob State Park, and the Johnstown Flood National Memorial while you are in the area.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Central City
What are the best RV parks near Central City, PA?
Central City itself has no RV park, so the best options ring it across the Laurel Highlands. Hickory Hollow Campground near Rockwood is the closest full-hookup private pick, with 107 sites, wide roads for big rigs, and pull-throughs. Friendship Village Campground toward Bedford offers 210 full-hookup sites with a pool and mini golf. For state-park camping and lower rates, Shawnee State Park about 30 minutes south has electric and full-hookup sites and a beach, and Laurel Hill State Park west of Somerset wraps a lake with 264 electric sites. Between the private resorts and the state parks, you can pick full hookups and amenities or a quiet electric site by the water.
Do RV parks near Central City have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks. Hickory Hollow Campground offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 20/30/50 amp service across 86 full-hookup sites, and Friendship Village provides 210 full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer, and cable. The state parks are different: Shawnee State Park has 94 modern electric sites plus 16 full-hookup sites and a central dump station, while Laurel Hill State Park generally offers electric hookups with central water rather than sewer at each site. So if full hookups are a must, book Hickory Hollow or Friendship Village. If electric with a nearby dump station works for you, the state parks trade sewer for lakeside scenery and lower rates.
How much does RV camping cost near Central City?
It comes down to public versus private. Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park are the budget picks, with electric sites at low state-park nightly rates, though they close by late fall and mostly offer electric rather than full hookups. The private resorts run higher: Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village both sit in the moderate range for a nightly full-hookup site, and both climb on summer and fall-color weekends when the Laurel Highlands are busiest. Weekly and monthly discounts at the private parks lower the effective cost for longer stays. Because there is no in-town park, budget a little extra fuel for the drives to the Flight 93 memorial and the lakes. Overall you can camp cheaply in shoulder season or pay a fair mid-range price for full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Central City?
It depends on the season. For summer weekends and fall color, reserve Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park well ahead through ReserveAmerica, which takes bookings up to 11 months out, because these lakeside state parks fill fast in warm and peak-color weather. The private parks, Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village, also fill on summer and holiday weekends, so a week or more of lead time is wise, and you book those direct. Fall-color weekends in late September and October are the tightest of all across the Laurel Highlands, so grab those early. On a spring or early-summer weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially at the state parks midweek.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Central City?
Late spring through early fall is the window, with autumn color the highlight. Summer brings warm days and cool mountain nights at this elevation and is the busiest, most comfortable camping stretch, so weekends fill. Fall color across the Laurel Highlands ridges is spectacular in late September and October, which makes those weekends both beautiful and crowded, so book early. Spring is quiet and green but can be wet and muddy as the mountains thaw, and parks open around mid-April. Winter is freezing and snowy here, averaging roughly 105 inches of snow, and the public campgrounds and most private parks close, so plan a warm-season trip for the best mix of weather and availability.
Can big rigs camp near Central City?
Yes, with a little route care. The private resorts handle big rigs well: Hickory Hollow is known for wide interior roads and pull-through sites built for larger motorhomes, and Friendship Village takes rigs up to 70 feet on pull-through full-hookup sites. Many of the developed loops at Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park accommodate larger RVs too, though a few older state-park loops run tighter, so confirm your length when booking. The bigger caution is the roads: PA-160 between Windber and Central City has been reported rough, so favor US-30 and US-219 for the approach. Confirm your site length and take the mountain grades steady, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options here.
Can I camp near the Flight 93 National Memorial?
Yes, and it is the main reason many RVers come. There is no camping at the Flight 93 National Memorial itself, but Central City sits only about 10 miles away, and the campgrounds that ring it all make a good base. Hickory Hollow near Rockwood is a close full-hookup option, Shawnee State Park is about 30 minutes south, and Laurel Hill State Park is a reasonable drive west near Somerset. From any of them you can reach the memorial in well under an hour to visit the visitor center, the Tower of Voices, and the Wall of Names. Plan a couple of unhurried hours there; it is a moving stop and worth the time on any Laurel Highlands trip.
Is there state park RV camping near Central City?
Yes, the Laurel Highlands are rich in state parks. Shawnee State Park, about 30 minutes south near Schellsburg, has 211 sites including 94 modern electric and 16 full-hookup sites, a swimming beach, hiking trails, and a sanitary dump station, all booked through ReserveAmerica. Laurel Hill State Park, roughly 10 miles west of Somerset, wraps a 63-acre lake with 264 wooded electric sites, a beach, and trails. Both offer electric rather than full hookups at most sites and lower nightly rates than the private resorts, and both close for the cold months. For RVers who want lakeside scenery, quiet, and a budget-friendly night, the state parks are the standout public option in the area.
Are RV parks near Central City pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks, Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village, welcome pets as most family campgrounds do, and the Pennsylvania state parks, Shawnee and Laurel Hill, allow leashed pets in their campgrounds under standard DCNR rules, with some designated pet loops and areas. Policies on breed, number, and where pets are allowed vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the family-focused private resorts. The trails around the lakes and the ridges of the Laurel Highlands give dogs plenty of room to walk. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper.
What is there to do around Central City while camping?
Plenty for a mountain area. The Flight 93 National Memorial near Shanksville is the headline stop, about 10 miles away, with its visitor center, Tower of Voices, and Wall of Names. Indian Lake, just east, offers boating, fishing, and a marina in summer. Blue Knob State Park, one of the highest points in Pennsylvania, has rugged hiking, a ski area, and big ridge views about 20 miles east. Farther north, the Johnstown Flood National Memorial tells the story of the 1889 disaster. Add the lakes and trails at Shawnee and Laurel Hill State Parks, and you have a full itinerary of history, water recreation, and mountain hiking within an easy drive of camp.
Is winter RV camping possible near Central City?
Realistically, no. Central City sits high in the Alleghenies and averages around 105 inches of snow a year, with freezing temperatures through the cold months. The Pennsylvania state park campgrounds, Shawnee and Laurel Hill, close by late fall, and most of the private parks, including Hickory Hollow, shut for the season as well, so there is no reliable year-round RV park right here. If you are set on a cold-weather trip, you would need to look well outside the immediate area for a rare year-round park and be ready to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose, plus plan travel around mountain snowstorms. For nearly all RVers, this is a warm-season destination, best from mid-April through October.
How do I get to Central City RV parks in a big rig?
With some route planning it is straightforward. PA-160 runs straight through Central City, but the stretch between Windber and Central City has been reported rough with potholes, so we would favor US-30, the old Lincoln Highway across the south, and US-219, the four-lane running north to Johnstown, for the smoothest towing. The Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76) is the fast east-west route, with the Somerset and Bedford interchanges the closest on-ramps. From there, Hickory Hollow near Rockwood, Shawnee State Park near Schellsburg, and Friendship Village west of Bedford all sit near paved routes with reasonable approaches. Fuel, propane, and RV service are available around Windber, Somerset, Johnstown, and Bedford, so stock up in those towns.
Is Central City a good base for exploring the Laurel Highlands by RV?
It is a solid one, especially if the Flight 93 National Memorial is on your list. Central City puts you within about 10 miles of the memorial and close to Indian Lake, with Blue Knob State Park, the Johnstown Flood National Memorial, and the lakes at Shawnee and Laurel Hill all within an easy drive. Camp at a full-hookup private park like Hickory Hollow or Friendship Village, or settle into a lakeside state-park site, and you have a central mountain base with real recreation and history nearby. Just remember it is high, snowy country with no in-town park, so plan a warm-season trip and expect a few extra miles between camp and the sights. For that mix, it works well.
What are the best RV parks near Central City, PA?
Central City itself has no RV park, so the best options ring it across the Laurel Highlands. Hickory Hollow Campground near Rockwood is the closest full-hookup private pick, with 107 sites, wide roads for big rigs, and pull-throughs. Friendship Village Campground toward Bedford offers 210 full-hookup sites with a pool and mini golf. For state-park camping and lower rates, Shawnee State Park about 30 minutes south has electric and full-hookup sites and a beach, and Laurel Hill State Park west of Somerset wraps a lake with 264 electric sites. Between the private resorts and the state parks, you can pick full hookups and amenities or a quiet electric site by the water.
Do RV parks near Central City have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks. Hickory Hollow Campground offers full hookups, meaning water, electric, and sewer at your site, with 20/30/50 amp service across 86 full-hookup sites, and Friendship Village provides 210 full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp electric, water, sewer, and cable. The state parks are different: Shawnee State Park has 94 modern electric sites plus 16 full-hookup sites and a central dump station, while Laurel Hill State Park generally offers electric hookups with central water rather than sewer at each site. So if full hookups are a must, book Hickory Hollow or Friendship Village. If electric with a nearby dump station works for you, the state parks trade sewer for lakeside scenery and lower rates.
How much does RV camping cost near Central City?
It comes down to public versus private. Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park are the budget picks, with electric sites at low state-park nightly rates, though they close by late fall and mostly offer electric rather than full hookups. The private resorts run higher: Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village both sit in the moderate range for a nightly full-hookup site, and both climb on summer and fall-color weekends when the Laurel Highlands are busiest. Weekly and monthly discounts at the private parks lower the effective cost for longer stays. Because there is no in-town park, budget a little extra fuel for the drives to the Flight 93 memorial and the lakes. Overall you can camp cheaply in shoulder season or pay a fair mid-range price for full hookups.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Central City?
It depends on the season. For summer weekends and fall color, reserve Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park well ahead through ReserveAmerica, which takes bookings up to 11 months out, because these lakeside state parks fill fast in warm and peak-color weather. The private parks, Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village, also fill on summer and holiday weekends, so a week or more of lead time is wise, and you book those direct. Fall-color weekends in late September and October are the tightest of all across the Laurel Highlands, so grab those early. On a spring or early-summer weekday you can often find a site with little notice, especially at the state parks midweek.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Central City?
Late spring through early fall is the window, with autumn color the highlight. Summer brings warm days and cool mountain nights at this elevation and is the busiest, most comfortable camping stretch, so weekends fill. Fall color across the Laurel Highlands ridges is spectacular in late September and October, which makes those weekends both beautiful and crowded, so book early. Spring is quiet and green but can be wet and muddy as the mountains thaw, and parks open around mid-April. Winter is freezing and snowy here, averaging roughly 105 inches of snow, and the public campgrounds and most private parks close, so plan a warm-season trip for the best mix of weather and availability.
Can big rigs camp near Central City?
Yes, with a little route care. The private resorts handle big rigs well: Hickory Hollow is known for wide interior roads and pull-through sites built for larger motorhomes, and Friendship Village takes rigs up to 70 feet on pull-through full-hookup sites. Many of the developed loops at Shawnee State Park and Laurel Hill State Park accommodate larger RVs too, though a few older state-park loops run tighter, so confirm your length when booking. The bigger caution is the roads: PA-160 between Windber and Central City has been reported rough, so favor US-30 and US-219 for the approach. Confirm your site length and take the mountain grades steady, and big-rig owners will find comfortable options here.
Can I camp near the Flight 93 National Memorial?
Yes, and it is the main reason many RVers come. There is no camping at the Flight 93 National Memorial itself, but Central City sits only about 10 miles away, and the campgrounds that ring it all make a good base. Hickory Hollow near Rockwood is a close full-hookup option, Shawnee State Park is about 30 minutes south, and Laurel Hill State Park is a reasonable drive west near Somerset. From any of them you can reach the memorial in well under an hour to visit the visitor center, the Tower of Voices, and the Wall of Names. Plan a couple of unhurried hours there; it is a moving stop and worth the time on any Laurel Highlands trip.
Is there state park RV camping near Central City?
Yes, the Laurel Highlands are rich in state parks. Shawnee State Park, about 30 minutes south near Schellsburg, has 211 sites including 94 modern electric and 16 full-hookup sites, a swimming beach, hiking trails, and a sanitary dump station, all booked through ReserveAmerica. Laurel Hill State Park, roughly 10 miles west of Somerset, wraps a 63-acre lake with 264 wooded electric sites, a beach, and trails. Both offer electric rather than full hookups at most sites and lower nightly rates than the private resorts, and both close for the cold months. For RVers who want lakeside scenery, quiet, and a budget-friendly night, the state parks are the standout public option in the area.
Are RV parks near Central City pet-friendly?
Generally yes. The private parks, Hickory Hollow and Friendship Village, welcome pets as most family campgrounds do, and the Pennsylvania state parks, Shawnee and Laurel Hill, allow leashed pets in their campgrounds under standard DCNR rules, with some designated pet loops and areas. Policies on breed, number, and where pets are allowed vary, so confirm the specifics when you book, especially at the family-focused private resorts. The trails around the lakes and the ridges of the Laurel Highlands give dogs plenty of room to walk. As always, bring proof of vaccinations, keep pets leashed in the campground, and clean up after them so the sites stay welcoming for the next camper.
What is there to do around Central City while camping?
Plenty for a mountain area. The Flight 93 National Memorial near Shanksville is the headline stop, about 10 miles away, with its visitor center, Tower of Voices, and Wall of Names. Indian Lake, just east, offers boating, fishing, and a marina in summer. Blue Knob State Park, one of the highest points in Pennsylvania, has rugged hiking, a ski area, and big ridge views about 20 miles east. Farther north, the Johnstown Flood National Memorial tells the story of the 1889 disaster. Add the lakes and trails at Shawnee and Laurel Hill State Parks, and you have a full itinerary of history, water recreation, and mountain hiking within an easy drive of camp.
Is winter RV camping possible near Central City?
Realistically, no. Central City sits high in the Alleghenies and averages around 105 inches of snow a year, with freezing temperatures through the cold months. The Pennsylvania state park campgrounds, Shawnee and Laurel Hill, close by late fall, and most of the private parks, including Hickory Hollow, shut for the season as well, so there is no reliable year-round RV park right here. If you are set on a cold-weather trip, you would need to look well outside the immediate area for a rare year-round park and be ready to manage freezing pipes with heat tape or a heated hose, plus plan travel around mountain snowstorms. For nearly all RVers, this is a warm-season destination, best from mid-April through October.
How do I get to Central City RV parks in a big rig?
With some route planning it is straightforward. PA-160 runs straight through Central City, but the stretch between Windber and Central City has been reported rough with potholes, so we would favor US-30, the old Lincoln Highway across the south, and US-219, the four-lane running north to Johnstown, for the smoothest towing. The Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76) is the fast east-west route, with the Somerset and Bedford interchanges the closest on-ramps. From there, Hickory Hollow near Rockwood, Shawnee State Park near Schellsburg, and Friendship Village west of Bedford all sit near paved routes with reasonable approaches. Fuel, propane, and RV service are available around Windber, Somerset, Johnstown, and Bedford, so stock up in those towns.
Is Central City a good base for exploring the Laurel Highlands by RV?
It is a solid one, especially if the Flight 93 National Memorial is on your list. Central City puts you within about 10 miles of the memorial and close to Indian Lake, with Blue Knob State Park, the Johnstown Flood National Memorial, and the lakes at Shawnee and Laurel Hill all within an easy drive. Camp at a full-hookup private park like Hickory Hollow or Friendship Village, or settle into a lakeside state-park site, and you have a central mountain base with real recreation and history nearby. Just remember it is high, snowy country with no in-town park, so plan a warm-season trip and expect a few extra miles between camp and the sights. For that mix, it works well.
Are there free dump stations in Central City?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Central City.
All Dump Stations Near Central City (125)
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RV ParkCampingpa.com
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