RV Parks In Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania
41.4887° N, 75.7085° W
Quick Overview
If you are planning an RV trip to northeastern Pennsylvania, Clarks Summit makes a smart home base. It sits just north of Scranton where four big routes meet: I-81, the I-476 Pennsylvania Turnpike Northeast Extension, US-6, and US-11. That means you can roll in and out without fighting your way through a downtown, and you are ten easy miles from Scranton attractions and even closer to the Endless Mountains. We like this area because the RV parks in Clarks Summit and the immediate ring around it cover both ends of the spectrum: a well-run state park on a lake and a family-owned private campground with full hookups.
The anchor is Lackawanna State Park, about ten miles north of Scranton off US-11. Its campground runs 53 sites with electric hookups plus a handful without, and it has the practical stuff RVers care about: a dump station, flush toilets, hot showers, and potable water, all wrapped around a 198-acre lake. For full hookups and a private-park feel, Highland Campgrounds in nearby Dalton gives you 30/50-amp service, back-in and pull-through sites, a pool, and laundry on 35 wooded acres. Between the two you can match the trip to your rig and your budget. Clarks Summit itself has one listed dump-station point, but the reliable, staffed option for tanks is the state park dump station during its season, so plan your dumps around that rather than counting on a self-serve spot in town.
Season matters here. The camping window tracks the state park calendar, roughly mid-April through mid-October, because this is a real snow-belt corner of Pennsylvania. Fall is the standout: Endless Mountains foliage peaks from late September into October, and the crowds thin out midweek. Come prepared for warm, humid summers and cold, snowy winters, and you will understand why we treat Clarks Summit as a spring-through-fall destination.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Clarks Summit
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Gear for Your Trip to Clarks Summit
All Dump Stations Near Clarks Summit
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How Kola Campground | 5.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Highland Campgrounds | 6.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rockledge Terrace Dr | 6.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunset Mobile Home Park Inc | 7.6 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Susquehanna Shores Campground | 8.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Honor Mobile Home Park | 8.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Moosic Trailer Park | 9.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hickory Grove Campground | 12.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Jones Mobile Home & RV Park | 13.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Clayton Park RV Escape | 13.5 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
How Kola Campground
5.8 miHighland Campgrounds
6.0 miRockledge Terrace Dr
6.7 miSunset Mobile Home Park Inc
7.6 miSusquehanna Shores Campground
8.0 miHonor Mobile Home Park
8.0 miMoosic Trailer Park
9.5 miHickory Grove Campground
12.2 miJones Mobile Home & RV Park
13.1 miClayton Park RV Escape
13.5 miTraveling to Clarks Summit by RV
Getting a rig to Clarks Summit is about as painless as northeastern Pennsylvania gets. I-81 runs straight through, and the I-476 Turnpike Northeast Extension ends right here at a trumpet interchange that ties together I-81, US-6, and US-11. The Turnpike uses open-road tolling with toll-by-plate or E-ZPass, so there are no cash booths to inch a big rig through. If you are coming up from Allentown or Philadelphia, the Northeast Extension delivers you almost to the campground door; from the north or from New York, I-81 does the same. Check current conditions and any restrictions on the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation site before you roll.
Once you are here, treat Clarks Summit as a hub and day-trip out. Downtown along State Street (US-11) is tight small-town parking, so leave the coach at camp and drive in. Lackawanna State Park sits about ten miles north off US-11; Highland Campgrounds is roughly eight miles out in Dalton. Scranton and its museums are ten miles south. Fuel is easy along US-11 and near the interchange, and grocery and big-box stops are plentiful in Clarks Summit and Dickson City.
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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 Clarks Summit, 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 Clarks Summit
Camping costs around Clarks Summit are middle-of-the-road for the Northeast, and you have real choice. Basic sites in the area run roughly $30 to $70 a night depending on hookups and amenities, while the more resort-style private sites climb toward $80 to $120 on peak weekends. Lackawanna State Park is the value play: electric sites at Pennsylvania state-park rates, with the dump station, showers, and lake access included. Reservations can be made up to 11 months out and must be locked in at least three days before arrival, so plan ahead for summer and foliage weekends.
Highland Campgrounds in Dalton is the full-hookup option; book direct for current nightly and weekly rates, and ask about weekly discounts if you are settling in. Budget a little extra for the Turnpike if you arrive via I-476 (toll-by-plate or E-ZPass), plus propane refills from AmeriGas as needed. Overall, a week here does not have to break the bank, especially if you lean on the state park and cook at camp.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Clarks Summit
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Best Time to Visit Clarks Summit by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
Crowds: Medium
Cold and snowy, with January means near 27F and about 58 inches of snow a year. Campgrounds are closed and this is not RV season. Winterize your rig and treat Clarks Summit as a warm-weather destination.
Spring
Mar - May
Crowds: Medium
Cool and wet, with early mud season. Lackawanna State Park campground opens mid-April, so this is the start of the RV window. Highs climb from the 50s into the 60s; pack layers and expect rain.
Summer
Jun - Aug
Crowds: Medium
Warm and humid, highs in the upper 70s to low 80s. Afternoon thunderstorms are common. Peak demand at both the state park and private campgrounds, so reserve early for weekends and holidays.
Fall
Sep - Oct
Crowds: Medium
The best season here. Crisp days, highs in the 60s, and strong Endless Mountains foliage peaking from late September into October. Book foliage weekends well ahead; midweek is much quieter.
Explore the Clarks Summit Area
A few things we would tell a friend heading this way. First, book the state park early for any fall-foliage weekend. The color peaks late September into October and those sites go fast; midweek is far easier if your schedule is flexible. Second, use the highway geometry to your advantage. The I-81 / I-476 / US-6 / US-11 knot right at Clarks Summit makes this one of the easier in-and-out spots in the region, so it works well as a touring base for the whole Endless Mountains and Scranton area.
Third, plan your tank dumps around the Lackawanna State Park dump station during its season rather than assuming a self-serve spot in town; there is only one listed point in Clarks Summit and the staffed park option is the dependable one. Fourth, respect the season. With about 58 inches of average snow and campgrounds closing in mid-October, this is warm-weather country. Winterize by early November if you are storing or moving through. Finally, for propane and quick fixes, AmeriGas serves the area and there is mobile RV repair based right in Clarks Summit, so you are not stranded if something acts up.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Clarks Summit
What RV parks and campgrounds are near Clarks Summit, PA?
The two anchors are Lackawanna State Park Campground and Highland Campgrounds. Lackawanna State Park sits about ten miles north of Scranton off US-11 and offers 53 electric sites plus a handful without hookups, a dump station, flush toilets, hot showers, and potable water around a 198-acre lake. Highland Campgrounds is a family-run private park in nearby Dalton with roughly 70 shaded sites, full and partial hookups, 30/50-amp service, and both back-in and pull-through spots. Between the two you can pick a public lakeside setting or a full-hookup private campground, and both are within about ten miles of Clarks Summit and easy to reach off I-81.
Does Lackawanna State Park have RV hookups?
Yes. Lackawanna State Park Campground has 53 sites with electric hookups and 11 without, so most RVers can plug in for shore power. It does not offer full water and sewer at the site, but the campground has a dump station, potable water fill, flush toilets, and hot showers, which covers the essentials for a comfortable stay. There are also cabins and yurts if you are traveling with non-RV friends. Because it is a Pennsylvania state park, rates are reasonable, and the wooded sites wrap around a 198-acre lake with boating and a pool. Reserve through ReserveAmerica or by calling 888-PA-PARKS.
Are there full-hookup RV sites near Clarks Summit?
Yes. For full hookups your best bet is Highland Campgrounds in Dalton, about eight miles from Clarks Summit in the Endless Mountains. It has roughly 70 shaded sites with full and partial hookups, 30 and 50-amp electric, and a mix of back-in and pull-through sites that accommodate rigs up to about 55 feet. On-site you will find a dump station, an in-ground pool, coin laundry, restrooms with free hot showers, and limited groceries. Lackawanna State Park, by contrast, offers electric-only sites with a shared dump station rather than full hookups, so if sewer at your site matters, Highland is the one to book. Reserve direct with the campground for current rates.
Is there a dump station in Clarks Summit?
Clarks Summit has just one listed dump-station point, so we would not rely on it as your main plan. The dependable, staffed option is the dump station at Lackawanna State Park, about ten miles north off US-11, which operates during the campground season from roughly mid-April through mid-October. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton also has a dump station for its guests. If you are passing through outside the state-park season, plan to dump before you arrive or route to a campground that stays open, because winter closures are the norm in this snow-belt part of Pennsylvania. Always confirm current hours before you count on any single station.
What highways serve Clarks Summit for RV travel?
Clarks Summit sits at an unusually convenient crossroads. I-81 runs straight through town, and the I-476 Pennsylvania Turnpike Northeast Extension reaches its northern terminus right here at a trumpet interchange that also ties in US-6 and US-11. For RVers that means you can approach from Philadelphia and Allentown via the Turnpike or from New York and the north via I-81 and land almost at the campground door. The Turnpike uses open-road tolling with toll-by-plate or E-ZPass, so there are no cash booths to squeeze a big rig through. There are no unusual RV bans on these main routes, though you should still check PennDOT for any active construction or restrictions.
When is the best time to RV in Clarks Summit?
Late spring through fall, roughly mid-April to mid-October, which tracks the Lackawanna State Park camping season. Fall is our favorite: the Endless Mountains foliage peaks from late September into October, days are crisp with highs in the 60s, and midweek crowds are thin. Summer is warm, humid, and the busiest, so reserve early for weekends and holidays. Spring is cool and wet with some mud season early on. Winter is genuinely cold and snowy here, with campgrounds closed, so we treat this as a warm-weather destination and would not plan an RV trip between November and March unless you are just passing through.
How much does it cost to camp near Clarks Summit?
Camping in the area runs roughly $30 to $70 a night for basic sites depending on hookups and amenities, with more resort-style private sites climbing toward $80 to $120 on peak weekends. Lackawanna State Park is the value option, charging Pennsylvania state-park rates for electric sites while including the dump station, hot showers, and lake access. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton is the full-hookup choice; book direct for current nightly and weekly rates and ask about weekly discounts if you are staying a while. Budget a little extra for Turnpike tolls if you arrive via I-476 and for propane refills. A week here does not have to be expensive if you lean on the state park.
Can I park my RV overnight at Walmart in the Clarks Summit area?
Maybe, but do not count on it. In Pennsylvania many Walmarts sit on township-owned land, so local ordinances, which often carry a two-hour limit or a flat no-overnight rule, can override corporate policy. Walmart corporate generally permits overnight RV stays, but the store manager makes the call based on local conditions, and municipal ordinances trump both. The practical move is to call the specific store ahead and ask the manager directly, then have a backup. Honestly, with Lackawanna State Park and Highland Campgrounds both close by and reasonably priced, we would just reserve a real site and sleep easier with hookups and a dump station on hand.
Are the campgrounds near Clarks Summit big-rig friendly?
For the most part, yes. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton advertises sites that accommodate rigs up to about 55 feet, with pull-through options that make setup easier for longer coaches and fifth wheels. Lackawanna State Park has a mix of sites, and while many are wooded and comfortable for mid-size RVs, you should check individual site lengths when you reserve because state-park sites vary and some are tighter than others. Access is not the problem here, since I-81 and the Turnpike bring you in on good roads; the constraint is site dimensions at the individual campground. Reserve early and read the site details, and most standard rigs will fit fine.
What is there to do around Clarks Summit for RVers?
Plenty within a short drive. Lackawanna State Park itself gives you a 198-acre lake with boating, a swimming pool, and trails right at your campsite. Ten miles south in Scranton you can visit Steamtown National Historic Site, a free-admission steam railroad park with seasonal short train rides, plus the Lackawanna Coal Mine Tour that takes you underground into a real anthracite mine. In Clarks Summit, Lahey Family Fun Park runs mini-golf, go-karts, and bumper boats and stays open year-round. The surrounding Endless Mountains are made for hiking, kayaking, and fall leaf-peeping. Between the state park, the railroad history, and the mountains, a few days here fill up easily.
Where can I get propane and RV repairs near Clarks Summit?
You are covered for both. AmeriGas serves the Clarks Summit area for propane refills and tank exchange, and there are U-Haul propane locations in nearby Scranton if you need an alternative. For repairs, Interstate Fleet Services offers mobile RV repair based right in Clarks Summit, which is handy if you would rather not break camp to fix something, and there are additional RV service shops in the Scranton area. Between the state park, Highland Campgrounds, and area suppliers you can also top off water and find limited groceries. It is a well-serviced corner of Pennsylvania, so a minor breakdown or an empty propane tank should not derail your trip.
Do I need reservations for campgrounds near Clarks Summit?
We strongly recommend it, especially in summer and on fall-foliage weekends. Lackawanna State Park takes reservations up to 11 months in advance and requires them at least three days before arrival, and its lakeside electric sites fill quickly for weekends and holidays. You can book online through ReserveAmerica or by calling 888-PA-PARKS. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton is a private park; book direct with the campground for current availability and rates. Because the overall camping window here is short, roughly mid-April to mid-October, demand concentrates into those warm months, so the earlier you lock in a site the better your choice of location and length. Walking up without a reservation on a summer weekend is risky.
Is Clarks Summit a good winter RV destination?
No, and we would steer you elsewhere for cold-weather travel. This is a snow-belt corner of northeastern Pennsylvania that averages about 58 inches of snow a year, with January means near 27 degrees and freezing temperatures common from November into April. The area campgrounds, including Lackawanna State Park and Highland Campgrounds, close in mid-October and reopen mid-April, so there is essentially no seasonal RV camping in the depths of winter. If you are moving through in the cold months, winterize your rig by early November and plan on dumping and filling before you arrive. For an actual RV stay, come spring through fall when the campgrounds are open and the weather cooperates.
What RV parks and campgrounds are near Clarks Summit, PA?
The two anchors are Lackawanna State Park Campground and Highland Campgrounds. Lackawanna State Park sits about ten miles north of Scranton off US-11 and offers 53 electric sites plus a handful without hookups, a dump station, flush toilets, hot showers, and potable water around a 198-acre lake. Highland Campgrounds is a family-run private park in nearby Dalton with roughly 70 shaded sites, full and partial hookups, 30/50-amp service, and both back-in and pull-through spots. Between the two you can pick a public lakeside setting or a full-hookup private campground, and both are within about ten miles of Clarks Summit and easy to reach off I-81.
Does Lackawanna State Park have RV hookups?
Yes. Lackawanna State Park Campground has 53 sites with electric hookups and 11 without, so most RVers can plug in for shore power. It does not offer full water and sewer at the site, but the campground has a dump station, potable water fill, flush toilets, and hot showers, which covers the essentials for a comfortable stay. There are also cabins and yurts if you are traveling with non-RV friends. Because it is a Pennsylvania state park, rates are reasonable, and the wooded sites wrap around a 198-acre lake with boating and a pool. Reserve through ReserveAmerica or by calling 888-PA-PARKS.
Are there full-hookup RV sites near Clarks Summit?
Yes. For full hookups your best bet is Highland Campgrounds in Dalton, about eight miles from Clarks Summit in the Endless Mountains. It has roughly 70 shaded sites with full and partial hookups, 30 and 50-amp electric, and a mix of back-in and pull-through sites that accommodate rigs up to about 55 feet. On-site you will find a dump station, an in-ground pool, coin laundry, restrooms with free hot showers, and limited groceries. Lackawanna State Park, by contrast, offers electric-only sites with a shared dump station rather than full hookups, so if sewer at your site matters, Highland is the one to book. Reserve direct with the campground for current rates.
Is there a dump station in Clarks Summit?
Clarks Summit has just one listed dump-station point, so we would not rely on it as your main plan. The dependable, staffed option is the dump station at Lackawanna State Park, about ten miles north off US-11, which operates during the campground season from roughly mid-April through mid-October. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton also has a dump station for its guests. If you are passing through outside the state-park season, plan to dump before you arrive or route to a campground that stays open, because winter closures are the norm in this snow-belt part of Pennsylvania. Always confirm current hours before you count on any single station.
What highways serve Clarks Summit for RV travel?
Clarks Summit sits at an unusually convenient crossroads. I-81 runs straight through town, and the I-476 Pennsylvania Turnpike Northeast Extension reaches its northern terminus right here at a trumpet interchange that also ties in US-6 and US-11. For RVers that means you can approach from Philadelphia and Allentown via the Turnpike or from New York and the north via I-81 and land almost at the campground door. The Turnpike uses open-road tolling with toll-by-plate or E-ZPass, so there are no cash booths to squeeze a big rig through. There are no unusual RV bans on these main routes, though you should still check PennDOT for any active construction or restrictions.
When is the best time to RV in Clarks Summit?
Late spring through fall, roughly mid-April to mid-October, which tracks the Lackawanna State Park camping season. Fall is our favorite: the Endless Mountains foliage peaks from late September into October, days are crisp with highs in the 60s, and midweek crowds are thin. Summer is warm, humid, and the busiest, so reserve early for weekends and holidays. Spring is cool and wet with some mud season early on. Winter is genuinely cold and snowy here, with campgrounds closed, so we treat this as a warm-weather destination and would not plan an RV trip between November and March unless you are just passing through.
How much does it cost to camp near Clarks Summit?
Camping in the area runs roughly $30 to $70 a night for basic sites depending on hookups and amenities, with more resort-style private sites climbing toward $80 to $120 on peak weekends. Lackawanna State Park is the value option, charging Pennsylvania state-park rates for electric sites while including the dump station, hot showers, and lake access. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton is the full-hookup choice; book direct for current nightly and weekly rates and ask about weekly discounts if you are staying a while. Budget a little extra for Turnpike tolls if you arrive via I-476 and for propane refills. A week here does not have to be expensive if you lean on the state park.
Can I park my RV overnight at Walmart in the Clarks Summit area?
Maybe, but do not count on it. In Pennsylvania many Walmarts sit on township-owned land, so local ordinances, which often carry a two-hour limit or a flat no-overnight rule, can override corporate policy. Walmart corporate generally permits overnight RV stays, but the store manager makes the call based on local conditions, and municipal ordinances trump both. The practical move is to call the specific store ahead and ask the manager directly, then have a backup. Honestly, with Lackawanna State Park and Highland Campgrounds both close by and reasonably priced, we would just reserve a real site and sleep easier with hookups and a dump station on hand.
Are the campgrounds near Clarks Summit big-rig friendly?
For the most part, yes. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton advertises sites that accommodate rigs up to about 55 feet, with pull-through options that make setup easier for longer coaches and fifth wheels. Lackawanna State Park has a mix of sites, and while many are wooded and comfortable for mid-size RVs, you should check individual site lengths when you reserve because state-park sites vary and some are tighter than others. Access is not the problem here, since I-81 and the Turnpike bring you in on good roads; the constraint is site dimensions at the individual campground. Reserve early and read the site details, and most standard rigs will fit fine.
What is there to do around Clarks Summit for RVers?
Plenty within a short drive. Lackawanna State Park itself gives you a 198-acre lake with boating, a swimming pool, and trails right at your campsite. Ten miles south in Scranton you can visit Steamtown National Historic Site, a free-admission steam railroad park with seasonal short train rides, plus the Lackawanna Coal Mine Tour that takes you underground into a real anthracite mine. In Clarks Summit, Lahey Family Fun Park runs mini-golf, go-karts, and bumper boats and stays open year-round. The surrounding Endless Mountains are made for hiking, kayaking, and fall leaf-peeping. Between the state park, the railroad history, and the mountains, a few days here fill up easily.
Where can I get propane and RV repairs near Clarks Summit?
You are covered for both. AmeriGas serves the Clarks Summit area for propane refills and tank exchange, and there are U-Haul propane locations in nearby Scranton if you need an alternative. For repairs, Interstate Fleet Services offers mobile RV repair based right in Clarks Summit, which is handy if you would rather not break camp to fix something, and there are additional RV service shops in the Scranton area. Between the state park, Highland Campgrounds, and area suppliers you can also top off water and find limited groceries. It is a well-serviced corner of Pennsylvania, so a minor breakdown or an empty propane tank should not derail your trip.
Do I need reservations for campgrounds near Clarks Summit?
We strongly recommend it, especially in summer and on fall-foliage weekends. Lackawanna State Park takes reservations up to 11 months in advance and requires them at least three days before arrival, and its lakeside electric sites fill quickly for weekends and holidays. You can book online through ReserveAmerica or by calling 888-PA-PARKS. Highland Campgrounds in Dalton is a private park; book direct with the campground for current availability and rates. Because the overall camping window here is short, roughly mid-April to mid-October, demand concentrates into those warm months, so the earlier you lock in a site the better your choice of location and length. Walking up without a reservation on a summer weekend is risky.
Is Clarks Summit a good winter RV destination?
No, and we would steer you elsewhere for cold-weather travel. This is a snow-belt corner of northeastern Pennsylvania that averages about 58 inches of snow a year, with January means near 27 degrees and freezing temperatures common from November into April. The area campgrounds, including Lackawanna State Park and Highland Campgrounds, close in mid-October and reopen mid-April, so there is essentially no seasonal RV camping in the depths of winter. If you are moving through in the cold months, winterize your rig by early November and plan on dumping and filling before you arrive. For an actual RV stay, come spring through fall when the campgrounds are open and the weather cooperates.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Clarks Summit?
The highest-rated station is Frances Slocum State Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Clarks Summit?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Clarks Summit.
All Dump Stations Near Clarks Summit (127)
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