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RV Dump Stations In East Ridge, Tennessee

35.0142° N, 85.2519° W

Quick Overview

East Ridge sits right on the Tennessee-Georgia line at the southern edge of Chattanooga, and for RVers it is mostly a crossroads town. Interstate 75 runs the eastern side and Interstate 24 runs the Chattanooga boundary, meeting at the well-known 75/24 Split at Exit 2. That makes East Ridge an easy fuel-and-supply stop on the Atlanta-to-Knoxville corridor, but it also means you are threading one of the busier freight interchanges in the country, so we time our passage away from rush hour.

On dump stations, keep your expectations realistic for a town this size. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park handles waste for its guests, but those 30-amp sites open mostly on weekends and around park events rather than year-round, so they are not a dependable drive-up dump. The surest nearby option is Chester Frost County Park about 25 minutes north on Chickamauga Lake, which keeps public dump stations with potable water and a non-potable rinse line, built for real camper traffic. For planning municipal and county details, the Hamilton County Parks site is a solid reference, and the National Weather Service Chattanooga climate page is worth a look before you set a season.

The climate here is humid subtropical. Summers are hot and muggy with July highs near 89F and afternoon thunderstorms, while winters stay short and mild in the low 50s with a few hard-freeze nights a month. Spring and fall are the comfortable shoulder seasons and our pick for a visit. Services are easy since the full Chattanooga metro is minutes away, with propane along Ringgold Road, RV repair shops like Tri-State Truck & RV and Northgate RV Parts, and big-box shopping close at hand.

Staying a while? East Ridge is a strong base for the Tennessee Aquarium, Lookout Mountain, and the Chickamauga battlefield, and we would book Chester Frost County Park up the lake or check the RV parks around East Ridge for hookups and reservations before settling in.

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Traveling to East Ridge by RV

Getting to East Ridge is straightforward because it hugs the interstates. Coming north out of Georgia, I-75 drops you right at the state line and into town within a mile, with fuel and truck stops clustered near Exit 1. From the west or from Nashville, I-24 brings you along the Chattanooga boundary to meet I-75 at the 75/24 Split at Exit 2. Know your exit before you reach that interchange, because it is a heavy freight convergence and lane changes come up fast when you are towing.

Around town, Ringgold Road, the old US-41, is the main surface street and carries most of the shopping and dining, so expect stoplights and steady traffic but no low bridges or weight traps. If you are basing here to see Chattanooga, downtown and the aquarium are only a few miles northwest, Lookout Mountain is about ten miles out, and Chester Frost County Park on Chickamauga Lake is a 25-minute run north when you want a lake site and a public dump station.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to East Ridge, Tennessee, 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 East Ridge

East Ridge is a budget-friendly place to stage a Chattanooga trip, but the cost picture depends on where you sleep. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park runs about $30 a night for an electric site, which is reasonable, though its weekend-and-event schedule limits when you can actually book it. Chester Frost County Park to the north is a good value for a public campground with water and electric hookups and lake access, and because dumping there is included for guests you avoid paying a separate fee.

If you only need to dump and fill between stops, remember most in-town waste handling is tied to campground stays rather than a cheap drive-up station, so factor a night of camping into the math. Fuel and propane are competitively priced along the I-75 corridor near the state line, and groceries at the Ringgold Road big-box stores keep your provisioning costs down. Overall, plan on a modest nightly camping cost plus normal fuel, and skip any temptation to improvise an overnight that could draw a fine.

Free: 2 stations (50%)
Paid: 2 stations (50%)

Contact station for pricing details.

Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About East Ridge

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Best Time to Visit East Ridge by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

31F - 50F

Crowds: Low

Mild but wet with a few hard-freeze nights a month. Heat-tape hoses and expect quiet campgrounds; Chester Frost drops to 82 winter sites.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

48F - 70F

Crowds: Medium

The best months. Dogwoods bloom, days are mild, and crowds stay light until school lets out. Watch spring storms in the valley.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

68F - 89F

Crowds: High

Hot, muggy, and busy with lake traffic and events at Camp Jordan Arena. Book electric sites early and plan for afternoon thunderstorms.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

48F - 72F

Crowds: Medium

Crisp and dry with the lowest rain of the year and good color on Lookout Mountain. Our favorite window for a Chattanooga-area stay.

Explore the East Ridge Area

A few things we would tell a friend rolling into East Ridge. First, respect the 75/24 Split. It is one of the most congested interchanges in the country, so cross it mid-morning or early afternoon rather than during the rush windows, and stay out of the fast lane if your rig is slow off the line. Second, do not count on Camp Jordan for a spur-of-the-moment dump or overnight. Its RV sites lean toward weekends and park events and want reservations at least four days out, so call before you plan around it.

Third, treat Chester Frost County Park as your reliable lake base and dump point up north; it has 188 water-and-electric sites and public dump stations, though no sewer at the site. Fourth, top off propane and groceries along Ringgold Road while you are already in the commercial strip, because options thin out fast once you climb Lookout Mountain or head toward the national forests. Keep a weather radio on in spring, when valley thunderstorms and the occasional tornado watch roll through.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in East Ridge

Is there an RV dump station in East Ridge, TN?

East Ridge is a small suburb right on the Tennessee-Georgia line, so in-town dump options are limited. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park handles waste for its guests, but those sites mostly open on weekends and around park events rather than year-round. If you are rolling through and need a reliable dump, the surest bet is Chester Frost County Park about 25 minutes north on Chickamauga Lake, which keeps public dump stations with both potable and non-potable rinse water. Plan your dump around one of those rather than expecting a 24-hour drive-up station in town.

Where is the nearest reliable dump station near East Ridge?

Chester Frost County Park in Hamilton County is the most dependable nearby option. It sits about 25 minutes north of East Ridge on the shores of Chickamauga Lake and runs three public dump stations on the left side of the campground, with potable water and a non-potable rinse line. Because it is a county park with 188 RV sites, the dump area is built for real traffic and stays open through the camping season. Camp Jordan Park in East Ridge itself can serve guests, but its sites are tied to weekends and events, so call ahead before you rely on it.

Can I stay overnight in my RV in East Ridge for free?

Not really. East Ridge is built up along Ringgold Road and near the interstates, and the city has no sanctioned free overnight camping on its streets. Tennessee leaves RV parking rules to local government, and overnight parking on some public land in the state carries heavy penalties, so improvising is a bad idea here. Your practical choices are a campground like Camp Jordan or Chester Frost, or a truck stop off I-75 near Exit 1 where overnight parking is expected. For actual free dispersed camping you would head toward the Cherokee or Chattahoochee national forests, both more than an hour out.

What highways run through East Ridge?

East Ridge sits at a major crossroads. Interstate 75 runs along the eastern edge of town and Interstate 24 runs the boundary with Chattanooga, and the two meet at the famous 75/24 Split at Exit 2 on I-75. That interchange is one of the most congested freight bottlenecks in the country, so time your passage away from rush hour if you are towing something big. Ringgold Road, which is old US-41, is the main surface street through town and is lined with shopping and fuel. There are no low-bridge or weight surprises on the main routes, just traffic.

Is the I-75 and I-24 interchange hard to drive with an RV?

The 75/24 Split at Exit 2 is manageable but demands attention. It is where two major north-south freight corridors converge, one running Atlanta to Detroit and the other Atlanta to Chicago, so truck volume is heavy and it ranks among the worst bottlenecks nationally. Lane changes come up fast and traffic can back up badly at peak hours. Our advice is to know your exit ahead of time, stay out of the far-left flow if you are slow to accelerate, and cross it mid-morning or early afternoon rather than during the 7-9 or 4-6 crunch. Off-peak it is just a normal big interchange.

What is the weather like for RVing in East Ridge?

East Ridge shares the humid subtropical climate of the greater Chattanooga area. Summers are hot and muggy, with July highs near 89F and frequent afternoon thunderstorms rolling off the Cumberland Plateau. Winters are short and mild, with highs around 50F but a handful of hard-freeze nights each month in January and February. Spring and fall are the comfortable shoulder seasons, running highs in the low 70s with far less rain. Annual precipitation is high, near 58 inches, so keep rain gear handy any time of year and a weather radio on during spring storm season.

When is the best time to visit East Ridge in an RV?

Fall is our favorite window. October and early November bring crisp, dry days, the lowest rainfall of the year, and good leaf color up on Lookout Mountain, all without the summer humidity or the heavy lake and event crowds. Spring is a close second, with mild temperatures and blooming dogwoods, though you should watch for valley thunderstorms. Summer works if you do not mind heat and muggy nights, and it is when Camp Jordan Arena events and lake activity peak, so book electric sites early. Winter is quiet and cheap but wet, and some nearby campgrounds cut back their open sites.

Where can I refill propane near East Ridge?

Propane is easy to find in the East Ridge and Chattanooga area. U-Haul runs a propane refill station in the 37412 zip near East Ridge, and AmeriGas has several Chattanooga locations for refills and tank exchange. Suburban Propane and other regional suppliers also serve the area. Most options cluster along Ringgold Road and the nearby commercial strips, so it is simple to top off while you are already stopping for groceries or fuel. If you are heading up onto Lookout Mountain or out toward the national forests afterward, fill up before you leave town since options thin out quickly once you climb.

Are there RV repair shops near East Ridge?

Yes, the Chattanooga metro gives you solid options within a short drive. Tri-State Truck & RV is a family-owned shop in Chattanooga that services RVs, trailers, trucks, and buses, which is handy for bigger rigs. Northgate RV Parts Center in Chattanooga carries parts, supplies, and handles maintenance and major repairs. Just south across the Georgia line, Blue Compass RV in Ringgold sits right on the I-75 corridor and is one of the more accessible full-service shops in the region. Between those, you can cover everything from a quick part run to a real service appointment without leaving the immediate area.

What campgrounds are near East Ridge for RVs?

The closest is the RV campground at Camp Jordan Park inside East Ridge at 350 Camp Jordan Road, which offers 30-amp electric sites, water on a few of them, and short-term stays mostly on weekends and around park events. For a longer or more scenic base, Chester Frost County Park about 25 minutes north on Chickamauga Lake has 188 RV sites with water and electric hookups, a swimming beach, boat ramps, and public dump stations. There are no sewer hookups at Chester Frost, but the dump stations cover that. Between the two you can pick a quick overnight in town or a full lake stay nearby.

Do the campgrounds near East Ridge have full hookups?

Full sewer hookups are limited in this area. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park offers 30-amp electric with water on some sites, but no sewer, and it leans toward short event-tied stays. Chester Frost County Park to the north has water and electric on all 188 sites but no sewer either, relying instead on its centralized dump stations that campers use during their stay. So the realistic plan here is electric-and-water camping plus a trip to the dump station rather than sitting on a full sewer connection. If full hookups are a must, you may look at private parks along the wider Chattanooga I-75 corridor.

What is there to do around East Ridge?

East Ridge works best as an affordable base for the Chattanooga area. In town, Camp Jordan Park gives you trails, ballfields, a skate park, and an arena that hosts flea markets and events. Just a few miles away, downtown Chattanooga has the Tennessee Aquarium, a standout freshwater and saltwater complex worth three or four hours. Up on Lookout Mountain, Sunset Rock rewards a short steep hike with a wide valley view, and the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park offers one of the oldest and largest Civil War battlefield driving tours in the country. It is an easy region to fill several days.

Is East Ridge a good stop for RVers passing through on I-75?

It is a convenient one. East Ridge sits right where I-75 crosses from Georgia into Tennessee, so it is a natural pause on the Atlanta-to-Knoxville run with fuel, groceries, propane, and repair shops all clustered near the highway and Ringgold Road. You are also minutes from downtown Chattanooga attractions if you want to turn a fuel stop into an overnight. The main caution is the 75/24 Split just north of town, which gets congested, so plan your route through it. For the night itself, aim for Camp Jordan, Chester Frost up the lake, or a truck stop near Exit 1.

Is there an RV dump station in East Ridge, TN?

East Ridge is a small suburb right on the Tennessee-Georgia line, so in-town dump options are limited. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park handles waste for its guests, but those sites mostly open on weekends and around park events rather than year-round. If you are rolling through and need a reliable dump, the surest bet is Chester Frost County Park about 25 minutes north on Chickamauga Lake, which keeps public dump stations with both potable and non-potable rinse water. Plan your dump around one of those rather than expecting a 24-hour drive-up station in town.

Where is the nearest reliable dump station near East Ridge?

Chester Frost County Park in Hamilton County is the most dependable nearby option. It sits about 25 minutes north of East Ridge on the shores of Chickamauga Lake and runs three public dump stations on the left side of the campground, with potable water and a non-potable rinse line. Because it is a county park with 188 RV sites, the dump area is built for real traffic and stays open through the camping season. Camp Jordan Park in East Ridge itself can serve guests, but its sites are tied to weekends and events, so call ahead before you rely on it.

Can I stay overnight in my RV in East Ridge for free?

Not really. East Ridge is built up along Ringgold Road and near the interstates, and the city has no sanctioned free overnight camping on its streets. Tennessee leaves RV parking rules to local government, and overnight parking on some public land in the state carries heavy penalties, so improvising is a bad idea here. Your practical choices are a campground like Camp Jordan or Chester Frost, or a truck stop off I-75 near Exit 1 where overnight parking is expected. For actual free dispersed camping you would head toward the Cherokee or Chattahoochee national forests, both more than an hour out.

What highways run through East Ridge?

East Ridge sits at a major crossroads. Interstate 75 runs along the eastern edge of town and Interstate 24 runs the boundary with Chattanooga, and the two meet at the famous 75/24 Split at Exit 2 on I-75. That interchange is one of the most congested freight bottlenecks in the country, so time your passage away from rush hour if you are towing something big. Ringgold Road, which is old US-41, is the main surface street through town and is lined with shopping and fuel. There are no low-bridge or weight surprises on the main routes, just traffic.

Is the I-75 and I-24 interchange hard to drive with an RV?

The 75/24 Split at Exit 2 is manageable but demands attention. It is where two major north-south freight corridors converge, one running Atlanta to Detroit and the other Atlanta to Chicago, so truck volume is heavy and it ranks among the worst bottlenecks nationally. Lane changes come up fast and traffic can back up badly at peak hours. Our advice is to know your exit ahead of time, stay out of the far-left flow if you are slow to accelerate, and cross it mid-morning or early afternoon rather than during the 7-9 or 4-6 crunch. Off-peak it is just a normal big interchange.

What is the weather like for RVing in East Ridge?

East Ridge shares the humid subtropical climate of the greater Chattanooga area. Summers are hot and muggy, with July highs near 89F and frequent afternoon thunderstorms rolling off the Cumberland Plateau. Winters are short and mild, with highs around 50F but a handful of hard-freeze nights each month in January and February. Spring and fall are the comfortable shoulder seasons, running highs in the low 70s with far less rain. Annual precipitation is high, near 58 inches, so keep rain gear handy any time of year and a weather radio on during spring storm season.

When is the best time to visit East Ridge in an RV?

Fall is our favorite window. October and early November bring crisp, dry days, the lowest rainfall of the year, and good leaf color up on Lookout Mountain, all without the summer humidity or the heavy lake and event crowds. Spring is a close second, with mild temperatures and blooming dogwoods, though you should watch for valley thunderstorms. Summer works if you do not mind heat and muggy nights, and it is when Camp Jordan Arena events and lake activity peak, so book electric sites early. Winter is quiet and cheap but wet, and some nearby campgrounds cut back their open sites.

Where can I refill propane near East Ridge?

Propane is easy to find in the East Ridge and Chattanooga area. U-Haul runs a propane refill station in the 37412 zip near East Ridge, and AmeriGas has several Chattanooga locations for refills and tank exchange. Suburban Propane and other regional suppliers also serve the area. Most options cluster along Ringgold Road and the nearby commercial strips, so it is simple to top off while you are already stopping for groceries or fuel. If you are heading up onto Lookout Mountain or out toward the national forests afterward, fill up before you leave town since options thin out quickly once you climb.

Are there RV repair shops near East Ridge?

Yes, the Chattanooga metro gives you solid options within a short drive. Tri-State Truck & RV is a family-owned shop in Chattanooga that services RVs, trailers, trucks, and buses, which is handy for bigger rigs. Northgate RV Parts Center in Chattanooga carries parts, supplies, and handles maintenance and major repairs. Just south across the Georgia line, Blue Compass RV in Ringgold sits right on the I-75 corridor and is one of the more accessible full-service shops in the region. Between those, you can cover everything from a quick part run to a real service appointment without leaving the immediate area.

What campgrounds are near East Ridge for RVs?

The closest is the RV campground at Camp Jordan Park inside East Ridge at 350 Camp Jordan Road, which offers 30-amp electric sites, water on a few of them, and short-term stays mostly on weekends and around park events. For a longer or more scenic base, Chester Frost County Park about 25 minutes north on Chickamauga Lake has 188 RV sites with water and electric hookups, a swimming beach, boat ramps, and public dump stations. There are no sewer hookups at Chester Frost, but the dump stations cover that. Between the two you can pick a quick overnight in town or a full lake stay nearby.

Do the campgrounds near East Ridge have full hookups?

Full sewer hookups are limited in this area. The RV campground at Camp Jordan Park offers 30-amp electric with water on some sites, but no sewer, and it leans toward short event-tied stays. Chester Frost County Park to the north has water and electric on all 188 sites but no sewer either, relying instead on its centralized dump stations that campers use during their stay. So the realistic plan here is electric-and-water camping plus a trip to the dump station rather than sitting on a full sewer connection. If full hookups are a must, you may look at private parks along the wider Chattanooga I-75 corridor.

What is there to do around East Ridge?

East Ridge works best as an affordable base for the Chattanooga area. In town, Camp Jordan Park gives you trails, ballfields, a skate park, and an arena that hosts flea markets and events. Just a few miles away, downtown Chattanooga has the Tennessee Aquarium, a standout freshwater and saltwater complex worth three or four hours. Up on Lookout Mountain, Sunset Rock rewards a short steep hike with a wide valley view, and the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park offers one of the oldest and largest Civil War battlefield driving tours in the country. It is an easy region to fill several days.

Is East Ridge a good stop for RVers passing through on I-75?

It is a convenient one. East Ridge sits right where I-75 crosses from Georgia into Tennessee, so it is a natural pause on the Atlanta-to-Knoxville run with fuel, groceries, propane, and repair shops all clustered near the highway and Ringgold Road. You are also minutes from downtown Chattanooga attractions if you want to turn a fuel stop into an overnight. The main caution is the 75/24 Split just north of town, which gets congested, so plan your route through it. For the night itself, aim for Camp Jordan, Chester Frost up the lake, or a truck stop near Exit 1.

Are there free dump stations in East Ridge?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near East Ridge.