RV Parks In Nashville, Tennessee
36.1659° N, 86.7844° W
Quick Overview
Nashville is one of the easier big cities to enjoy by RV, mostly because you do not have to camp downtown to be close to the action. A ring of well-run parks sits 10 to 15 minutes out along the interstates and on Percy Priest Lake, several with shuttles straight to Broadway. You get the music, the food, and the festivals without ever pointing your rig at a honky-tonk.
The private parks carry most of the load here, and they are good ones. The Nashville KOA Resort is the amenity leader with full-hookup pull-throughs and a downtown shuttle about 12 miles out, Two Rivers Campground is a short drive from the core, and Grand Ole RV Resort in Goodlettsville offers 130 shaded full-hookup sites with a store and restaurant. All run 30 and 50-amp service built for big rigs.
If you would rather be on the water, Percy Priest Lake just east of town is the spot. Elm Hill RV Resort and Nashville Shores both have full-hookup sites about 13 miles out, and the US Army Corps of Engineers runs lakeside campgrounds like Seven Points, bookable through Recreation.gov. For a quieter, forested stay, Cedars of Lebanon State Park is about 40 minutes east with electric and water sites.
There is no shortage of things to do. The Grand Ole Opry, the Ryman, and the Country Music Hall of Fame anchor the music scene, while the Cumberland River and Percy Priest Lake bring paddling, boating, and fishing right to the campgrounds. State parks add hiking and wildlife watching, and the city runs a steady calendar of festivals all year.
Plan around demand and you will do well. Summer and festival weekends are the busy, pricey peak and need a few weeks of lead time, spring and fall bring the best weather, and winter is the quiet, cheap season if mild days suit you.
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All Dump Stations Near Nashville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fairgrounds RV | 2.6 mi | 3.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Trinity RV Park And Campground | 2.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Holiday Village | 3.2 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nashville RV Resort And Cabins | 6.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nashville KOA | 6.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Two Rivers Campground | 6.5 mi | 4.5 | RV Park | Free |
| Elm Hill RV Resort | 9.5 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Nashville Shores Lakeside Resort RV Check-in | 10.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Anderson Road Campground | 10.7 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Varies |
| O K Camp Ground | 11.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Fairgrounds RV
2.6 miTrinity RV Park And Campground
2.9 miHoliday Village
3.2 miNashville RV Resort And Cabins
6.4 miNashville KOA
6.5 miTwo Rivers Campground
6.5 miElm Hill RV Resort
9.5 miNashville Shores Lakeside Resort RV Check-in
10.1 miAnderson Road Campground
10.7 miO K Camp Ground
11.7 miTraveling to Nashville by RV
Nashville is a major interstate hub where I-40, I-24, and I-65 converge, tied together by the I-440 connector. That makes it easy to reach from any direction, and it works in an RVer's favor because the recommended parks sit off these corridors toward Percy Priest Lake to the east and Goodlettsville to the north, away from the congested downtown core. Plan your route to stay on the interstates and exit near the park rather than cutting through city streets.
Once you are set up, the smart move is to leave the rig parked. Several parks, including the KOA and Nashville Shores, run shuttles to downtown, and rideshare is plentiful, so you never have to fight Broadway traffic or hunt for motorhome parking. Nashville International Airport is close to the southeast side for fly-and-rent trips, and Percy Priest Lake recreation is just minutes from the lakeside parks. Fuel, propane, and RV service are easy to find along the interstate corridors.
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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 Nashville, 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 Nashville
Camping costs in Nashville cover a broad spectrum. The public options are the value leaders, with Tennessee state park sites and Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake starting around $30 a night for electric and water. Mid-tier private parks generally run $50 to $80 a night, and premium resorts like the Nashville KOA can climb well past $100, particularly on event weekends when demand spikes.
A few factors push the price up: waterfront and pull-through sites cost more than standard back-ins, and any weekend tied to a festival or major event carries a premium. The best way to save is to stay longer or travel off-peak. Weekly rates trim the nightly cost and monthly rates cut it substantially, so snowbirds and remote workers settling in pay far less per night than weekenders. Winter is the cheapest season overall, with mild weather and soft demand, while summer and festival weekends are the most expensive. If your dates are flexible, aim for shoulder-season weekdays to get the most for your money.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Nashville
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Best Time to Visit Nashville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
31F - 50F
Crowds: Low
Mild days in the low 50s with occasional frost and cold nights. Rates drop and sites are easy to book, though some Corps and state park loops close for the season. Good value if you want the city quieter.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 72F
Crowds: High
Comfortable 60s and 70s with green hills and full park amenities. Festival season ramps up, so reserve event weekends early. One of the two best stretches for weather here.
Summer
Jun - Aug
69F - 89F
Crowds: High
Hot and humid in the upper 80s with peak tourist demand from June through August. Every private park has full hookups for air conditioning. Book 2 to 3 weeks ahead, more for festival weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 74F
Crowds: High
Mild temperatures and good fall color through October. Excellent camping weather, though football Saturdays and event weekends still fill the close-in parks. Our pick alongside spring.
Explore the Nashville Area
Our top tip: pick a park with a downtown shuttle, like the Nashville KOA or Nashville Shores, so you can enjoy the bars and music on Broadway without driving a motorhome into the heart of the city. Downtown parking and traffic are genuinely miserable in a big rig, and a shuttle or rideshare solves it cleanly. If being on the water appeals to you, the Percy Priest Lake parks put you on the lake and still only about 15 minutes from downtown.
Book with the calendar in mind. Summer and any festival, CMA, or big event weekend tighten up fast, so reserve at least 2 to 3 weeks ahead and earlier for the marquee dates. Spring and fall deliver the best weather, while winter is the value season with mild days, low rates, and open sites, just confirm that public campgrounds are open before you head out since some Corps and state loops close. For longer stays, ask about weekly and monthly rates, which drop the per-night cost a lot.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Nashville
What are the best RV parks in Nashville?
For staying close to downtown with full amenities, the Nashville KOA Resort, Two Rivers Campground, and Grand Ole RV Resort in Goodlettsville all rank highly, and several run shuttles so you do not have to drive your rig into the city. If you want to be on the water, Elm Hill RV Resort and Nashville Shores both sit on Percy Priest Lake about 13 miles out with full hookups. For a quieter, more natural setting, Cedars of Lebanon State Park is about 40 minutes east. Your choice mostly comes down to lake versus city versus value.
Do Nashville RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, the private parks do. Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, Two Rivers, Grand Ole, and Nashville Shores all offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer at the site, and several add cable and wifi. The public options are a step down on hookups: Tennessee state parks like Cedars of Lebanon and the Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake generally provide electric and water with a shared dump station rather than individual sewer. If full hookups are essential, book a private park; if you can dump on the way out, the public parks save money.
How much does RV camping cost in Nashville?
Rates run a very wide range here. Public options like Cedars of Lebanon and the Corps campgrounds start around $30 a night for electric and water sites. Mid-tier private parks fall in the $50 to $80 range, and premium resorts such as the Nashville KOA can climb well past $100 a night, especially on event weekends. Waterfront and pull-through sites cost more than standard back-ins. Weekly and monthly rates cut the per-night cost significantly, so if you are staying a while, ask about extended-stay pricing rather than booking night by night.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Nashville?
For summer weekends and the busy June through August stretch, book at least 2 to 3 weeks ahead, and for major festival, CMA, or event weekends, reserve as early as you can since the close-in parks sell out fast. Tennessee state parks and the Corps of Engineers sites on Percy Priest Lake take reservations online, the latter through Recreation.gov, and those fill for summer holiday weekends too. Winter and midweek stays are easy to grab on short notice. The rule of thumb: the closer to downtown and the bigger the event, the earlier you book.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Nashville?
Spring (April and May) and fall (September and October) are the sweet spots, with temperatures in the comfortable 60s and 70s, lower humidity, and full park amenities. Fall adds good color and slightly easier booking than spring. Summer is hot, humid, and the busiest tourist season, so expect higher rates and book ahead, though every private park has full hookups to run the AC. Winter is mild, cheap, and quiet, with occasional frost and some seasonal park closures. If you want the best weather and reasonable crowds, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Nashville?
Yes. The major private resorts are built for them: the Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, and Grand Ole RV Resort all have 50-amp full-hookup sites with pull-throughs that handle 40-foot motorhomes and fifth wheels comfortably. Getting there is straightforward since three interstates converge on the city, and the close-in parks sit off these corridors toward Percy Priest Lake and Goodlettsville rather than in the dense core. State park loops at places like Cedars of Lebanon tend to be tighter and more wooded, so check site length when you reserve if you are running a large rig.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Nashville?
Options are limited around a major metro like this, but they exist farther out. Some Corps of Engineers and Tennessee state park sites are first-come midweek when not reserved, and there is scattered dispersed camping in the broader region on public land. Within the metro itself, true free boondocking is scarce, so most travelers use the private parks or the public campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake. If you want to camp cheaply, your best bet is a midweek state park stay or an extended-stay rate at a private park rather than relying on finding free sites near the city.
Can I camp close to downtown Nashville?
Yes, and several parks make it easy to enjoy the city without driving your rig downtown. The Nashville KOA is about 12 miles out, Two Rivers Campground is a short drive from the core, and both the KOA and Nashville Shores offer shuttle service to downtown. Elm Hill and Nashville Shores on Percy Priest Lake put you roughly 13 miles out with quick interstate access. We strongly recommend parking outside the core and using a shuttle or rideshare for Broadway, since downtown parking and traffic are no place for a motorhome.
What is there to do while camping in Nashville?
The music is the main draw, from the Grand Ole Opry and the historic Ryman Auditorium to the honky-tonks on Broadway and the Country Music Hall of Fame. Beyond music, the Cumberland River and Percy Priest Lake offer paddling, kayaking, boating, and bass fishing close to the campgrounds. State parks like Cedars of Lebanon and Montgomery Bell add year-round hiking and wildlife watching. The city also hosts a steady calendar of festivals, from food events to Shakespeare in the Park, so there is almost always something happening during your stay.
Which campgrounds are on Percy Priest Lake?
Percy Priest Lake, just east of the city, is the main lakeside camping area. Elm Hill RV Resort and Nashville Shores RV Park are the private options, both with full hookups and easy downtown access, and Nashville Shores adds a waterpark and shuttle. On the public side, the US Army Corps of Engineers runs several campgrounds on the lake, including Seven Points, bookable through Recreation.gov, with electric and water sites in a more natural setting. The lake puts you on the water for boating and paddling while staying only about 15 minutes from downtown Nashville.
Are Nashville RV parks open year-round?
The private parks are. Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, Two Rivers, and Grand Ole RV Resort all operate through all four seasons, since Tennessee winters are mild. The public side is more seasonal: some Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake close in the colder months, and certain state park loops reduce operations in winter. If you are traveling between roughly November and March, confirm that your chosen public campground is open before you arrive, or default to one of the year-round private parks, which also tend to have the lowest rates and best availability in winter.
How do I get to Nashville RV parks with a big rig?
Nashville is a major interstate hub where I-40, I-24, and I-65 converge, with the I-440 connector tying them together. The good news for RVers is that most of the recommended parks sit off these corridors toward Percy Priest Lake to the east or Goodlettsville to the north, so you can reach them without driving through the congested downtown core. Plan your route to stay on the interstates and exit near the park rather than cutting through city streets, and use a campground shuttle or rideshare for any trips into the Broadway entertainment district.
Is Nashville good for a longer RV stay?
It can be, especially in the shoulder seasons and winter when rates and availability improve. Several private parks offer weekly and monthly rates that bring the per-night cost down substantially, and the mix of city culture, lake recreation, and nearby state parks gives long-stay travelers plenty to do. The main consideration is event-driven demand: summer and festival weekends push rates up and tighten availability, so a long stay is most comfortable and affordable from late fall through early spring. Ask any park about extended-stay pricing and whether monthly sites are available before you commit.
What are the best RV parks in Nashville?
For staying close to downtown with full amenities, the Nashville KOA Resort, Two Rivers Campground, and Grand Ole RV Resort in Goodlettsville all rank highly, and several run shuttles so you do not have to drive your rig into the city. If you want to be on the water, Elm Hill RV Resort and Nashville Shores both sit on Percy Priest Lake about 13 miles out with full hookups. For a quieter, more natural setting, Cedars of Lebanon State Park is about 40 minutes east. Your choice mostly comes down to lake versus city versus value.
Do Nashville RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, the private parks do. Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, Two Rivers, Grand Ole, and Nashville Shores all offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer at the site, and several add cable and wifi. The public options are a step down on hookups: Tennessee state parks like Cedars of Lebanon and the Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake generally provide electric and water with a shared dump station rather than individual sewer. If full hookups are essential, book a private park; if you can dump on the way out, the public parks save money.
How much does RV camping cost in Nashville?
Rates run a very wide range here. Public options like Cedars of Lebanon and the Corps campgrounds start around $30 a night for electric and water sites. Mid-tier private parks fall in the $50 to $80 range, and premium resorts such as the Nashville KOA can climb well past $100 a night, especially on event weekends. Waterfront and pull-through sites cost more than standard back-ins. Weekly and monthly rates cut the per-night cost significantly, so if you are staying a while, ask about extended-stay pricing rather than booking night by night.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Nashville?
For summer weekends and the busy June through August stretch, book at least 2 to 3 weeks ahead, and for major festival, CMA, or event weekends, reserve as early as you can since the close-in parks sell out fast. Tennessee state parks and the Corps of Engineers sites on Percy Priest Lake take reservations online, the latter through Recreation.gov, and those fill for summer holiday weekends too. Winter and midweek stays are easy to grab on short notice. The rule of thumb: the closer to downtown and the bigger the event, the earlier you book.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Nashville?
Spring (April and May) and fall (September and October) are the sweet spots, with temperatures in the comfortable 60s and 70s, lower humidity, and full park amenities. Fall adds good color and slightly easier booking than spring. Summer is hot, humid, and the busiest tourist season, so expect higher rates and book ahead, though every private park has full hookups to run the AC. Winter is mild, cheap, and quiet, with occasional frost and some seasonal park closures. If you want the best weather and reasonable crowds, target the shoulder seasons.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Nashville?
Yes. The major private resorts are built for them: the Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, and Grand Ole RV Resort all have 50-amp full-hookup sites with pull-throughs that handle 40-foot motorhomes and fifth wheels comfortably. Getting there is straightforward since three interstates converge on the city, and the close-in parks sit off these corridors toward Percy Priest Lake and Goodlettsville rather than in the dense core. State park loops at places like Cedars of Lebanon tend to be tighter and more wooded, so check site length when you reserve if you are running a large rig.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options near Nashville?
Options are limited around a major metro like this, but they exist farther out. Some Corps of Engineers and Tennessee state park sites are first-come midweek when not reserved, and there is scattered dispersed camping in the broader region on public land. Within the metro itself, true free boondocking is scarce, so most travelers use the private parks or the public campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake. If you want to camp cheaply, your best bet is a midweek state park stay or an extended-stay rate at a private park rather than relying on finding free sites near the city.
Can I camp close to downtown Nashville?
Yes, and several parks make it easy to enjoy the city without driving your rig downtown. The Nashville KOA is about 12 miles out, Two Rivers Campground is a short drive from the core, and both the KOA and Nashville Shores offer shuttle service to downtown. Elm Hill and Nashville Shores on Percy Priest Lake put you roughly 13 miles out with quick interstate access. We strongly recommend parking outside the core and using a shuttle or rideshare for Broadway, since downtown parking and traffic are no place for a motorhome.
What is there to do while camping in Nashville?
The music is the main draw, from the Grand Ole Opry and the historic Ryman Auditorium to the honky-tonks on Broadway and the Country Music Hall of Fame. Beyond music, the Cumberland River and Percy Priest Lake offer paddling, kayaking, boating, and bass fishing close to the campgrounds. State parks like Cedars of Lebanon and Montgomery Bell add year-round hiking and wildlife watching. The city also hosts a steady calendar of festivals, from food events to Shakespeare in the Park, so there is almost always something happening during your stay.
Which campgrounds are on Percy Priest Lake?
Percy Priest Lake, just east of the city, is the main lakeside camping area. Elm Hill RV Resort and Nashville Shores RV Park are the private options, both with full hookups and easy downtown access, and Nashville Shores adds a waterpark and shuttle. On the public side, the US Army Corps of Engineers runs several campgrounds on the lake, including Seven Points, bookable through Recreation.gov, with electric and water sites in a more natural setting. The lake puts you on the water for boating and paddling while staying only about 15 minutes from downtown Nashville.
Are Nashville RV parks open year-round?
The private parks are. Nashville KOA, Elm Hill, Two Rivers, and Grand Ole RV Resort all operate through all four seasons, since Tennessee winters are mild. The public side is more seasonal: some Corps of Engineers campgrounds on Percy Priest Lake close in the colder months, and certain state park loops reduce operations in winter. If you are traveling between roughly November and March, confirm that your chosen public campground is open before you arrive, or default to one of the year-round private parks, which also tend to have the lowest rates and best availability in winter.
How do I get to Nashville RV parks with a big rig?
Nashville is a major interstate hub where I-40, I-24, and I-65 converge, with the I-440 connector tying them together. The good news for RVers is that most of the recommended parks sit off these corridors toward Percy Priest Lake to the east or Goodlettsville to the north, so you can reach them without driving through the congested downtown core. Plan your route to stay on the interstates and exit near the park rather than cutting through city streets, and use a campground shuttle or rideshare for any trips into the Broadway entertainment district.
Is Nashville good for a longer RV stay?
It can be, especially in the shoulder seasons and winter when rates and availability improve. Several private parks offer weekly and monthly rates that bring the per-night cost down substantially, and the mix of city culture, lake recreation, and nearby state parks gives long-stay travelers plenty to do. The main consideration is event-driven demand: summer and festival weekends push rates up and tighten availability, so a long stay is most comfortable and affordable from late fall through early spring. Ask any park about extended-stay pricing and whether monthly sites are available before you commit.
Are there free dump stations in Nashville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Nashville.
All Dump Stations Near Nashville (99)
RV ParkFairgrounds RV
RV ParkTrinity RV Park And Campground
RV ParkHoliday Village
RV ParkNashville KOA
RV ParkNashville RV Resort And Cabins
RV Park with Dump StationsTwo Rivers Campground
RV ParkElm Hill RV Resort
RV Park





