RV Parks In Brownfield, Texas
33.1812° N, 102.2743° W
Quick Overview
Brownfield is a West Texas cotton town on the High Plains, the Terry County seat about 40 minutes southwest of Lubbock. It's flat, open, big-sky country, and it works best as a practical overnight or a base for exploring the Lubbock area and the High Plains wine country. You won't find a strip of resort RV parks here, but you will find a couple of genuinely useful options plus easy access to fuller-service camping a short drive north. The camping splits between a free city park and a private full-hookup park, with the bigger public recreation up near Lubbock.
The in-town picks are simple. Buggies RV Park is the private full-hookup option, an RV-only park with about 30 sites, 30/50-amp service, and water and sewer, open year-round. Coleman City RV Park is the surprise: a free, city-run park off Hwy 62 with 12 pull-through sites, electric and water hookups, and room for rigs up to 45 feet. For a quick overnight off the highway, free and pull-through is hard to argue with, though there's no sewer at the site so you'll want a dump station on the way out. Both keep you close to downtown Brownfield's historic square, the Terry County heritage museum, and the town's deep cotton-country roots and West Texas history.
For a full-hookup lakeside stay you drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which has 34 full-hookup and 89 partial sites with 20/30/50-amp service by the water. And if you want a real Texas state park, Caprock Canyons with its bison herd is a day trip north, bookable through Texas Parks and Wildlife. Between the free city park, Buggies' full hookups, and the Lubbock-area lakes, Brownfield covers the basics without a long haul. Need to empty your tanks? See our guide to RV dump stations in Brownfield.
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All Dump Stations Near Brownfield
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coleman RV Park | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Brownfield RV Parking | 1.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Buggies RV Park | 1.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Arons RV Park | 1.8 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hill Street Storage And RV Park | 23.4 mi | 5.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunshine RV Park | 25.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Free Levelland City Campground | 26.4 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camp Bluegrass | 27.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Five Point RV Park | 28.4 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| B & B Mobile Home And RV Trailer Park | 29.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Coleman RV Park
0.6 miBrownfield RV Parking
1.0 miBuggies RV Park
1.4 miArons RV Park
1.8 miHill Street Storage And RV Park
23.4 miSunshine RV Park
25.9 miFree Levelland City Campground
26.4 miCamp Bluegrass
27.7 miFive Point RV Park
28.4 miB & B Mobile Home And RV Trailer Park
29.4 miTraveling to Brownfield by RV
Brownfield sits on the flat High Plains where the roads are open and easy to tow. US-62/US-82 is the main paved big-rig route through town and up to Lubbock, and US-380 and TX-137 fill in the grid. There are no grades or clearance issues to worry about out here; the biggest hazard is crosswind on an open plain, so watch a tall-profile rig on a gusty day and slow down.
Lubbock is about 40 miles north and it's your hub for anything Brownfield doesn't have: a Walmart run, propane, RV parts and service, and the nearest airport if you're flying in to meet a rig. Coleman City RV Park sits just off Hwy 62 on South 2nd Street, so it's an easy in-and-out for an overnight. Once you're parked in Brownfield the town square, museum, and aquatic center are all a short drive, and the High Plains wineries and Buffalo Springs Lake make good unhitched day trips north toward Lubbock.
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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 Brownfield, Texas, 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 Brownfield
Camping around Brownfield is cheap by any standard, mostly because of the free city park. Coleman City RV Park costs nothing for an electric-and-water pull-through, which is about as good as it gets for a big-rig overnight. Buggies RV Park, the private full-hookup option in town, runs in the typical small-town range of roughly $25 to $45 a night depending on hookups, so you're paying for the sewer and the year-round convenience.
The real trade-off here is hookups versus price rather than public versus private. The free and low-cost options are electric-only, while full hookups cost more, either at Buggies in town or up at Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which runs about $37 for partial and $40 for full plus per-person gate admission. If you don't need daily sewer, the free city park is unbeatable value; if you want full hookups and lakeside recreation, budget for the drive north and the higher nightly rate. Either way, this is a budget-friendly corner of West Texas.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Brownfield by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
28F - 54F
Crowds: Low
Short but cold with occasional light snow and steady wind; the in-town city and private parks stay open while regional state parks quiet down. Watch for the odd hard freeze on water lines.
Spring
Mar - May
45F - 72F
Crowds: Medium
Pleasant but famously windy on the plains; watch for dust days and a late cold snap before the summer heat sets in. Good shoulder-season value at the local parks.
Summer
Jun - Aug
68F - 93F
Crowds: Medium
Hot and dry on the High Plains; run 50-amp for AC and camp on electric. Cool off at the Brownfield Aquatic Center or drive north to swim at Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock.
Fall
Sep - Oct
48F - 75F
Crowds: Medium
The best stretch to visit: mild days, cool nights, and harvest season at the High Plains vineyards. Comfortable camping weather and the city and private parks stay open year-round.
Explore the Brownfield Area
Coleman City RV Park is free and takes big rigs up to 45 feet, which makes it one of the better quick overnights on this stretch of US-62. If you need full hookups in town, book Buggies RV Park directly by phone; it's RV-only and open year-round. Neither in-town option has sewer at every site, so plan to use a dump station before you roll out. Run 50-amp in summer, because the High Plains sun is intense and you'll want the AC.
For a lakeside full-hookup stay, drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, where you can swim and fish; just note it charges gate admission per person on top of the site fee. If you want a Texas state park, book Caprock Canyons right at the five-month window at 8am Central, since weekends there fill fast. And watch the wind: an open-plains gust can push a high-profile rig around on US-62, so ease off the throttle when it kicks up.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Brownfield
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Brownfield, TX?
Brownfield is a small West Texas town, so the options are focused but useful. Buggies RV Park is the private full-hookup pick in town, an RV-only park with about 30 sites and 30/50-amp service. Coleman City RV Park is a free, city-run park off Hwy 62 with 12 electric-and-water pull-through sites that take rigs up to 45 feet. For full hookups and lakeside recreation, drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which has 34 full-hookup and 89 partial sites. Caprock Canyons State Park is a day trip north if you want a true state park.
Do Brownfield campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Some do, some don't. Buggies RV Park in town offers full hookups with water, electric, and sewer plus 30/50-amp service, so that's your in-town full-hookup choice. Coleman City RV Park, the free city park, has electric and water but no sewer at the site. For a fuller-service lakeside stay, Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, about 40 minutes north, has 34 full-hookup sites with 20/30/50-amp service. If you need sewer at your pad, book Buggies in town or plan the drive north, since the free city option is electric and water only and relies on a dump station.
How much does RV camping cost in Brownfield?
It's cheap, largely thanks to the free city park. Coleman City RV Park costs nothing for an electric-and-water pull-through, which is about as good as it gets for a big-rig overnight. Buggies RV Park, the private full-hookup option, runs in the typical small-town range of roughly $25 to $45 a night depending on the hookups you need. If you drive north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, expect about $37 for partial and $40 for full hookups, plus per-person gate admission on top. Overall this is a budget-friendly corner of West Texas, especially if you can camp on electric alone.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Brownfield?
Brownfield's own parks are small and casual, so you usually don't need to book far ahead: Coleman City RV Park is free and first-come, and Buggies RV Park takes direct phone bookings on relatively short notice. The exception is regional Texas state parks like Caprock Canyons, which open reservations five months in advance at 8am Central on a rolling basis and fill for weekends. Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock is reservation-only, so call ahead there. For a simple Brownfield overnight, you can generally roll in, but reserve the state parks and the lake if your dates are fixed.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Brownfield?
Fall is the sweet spot, with mild days, cool nights, and harvest season at the High Plains vineyards, making it the most comfortable time to camp. Spring is pleasant too but famously windy on the plains, with the occasional dust day and late cold snap. Summer is hot and dry, often hitting the low 90s, so you'll want 50-amp for the AC and a lake or the aquatic center to cool off. Winter is short but cold with wind and light snow. Overall, aim for fall or spring for the easiest High Plains camping around Brownfield.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Brownfield?
Yes, and the flat terrain helps. Coleman City RV Park, the free city park, specifically takes rigs up to 45 feet on its pull-through sites, which is generous for a free spot. Buggies RV Park is RV-only with full hookups and handles larger rigs comfortably. If you want the roomiest full-hookup sites, Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, about 40 minutes north, has big lakeside pads. The main big-rig consideration out here isn't site length or grades, it's crosswind on the open plains, so slow a tall-profile rig down on gusty days along US-62.
Are there free or first-come camping options in Brownfield?
Yes, and it's a highlight. Coleman City RV Park is a genuinely free, city-run park off Hwy 62 with 12 pull-through sites, electric and water hookups, and room for rigs up to 45 feet, all on a first-come basis. That makes it one of the better free overnights on this stretch of West Texas highway. Beyond that, Texas state parks in the region allow last-minute reservations until 4pm on the day of arrival when sites remain, which functions like first-come camping if you're flexible. For a no-cost stop in Brownfield, the city park is the obvious pick.
Is there full-hookup camping near Brownfield if I need sewer?
Yes. In town, Buggies RV Park is the full-hookup option, an RV-only park with water, electric, and sewer plus 30/50-amp service, open year-round. If you want a lakeside full-hookup stay with more recreation, drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which has 34 full-hookup sites with 20/30/50-amp service right by the water. Both give you sewer at the site, unlike the free Coleman City park, which is electric and water only. If sewer is a must, plan on Buggies for convenience or Buffalo Springs Lake for the lake.
What is there to do around Brownfield campgrounds?
Brownfield leans on High Plains heritage and wine country. The Terry County Heritage Museum sits in founder A.M. Brownfield's home with the old jail, the first train depot, and a restored chuck wagon. Reddy Vineyards nearby offers tours and tastings as part of the growing Texas High Plains wine scene. In town, Hamilton Park has disc golf and picnic areas, and the Brownfield Aquatic Center is a summer cool-off with slides and a lazy river. For bigger day trips, drive north to Buffalo Springs Lake for boating and fishing, or to Caprock Canyons State Park to see red canyons and the Texas State Bison Herd.
Are Brownfield campgrounds open in winter?
The in-town options are. Buggies RV Park and Coleman City RV Park both stay open year-round, so you can camp in Brownfield through the winter, though you'll want to watch water lines during the occasional hard freeze. Winters here are short but cold, with highs around 54F, lows near 28F, steady wind, and occasional light snow. Regional state parks and lake recreation quiet down in the cold months, so if you're after lakeside or state-park camping you may need to wait for spring. For a straightforward winter overnight, the city and private parks in town have you covered.
Should I choose a public or private campground in Brownfield?
Here the choice is really about hookups and cost rather than a big public-versus-private divide. The public option, Coleman City RV Park, is free and takes big rigs but offers only electric and water. The private option, Buggies RV Park, costs more but adds full sewer hookups and year-round convenience. If you want lakeside public recreation with full hookups, that means driving 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock. For a cheap overnight, take the free city park; for full hookups in town, book Buggies; for a lake and more amenities, head north. All three are budget-friendly by RV standards.
How windy is it camping around Brownfield?
Windy enough that it's worth planning for. Brownfield sits on the open High Plains, and spring in particular brings steady wind and the occasional dust day, with gusts strong enough to push a high-profile rig around on US-62. It's rarely dangerous, but you'll want to slow down while towing on a gusty day, retract awnings when you leave the site, and secure loose gear. The flip side is that the wind and dry air keep humidity low, so summer heat feels less oppressive than it would back east. Just build the wind into your driving and setup routine here.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Brownfield?
Buggies RV Park offers full hookups, so you can dump at your own site there, and Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock has sewer at its full-hookup sites too. Since the free Coleman City RV Park is electric and water only, you'll want to use a dump station before or after that stay rather than expecting sewer at the pad. If you're passing through on electric-only sites, plan your dumps around the full-hookup parks. For a full rundown of where to empty your tanks in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Brownfield, which covers the local options in detail.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Brownfield, TX?
Brownfield is a small West Texas town, so the options are focused but useful. Buggies RV Park is the private full-hookup pick in town, an RV-only park with about 30 sites and 30/50-amp service. Coleman City RV Park is a free, city-run park off Hwy 62 with 12 electric-and-water pull-through sites that take rigs up to 45 feet. For full hookups and lakeside recreation, drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which has 34 full-hookup and 89 partial sites. Caprock Canyons State Park is a day trip north if you want a true state park.
Do Brownfield campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Some do, some don't. Buggies RV Park in town offers full hookups with water, electric, and sewer plus 30/50-amp service, so that's your in-town full-hookup choice. Coleman City RV Park, the free city park, has electric and water but no sewer at the site. For a fuller-service lakeside stay, Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, about 40 minutes north, has 34 full-hookup sites with 20/30/50-amp service. If you need sewer at your pad, book Buggies in town or plan the drive north, since the free city option is electric and water only and relies on a dump station.
How much does RV camping cost in Brownfield?
It's cheap, largely thanks to the free city park. Coleman City RV Park costs nothing for an electric-and-water pull-through, which is about as good as it gets for a big-rig overnight. Buggies RV Park, the private full-hookup option, runs in the typical small-town range of roughly $25 to $45 a night depending on the hookups you need. If you drive north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, expect about $37 for partial and $40 for full hookups, plus per-person gate admission on top. Overall this is a budget-friendly corner of West Texas, especially if you can camp on electric alone.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Brownfield?
Brownfield's own parks are small and casual, so you usually don't need to book far ahead: Coleman City RV Park is free and first-come, and Buggies RV Park takes direct phone bookings on relatively short notice. The exception is regional Texas state parks like Caprock Canyons, which open reservations five months in advance at 8am Central on a rolling basis and fill for weekends. Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock is reservation-only, so call ahead there. For a simple Brownfield overnight, you can generally roll in, but reserve the state parks and the lake if your dates are fixed.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Brownfield?
Fall is the sweet spot, with mild days, cool nights, and harvest season at the High Plains vineyards, making it the most comfortable time to camp. Spring is pleasant too but famously windy on the plains, with the occasional dust day and late cold snap. Summer is hot and dry, often hitting the low 90s, so you'll want 50-amp for the AC and a lake or the aquatic center to cool off. Winter is short but cold with wind and light snow. Overall, aim for fall or spring for the easiest High Plains camping around Brownfield.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 feet and up) camp in Brownfield?
Yes, and the flat terrain helps. Coleman City RV Park, the free city park, specifically takes rigs up to 45 feet on its pull-through sites, which is generous for a free spot. Buggies RV Park is RV-only with full hookups and handles larger rigs comfortably. If you want the roomiest full-hookup sites, Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, about 40 minutes north, has big lakeside pads. The main big-rig consideration out here isn't site length or grades, it's crosswind on the open plains, so slow a tall-profile rig down on gusty days along US-62.
Are there free or first-come camping options in Brownfield?
Yes, and it's a highlight. Coleman City RV Park is a genuinely free, city-run park off Hwy 62 with 12 pull-through sites, electric and water hookups, and room for rigs up to 45 feet, all on a first-come basis. That makes it one of the better free overnights on this stretch of West Texas highway. Beyond that, Texas state parks in the region allow last-minute reservations until 4pm on the day of arrival when sites remain, which functions like first-come camping if you're flexible. For a no-cost stop in Brownfield, the city park is the obvious pick.
Is there full-hookup camping near Brownfield if I need sewer?
Yes. In town, Buggies RV Park is the full-hookup option, an RV-only park with water, electric, and sewer plus 30/50-amp service, open year-round. If you want a lakeside full-hookup stay with more recreation, drive about 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock, which has 34 full-hookup sites with 20/30/50-amp service right by the water. Both give you sewer at the site, unlike the free Coleman City park, which is electric and water only. If sewer is a must, plan on Buggies for convenience or Buffalo Springs Lake for the lake.
What is there to do around Brownfield campgrounds?
Brownfield leans on High Plains heritage and wine country. The Terry County Heritage Museum sits in founder A.M. Brownfield's home with the old jail, the first train depot, and a restored chuck wagon. Reddy Vineyards nearby offers tours and tastings as part of the growing Texas High Plains wine scene. In town, Hamilton Park has disc golf and picnic areas, and the Brownfield Aquatic Center is a summer cool-off with slides and a lazy river. For bigger day trips, drive north to Buffalo Springs Lake for boating and fishing, or to Caprock Canyons State Park to see red canyons and the Texas State Bison Herd.
Are Brownfield campgrounds open in winter?
The in-town options are. Buggies RV Park and Coleman City RV Park both stay open year-round, so you can camp in Brownfield through the winter, though you'll want to watch water lines during the occasional hard freeze. Winters here are short but cold, with highs around 54F, lows near 28F, steady wind, and occasional light snow. Regional state parks and lake recreation quiet down in the cold months, so if you're after lakeside or state-park camping you may need to wait for spring. For a straightforward winter overnight, the city and private parks in town have you covered.
Should I choose a public or private campground in Brownfield?
Here the choice is really about hookups and cost rather than a big public-versus-private divide. The public option, Coleman City RV Park, is free and takes big rigs but offers only electric and water. The private option, Buggies RV Park, costs more but adds full sewer hookups and year-round convenience. If you want lakeside public recreation with full hookups, that means driving 40 minutes north to Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock. For a cheap overnight, take the free city park; for full hookups in town, book Buggies; for a lake and more amenities, head north. All three are budget-friendly by RV standards.
How windy is it camping around Brownfield?
Windy enough that it's worth planning for. Brownfield sits on the open High Plains, and spring in particular brings steady wind and the occasional dust day, with gusts strong enough to push a high-profile rig around on US-62. It's rarely dangerous, but you'll want to slow down while towing on a gusty day, retract awnings when you leave the site, and secure loose gear. The flip side is that the wind and dry air keep humidity low, so summer heat feels less oppressive than it would back east. Just build the wind into your driving and setup routine here.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Brownfield?
Buggies RV Park offers full hookups, so you can dump at your own site there, and Buffalo Springs Lake near Lubbock has sewer at its full-hookup sites too. Since the free Coleman City RV Park is electric and water only, you'll want to use a dump station before or after that stay rather than expecting sewer at the pad. If you're passing through on electric-only sites, plan your dumps around the full-hookup parks. For a full rundown of where to empty your tanks in the area, see our guide to RV dump stations in Brownfield, which covers the local options in detail.
Are there free dump stations in Brownfield?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Brownfield.
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