RV Dump Stations In Burnet, Texas
30.7582° N, 98.2284° W
Quick Overview
Burnet sits smack in the middle of the Texas Hill Country, where US-281 and TX-29 cross, and it makes a genuinely good RV stop if you are working the Highland Lakes. We track several dump stations in and around town, and with the local state parks close by, you have real options for the black and gray tanks whether you are passing through on US-281 or basing here for a few days of lake time. Burnet calls itself the Bluebonnet Capital of Texas, and if you time it right in April you will see why.
The standout for RVers is Inks Lake State Park, about 9 miles west of town off TX-29 via Park Road 4. It has a free dump station, though the sites themselves are water and electric only with no sewer hookups. If you want full hookups with sewer, Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan northwest of town has 25 full-service RV sites and its own dump station. Between the two, plus the paid facilities we list in the several nearby stations, you can keep the tanks in check without much fuss.
Getting here is easy in any size rig. US-281 runs four-lane north to Lampasas and south to Marble Falls, and TX-29 carries you east about 34 miles to I-35 at Georgetown or west toward the lakes. There is no interstate in Burnet, but you do not need one. Austin is about 50 miles southeast, close enough for a supply run yet far enough that Burnet keeps its small Hill Country feel.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Burnet
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Burnet
All Dump Stations Near Burnet
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inks Lake State Park | 8.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Big Chief RV Resort | 10.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Twin Isles RV | 13.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sunset Point on Lake LBJ | 14.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Idyll Glen RV Park | 25.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Pace Bend RV Park | 26.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| KOA - Leander / NW Austin KOA Campground | 26.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Jim Hogg Park Campground | 29.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| La Hacienda RV Park | 29.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Cedar Breaks Park | 30.7 mi | 3.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
Inks Lake State Park
8.4 miBig Chief RV Resort
10.4 miTwin Isles RV
13.9 miSunset Point on Lake LBJ
14.9 miIdyll Glen RV Park
25.5 miPace Bend RV Park
26.2 miKOA - Leander / NW Austin KOA Campground
26.2 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Jim Hogg Park Campground
29.1 miLa Hacienda RV Park
29.5 miU.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Cedar Breaks Park
30.7 miTraveling to Burnet by RV
Burnet is a highway crossroads, and that works in an RVer's favor. US-281 is the main north-south route, four-lane through town, running north to Lampasas and south through Marble Falls toward San Antonio. TX-29 is the east-west connector: head east about 34 miles and you hit I-35 at Georgetown, or go west and you drop into the Highland Lakes country. US-183 also crosses the county if you are routing up from the Austin side.
The road worth knowing is Park Road 4, a 15.5-mile parkway that loops off US-281 and TX-29 and threads through both Longhorn Cavern and Inks Lake State Parks. It is a scenic drive but a narrow two-lane, so take it easy in a big rig and watch for cyclists and slow tourist traffic. Speaking of traffic, US-281 through Marble Falls just south of Burnet gets congested in peak lake season, so build in extra time on summer weekends. For a Texas state park dump and lake access route, TX-29 west to Park Road 4 is your cleanest shot to Inks Lake, and it is genuinely one of the prettier approaches in the Hill Country. Fuel and propane are both easy to find along the US-281 and TX-29 corridors through town.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Burnet
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Texas
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Burnet, TX
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Burnet, 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 Burnet
Dumping around Burnet is affordable, partly because a state park anchors the area. Of the several dump stations we track here, a portion are paid, but the nearby Inks Lake State Park dump station is free to use, and the park day-use fee runs just $7 per person if you want lake access to go with it. That is hard to beat in the Hill Country.
For overnight sites, Inks Lake runs about $23 a night for water and 30/50-amp electric, or roughly $16 for the water-only sites if you are in a smaller rig under 26 feet. Canyon of the Eagles, with full hookups including sewer, prices higher as a resort-style nature park but saves you the dump-station shuffle. Propane and fuel track Central Texas averages, which are reasonable compared with the coasts. If you are watching the budget, base at Inks Lake, use the free dump station, and make your supply runs count by stocking up in Marble Falls where the grocery selection is larger. Spring and fall also bring milder weather, which means less generator and air-conditioning cost.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Burnet
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Burnet by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
41F - 59F
Crowds: Low
Short, cool, and windy. The quiet season with the best site availability. Days are mild and pleasant for hiking, nights get chilly, and hard freezes are rare.
Spring
Mar - May
58F - 77F
Crowds: High
Peak season. Bluebonnets and wildflowers peak in early-to-mid April and the Bluebonnet Festival packs downtown. Book Inks Lake weeks ahead; May brings the year's heaviest rain.
Summer
Jun - Aug
74F - 95F
Crowds: High
Hot and muggy with August highs near 95F. Busy lake season for swimming and boating; grab a shady site and expect crowds on US-281 through Marble Falls on weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
60F - 82F
Crowds: Medium
Comfortable shoulder season and our pick for easy Hill Country camping. Warm days, cool nights, thinner crowds once school is back, and lake water still warm into September.
Explore the Burnet Area
Reserve early. Inks Lake State Park is one of the most popular parks in Texas and regularly sells out both camping and day-use, especially spring weekends. Its dump station is free, which is a nice perk, but remember the sites are water and electric only, so plan to dump before you leave rather than expecting sewer at your pad. If you need full hookups with sewer, Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan is the closest option to Burnet.
Time your trip around early-to-mid April if you can. That is when the bluebonnets and Hill Country wildflowers peak, and the Burnet Bluebonnet Festival takes over downtown the second week of the month. It is a great time to be here, but book your site weeks ahead because everyone else has the same idea. For propane, Star Tex Propane on West State Highway 29 handles RV refills right in town. And when you are provisioning, Burnet has the basics, but the bigger grocery selection is down US-281 in Marble Falls. One more thing: summers here are genuinely hot and muggy, with August highs near 95F, so a shady site and good airflow matter. Spring and fall are the sweet spots for comfortable Hill Country camping.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Burnet
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Burnet, TX?
We track several dump stations in and around Burnet. The most useful for travelers is the free dump station at Inks Lake State Park, about 9 miles west of town off TX-29 via Park Road 4. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site instead, Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan has 25 full-service RV sites plus its own dump station. Because Burnet sits at the crossroads of US-281 and TX-29, both are an easy drive whether you are heading toward the Highland Lakes or continuing north and south through the Hill Country.
Is there a free dump station in Burnet?
The closest free option is the dump station at Inks Lake State Park, roughly 9 miles west of Burnet. It is free to use, which is a real perk in the Hill Country, though keep in mind the campsites themselves are water and electric only with no sewer hookups, so you dump on your way in or out rather than at your pad. If you want to combine the free dump with lake time, Inks Lake charges a modest $7 per person day-use fee. Otherwise, most in-town listings are paid facilities at private RV parks.
What highways run through Burnet for RVs?
Burnet sits where US-281 and TX-29 cross in the heart of the Hill Country. US-281 is a four-lane route running north to Lampasas and south through Marble Falls, comfortable for any size rig. TX-29 is the east-west connector, reaching I-35 at Georgetown about 34 miles east or the Highland Lakes to the west. US-183 also crosses Burnet County. There is no interstate in Burnet itself, but the four-lane US-281 makes getting a big rig around town simple. The scenic Park Road 4 loops off both highways through Longhorn Cavern and Inks Lake state parks.
Can I park my RV overnight in Burnet?
Burnet city ordinance limits RVs parked on a public street to 72 consecutive hours, and RVs cannot be used for living or sleeping in a residential district. RV parks are only permitted in the Heavy Commercial C-3 zone with a conditional use permit, so your best bet for a legal overnight is a designated campground. Inks Lake State Park about 9 miles west and Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan both offer proper RV sites with hookups. For a quick rest stop rather than an overnight, plan your fuel and dump stops around those established facilities.
When is the best time to visit Burnet in an RV?
Spring and fall are the standouts. Early-to-mid April is peak bluebonnet season, when the Hill Country wildflowers put on their show and the Burnet Bluebonnet Festival fills downtown, though that also means the parks book up fast. Fall is our quiet favorite, with warm days, cool nights, and thinner crowds once summer ends, plus lake water that stays swimmable into September. Summer is hot and muggy with August highs near 95F, so it works if you want lake time but plan for shade and airflow. Winter is mild and the least crowded.
Does Inks Lake State Park have RV facilities?
Yes. Inks Lake State Park, about 9 miles west of Burnet, has 114 sites with water and 30/50-amp electric for around $23 a night, plus 42 water-only sites near $16 for smaller rigs under 26 feet. There are no sewer hookups at the sites, but the park has a free dump station on the way in or out. Day use runs $7 per person for age 13 and up. The park sits on the constant-level Inks Lake for swimming, boating, kayaking, and fishing, and it is popular enough that you should reserve well ahead because it regularly sells out.
Where can I get propane near Burnet?
Star Tex Propane at 1742 West State Highway 29 in Burnet handles both bulk and RV refills and is open weekdays, which makes it the go-to for RVers passing through town. Action Propane and AmeriGas also serve the Burnet area if you need a backup. Because you are in a smaller Hill Country town, it is smart to top off here rather than assume the next lakeside community will have easy refills. If you are heading south, Marble Falls has additional suppliers, and Austin about 50 miles away has plenty of options if you get caught short.
What is there to do around Burnet besides dump and fuel?
Quite a bit, which is why Burnet is worth more than a pit stop. Inks Lake State Park offers swimming, boating, kayaking, and 9 miles of trails. Longhorn Cavern State Park, about 11 to 12 miles away via Park Road 4, runs an 85-minute guided tour over a mile underground. The Vanishing Texas River Cruise on Lake Buchanan is known for waterfalls and wintering bald eagles. Downtown hosts the Bluebonnet Festival every April. And the whole Highland Lakes chain, part of the Colorado River system, spreads out northwest of town for boating and fishing.
Are the roads around Burnet RV-friendly?
For the most part, yes. US-281 and TX-29 are both four-lane through Burnet and easy in any size rig. The one to take slowly is Park Road 4, the scenic 15.5-mile parkway that connects the two highways through Longhorn Cavern and Inks Lake state parks. It is a narrow two-lane with tourist traffic and cyclists, so keep your speed down. Also watch US-281 through Marble Falls just south of Burnet, which gets congested during peak lake season on summer weekends. Otherwise the Hill Country grades around Burnet are gentle and manageable for most motorhomes and trailers.
How far is Burnet from Austin and I-35?
Burnet is roughly 50 miles northwest of Austin, close enough for a supply or repair run but far enough to keep its small Hill Country character. The nearest interstate is I-35 at Georgetown, about 34 miles east of Burnet via TX-29. That makes Burnet a comfortable off-interstate base if you want lake access and wildflower country without the congestion of the I-35 corridor. Many RVers stage here to explore the Highland Lakes, then hop back to I-35 through Georgetown when they are ready to continue north toward Waco or south toward San Antonio.
Does Canyon of the Eagles have full hookups?
Yes. Canyon of the Eagles, on Lake Buchanan northwest of Burnet, has 25 full-hookup RV sites with 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer, plus a dump station and 33 tent sites. It sits within 940 acres of preserved Hill Country with 14 miles of trails and an on-site restaurant, so it feels more like a nature resort than a basic campground. For RVers who want sewer at the pad and do not want to deal with the dump-station shuffle at Inks Lake, this is the closest full-service option to Burnet, though it prices higher as a resort-style park. Reserve ahead in peak season.
What is the weather like in Burnet for camping?
Burnet has a classic Central Texas Hill Country climate. Summers are hot and muggy, with August highs near 95F, so shade and airflow matter if you camp then. Winters are short, cool, and windy, with January highs around 59F and lows near 41F, and hard freezes are rare. Spring is beautiful, with April highs around 77F and peak wildflowers, though May brings the heaviest rain of the year. Fall is mild and comfortable, our favorite for camping. The area gets about 31 inches of rain annually, and spring thunderstorms can roll through, so keep an eye on the forecast.
Is Burnet a good base for the Highland Lakes?
It is one of the best. Burnet sits right at the northern end of the Highland Lakes chain, so Inks Lake, Lake Buchanan, and the string of Colorado River reservoirs are all within easy reach. You can base at Inks Lake State Park or Canyon of the Eagles, take care of your dump and water, and spend days boating, fishing, and exploring the lakes without long drives. Add in the state parks, the Vanishing Texas River Cruise, Longhorn Cavern, and the April wildflower season, and Burnet earns its reputation as a Hill Country home base rather than just a fuel stop.
Where can I dump my RV tanks near Burnet, TX?
We track {{stationCount}} dump stations in and around Burnet. The most useful for travelers is the free dump station at Inks Lake State Park, about 9 miles west of town off TX-29 via Park Road 4. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site instead, Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan has 25 full-service RV sites plus its own dump station. Because Burnet sits at the crossroads of US-281 and TX-29, both are an easy drive whether you are heading toward the Highland Lakes or continuing north and south through the Hill Country.
Is there a free dump station in Burnet?
The closest free option is the dump station at Inks Lake State Park, roughly 9 miles west of Burnet. It is free to use, which is a real perk in the Hill Country, though keep in mind the campsites themselves are water and electric only with no sewer hookups, so you dump on your way in or out rather than at your pad. If you want to combine the free dump with lake time, Inks Lake charges a modest $7 per person day-use fee. Otherwise, most in-town listings are paid facilities at private RV parks.
What highways run through Burnet for RVs?
Burnet sits where US-281 and TX-29 cross in the heart of the Hill Country. US-281 is a four-lane route running north to Lampasas and south through Marble Falls, comfortable for any size rig. TX-29 is the east-west connector, reaching I-35 at Georgetown about 34 miles east or the Highland Lakes to the west. US-183 also crosses Burnet County. There is no interstate in Burnet itself, but the four-lane US-281 makes getting a big rig around town simple. The scenic Park Road 4 loops off both highways through Longhorn Cavern and Inks Lake state parks.
Can I park my RV overnight in Burnet?
Burnet city ordinance limits RVs parked on a public street to 72 consecutive hours, and RVs cannot be used for living or sleeping in a residential district. RV parks are only permitted in the Heavy Commercial C-3 zone with a conditional use permit, so your best bet for a legal overnight is a designated campground. Inks Lake State Park about 9 miles west and Canyon of the Eagles on Lake Buchanan both offer proper RV sites with hookups. For a quick rest stop rather than an overnight, plan your fuel and dump stops around those established facilities.
When is the best time to visit Burnet in an RV?
Spring and fall are the standouts. Early-to-mid April is peak bluebonnet season, when the Hill Country wildflowers put on their show and the Burnet Bluebonnet Festival fills downtown, though that also means the parks book up fast. Fall is our quiet favorite, with warm days, cool nights, and thinner crowds once summer ends, plus lake water that stays swimmable into September. Summer is hot and muggy with August highs near 95F, so it works if you want lake time but plan for shade and airflow. Winter is mild and the least crowded.
Does Inks Lake State Park have RV facilities?
Yes. Inks Lake State Park, about 9 miles west of Burnet, has 114 sites with water and 30/50-amp electric for around $23 a night, plus 42 water-only sites near $16 for smaller rigs under 26 feet. There are no sewer hookups at the sites, but the park has a free dump station on the way in or out. Day use runs $7 per person for age 13 and up. The park sits on the constant-level Inks Lake for swimming, boating, kayaking, and fishing, and it is popular enough that you should reserve well ahead because it regularly sells out.
Where can I get propane near Burnet?
Star Tex Propane at 1742 West State Highway 29 in Burnet handles both bulk and RV refills and is open weekdays, which makes it the go-to for RVers passing through town. Action Propane and AmeriGas also serve the Burnet area if you need a backup. Because you are in a smaller Hill Country town, it is smart to top off here rather than assume the next lakeside community will have easy refills. If you are heading south, Marble Falls has additional suppliers, and Austin about 50 miles away has plenty of options if you get caught short.
What is there to do around Burnet besides dump and fuel?
Quite a bit, which is why Burnet is worth more than a pit stop. Inks Lake State Park offers swimming, boating, kayaking, and 9 miles of trails. Longhorn Cavern State Park, about 11 to 12 miles away via Park Road 4, runs an 85-minute guided tour over a mile underground. The Vanishing Texas River Cruise on Lake Buchanan is known for waterfalls and wintering bald eagles. Downtown hosts the Bluebonnet Festival every April. And the whole Highland Lakes chain, part of the Colorado River system, spreads out northwest of town for boating and fishing.
Are the roads around Burnet RV-friendly?
For the most part, yes. US-281 and TX-29 are both four-lane through Burnet and easy in any size rig. The one to take slowly is Park Road 4, the scenic 15.5-mile parkway that connects the two highways through Longhorn Cavern and Inks Lake state parks. It is a narrow two-lane with tourist traffic and cyclists, so keep your speed down. Also watch US-281 through Marble Falls just south of Burnet, which gets congested during peak lake season on summer weekends. Otherwise the Hill Country grades around Burnet are gentle and manageable for most motorhomes and trailers.
How far is Burnet from Austin and I-35?
Burnet is roughly 50 miles northwest of Austin, close enough for a supply or repair run but far enough to keep its small Hill Country character. The nearest interstate is I-35 at Georgetown, about 34 miles east of Burnet via TX-29. That makes Burnet a comfortable off-interstate base if you want lake access and wildflower country without the congestion of the I-35 corridor. Many RVers stage here to explore the Highland Lakes, then hop back to I-35 through Georgetown when they are ready to continue north toward Waco or south toward San Antonio.
Does Canyon of the Eagles have full hookups?
Yes. Canyon of the Eagles, on Lake Buchanan northwest of Burnet, has 25 full-hookup RV sites with 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer, plus a dump station and 33 tent sites. It sits within 940 acres of preserved Hill Country with 14 miles of trails and an on-site restaurant, so it feels more like a nature resort than a basic campground. For RVers who want sewer at the pad and do not want to deal with the dump-station shuffle at Inks Lake, this is the closest full-service option to Burnet, though it prices higher as a resort-style park. Reserve ahead in peak season.
What is the weather like in Burnet for camping?
Burnet has a classic Central Texas Hill Country climate. Summers are hot and muggy, with August highs near 95F, so shade and airflow matter if you camp then. Winters are short, cool, and windy, with January highs around 59F and lows near 41F, and hard freezes are rare. Spring is beautiful, with April highs around 77F and peak wildflowers, though May brings the heaviest rain of the year. Fall is mild and comfortable, our favorite for camping. The area gets about 31 inches of rain annually, and spring thunderstorms can roll through, so keep an eye on the forecast.
Is Burnet a good base for the Highland Lakes?
It is one of the best. Burnet sits right at the northern end of the Highland Lakes chain, so Inks Lake, Lake Buchanan, and the string of Colorado River reservoirs are all within easy reach. You can base at Inks Lake State Park or Canyon of the Eagles, take care of your dump and water, and spend days boating, fishing, and exploring the lakes without long drives. Add in the state parks, the Vanishing Texas River Cruise, Longhorn Cavern, and the April wildflower season, and Burnet earns its reputation as a Hill Country home base rather than just a fuel stop.
Are there free dump stations in Burnet?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Burnet.
All Dump Stations Near Burnet (35)
RV Dump StationsInks Lake State Park
RV Dump StationsBig Chief RV Resort
RV Dump StationsTwin Isles RV
RV Dump StationsSunset Point on Lake LBJ
RV Dump StationsPace Bend RV Park
RV Dump StationsIdyll Glen RV Park
RV Dump StationsKOA - Leander / NW Austin KOA Campground
RV Dump Stations



