RV Parks In Fort Stockton, Texas
30.8940° N, 102.8793° W
Quick Overview
If you drive I-10 across West Texas, Fort Stockton is the spot where you finally stop. It sits roughly halfway between San Antonio and El Paso, a six-to-seven-hour haul from either, which makes it the natural overnight on a long desert crossing. The town is built for exactly that: a cluster of full-hookup, pull-through RV parks right off the interstate, plus fuel, groceries, and a couple of genuinely worthwhile attractions nearby.
For the overnight crowd, the private parks lead. Hilltop RV Park is 100 percent pull-through with full hookups, a pool, and remodeled showers. The Fort Stockton RV Park (a KOA) adds a dog park, cafe, and propane, and Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park has 75-foot pull-throughs and an on-site diner. Camp Stockton is the budget pick. All of them are level, big-rig friendly, and a quick turn off I-10, so you can plug in, sleep, and roll on, or settle in for a few nights.
The real reason to linger, though, is the public land within an hour. Balmorhea State Park, 50 miles west, has a huge spring-fed swimming pool that stays cool and crystal-clear all year, one of the best swims in Texas, with water-and-electric campsites that take rigs up to 77 feet. Monahans Sandhills State Park, about 75 miles north, offers sand dunes you can sled and an 800-acre horseback area.
This is also dark-sky country. Fort Stockton sits inside the greater Big Bend dark-sky region, so a clear night here delivers a sky most travelers never see, and the town is a common staging point for a Big Bend National Park road trip to the south.
Below we cover which park fits an overnight versus a multi-day base, the state-park options worth the detour, costs, the I-10 logistics, and what the Chihuahuan Desert seasons are like at about 3,000 feet, so you can plan a stop that is more than just a place to sleep.
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All Dump Stations Near Fort Stockton
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Circle B RV Park | 0.8 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park | 1.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| I-10 RV Park Fort Stockton | 1.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camp Stockton RV Park | 1.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Honey Badger RV Park | 2.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Stockton RV Park | 5.0 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Free |
| Rio Pecos Campgrounds RV Park | 33.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mccamey Hitchin' Post RV Park | 41.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mccamey RV Park, Llc | 42.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Doug's RV Park | 42.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Circle B RV Park
0.8 miFort Stockton Resort & RV Park
1.0 miI-10 RV Park Fort Stockton
1.1 miCamp Stockton RV Park
1.5 miHoney Badger RV Park
2.2 miFort Stockton RV Park
5.0 miRio Pecos Campgrounds RV Park
33.4 miMccamey Hitchin' Post RV Park
41.9 miMccamey RV Park, Llc
42.0 miDoug's RV Park
42.6 miTraveling to Fort Stockton by RV
Fort Stockton could not be easier to reach: Interstate 10 runs right through town between San Antonio and El Paso, and every RV park is a quick turn off an exit with no grades to climb. US-285 and US-385 branch south toward the Big Bend country, so the town is a junction as well as a rest stop. For most travelers it is the midpoint of a long desert crossing, which is exactly why the parks here are built for big rigs with full hookups and long pull-throughs.
Services are plentiful and that is part of the appeal. There are Loves and Flying J travel centers with diesel, plus a Walmart, making this the last reliable big-box supply stop before the long, empty stretches toward Big Bend. If you are heading into Big Bend National Park, plan carefully: the Chisos Basin road restricts RVs over 24 feet and trailers over 20 feet, so many travelers base a big rig in Fort Stockton or at a desert-floor campground and day-trip in. The nearest sizable airport is Midland-Odessa, about 80 miles north.
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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 Fort Stockton, 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 Fort Stockton
Fort Stockton is an affordable stop. The private full-hookup parks generally run in the $16 to $35 range a night, with budget options like Camp Stockton around $16 to $18 and the amenity parks and resort closer to $35, all offering weekly and monthly rates that drop the cost for snowbirds and longer stays. For a full-hookup pull-through right off I-10, that is a bargain compared with parks in bigger cities.
The state parks are cheaper still on the site fee but add a daily entrance fee. Balmorhea runs about $20 to $25 a night for water-and-electric sites plus roughly $7 per person entrance, and Monahans is around $15 a night plus entrance. Neither has sewer at the site, so you dump at the park dump station. The math is simple: pay a private park for a full-hookup overnight with a pull-through and a pool, or spend a little less per night at a state park for the spring pool or the dunes, with the trade-off of no sewer hookup and a per-person gate fee.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Fort Stockton
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Best Time to Visit Fort Stockton by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
32F - 60F
Crowds: Medium
Mild desert winter with cool nights and the occasional freeze; the full-hookup parks stay open year-round and snowbirds pass through, so call ahead in peak weeks.
Spring
Mar - May
50F - 82F
Crowds: Medium
Pleasant and often beautiful with wildflowers, though spring wind and dust can pick up; Balmorhea is back in full swing and the pool water warms slightly.
Summer
Jun - Aug
68F - 96F
Crowds: Medium
Hot days near 100F but with low humidity and cool nights; the cool Balmorhea spring pool is the highlight, and afternoon storms are rare in this dry climate.
Fall
Sep - Oct
52F - 83F
Crowds: Medium
One of the best windows of the year: warm days, cool nights, lighter wind, and superb dark skies, ideal for both camping and stargazing before winter.
Explore the Fort Stockton Area
Treat Fort Stockton as more than a gas-and-go. If it is purely an overnight, the pull-through parks off I-10 are made for it, plug in, level up, and you are back on the interstate in minutes. But if you have a day, point the rig 50 miles west to Balmorhea State Park and swim the spring-fed pool. It stays around 72 degrees year-round and is genuinely one of the best swims in Texas. Reserve a Balmorhea or Monahans site up to five months ahead, since they fill on summer weekends.
Do not sleep on the night sky out here. Fort Stockton sits in the greater Big Bend dark-sky region, and on a clear, moonless night the Milky Way is staggering, so plan a stargazing night and let your eyes adjust away from the park lights. In town, the restored Historic Fort Stockton and the giant Paisano Pete roadrunner statue are quick, fun stops. And stock up on fuel and groceries here, because the desert stretches south and west of town go a long way between services.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Fort Stockton
What are the best RV parks in Fort Stockton?
For an easy full-hookup stop, Hilltop RV Park is a strong pick because every site is a pull-through with full hookups, a pool, and remodeled showers right on I-10. The Fort Stockton RV Park, a KOA, adds a dog park, swimming pool, cafe, and propane, and Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park has 75-foot pull-throughs and an on-site diner. Camp Stockton is the budget option. If you want public land, Balmorhea State Park (the spring pool) and Monahans Sandhills State Park are both within an hour and worth a detour for a longer stay.
Is Fort Stockton a good overnight stop on I-10?
It is one of the best on the West Texas stretch of I-10. Fort Stockton sits roughly halfway between San Antonio and El Paso, about six to seven hours from either, so it is the natural place to break the drive. The town has a cluster of full-hookup, mostly pull-through RV parks right off the interstate, all level and big-rig friendly, so you can pull in, plug in, and be back on the road quickly. Add diesel at Loves and Flying J, a Walmart, and a couple of good attractions nearby, and it earns more than a one-night stop.
Do Fort Stockton RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private RV parks in Fort Stockton are built around full hookups because the town serves long-haul I-10 travelers who want to plug in for the night. Hilltop, the Fort Stockton KOA, Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park, and Camp Stockton all offer 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer at the site, with long pull-throughs that make setup quick. The nearby state parks, Balmorhea and Monahans, offer water and electric but no sewer at the site, relying on a park dump station instead. If you need full hookups, stay at one of the private parks in town.
Can big rigs camp in Fort Stockton?
Easily. The private parks were built for big rigs crossing West Texas, with long, level pull-throughs, some up to 75 feet, and no tight grades right at town. A 40-foot motorhome towing a car slots in without trouble. On the public side, Balmorhea State Park accommodates rigs up to 77 feet (with pull-through sites preferred over the back-ins for large rigs) and Monahans handles up to about 65 feet. One caution for Big Bend day trips: the Chisos Basin road in the national park restricts RVs over 24 feet and trailers over 20 feet, so leave the big rig at your Fort Stockton base.
What is there to do in Fort Stockton besides sleep?
More than you might expect. The headline is Balmorhea State Park, 50 miles west, where a huge spring-fed pool stays cool and crystal-clear all year for one of the best swims in Texas. Monahans Sandhills State Park, about 75 miles north, has sand dunes you can sled down and an 800-acre horseback-riding area. In town, the restored Historic Fort Stockton tells the frontier story at Comanche Springs, and the giant Paisano Pete roadrunner is a classic photo stop. At night, the dark skies in this corner of West Texas are some of the best in the country for stargazing.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Fort Stockton?
For the private parks in town, you can usually arrive the same day, especially midweek, since they cater to overnighters and keep pull-through space open. It is still smart to call ahead on busy holiday weekends. The two nearby state parks are a different story: Balmorhea and Monahans take reservations up to five months ahead through the Texas State Parks system and fill on summer weekends and holidays, so book those early if a spring-pool swim or a dune trip is your plan. Balmorhea in particular is popular and can sell out well in advance.
When is the best time to camp in Fort Stockton?
Fall is excellent, with warm days, cool nights, lighter wind, and superb dark skies for stargazing. Spring is pleasant and green with wildflowers, though it can get windy and dusty. Summer is hot, often near 100 degrees, but the low humidity and cool nights make it bearable, and the cool Balmorhea spring pool is a perfect heat escape. Winter is mild for the desert with cool nights and the occasional freeze, and snowbirds pass through, so the full-hookup parks stay open year-round. Any season works here, but fall is the sweet spot.
Can I visit Big Bend National Park from Fort Stockton?
Yes, and many RVers use Fort Stockton as a staging point. Big Bend lies roughly 100 to 140 miles south via US-385 or US-285, about a two-to-three-hour drive depending on which entrance you use. The key planning note is rig size: the road into the Chisos Basin restricts RVs over 24 feet and trailers over 20 feet, so big rigs cannot reach the high campground there. Many travelers base a large rig in Fort Stockton and day-trip in, or camp at the desert-floor Rio Grande Village campground. Either way, fuel up and stock groceries in Fort Stockton first, since services are sparse to the south.
Is the Balmorhea spring pool worth the detour?
For most RVers, absolutely. Balmorhea State Park is about 50 miles west of Fort Stockton, and its centerpiece is one of the largest spring-fed swimming pools in the world, fed by the San Solomon Springs at a steady, refreshing temperature around 72 degrees year-round. The water is famously clear, and you can even see fish in it. The park has water-and-electric campsites that handle big rigs up to 77 feet, so you can camp right there. It is a genuine destination, not just a stop, and on a hot West Texas day it is the best way to cool off for hundreds of miles.
How dark are the night skies near Fort Stockton?
Very dark, which is one of the underrated reasons to stop here. Fort Stockton sits within the greater Big Bend dark-sky region, an area with some of the least light pollution in the Lower 48. On a clear, moonless night away from the park lights, the Milky Way is brilliant and you can see far more stars than in any city. The famous McDonald Observatory is about 90 miles north in the Davis Mountains and runs public star parties. If you camp here, plan at least one clear night for stargazing, let your eyes adjust for 20 minutes, and enjoy a sky most travelers never get to see.
Are there dump stations in Fort Stockton?
Yes. The private RV parks in town have sewer hookups at the site or an on-site dump station, so dumping is easy whether you stay one night or several, and the travel centers along I-10 are also handy for tank service. The nearby state parks, Balmorhea and Monahans, do not have sewer at the campsites but each has a dump station you use on your way out. The practical approach is to arrive with empty tanks and dump before you leave a park. With full-hookup pull-throughs widely available in town, most travelers simply hook up to sewer at their site.
What is the weather like for camping in Fort Stockton?
Fort Stockton has a high Chihuahuan Desert climate at about 3,000 feet, which means hot, dry summers and mild winters with big day-to-night temperature swings. Summer highs run into the 90s and can touch 100, but humidity is low and nights cool into the 60s. Winters are mild with daytime highs in the 50s and 60s and cool nights that occasionally freeze. Spring brings wind and some dust, while fall is calm and comfortable. Rainfall is low year-round at around 14 inches, and the area sees over 260 sunny days, so you can plan on dry, clear conditions most of the time.
Do Fort Stockton RV parks stay open year-round?
Yes. Because Fort Stockton is an I-10 service town that sees steady traveler and snowbird traffic all year, the private full-hookup parks operate year-round rather than closing seasonally. That makes it a reliable winter stop on a southern cross-country route, and many snowbirds heading to or from the desert Southwest pause here. The nearby Texas state parks also operate year-round, though their busiest seasons are summer at Balmorhea (for the pool) and the cooler months overall. Always confirm current hours and availability when you book, but unlike northern destinations, you will not find Fort Stockton parks shutting down for the winter.
What are the best RV parks in Fort Stockton?
For an easy full-hookup stop, Hilltop RV Park is a strong pick because every site is a pull-through with full hookups, a pool, and remodeled showers right on I-10. The Fort Stockton RV Park, a KOA, adds a dog park, swimming pool, cafe, and propane, and Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park has 75-foot pull-throughs and an on-site diner. Camp Stockton is the budget option. If you want public land, Balmorhea State Park (the spring pool) and Monahans Sandhills State Park are both within an hour and worth a detour for a longer stay.
Is Fort Stockton a good overnight stop on I-10?
It is one of the best on the West Texas stretch of I-10. Fort Stockton sits roughly halfway between San Antonio and El Paso, about six to seven hours from either, so it is the natural place to break the drive. The town has a cluster of full-hookup, mostly pull-through RV parks right off the interstate, all level and big-rig friendly, so you can pull in, plug in, and be back on the road quickly. Add diesel at Loves and Flying J, a Walmart, and a couple of good attractions nearby, and it earns more than a one-night stop.
Do Fort Stockton RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. The private RV parks in Fort Stockton are built around full hookups because the town serves long-haul I-10 travelers who want to plug in for the night. Hilltop, the Fort Stockton KOA, Fort Stockton Resort & RV Park, and Camp Stockton all offer 30/50-amp electric, water, and sewer at the site, with long pull-throughs that make setup quick. The nearby state parks, Balmorhea and Monahans, offer water and electric but no sewer at the site, relying on a park dump station instead. If you need full hookups, stay at one of the private parks in town.
Can big rigs camp in Fort Stockton?
Easily. The private parks were built for big rigs crossing West Texas, with long, level pull-throughs, some up to 75 feet, and no tight grades right at town. A 40-foot motorhome towing a car slots in without trouble. On the public side, Balmorhea State Park accommodates rigs up to 77 feet (with pull-through sites preferred over the back-ins for large rigs) and Monahans handles up to about 65 feet. One caution for Big Bend day trips: the Chisos Basin road in the national park restricts RVs over 24 feet and trailers over 20 feet, so leave the big rig at your Fort Stockton base.
What is there to do in Fort Stockton besides sleep?
More than you might expect. The headline is Balmorhea State Park, 50 miles west, where a huge spring-fed pool stays cool and crystal-clear all year for one of the best swims in Texas. Monahans Sandhills State Park, about 75 miles north, has sand dunes you can sled down and an 800-acre horseback-riding area. In town, the restored Historic Fort Stockton tells the frontier story at Comanche Springs, and the giant Paisano Pete roadrunner is a classic photo stop. At night, the dark skies in this corner of West Texas are some of the best in the country for stargazing.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Fort Stockton?
For the private parks in town, you can usually arrive the same day, especially midweek, since they cater to overnighters and keep pull-through space open. It is still smart to call ahead on busy holiday weekends. The two nearby state parks are a different story: Balmorhea and Monahans take reservations up to five months ahead through the Texas State Parks system and fill on summer weekends and holidays, so book those early if a spring-pool swim or a dune trip is your plan. Balmorhea in particular is popular and can sell out well in advance.
When is the best time to camp in Fort Stockton?
Fall is excellent, with warm days, cool nights, lighter wind, and superb dark skies for stargazing. Spring is pleasant and green with wildflowers, though it can get windy and dusty. Summer is hot, often near 100 degrees, but the low humidity and cool nights make it bearable, and the cool Balmorhea spring pool is a perfect heat escape. Winter is mild for the desert with cool nights and the occasional freeze, and snowbirds pass through, so the full-hookup parks stay open year-round. Any season works here, but fall is the sweet spot.
Can I visit Big Bend National Park from Fort Stockton?
Yes, and many RVers use Fort Stockton as a staging point. Big Bend lies roughly 100 to 140 miles south via US-385 or US-285, about a two-to-three-hour drive depending on which entrance you use. The key planning note is rig size: the road into the Chisos Basin restricts RVs over 24 feet and trailers over 20 feet, so big rigs cannot reach the high campground there. Many travelers base a large rig in Fort Stockton and day-trip in, or camp at the desert-floor Rio Grande Village campground. Either way, fuel up and stock groceries in Fort Stockton first, since services are sparse to the south.
Is the Balmorhea spring pool worth the detour?
For most RVers, absolutely. Balmorhea State Park is about 50 miles west of Fort Stockton, and its centerpiece is one of the largest spring-fed swimming pools in the world, fed by the San Solomon Springs at a steady, refreshing temperature around 72 degrees year-round. The water is famously clear, and you can even see fish in it. The park has water-and-electric campsites that handle big rigs up to 77 feet, so you can camp right there. It is a genuine destination, not just a stop, and on a hot West Texas day it is the best way to cool off for hundreds of miles.
How dark are the night skies near Fort Stockton?
Very dark, which is one of the underrated reasons to stop here. Fort Stockton sits within the greater Big Bend dark-sky region, an area with some of the least light pollution in the Lower 48. On a clear, moonless night away from the park lights, the Milky Way is brilliant and you can see far more stars than in any city. The famous McDonald Observatory is about 90 miles north in the Davis Mountains and runs public star parties. If you camp here, plan at least one clear night for stargazing, let your eyes adjust for 20 minutes, and enjoy a sky most travelers never get to see.
Are there dump stations in Fort Stockton?
Yes. The private RV parks in town have sewer hookups at the site or an on-site dump station, so dumping is easy whether you stay one night or several, and the travel centers along I-10 are also handy for tank service. The nearby state parks, Balmorhea and Monahans, do not have sewer at the campsites but each has a dump station you use on your way out. The practical approach is to arrive with empty tanks and dump before you leave a park. With full-hookup pull-throughs widely available in town, most travelers simply hook up to sewer at their site.
What is the weather like for camping in Fort Stockton?
Fort Stockton has a high Chihuahuan Desert climate at about 3,000 feet, which means hot, dry summers and mild winters with big day-to-night temperature swings. Summer highs run into the 90s and can touch 100, but humidity is low and nights cool into the 60s. Winters are mild with daytime highs in the 50s and 60s and cool nights that occasionally freeze. Spring brings wind and some dust, while fall is calm and comfortable. Rainfall is low year-round at around 14 inches, and the area sees over 260 sunny days, so you can plan on dry, clear conditions most of the time.
Do Fort Stockton RV parks stay open year-round?
Yes. Because Fort Stockton is an I-10 service town that sees steady traveler and snowbird traffic all year, the private full-hookup parks operate year-round rather than closing seasonally. That makes it a reliable winter stop on a southern cross-country route, and many snowbirds heading to or from the desert Southwest pause here. The nearby Texas state parks also operate year-round, though their busiest seasons are summer at Balmorhea (for the pool) and the cooler months overall. Always confirm current hours and availability when you book, but unlike northern destinations, you will not find Fort Stockton parks shutting down for the winter.
Are there free dump stations in Fort Stockton?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Fort Stockton.
All Dump Stations Near Fort Stockton (27)
RV ParkCircle B RV Park
RV ParkI-10 RV Park Fort Stockton
RV ParkFort Stockton Resort & RV Park
RV ParkCamp Stockton RV Park
RV ParkHoney Badger RV Park
RV Park with Dump StationsFort Stockton RV Park
RV ParkRio Pecos Campgrounds RV Park
RV Park



