RV Parks In Houston, Texas
29.7633° N, 95.3633° W
Quick Overview
Houston is a sprawling metro, and RV camping here splits cleanly between full-hookup private resorts ringing the city along its loops and one standout public option about an hour outside town. On the east side, Houston Leisure RV Resort in the Highlands area and Eastlake RV Resort both run full hookups with big-rig sites, and Eastlake takes rigs as large as 75 feet. If your plans include NASA and the coast, Space Center RV Park sits off I-45 South in League City, close to Kemah Boardwalk and Galveston Island. North toward The Woodlands and Conroe, Rayford Crossing RV Resort adds a luxury full-hookup option. For public camping, Brazos Bend State Park is the draw, nearly 5,000 acres with 40 miles of trails, resident alligators, the George Observatory, and over 70 full-hookup sites across two loops.
Big-rig access is not really the limiting factor here, hookups are widely available and several parks are built specifically for large coaches. The real variable is getting across the city. Houston is stitched together by I-10 running east-west, I-45 running north-south, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59, and all of them carry heavy urban traffic. Full-hookup parks tend to ring the metro along these loops, so plan your route before you arrive and cross downtown and the major interchanges at off-peak times, staying in the middle lanes rather than working across several lanes at the last minute.
Free and dispersed camping inside the metro itself is limited. If boondocking is the goal, head north to Sam Houston National Forest, which offers dispersed options well outside the city. Lake Houston Wilderness Park, northeast of Houston, is a public option with rustic pine-forest camping and no hookups, a nice change of pace from the full-service resorts. Reservations matter most at Brazos Bend, where the Texas State Parks system recommends booking 2 to 4 months ahead for holiday weekends since it is the closest full-service public park to the metro.
Weather drives a lot of the planning here. Summers run hot and very humid, often feeling over 100 degrees with the heat index, and hurricane season runs June through November, so full hookups and a working AC are not optional in July and August. Winter is mild and a popular snowbird season, with occasional cold fronts that rarely hold a freeze for long. Below we cover the drive in, what it costs to camp, the best time of year, and the questions we hear most from RVers planning a Houston trip. If you just need somewhere to empty tanks without an overnight stay, see our guide to RV dump stations in Houston.
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All Dump Stations Near Houston
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Main RV Park | 6.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Aba RV Park | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Medical Center RV Resort | 7.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Danny's RV Resort / Park | 10.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| RV Park Agave | 11.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Houston Central RV Park | 11.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Advanced RV Resort | 11.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Red Dot RV Park | 12.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Jus Passn Thru RV Park | 12.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fallbrook RV Resort | 12.4 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
South Main RV Park
6.8 miAba RV Park
7.5 miMedical Center RV Resort
7.9 miDanny's RV Resort / Park
10.0 miRV Park Agave
11.0 miHouston Central RV Park
11.1 miAdvanced RV Resort
11.6 miRed Dot RV Park
12.0 miJus Passn Thru RV Park
12.3 miFallbrook RV Resort
12.4 miTraveling to Houston by RV
Houston sits at the junction of I-10 running east-west and I-45 running north-south, with the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59 forming the inner and outer rings that most RV traffic uses to get around the metro. Full-hookup private parks tend to ring the city along these loops rather than sitting downtown, and the Space Center area parks cluster off I-45 South toward League City and Clear Lake. From most directions, you will spend some time on one of these highways before turning off toward your campground.
The main challenge for a big rig is not the roads themselves, it is the volume of traffic. Cross Houston at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges, since exits and merges come up quickly in a metro this size. If you are headed to Brazos Bend State Park, plan for about an hour southwest of the city and note the 66-foot vehicle length limit at the park entrance. Rigs up to 75 feet are welcome at Eastlake RV Resort on the east side, so length is rarely the limiting factor at the private parks, timing your crossing is.
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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 Houston, 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 Houston
Houston camping costs split along public and private lines, same as most Texas metros. Brazos Bend State Park is the value anchor, booking through the Texas State Parks reservation system for full-hookup sites that generally undercut the private resorts, which is a big reason it fills up 2 to 4 months out for holiday weekends. Expect to pay a modest nightly reservation fee on top of the site rate, standard for the state park system.
The private full-hookup resorts, Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake RV Resort, Space Center RV Park, and Rayford Crossing RV Resort, run higher than the state park but stay reasonable for a major metro, and several advertise monthly rates that bring the effective nightly cost down significantly for longer stays. That monthly option is popular with winter snowbirds, so expect the tightest pricing and availability from November through March. Fuel and services are not a cost concern here, Houston has full big-city amenities and abundant fuel everywhere, the challenge is traffic, not availability or price. Spring and fall shoulder seasons tend to bring the best combination of comfortable weather and easier availability.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Houston by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
45°F - 65°F
Crowds: High
Mild and comfortable, and this is prime snowbird season around Houston. Occasional cold fronts roll through but rarely hold a freeze for long. Full-hookup parks fill up with long-term winter guests, so book monthly sites well ahead if you plan to stay a while.
Spring
Mar - May
60°F - 79°F
Crowds: Medium
Warm and pleasant early, then humid and stormy as the season goes on. One of the better windows before summer heat sets in, and a good time to book Brazos Bend State Park before the 2 to 4 month lead time for holiday weekends runs out.
Summer
Jun - Aug
76°F - 94°F
Crowds: Medium
Hot and heavy with humidity, often pushing past 100 with the heat index. Travel with full hookups so you can run the AC around the clock. Hurricane season is underway from June through November, so keep an eye on the Gulf.
Fall
Sep - Oct
60°F - 80°F
Crowds: High
Our favorite stretch. It cools off and the humidity breaks after the summer peak, though the back half of hurricane season runs into October, so still watch the tropics. Snowbirds start rolling in for the winter season, so private parks tighten up.
Explore the Houston Area
Time your drive around Houston traffic, not your campground. Cross at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges on I-10, I-45, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59. A rig that would take 40 minutes at 10am can take twice that at 5pm, and merges in a 40-foot coach are a lot less stressful with lighter traffic around you.
Book Brazos Bend State Park early if you want a weekend, especially around holidays, since it is the closest full-service public park to the metro and 2 to 4 months of lead time is the norm for peak dates through the Texas State Parks reservation system. The private resorts fill differently, watch for winter snowbird season when Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake, Rayford Crossing, and Space Center RV Park all see longer-term guests locking in monthly rates, which can tighten up availability for shorter stays.
Travel with full hookups whenever you are in Houston June through September. The heat and humidity are real, often pushing past 100 with the heat index, and running the AC off shore power beats stressing your generator and batteries. If you want dispersed or free camping, do not expect to find it inside the metro, head to Sam Houston National Forest to the north instead. And if alligators and dark skies sound appealing, build in a full day at Brazos Bend for the trails and the George Observatory rather than a quick pass-through.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Houston
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Houston?
It depends on which side of the metro you are working from. On the east side, Houston Leisure RV Resort in the Highlands area and Eastlake RV Resort both run full hookups with big-rig sites, and Eastlake takes rigs up to 75 feet. If you are headed toward the Space Center, Space Center RV Park off I-45 South in League City puts you near NASA, Kemah Boardwalk, and Galveston. North of town near The Woodlands and Conroe, Rayford Crossing RV Resort is a full-hookup luxury option. For public camping, Brazos Bend State Park about an hour southwest is the standout, with over 70 full-hookup sites across two loops.
Do RV parks around Houston have full hookups?
The private parks do, across the board. Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake RV Resort, Space Center RV Park, and Rayford Crossing RV Resort all run full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50 amp power, which matters a lot given how hot and humid Houston summers get. Brazos Bend State Park, the main public option, also offers full hookups on its 70-plus sites, so you are not stuck dry camping if you want to stay on the state park side. The real dry-camping option is Lake Houston Wilderness Park northeast of the city, which runs rustic camping in the pine woods with no hookups.
How much does RV camping cost around Houston?
Private full-hookup resorts near Houston tend to land in a moderate range for a big metro, reflecting the pool, pet-friendly grounds, and monthly-rate options that several of them advertise, like Houston Leisure RV Resort. Brazos Bend State Park books through the Texas State Parks reservation system and generally runs cheaper than the private resorts for a full-hookup site, which is a big part of why it fills up early on weekends. Expect the priciest nights during winter snowbird season when private parks are running near capacity with longer-term guests, and softer pricing in the shoulder months of spring and fall.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Houston?
For Brazos Bend State Park, book 2 to 4 months ahead for holiday weekends through the Texas State Parks reservation system, since it is one of the closest full-service public parks to the metro and it shows. Regular weekends need less lead time but still deserve a few weeks notice, especially in spring and fall when the weather is at its best. The private resorts like Houston Leisure RV Resort and Rayford Crossing fill up fastest during winter snowbird season when guests book monthly stays, so if you want a long-term full-hookup site from November through March, call well ahead of that window.
When is the best time to go RV camping around Houston?
October through April is the sweet spot, and it lines up with why Houston is such a popular snowbird stop. Winter stays mild with only occasional cold fronts, rarely freezing for long, and fall brings cooler, less humid air after the summer peak. Spring is warm and pleasant early before it turns humid and stormy later in the season. Summer is the one stretch we would plan around if we could, since it runs hot and very humid, often feeling over 100 degrees with the heat index, and it overlaps with hurricane season from June through November.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp near Houston?
Yes, and several parks are built specifically for it. Eastlake RV Resort on the east side takes rigs up to 75 feet, and Houston Leisure RV Resort and Rayford Crossing RV Resort both run big-rig sites with full hookups. Brazos Bend State Park allows rigs up to 66 feet on its sites. The bigger challenge for large coaches is not the campgrounds, it is the drive: Houston traffic is heavy on I-10, I-45, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59, so cross the metro at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Houston?
Not really inside the metro itself. Free and dispersed camping is limited around Houston, and your best bet for that kind of boondocking is heading north to Sam Houston National Forest, which sits well outside the city and offers dispersed options away from the crowds and the traffic. Lake Houston Wilderness Park northeast of town offers rustic camping in a pine forest setting, which is the closest thing to a low-cost, low-frills option without leaving the region entirely. Inside the loops and along the major highways, plan on a private park or Brazos Bend State Park rather than counting on a first-come site.
How do I get to Houston with an RV?
Houston sits at the crossing of I-10 running east-west and I-45 running north-south, with the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59 handling the inner and outer rings around the metro. Full-hookup parks tend to ring the city along those loops, and the Space Center area parks sit off I-45 South toward League City. However you approach, plan your crossing for off-peak hours if you can, since urban traffic is heavy and a big rig is happier staying in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges rather than working across multiple lanes at the last minute.
Is there a dump station near Houston RV parks?
Yes. All of the full-hookup private parks, including Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake RV Resort, Space Center RV Park, and Rayford Crossing RV Resort, handle dumping as part of a full-hookup stay, and Brazos Bend State Park supports dumping for its campground guests as well. Houston has many dedicated dump stations scattered across the metro beyond the campgrounds themselves, which is useful if you are passing through without an overnight stay. For the full rundown of locations, see our guide to RV dump stations in Houston, which covers the public and private options around the metro in more detail.
Is Houston RV camping good for families and pets?
Very much so. Houston Leisure RV Resort specifically advertises as pet-friendly with a pool, which is a welcome amenity in the summer heat, and the private resorts generally cater well to families with amenities built for longer stays. Brazos Bend State Park is a great pick for families, with 40 miles of trails, resident alligators to spot safely from boardwalks, and the George Observatory on site for stargazing. Space Center RV Park puts families within easy reach of NASA, Kemah Boardwalk, and the Galveston beaches, which covers a lot of kid-friendly ground without long drives between stops.
What is there to do around Houston while camping?
A lot, and it spreads in every direction. Space Center Houston, the official visitor center of NASA Johnson Space Center, is the marquee draw near Clear Lake and I-45 South, and it pairs naturally with the Kemah Boardwalk for waterfront dining and rides. Galveston Island is about 50 miles south for Gulf beaches, the historic Strand district, and Galveston Island State Park. Brazos Bend State Park about an hour southwest covers alligators, trails, and the observatory. Closer to downtown, the Houston Museum District and Buffalo Bayou Park give you a green, walkable break from the highways.
What is Houston traffic like for RVers and how do I avoid problems?
Plan around it rather than fighting it. The metro is stitched together by I-10, I-45, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59, and all of them carry heavy urban traffic through the day. The advice from RVers who cross regularly is simple: travel at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges, since exit lanes and merges come up fast in a city this size. If your campground is on the far side of downtown from your approach, it is worth timing your arrival outside the morning and evening rush rather than saving twenty minutes and fighting stop-and-go traffic in a 40-foot rig.
What is the weather like for RV camping in Houston across the year?
It swings from very hot and humid to genuinely mild. Summer highs average around 94 degrees with lows near 76 and humidity that makes it feel hotter, often over 100 with the heat index, and hurricane season runs June through November so it pays to watch the tropics. Winter is the payoff, with highs near 65 and lows around 45, mild enough that occasional cold fronts rarely hold a freeze for long, which is exactly why Houston pulls in snowbirds. Spring and fall both run comfortably in the 60s and 70s and are our pick for the best combination of weather and lighter demand than peak winter.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Houston?
It depends on which side of the metro you are working from. On the east side, Houston Leisure RV Resort in the Highlands area and Eastlake RV Resort both run full hookups with big-rig sites, and Eastlake takes rigs up to 75 feet. If you are headed toward the Space Center, Space Center RV Park off I-45 South in League City puts you near NASA, Kemah Boardwalk, and Galveston. North of town near The Woodlands and Conroe, Rayford Crossing RV Resort is a full-hookup luxury option. For public camping, Brazos Bend State Park about an hour southwest is the standout, with over 70 full-hookup sites across two loops.
Do RV parks around Houston have full hookups?
The private parks do, across the board. Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake RV Resort, Space Center RV Park, and Rayford Crossing RV Resort all run full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50 amp power, which matters a lot given how hot and humid Houston summers get. Brazos Bend State Park, the main public option, also offers full hookups on its 70-plus sites, so you are not stuck dry camping if you want to stay on the state park side. The real dry-camping option is Lake Houston Wilderness Park northeast of the city, which runs rustic camping in the pine woods with no hookups.
How much does RV camping cost around Houston?
Private full-hookup resorts near Houston tend to land in a moderate range for a big metro, reflecting the pool, pet-friendly grounds, and monthly-rate options that several of them advertise, like Houston Leisure RV Resort. Brazos Bend State Park books through the Texas State Parks reservation system and generally runs cheaper than the private resorts for a full-hookup site, which is a big part of why it fills up early on weekends. Expect the priciest nights during winter snowbird season when private parks are running near capacity with longer-term guests, and softer pricing in the shoulder months of spring and fall.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Houston?
For Brazos Bend State Park, book 2 to 4 months ahead for holiday weekends through the Texas State Parks reservation system, since it is one of the closest full-service public parks to the metro and it shows. Regular weekends need less lead time but still deserve a few weeks notice, especially in spring and fall when the weather is at its best. The private resorts like Houston Leisure RV Resort and Rayford Crossing fill up fastest during winter snowbird season when guests book monthly stays, so if you want a long-term full-hookup site from November through March, call well ahead of that window.
When is the best time to go RV camping around Houston?
October through April is the sweet spot, and it lines up with why Houston is such a popular snowbird stop. Winter stays mild with only occasional cold fronts, rarely freezing for long, and fall brings cooler, less humid air after the summer peak. Spring is warm and pleasant early before it turns humid and stormy later in the season. Summer is the one stretch we would plan around if we could, since it runs hot and very humid, often feeling over 100 degrees with the heat index, and it overlaps with hurricane season from June through November.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp near Houston?
Yes, and several parks are built specifically for it. Eastlake RV Resort on the east side takes rigs up to 75 feet, and Houston Leisure RV Resort and Rayford Crossing RV Resort both run big-rig sites with full hookups. Brazos Bend State Park allows rigs up to 66 feet on its sites. The bigger challenge for large coaches is not the campgrounds, it is the drive: Houston traffic is heavy on I-10, I-45, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59, so cross the metro at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Houston?
Not really inside the metro itself. Free and dispersed camping is limited around Houston, and your best bet for that kind of boondocking is heading north to Sam Houston National Forest, which sits well outside the city and offers dispersed options away from the crowds and the traffic. Lake Houston Wilderness Park northeast of town offers rustic camping in a pine forest setting, which is the closest thing to a low-cost, low-frills option without leaving the region entirely. Inside the loops and along the major highways, plan on a private park or Brazos Bend State Park rather than counting on a first-come site.
How do I get to Houston with an RV?
Houston sits at the crossing of I-10 running east-west and I-45 running north-south, with the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59 handling the inner and outer rings around the metro. Full-hookup parks tend to ring the city along those loops, and the Space Center area parks sit off I-45 South toward League City. However you approach, plan your crossing for off-peak hours if you can, since urban traffic is heavy and a big rig is happier staying in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges rather than working across multiple lanes at the last minute.
Is there a dump station near Houston RV parks?
Yes. All of the full-hookup private parks, including Houston Leisure RV Resort, Eastlake RV Resort, Space Center RV Park, and Rayford Crossing RV Resort, handle dumping as part of a full-hookup stay, and Brazos Bend State Park supports dumping for its campground guests as well. Houston has many dedicated dump stations scattered across the metro beyond the campgrounds themselves, which is useful if you are passing through without an overnight stay. For the full rundown of locations, see our guide to RV dump stations in Houston, which covers the public and private options around the metro in more detail.
Is Houston RV camping good for families and pets?
Very much so. Houston Leisure RV Resort specifically advertises as pet-friendly with a pool, which is a welcome amenity in the summer heat, and the private resorts generally cater well to families with amenities built for longer stays. Brazos Bend State Park is a great pick for families, with 40 miles of trails, resident alligators to spot safely from boardwalks, and the George Observatory on site for stargazing. Space Center RV Park puts families within easy reach of NASA, Kemah Boardwalk, and the Galveston beaches, which covers a lot of kid-friendly ground without long drives between stops.
What is there to do around Houston while camping?
A lot, and it spreads in every direction. Space Center Houston, the official visitor center of NASA Johnson Space Center, is the marquee draw near Clear Lake and I-45 South, and it pairs naturally with the Kemah Boardwalk for waterfront dining and rides. Galveston Island is about 50 miles south for Gulf beaches, the historic Strand district, and Galveston Island State Park. Brazos Bend State Park about an hour southwest covers alligators, trails, and the observatory. Closer to downtown, the Houston Museum District and Buffalo Bayou Park give you a green, walkable break from the highways.
What is Houston traffic like for RVers and how do I avoid problems?
Plan around it rather than fighting it. The metro is stitched together by I-10, I-45, the 610 Loop, Beltway 8, and US-59, and all of them carry heavy urban traffic through the day. The advice from RVers who cross regularly is simple: travel at off-peak times and stay in the middle lanes through downtown and the major interchanges, since exit lanes and merges come up fast in a city this size. If your campground is on the far side of downtown from your approach, it is worth timing your arrival outside the morning and evening rush rather than saving twenty minutes and fighting stop-and-go traffic in a 40-foot rig.
What is the weather like for RV camping in Houston across the year?
It swings from very hot and humid to genuinely mild. Summer highs average around 94 degrees with lows near 76 and humidity that makes it feel hotter, often over 100 with the heat index, and hurricane season runs June through November so it pays to watch the tropics. Winter is the payoff, with highs near 65 and lows around 45, mild enough that occasional cold fronts rarely hold a freeze for long, which is exactly why Houston pulls in snowbirds. Spring and fall both run comfortably in the 60s and 70s and are our pick for the best combination of weather and lighter demand than peak winter.
Are there free dump stations in Houston?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Houston.
All Dump Stations Near Houston (124)
RV Park with Dump StationsSouth Main RV Park
RV ParkMedical Center RV Resort
RV ParkAba RV Park
RV ParkDanny's RV Resort / Park
RV ParkHouston Central RV Park
RV ParkAdvanced RV Resort
RV ParkRed Dot RV Park
RV Park



