RV Dump Stations In Marble Falls, Texas
30.5784° N, 98.2751° W
Quick Overview
Marble Falls is one of the easier Hill Country dump stops on the Highland Lakes chain about 50 miles northwest of Austin. The closest reliable public dump is Inks Lake State Park, 12 miles west of town on Park Road 4, where the campground dump station is free for registered campers and open to day-use visitors with the standard Texas State Parks $7/adult entry.
The state park is the local anchor: an on-site dump with potable water on the same loop, big-rig friendly approaches, 30/50A electric loops (no full hookups), and a constant-level lake for swimming and fishing. Most touring rigs pair a night or two at Inks Lake with the dump-and-fill on the way out. For full-hookup convenience the lakeside private parks take over: Sunset Point on Lake LBJ at 2322 N Wirtz Dam Road, Wake and Lake RV Resort built for big-rigs, and the in-town Pecan Valley RV Park. All accept their own paying guests for dumping and sometimes take walk-in dumps for $5-15 in the shoulder season.
There’s no free public dump in town and no overnight RV parking on city streets or at the local Walmart, which catches Texas travelers used to county-park free dumps and Walmart-friendly small towns. Plan to camp; the state park or a private lake park is the right answer. Hill Country RV at 1400 US-281 South handles repairs and parts and occasionally accommodates a quick dump for service customers.
Highway access is straightforward. US-281 north-south and TX-71 east-west are both four-lane divided through town and handle any rig. The 281/71 intersection south of town gets jammed at rush hour and is currently slated for a $243 million turbine interchange rebuild. HEB on US-281 has the largest RV-friendly grocery lot in town; stock up here before heading into the smaller Hill Country towns where the grocery selection drops fast. Fall and spring are prime; March-April bluebonnet weekends pack the state park, so reserve months out.
Staying a while? Our companion guide to RV parks in Marble Falls covers the Inks Lake loops, the lakeside private resorts, and the Highland Lakes touring routes in detail. The dump-side summary: use Inks Lake when you’re routing west or south, default to a private park in town when you need full hookups, and watch the calendar for bluebonnet weekends when reservations vanish.
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All Dump Stations Near Marble Falls
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sunset Point on Lake LBJ | 4.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Isles RV | 9.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Inks Lake State Park | 12.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Big Chief RV Resort | 15.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Pace Bend RV Park | 17.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pedernales Falls State Park | 18.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Idyll Glen RV Park | 20.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| La Hacienda RV Park | 23.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| KOA - Leander / NW Austin KOA Campground | 26.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dripping Springs Ranch Park (DSRP) | 27.4 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
Sunset Point on Lake LBJ
4.1 miTwin Isles RV
9.1 miInks Lake State Park
12.3 miBig Chief RV Resort
15.1 miPace Bend RV Park
17.7 miPedernales Falls State Park
18.7 miIdyll Glen RV Park
20.6 miLa Hacienda RV Park
23.4 miKOA - Leander / NW Austin KOA Campground
26.3 miDripping Springs Ranch Park (DSRP)
27.4 miTraveling to Marble Falls by RV
US-281 is the north-south spine and TX-71 the east-west route from Austin; both four-lane divided and friendly to any rig. From I-35 at Austin, TX-71 west covers the 50 miles to Marble Falls in about an hour off rush hour. From I-10 at Junction, US-281 east is the 90-mile route through Llano. RR-1431 from Cedar Park is the scenic alternative and works fine for most rigs but slows you down. Avoid the 281/71 intersection south of town between 4 and 6 p.m. and on Sunday evenings during prime camping season; the cloverleaf gets jammed and rebuilding it is the $243M project still in planning.
In town the layout is simple: US-281 runs north-south down the east side, TX-71 runs east-west across the south end, HEB sits at the south end on 281, and Hill Country RV is a little farther south at 1400 US-281. To reach Inks Lake from town, take TX-29 north to Burnet then west on Park Road 4; or take RR-1431 west from town and pick up the park road from there. The state park entrance is well signed off Park Road 4. Cell coverage is solid in town and along the highways; spotty out at the lake itself.
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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 Marble Falls, 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 Marble Falls
Marble Falls dump-cost picture: Inks Lake State Park dump is free for registered campers and $7/adult day-use for non-campers (you pay the standard Texas State Parks entry, you get the dump). Private RV park walk-in dumps in town typically run $5-15 per use when accepted. Texas state-park camping at Inks Lake runs $20-30/night for electric+water sites; private full-hookup lakeside parks like Sunset Point or Wake and Lake run $50-90/night depending on season and view. No free public dump in town.
Texas State Parks now offers an annual pass ($70) that waives the $7/adult day-use fee at every state park; if you camp or dump at Texas state parks more than 10 times a year the pass pays for itself. Propane in Marble Falls is competitive with statewide pricing. Fuel is self-service. Groceries at HEB run a touch cheaper than Hill Country averages because Austin-supply chains reach this far. Bluebonnet weekends see all the lakeside parks raise their rates 10-20%, and many add a 2- or 3-night minimum stay.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Marble Falls by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
38°F - 61°F
Crowds: Low
Inks Lake dump stays open year-round; expect quick stops except during rare Texas freeze events.
Spring
Mar - May
57°F - 80°F
Crowds: High
Bluebonnet weekends (mid-March to mid-April) pack the lake parks; dump lines longer than usual.
Summer
Jun - Aug
74°F - 96°F
Crowds: High
Hot and humid; Inks Lake dump runs steady through summer with morning lines.
Fall
Sep - Oct
55°F - 80°F
Crowds: High
October weekends pack Inks Lake; dump and water lines build by mid-morning.
Explore the Marble Falls Area
Use Inks Lake. It is the only meaningful public dump within easy reach, free for registered campers and $7 day-use for everyone else, and the same loop has potable water. The state park books months out for bluebonnet weekends in mid-March through mid-April; reserve early or come on a weekday. October-November is the local sweet spot for camping with mild days and cool nights. Constant-level lakes (LBJ, Marble Falls) stay full year-round; the upper-chain lakes (Buchanan, Travis) drop in drought, so lake-view sites at private parks like Sunset Point keep their view in any year.
HEB on US-281 South is the one-stop grocery, propane exchange, and pharmacy run; Walmart on TX-71 is the non-grocery backup. Skip the in-town Walmart for overnight; not allowed. Drop the trailer and day-trip to Longhorn Cavern, Enchanted Rock (rig-unfriendly), or Fredericksburg wine country in the tow vehicle. Watch May thunderstorms and rare winter ice storms; the highways close occasionally and Hill Country creeks flash-flood fast.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Marble Falls
Where is the closest RV dump station to Marble Falls, Texas?
The closest reliable public dump is at Inks Lake State Park, about 12 miles west of Marble Falls on Park Road 4. The dump station is on site at the campground; free for registered overnight campers, and open to day-use visitors with the standard Texas State Parks $7/adult entry fee. Private RV parks in town including Sunset Point on Lake LBJ and Wake and Lake RV Resort offer dump access to their paying guests, and sometimes accept walk-in dumps in the $5-15 range during shoulder seasons; call ahead to confirm.
Is there a free RV dump station in Marble Falls itself?
No free public dump exists in Marble Falls itself, which surprises Texas travelers used to county-park free dumps. The Inks Lake State Park dump is free for registered campers but requires the $7/adult day-use fee if you’re not camped there. Private RV parks may extend a small-fee dump to non-guests; that depends on the season and how busy they are. If you are dry-camping outside town and need a free option, you’ll likely have to drive to a more rural county park or push on toward Austin where some city RV park outlets offer dumps for a nominal fee.
Does Inks Lake State Park have a dump station and is it big-rig friendly?
Yes, Inks Lake State Park has an on-site dump station with potable water on the same loop. It handles rigs to about 40 feet without issue; the approach road is paved and the dump lane is wide enough for fifth wheels and Class A motorhomes. Free for registered campers; day-use non-campers pay the standard $7/adult Texas State Parks entry fee. The park itself sits on a constant-level lake with 30/50A electric loops, no full-hookup sites, swimming, hiking, and granite hills, making it the prime Hill Country dump-and-camp combo.
Where can I park my RV overnight in Marble Falls?
Not on city streets and not at the in-town Walmart; both are enforced no-overnight. Legitimate options include Inks Lake State Park 12 miles west, Sunset Point on Lake LBJ at 2322 N Wirtz Dam Road, Wake and Lake RV Resort (lakefront full-hookup), and Pecan Valley RV Park in town. All of the lakeside private parks are full-hookup and several are year-round, which matters because Texas Hill Country gets enough winter snowbirds to keep them open. We default to Inks Lake when bluebonnets are not in season and the private parks when we need full hookups or lake access.
When is the best time to visit Marble Falls in an RV?
October-November and March-April are the local sweet spots; mild days in the 70s and low 80s, cool nights, and either fall color or bluebonnet wildflowers. Mid-March to mid-April is bluebonnet weekend season and the state park books months in advance; reserve early or come on a weekday. Summer (June-September) is hot and humid with August highs near 99°F; doable with strong AC and shore power but rough at the no-hookup state-park loops. Winter is mild with the occasional freeze; rare ice storms can shut highways for a day or two but most weeks stay above freezing.
What’s the best highway route into Marble Falls with a big RV?
US-281 is the north-south spine and TX-71 is the east-west route from Austin; both are four-lane divided and handle any rig. From I-35 at Austin, take TX-71 west about 50 miles. From I-10 at Junction, take US-281 east about 90 miles. The intersection of 281 and 71 south of town gets jammed at rush hour and weekend evenings; Texas DOT has a $243 million turbine interchange rebuild proposed there. RR-1431 from Cedar Park is a scenic alternative but narrows in stretches; fine for most rigs but slower than 281.
Are there RV repair and propane services in Marble Falls?
Yes; Hill Country RV at 1400 US-281 South handles repairs and parts (M-F 8-5, Sat 9-12, closed Sundays). Propane refills are at multiple outlets along US-281 and TX-71, including hardware stores, fuel stations, and a couple of RV dealers that do tank fills rather than just exchanges. Hours tighten on Sundays so call ahead in the off-season. Larger box-store propane outlets in Burnet (20 miles north) or Cedar Park (35 miles east toward Austin) have more consistent hours if you need a weekend evening fill and can’t hit a Marble Falls outlet in time.
Does the Inks Lake dump station stay open year-round?
Yes; Inks Lake State Park is open year-round and the dump station follows the campground schedule. Rare Texas freeze events (the 2021 Big Freeze, the 2024 cold snap) can shut down water lines for a day or two when temperatures drop into the teens, but normal winter weather here stays well above freezing. Check the Texas Parks & Wildlife alerts page before showing up in a cold snap; closures are usually posted within hours. The dump itself rarely freezes since the sewer pipes are buried.
Can I dump tanks at a private RV park in Marble Falls if I am not a guest?
Sometimes; private parks like Sunset Point on Lake LBJ and Wake and Lake RV Resort prioritize their paying guests but may accept walk-in dumps for $5-15 during shoulder seasons. Don’t count on it during peak bluebonnet weekends (mid-March through April) or holiday weekends; the parks save their dump capacity for guests then. Hill Country RV on US-281 sometimes accommodates service customers for a quick dump as part of a repair visit. Calling ahead is the move; showing up unannounced on a Saturday in spring will get you turned away politely.
What about flash floods or storms when camping near Marble Falls?
Spring and fall thunderstorms are the main weather risk; the Texas Hill Country has a flash-flood-prone landscape with hard limestone runoff and creeks that swell fast. May is the wettest month and the historic flood months are May and October. The Highland Lakes themselves are dam-regulated so the constant-level lakes (LBJ, Marble Falls) stay stable; the upper-chain lakes (Buchanan, Travis) fluctuate with drought. Watch local forecasts and the LCRA river-stage gauges if camping near a Hill Country creek. Rare winter ice storms can close US-281 and TX-71 for a day or two.
What groceries and supply stops work well with an RV in Marble Falls?
HEB on US-281 South has the largest RV-friendly grocery lot in town and stocks groceries, propane exchanges, and a pharmacy under one roof; it’s the most reliable one-stop in town. Walmart Supercenter on TX-71 is the alternative for non-grocery basics but does not allow overnight RV parking. Stock up here before heading further into the smaller Hill Country towns where grocery selection drops fast. Fredericksburg 40 miles southwest has its own HEB and is the next-largest stop heading toward wine country. Ice and bagged firewood are easy at any of the major retailers in town.
Are there scenic drives or attractions near Marble Falls worth dropping the trailer for?
Yes; drop the trailer at Inks Lake State Park or your private park and tour by tow vehicle. Longhorn Cavern State Park 14 miles west has guided cavern tours; the Highland Lakes wine and brewery loop runs along RR-1431 toward Cedar Park; Enchanted Rock State Natural Area 30 miles southwest is a granite dome with hiking but has very limited RV parking, so leave the rig at camp. Fredericksburg 40 miles southwest is the heart of Hill Country wine country with Main Street shopping and German-Texas restaurants. Bluebonnet drives along TX-71 and US-281 in late March are a state-wide tradition.
Where can I fill the fresh tank in Marble Falls?
Inks Lake State Park has potable water at the dump-station loop; free for registered campers, included with the $7/adult day-use fee for non-campers. All the private RV parks in town (Sunset Point, Wake and Lake, Pecan Valley) fill for their guests. Some service stations on US-281 have hose spigots accessible with a fuel purchase; ask before assuming. Hill Country RV occasionally accommodates customers with a quick fresh fill during service visits. We routinely combine dump-and-fill at Inks Lake on the way out of the Hill Country, which keeps the workflow simple even when staying at a private park in town.
Where is the closest RV dump station to Marble Falls, Texas?
The closest reliable public dump is at Inks Lake State Park, about 12 miles west of Marble Falls on Park Road 4. The dump station is on site at the campground; free for registered overnight campers, and open to day-use visitors with the standard Texas State Parks $7/adult entry fee. Private RV parks in town including Sunset Point on Lake LBJ and Wake and Lake RV Resort offer dump access to their paying guests, and sometimes accept walk-in dumps in the $5-15 range during shoulder seasons; call ahead to confirm.
Is there a free RV dump station in Marble Falls itself?
No free public dump exists in Marble Falls itself, which surprises Texas travelers used to county-park free dumps. The Inks Lake State Park dump is free for registered campers but requires the $7/adult day-use fee if you’re not camped there. Private RV parks may extend a small-fee dump to non-guests; that depends on the season and how busy they are. If you are dry-camping outside town and need a free option, you’ll likely have to drive to a more rural county park or push on toward Austin where some city RV park outlets offer dumps for a nominal fee.
Does Inks Lake State Park have a dump station and is it big-rig friendly?
Yes, Inks Lake State Park has an on-site dump station with potable water on the same loop. It handles rigs to about 40 feet without issue; the approach road is paved and the dump lane is wide enough for fifth wheels and Class A motorhomes. Free for registered campers; day-use non-campers pay the standard $7/adult Texas State Parks entry fee. The park itself sits on a constant-level lake with 30/50A electric loops, no full-hookup sites, swimming, hiking, and granite hills, making it the prime Hill Country dump-and-camp combo.
Where can I park my RV overnight in Marble Falls?
Not on city streets and not at the in-town Walmart; both are enforced no-overnight. Legitimate options include Inks Lake State Park 12 miles west, Sunset Point on Lake LBJ at 2322 N Wirtz Dam Road, Wake and Lake RV Resort (lakefront full-hookup), and Pecan Valley RV Park in town. All of the lakeside private parks are full-hookup and several are year-round, which matters because Texas Hill Country gets enough winter snowbirds to keep them open. We default to Inks Lake when bluebonnets are not in season and the private parks when we need full hookups or lake access.
When is the best time to visit Marble Falls in an RV?
October-November and March-April are the local sweet spots; mild days in the 70s and low 80s, cool nights, and either fall color or bluebonnet wildflowers. Mid-March to mid-April is bluebonnet weekend season and the state park books months in advance; reserve early or come on a weekday. Summer (June-September) is hot and humid with August highs near 99°F; doable with strong AC and shore power but rough at the no-hookup state-park loops. Winter is mild with the occasional freeze; rare ice storms can shut highways for a day or two but most weeks stay above freezing.
What’s the best highway route into Marble Falls with a big RV?
US-281 is the north-south spine and TX-71 is the east-west route from Austin; both are four-lane divided and handle any rig. From I-35 at Austin, take TX-71 west about 50 miles. From I-10 at Junction, take US-281 east about 90 miles. The intersection of 281 and 71 south of town gets jammed at rush hour and weekend evenings; Texas DOT has a $243 million turbine interchange rebuild proposed there. RR-1431 from Cedar Park is a scenic alternative but narrows in stretches; fine for most rigs but slower than 281.
Are there RV repair and propane services in Marble Falls?
Yes; Hill Country RV at 1400 US-281 South handles repairs and parts (M-F 8-5, Sat 9-12, closed Sundays). Propane refills are at multiple outlets along US-281 and TX-71, including hardware stores, fuel stations, and a couple of RV dealers that do tank fills rather than just exchanges. Hours tighten on Sundays so call ahead in the off-season. Larger box-store propane outlets in Burnet (20 miles north) or Cedar Park (35 miles east toward Austin) have more consistent hours if you need a weekend evening fill and can’t hit a Marble Falls outlet in time.
Does the Inks Lake dump station stay open year-round?
Yes; Inks Lake State Park is open year-round and the dump station follows the campground schedule. Rare Texas freeze events (the 2021 Big Freeze, the 2024 cold snap) can shut down water lines for a day or two when temperatures drop into the teens, but normal winter weather here stays well above freezing. Check the Texas Parks & Wildlife alerts page before showing up in a cold snap; closures are usually posted within hours. The dump itself rarely freezes since the sewer pipes are buried.
Can I dump tanks at a private RV park in Marble Falls if I am not a guest?
Sometimes; private parks like Sunset Point on Lake LBJ and Wake and Lake RV Resort prioritize their paying guests but may accept walk-in dumps for $5-15 during shoulder seasons. Don’t count on it during peak bluebonnet weekends (mid-March through April) or holiday weekends; the parks save their dump capacity for guests then. Hill Country RV on US-281 sometimes accommodates service customers for a quick dump as part of a repair visit. Calling ahead is the move; showing up unannounced on a Saturday in spring will get you turned away politely.
What about flash floods or storms when camping near Marble Falls?
Spring and fall thunderstorms are the main weather risk; the Texas Hill Country has a flash-flood-prone landscape with hard limestone runoff and creeks that swell fast. May is the wettest month and the historic flood months are May and October. The Highland Lakes themselves are dam-regulated so the constant-level lakes (LBJ, Marble Falls) stay stable; the upper-chain lakes (Buchanan, Travis) fluctuate with drought. Watch local forecasts and the LCRA river-stage gauges if camping near a Hill Country creek. Rare winter ice storms can close US-281 and TX-71 for a day or two.
What groceries and supply stops work well with an RV in Marble Falls?
HEB on US-281 South has the largest RV-friendly grocery lot in town and stocks groceries, propane exchanges, and a pharmacy under one roof; it’s the most reliable one-stop in town. Walmart Supercenter on TX-71 is the alternative for non-grocery basics but does not allow overnight RV parking. Stock up here before heading further into the smaller Hill Country towns where grocery selection drops fast. Fredericksburg 40 miles southwest has its own HEB and is the next-largest stop heading toward wine country. Ice and bagged firewood are easy at any of the major retailers in town.
Are there scenic drives or attractions near Marble Falls worth dropping the trailer for?
Yes; drop the trailer at Inks Lake State Park or your private park and tour by tow vehicle. Longhorn Cavern State Park 14 miles west has guided cavern tours; the Highland Lakes wine and brewery loop runs along RR-1431 toward Cedar Park; Enchanted Rock State Natural Area 30 miles southwest is a granite dome with hiking but has very limited RV parking, so leave the rig at camp. Fredericksburg 40 miles southwest is the heart of Hill Country wine country with Main Street shopping and German-Texas restaurants. Bluebonnet drives along TX-71 and US-281 in late March are a state-wide tradition.
Where can I fill the fresh tank in Marble Falls?
Inks Lake State Park has potable water at the dump-station loop; free for registered campers, included with the $7/adult day-use fee for non-campers. All the private RV parks in town (Sunset Point, Wake and Lake, Pecan Valley) fill for their guests. Some service stations on US-281 have hose spigots accessible with a fuel purchase; ask before assuming. Hill Country RV occasionally accommodates customers with a quick fresh fill during service visits. We routinely combine dump-and-fill at Inks Lake on the way out of the Hill Country, which keeps the workflow simple even when staying at a private park in town.
Are there free dump stations in Marble Falls?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Marble Falls.
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