RV Parks In Medina, Texas
29.7966° N, 99.2464° W
Quick Overview
Medina sits right in the middle of the Texas Hill Country, a tiny apple-growing town at the junction of State Highway 16 and Farm Road 337 in Bandera County. It's about 12 miles east of Bandera and 15 miles south of Kerrville, and while the town itself is small, the RV camping options fanning out around it are some of the best in central Texas. We come here for the limestone canyons, the spring-fed rivers, and the wide-open ranch country, and we stay at a genuine mix of public parks and private resorts.
The public side is anchored by two very different Texas Parks & Wildlife properties and one excellent city park. Hill Country State Natural Area is 5,369 acres of rugged backcountry southwest of Bandera, built for horses, hikers, and mountain bikers. It's primitive: walk-in and equestrian sites only, no hookups, and no potable water, so it's a dry-camping adventure, not a full-hookup weekend. About an hour east near Spring Branch, Guadalupe River State Park is the opposite kind of trip, with electric sites at Turkey Sink (50-amp) and Cedar Sage (30-amp) and four miles of cypress-lined river. Closer and easier, Kerrville-Schreiner Park is a 517-acre city park on the Guadalupe with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites, showers, laundry, and a dump station.
The private side is where you go for full hookups and creature comforts. Around Medina Lake near Lakehills, Thousand Trails Medina Lake runs a big lakeside resort with 387 sites, pull-throughs, and 30/50-amp full hookups, and Lake Medina RV Resort offers a smaller full-hookup park with a pool and pickleball. Over in Bandera, the Cowboy Capital of the World, Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort has 149 full-hookup sites on the Medina River within walking distance of Main Street, and Skyline Ranch RV Park handles rigs up to 70 feet on shaded gravel sites near the river. Between the public and private options, most rigs can find a good fit, but the big pull-throughs and 50-amp shade sites are on the private side. That matters in a Texas summer, when the heat climbs into the low 90s and you'll want AC and a hookup you can count on. Below we break down each campground, how to reserve, what it costs, and when to come.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Medina
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All Dump Stations Near Medina
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hill Country RV Resort And Event Center | 3.6 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bandera Crossing Riverfront RV Park | 8.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Skyline Ranch RV Park | 10.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bandera RV Park | 10.8 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Triple T RV Resort | 13.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Old River Road RV Resort Kerrville, Tx | 15.0 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Serenity Hills | 15.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Guadalupe Keys RV Resort | 16.6 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Happy Days RV Park | 16.7 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Medina River RV Park And Camping | 18.8 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
Hill Country RV Resort And Event Center
3.6 miBandera Crossing Riverfront RV Park
8.1 miSkyline Ranch RV Park
10.2 miBandera RV Park
10.8 miTriple T RV Resort
13.3 miOld River Road RV Resort Kerrville, Tx
15.0 miSerenity Hills
15.6 miGuadalupe Keys RV Resort
16.6 miHappy Days RV Park
16.7 miMedina River RV Park And Camping
18.8 miTraveling to Medina by RV
Getting to Medina takes a little Hill Country navigation, and the roads matter for a big rig. Medina sits at the SR-16 and FM-337 junction. From Kerrville it's about 15 miles south on TX-16; from Bandera it's about 12 miles east on FM-337. The nearest interstate is I-10 at Kerrville, and San Antonio's freeways are roughly 50 miles southeast.
Here's the honest routing warning: SR-16 south of Medina climbs a steep hill with tight switchbacks that isn't safe for big rigs, and FM-337 west toward Vanderpool (the famous Three Sisters drive) is a beautiful but very curvy canyon road better left to cars and small trailers. If you're pulling a long fifth-wheel or driving a big motorhome toward the Medina Lake and Bandera parks, route via TX-173 and TX-16 to FM-1283 instead, which has fewer grade changes and easier turns. For fly-and-rent trips, San Antonio International is the closest major airport, with plenty of RV rental options in the metro. Fuel, diesel, and full groceries are in Bandera and Kerrville; Medina itself has only a small store, so top off before you get out to the primitive spots.
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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 Medina, 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 Medina
Camping around Medina splits cleanly into public value and private comfort. The public parks are the budget play. Guadalupe River State Park starts around $20 a night for an electric site (with a two-night minimum on many dates) plus the state park day-use fee, and Kerrville-Schreiner Park runs roughly $30 to $45 for hookup sites, which is a strong deal for a full-hookup riverside spot managed by the city. Hill Country State Natural Area is cheapest of all as primitive camping, but you're trading price for no water and no hookups.
The private resorts cost more and deliver more. Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort runs about $45 to $60 a night for full-hookup river sites within walking distance of Main Street, and the Medina Lake resorts (Thousand Trails and Lake Medina RV Resort) land in a similar range with pools, hot tubs, and sport courts. Expect to pay a premium on weekends and during spring wildflower season and fall events. Our honest take: for a quick riverside weekend the public parks are the better value, but if you're staying a week, want 50-amp for the AC, or need a big pull-through, the private parks earn their higher nightly rate. Book direct with the private parks to skip third-party fees.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Medina by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
41°F - 59°F
Crowds: Low
Mild and quiet. Most private parks stay open year-round; the state parks run through winter too. Hard freezes are brief, so full-hookup sites are usable. A good time for cheap weekday rates and easy state-park reservations.
Spring
Mar - May
54°F - 78°F
Crowds: High
Prime season. Wildflowers peak in March and April and the rivers run. Book Guadalupe River State Park five months out; the private Medina Lake and Bandera resorts fill on weekends.
Summer
Jun - Aug
71°F - 92°F
Crowds: High
Hot and humid, low 90s in July and August. You'll want 50-amp for AC, so lean toward the private full-hookup parks. River tubing near Bandera and Guadalupe River State Park is at its busiest; reserve early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
56°F - 80°F
Crowds: High
The other sweet spot and the wettest stretch. Warm days, cool nights, apple season in Medina, and Hill Country events. Weekends book up; watch low-water crossings after rain.
Explore the Medina Area
A few things we've learned camping this pocket of the Hill Country. First, the state parks book on a strict schedule: reserve Guadalupe River State Park and Hill Country State Natural Area exactly five months out at 8 a.m. through texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com. Guadalupe River fills fast on weekends and often hits capacity, so set a reminder for the day your window opens.
Second, respect the roads. Do not take a big rig up SR-16 south of Medina; use TX-173 and FM-1283 to reach the lake and Bandera parks. Third, if you camp at Hill Country State Natural Area, remember there's no potable water and no hookups anywhere on the property, so haul every gallon you'll need and plan for genuinely dry, primitive sites. Fourth, for full hookups and shade in the summer heat, the private Medina Lake resorts and the Bandera river parks are the comfortable call, while Kerrville-Schreiner Park is the best public full-hookup value. Time your trip for spring wildflower season in March and April or the mild fall from September through November; summer weekends are hot, humid, and packed on the rivers. And keep an eye on low-water crossings after rain, because both the Medina and Guadalupe flash-flood. When you need to empty tanks, the developed parks all have on-site dump stations.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Medina
What are the best RV parks near Medina, TX?
It depends on what you want. For full hookups and resort amenities, Thousand Trails Medina Lake and Lake Medina RV Resort near Lakehills, plus Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort and Skyline Ranch RV Park in Bandera, are the top private picks. For public value, Kerrville-Schreiner Park offers 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites on the Guadalupe River, and Guadalupe River State Park about an hour east has electric sites. If you want rugged, horse-friendly primitive camping, Hill Country State Natural Area is the standout. We'd send most RVers with big rigs to the private lake and river resorts, and budget-minded folks to Kerrville-Schreiner.
Do RV parks near Medina have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, most of the private parks do. Thousand Trails Medina Lake has 220 full-hookup sites out of 387 total, with 30/50-amp service. Lake Medina RV Resort, Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort (149 full-hookup sites), and Skyline Ranch RV Park all offer full hookups with 50-amp. On the public side, Kerrville-Schreiner Park has 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites. Note the exceptions: Guadalupe River State Park offers water and electric but no sewer at the sites (it has an on-site dump station), and Hill Country State Natural Area is primitive with no hookups and no potable water at all.
How much does RV camping cost near Medina, TX?
Public parks are the value play. Guadalupe River State Park electric sites start around $20 a night plus the day-use fee, and Kerrville-Schreiner Park runs roughly $30 to $45 for full-hookup sites. Private resorts cost more: Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort is about $45 to $60 a night for a full-hookup river site, and the Medina Lake resorts land in a similar range with pools and sport courts. Expect weekend and peak-season premiums in spring and fall. Booking direct with the private parks avoids third-party reservation fees.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Medina?
For Texas state parks like Guadalupe River State Park and Hill Country State Natural Area, the reservation window opens exactly five months in advance at 8 a.m. through texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com, and popular summer and spring weekends go quickly, so book the moment your window opens. Kerrville-Schreiner Park is reserved through the City of Kerrville Parks and Recreation or by calling (830) 257-7300. The private resorts (Thousand Trails, Lake Medina RV Resort, Pioneer River Resort, Skyline Ranch) take direct reservations online or by phone; for holiday and event weekends, a month or more ahead is smart.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Medina, TX?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots. March and April bring peak Hill Country wildflowers and comfortable temperatures, while September through November offers warm days, cool nights, apple season in Medina, and lots of local events. Summer is hot and humid with highs in the low 90s, so you'll want 50-amp service for the AC and a shaded site; it's also the busiest river-tubing season near Bandera. Winter is mild and quiet, with easy state-park reservations and low weekday rates, though nights get chilly. We plan our trips for late spring or early fall when we can.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp near Medina?
Yes, but pick the right park and route carefully. Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort handles rigs up to 60 feet, and Skyline Ranch RV Park takes rigs up to 70 feet, both with pull-through and full-hookup options. Thousand Trails Medina Lake has 45 pull-throughs among its 387 sites. The catch is the roads: do not take a big rig up SR-16 south of Medina (steep hill, tight switchbacks) or the curvy FM-337 Three Sisters drive. Route large rigs via TX-173 and FM-1283 to reach the Medina Lake and Bandera parks instead.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) RV options near Medina?
Not really. This part of the Hill Country is mostly private ranch land and small state holdings, so dispersed boondocking is essentially nonexistent. There's no developed free camping right at Medina. The closest thing to primitive camping is Hill Country State Natural Area, but even that is paid and reservation-based (walk-in and equestrian sites, no hookups, no potable water). If you're used to free BLM or national-forest dispersed camping out West, plan instead on established parks here, either the public state and city parks or the private resorts.
What is there to do near Medina while RV camping?
Plenty. Hill Country State Natural Area has 40-plus miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding, with swimming holes on West Verde Creek. Bandera, the Cowboy Capital of the World, offers honky-tonks, dude ranches, rodeos, and Medina River tubing just 12 miles east. Medina Lake near Lakehills is popular for boating and fishing. Guadalupe River State Park has four miles of river for swimming and paddling. And the FM-337 Three Sisters drive out of Medina is one of the most famous scenic routes in Texas, best enjoyed in a car or on a motorcycle rather than a big rig.
Is Hill Country State Natural Area good for RV camping?
Only if you're set up for primitive, dry camping. Hill Country State Natural Area is 5,369 acres of rugged backcountry built around horses, hikers, and mountain bikers. Camping is walk-in and equestrian only: there are no RV hookups, and, importantly, no potable water anywhere on the property, so you must haul all your own. There's an equestrian camp with a barn and nine stalls if you're bringing horses (current negative Coggins required). It's a memorable spot for self-contained rigs and tent-style adventures, but if you need electric, water, or sewer, choose Kerrville-Schreiner Park or one of the private resorts instead.
Which public park is the best value near Medina?
For full hookups, Kerrville-Schreiner Park is the standout public value. It's a 517-acre city park on the Guadalupe River about 15 miles north of Medina, with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites on the Riverside, plus water-and-electric and full-hookup sites on the Hillside. Rates run roughly $30 to $45 for hookup sites, and you get drinking water, flush toilets, showers, laundry, and an on-site dump station. Guadalupe River State Park is cheaper still (electric sites from about $20) but has no sewer at the sites and is farther east near Spring Branch. Between the two, Kerrville-Schreiner wins on convenience and hookups.
Are the RV parks near Medina open year-round?
Most of the private parks are. Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort operates year-round, and the Medina Lake resorts and Skyline Ranch generally stay open through the seasons, since Hill Country winters are mild with only brief freezes. The Texas state parks (Guadalupe River State Park) and Kerrville-Schreiner Park also operate through winter. Do note that Thousand Trails Medina Lake enforces a 14-day maximum stay from April 15 to September 15. Winter is actually a pleasant, quiet time to camp here, with low crowds, easy reservations, and daytime highs in the upper 50s, though you'll want a heated water hose for the occasional cold snap.
Can I camp on Medina Lake in an RV?
Yes. Medina Lake, a large Hill Country reservoir near Lakehills about 20 minutes southeast of Medina, is ringed by private RV resorts. Thousand Trails Medina Lake is the big one, with 387 sites, 45 pull-throughs, 220 full hookups, and 30/50-amp service, plus a pool, hot tub, sport court, and playground. Lake Medina RV Resort is a smaller full-hookup option with similar amenities. Both put you close to boating and fishing (bass and catfish are the local catch). Reserve direct; Thousand Trails is membership-oriented, and both parks get busy on summer weekends, so book ahead.
What is the weather like for camping near Medina, TX?
Medina has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers and mild winters. July and August highs run into the low 90s (around 92°F) with warm, humid nights near 71°F, so summer camping calls for 50-amp service and AC. Winters are mild, with January highs near 59°F and lows around 41°F; hard freezes are brief and snow is rare. Spring (highs in the upper 70s) and fall (around 80°F) are the most comfortable seasons. Fall is also the wettest stretch, and both the Medina and Guadalupe rivers can flash-flood after heavy rain, so watch low-water crossings.
Do I need a Texas State Parks Pass to camp near Medina?
For the Texas Parks & Wildlife properties, yes, effectively. At Guadalupe River State Park and Hill Country State Natural Area, everyone pays a day-use entry fee on top of the camping fee unless you hold a Texas State Parks Pass, which waives the entry fee for you and your passengers for a year. If you plan several state-park stays in a year, the pass usually pays for itself. The pass does not apply to Kerrville-Schreiner Park (a city park) or to the private resorts around Medina Lake and Bandera, which set their own rates. Reserve state park sites at texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com.
What are the best RV parks near Medina, TX?
It depends on what you want. For full hookups and resort amenities, Thousand Trails Medina Lake and Lake Medina RV Resort near Lakehills, plus Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort and Skyline Ranch RV Park in Bandera, are the top private picks. For public value, Kerrville-Schreiner Park offers 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites on the Guadalupe River, and Guadalupe River State Park about an hour east has electric sites. If you want rugged, horse-friendly primitive camping, Hill Country State Natural Area is the standout. We'd send most RVers with big rigs to the private lake and river resorts, and budget-minded folks to Kerrville-Schreiner.
Do RV parks near Medina have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?
Yes, most of the private parks do. Thousand Trails Medina Lake has 220 full-hookup sites out of 387 total, with 30/50-amp service. Lake Medina RV Resort, Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort (149 full-hookup sites), and Skyline Ranch RV Park all offer full hookups with 50-amp. On the public side, Kerrville-Schreiner Park has 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites. Note the exceptions: Guadalupe River State Park offers water and electric but no sewer at the sites (it has an on-site dump station), and Hill Country State Natural Area is primitive with no hookups and no potable water at all.
How much does RV camping cost near Medina, TX?
Public parks are the value play. Guadalupe River State Park electric sites start around $20 a night plus the day-use fee, and Kerrville-Schreiner Park runs roughly $30 to $45 for full-hookup sites. Private resorts cost more: Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort is about $45 to $60 a night for a full-hookup river site, and the Medina Lake resorts land in a similar range with pools and sport courts. Expect weekend and peak-season premiums in spring and fall. Booking direct with the private parks avoids third-party reservation fees.
How far ahead do I need to reserve an RV site near Medina?
For Texas state parks like Guadalupe River State Park and Hill Country State Natural Area, the reservation window opens exactly five months in advance at 8 a.m. through texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com, and popular summer and spring weekends go quickly, so book the moment your window opens. Kerrville-Schreiner Park is reserved through the City of Kerrville Parks and Recreation or by calling (830) 257-7300. The private resorts (Thousand Trails, Lake Medina RV Resort, Pioneer River Resort, Skyline Ranch) take direct reservations online or by phone; for holiday and event weekends, a month or more ahead is smart.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Medina, TX?
Spring and fall are the sweet spots. March and April bring peak Hill Country wildflowers and comfortable temperatures, while September through November offers warm days, cool nights, apple season in Medina, and lots of local events. Summer is hot and humid with highs in the low 90s, so you'll want 50-amp service for the AC and a shaded site; it's also the busiest river-tubing season near Bandera. Winter is mild and quiet, with easy state-park reservations and low weekday rates, though nights get chilly. We plan our trips for late spring or early fall when we can.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp near Medina?
Yes, but pick the right park and route carefully. Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort handles rigs up to 60 feet, and Skyline Ranch RV Park takes rigs up to 70 feet, both with pull-through and full-hookup options. Thousand Trails Medina Lake has 45 pull-throughs among its 387 sites. The catch is the roads: do not take a big rig up SR-16 south of Medina (steep hill, tight switchbacks) or the curvy FM-337 Three Sisters drive. Route large rigs via TX-173 and FM-1283 to reach the Medina Lake and Bandera parks instead.
Are there free or first-come (boondocking) RV options near Medina?
Not really. This part of the Hill Country is mostly private ranch land and small state holdings, so dispersed boondocking is essentially nonexistent. There's no developed free camping right at Medina. The closest thing to primitive camping is Hill Country State Natural Area, but even that is paid and reservation-based (walk-in and equestrian sites, no hookups, no potable water). If you're used to free BLM or national-forest dispersed camping out West, plan instead on established parks here, either the public state and city parks or the private resorts.
What is there to do near Medina while RV camping?
Plenty. Hill Country State Natural Area has 40-plus miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking, and horseback riding, with swimming holes on West Verde Creek. Bandera, the Cowboy Capital of the World, offers honky-tonks, dude ranches, rodeos, and Medina River tubing just 12 miles east. Medina Lake near Lakehills is popular for boating and fishing. Guadalupe River State Park has four miles of river for swimming and paddling. And the FM-337 Three Sisters drive out of Medina is one of the most famous scenic routes in Texas, best enjoyed in a car or on a motorcycle rather than a big rig.
Is Hill Country State Natural Area good for RV camping?
Only if you're set up for primitive, dry camping. Hill Country State Natural Area is 5,369 acres of rugged backcountry built around horses, hikers, and mountain bikers. Camping is walk-in and equestrian only: there are no RV hookups, and, importantly, no potable water anywhere on the property, so you must haul all your own. There's an equestrian camp with a barn and nine stalls if you're bringing horses (current negative Coggins required). It's a memorable spot for self-contained rigs and tent-style adventures, but if you need electric, water, or sewer, choose Kerrville-Schreiner Park or one of the private resorts instead.
Which public park is the best value near Medina?
For full hookups, Kerrville-Schreiner Park is the standout public value. It's a 517-acre city park on the Guadalupe River about 15 miles north of Medina, with 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites on the Riverside, plus water-and-electric and full-hookup sites on the Hillside. Rates run roughly $30 to $45 for hookup sites, and you get drinking water, flush toilets, showers, laundry, and an on-site dump station. Guadalupe River State Park is cheaper still (electric sites from about $20) but has no sewer at the sites and is farther east near Spring Branch. Between the two, Kerrville-Schreiner wins on convenience and hookups.
Are the RV parks near Medina open year-round?
Most of the private parks are. Bandera Pioneer RV River Resort operates year-round, and the Medina Lake resorts and Skyline Ranch generally stay open through the seasons, since Hill Country winters are mild with only brief freezes. The Texas state parks (Guadalupe River State Park) and Kerrville-Schreiner Park also operate through winter. Do note that Thousand Trails Medina Lake enforces a 14-day maximum stay from April 15 to September 15. Winter is actually a pleasant, quiet time to camp here, with low crowds, easy reservations, and daytime highs in the upper 50s, though you'll want a heated water hose for the occasional cold snap.
Can I camp on Medina Lake in an RV?
Yes. Medina Lake, a large Hill Country reservoir near Lakehills about 20 minutes southeast of Medina, is ringed by private RV resorts. Thousand Trails Medina Lake is the big one, with 387 sites, 45 pull-throughs, 220 full hookups, and 30/50-amp service, plus a pool, hot tub, sport court, and playground. Lake Medina RV Resort is a smaller full-hookup option with similar amenities. Both put you close to boating and fishing (bass and catfish are the local catch). Reserve direct; Thousand Trails is membership-oriented, and both parks get busy on summer weekends, so book ahead.
What is the weather like for camping near Medina, TX?
Medina has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers and mild winters. July and August highs run into the low 90s (around 92°F) with warm, humid nights near 71°F, so summer camping calls for 50-amp service and AC. Winters are mild, with January highs near 59°F and lows around 41°F; hard freezes are brief and snow is rare. Spring (highs in the upper 70s) and fall (around 80°F) are the most comfortable seasons. Fall is also the wettest stretch, and both the Medina and Guadalupe rivers can flash-flood after heavy rain, so watch low-water crossings.
Do I need a Texas State Parks Pass to camp near Medina?
For the Texas Parks & Wildlife properties, yes, effectively. At Guadalupe River State Park and Hill Country State Natural Area, everyone pays a day-use entry fee on top of the camping fee unless you hold a Texas State Parks Pass, which waives the entry fee for you and your passengers for a year. If you plan several state-park stays in a year, the pass usually pays for itself. The pass does not apply to Kerrville-Schreiner Park (a city park) or to the private resorts around Medina Lake and Bandera, which set their own rates. Reserve state park sites at texasstateparks.reserveamerica.com.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Medina?
The highest-rated station is Sionito R.V. Park with a rating of 4.6/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Medina?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Medina.
All Dump Stations Near Medina (69)
RV ParkHill Country RV Resort And Event Center
RV ParkBandera Crossing Riverfront RV Park
RV ParkSkyline Ranch RV Park
RV ParkBandera RV Park
RV ParkTriple T RV Resort
RV ParkOld River Road RV Resort Kerrville, Tx
RV ParkSerenity Hills
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