RV Parks In Amelia Court House, Virginia
37.3429° N, 77.9806° W
Quick Overview
Amelia Court House is the small, historic county seat of Amelia County, a courthouse village set in rolling central Virginia Piedmont farmland about 40 minutes southwest of Richmond. For RVers the honest reality is that the village itself has no campground, so planning a stay here means picking a base nearby and using good highways to day-trip in. That is not a knock; it is a genuinely rewarding Civil War and Piedmont-country destination, but you camp at a state park or a metro RV park rather than in the village.
The closest and best public option is Bear Creek Lake State Park, about 20 miles west near Cumberland, with water and electric campsites in the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops set in the Cumberland State Forest. It runs roughly $35 a night for Virginia residents and $40 for non-residents, reserved online through the Virginia State Parks system, and it has a campground dump station on-site. Note the tradeoff up front: there are no sewer hookups, and the sites top out around 35 feet, so it suits mid-size rigs best. For a larger campground with more big-rig room, Pocahontas State Park is about 40 minutes northeast toward Richmond, and the Richmond metro holds the full-hookup private parks the rural area lacks.
So the public-versus-private picture is clear: if you want lakeside scenery and a quiet forest setting, base at Bear Creek Lake and plan around water-and-electric sites; if you need full hookups, 50-amp power, and a big-rig pull-through, look to Pocahontas or a private park in the Richmond metro and drive the 40 minutes out on US-360. Either way you get the same easy, gentle Piedmont driving, since the roads here are good with no mountain grades or low bridges.
The main planning wrinkle is the season. Bear Creek Lake camping is seasonal and its water and electric sites are popular, so verify dates in the off-season and reserve weekends ahead in spring and fall. Those shoulder seasons are also the best weather: spring brings dogwood and redbud across the Piedmont, and fall delivers crisp days and strong foliage. Below we cover the campgrounds, what a night costs, when to book, and the Lee's Retreat history that makes Amelia Court House worth building a stay around.
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All Dump Stations Near Amelia Court House
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amelia Family Campground | 5.4 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Free |
| Cozy Acres Family Campground | 13.7 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Forestry Department | 16.0 mi | 3.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Seay Park | 18.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Twin Lakes State Park | 20.1 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sandy River Outdoor Adventure | 20.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bear Creek Lake State Park | 20.7 mi | 4.7 | RV Park | Varies |
| Cartersville Estates | 21.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Whippernock Campground | 22.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Campsite | 22.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Amelia Family Campground
5.4 miCozy Acres Family Campground
13.7 miForestry Department
16.0 miSeay Park
18.5 miTwin Lakes State Park
20.1 miSandy River Outdoor Adventure
20.2 miBear Creek Lake State Park
20.7 miCartersville Estates
21.3 miWhippernock Campground
22.4 miCampsite
22.4 miTraveling to Amelia Court House by RV
US-360 is the road you will rely on most. It cuts east and west through Amelia Court House and runs northeast toward Richmond, the regional hub about 40 miles away, where you will find full RV repair, propane, big-box shopping, and the private full-hookup parks. Virginia Route 38 fills in local connections, and Interstate 85 sits roughly 20 miles south for travelers bound for the North Carolina line. The rolling Piedmont terrain is gentle, the road surfaces are good, and there are no notable low bridges or weight limits, so the driving is comfortable even for larger rigs.
To reach the closest campground, Bear Creek Lake State Park is about 20 miles west near Cumberland on good county roads; Pocahontas State Park is about 40 minutes northeast in Chesterfield. Because the area is rural and conveniences are scattered, we top off fuel, water, and propane in the Richmond metro rather than hunting for them out among the farms, and we stage the rig at a park and day-trip the historic village in a tow vehicle. Richmond International Airport, about an hour northeast, is the nearest hub for a fly-and-rent trip, and I-95 through Richmond connects the area to the wider East Coast corridor.
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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 Amelia Court House, Virginia, 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 Amelia Court House
Camping near Amelia Court House is reasonably priced, especially on the public side. Bear Creek Lake State Park runs about $35 a night for Virginia residents and $40 for non-residents on its water-and-electric sites, with standard non-hookup sites in the $25 to $35 range depending on whether you want a water view. That buys a quiet lakeside forest setting, though no sewer, so factor in the on-site dump station rather than a full hookup. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond prices similarly for its electric and water sites.
If you need full hookups and 50-amp power, the Richmond-metro private parks are the option, and they generally land in the $$ to $$$ range, roughly $40 to $70 a night, trading the lakeside quiet for sewer connections, big-rig pull-throughs, and metro convenience. A budget-minded plan is to book a water-and-electric state park site, dump at the campground station on your way out, and pair your camping with a single Richmond supply run so one loop covers groceries, fuel, and propane. Admission is free at the Amelia historic district and modest at the national park sites, so the history loop itself costs little beyond the driving.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Amelia Court House
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Best Time to Visit Amelia Court House by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
29F - 48F
Crowds: Low
Cool and generally mild, but the Bear Creek Lake campground season winds down; confirm hookups and open dates before a cold-month trip, or base at a year-round Richmond private park.
Spring
Mar - May
46F - 70F
Crowds: Medium
Dogwood and redbud season across the Piedmont; excellent weather and the state park campground reopens. Reserve Bear Creek Lake weekends ahead as sites fill.
Summer
Jun - Aug
67F - 88F
Crowds: High
Warm and humid with afternoon storms; the Bear Creek Lake swimming beach is a draw. Full hookups help run the AC, so many big rigs choose Pocahontas or a Richmond park.
Fall
Sep - Oct
46F - 71F
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days and strong foliage; a favorite time to pair the Lee's Retreat history with cool-weather hiking. Book weekends ahead, midweek is easy.
Explore the Amelia Court House Area
The key move here is choosing your base by rig and priorities. If you have a mid-size rig and want scenery, Bear Creek Lake State Park is our pick: quiet, lakeside, and set in the Cumberland State Forest with swimming, fishing, and trails right outside the door. Just remember its sites are water and electric only with no sewer, and they top out around 35 feet, so plan your dump around the campground station and confirm your length fits before booking. If you run a big fifth wheel or want full hookups, base at Pocahontas State Park or a Richmond private park instead and accept the 40-minute drive to the village.
Lean into the history, because it is the reason to come. Amelia Court House is where General Lee's retreating army concentrated in April 1865 on the road to Appomattox, and the courthouse district still carries markers and a strong sense of that final chapter. Pair it with a drive west to Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the site of the surrender, for a memorable Lee's Retreat loop, and use Richmond, 40 minutes northeast, for its own deep Civil War sites, the James River, museums, and breweries.
On timing, aim for April through June or September through October for the best weather and color, and reserve Bear Creek Lake weekends ahead since the small park fills. Stock up on groceries, propane, and anything RV-specific in Richmond before you settle in, because the village itself keeps very limited services and the nearest full-service RV shop is back in the city. In the off-season, always confirm the state park campground is actually open before you point the rig that way.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Amelia Court House
Where should I camp near Amelia Court House, Virginia?
The village itself has no campground, so you base nearby and day-trip in. The closest and best public option is Bear Creek Lake State Park, about 20 miles west near Cumberland, with water and electric sites in a quiet forest-and-lake setting. For a larger campground with more big-rig room, Pocahontas State Park is about 40 minutes northeast toward Richmond. If you need full hookups with sewer and 50-amp power, the Richmond metro holds the private RV parks the rural area lacks. Match your choice to your rig: mid-size rigs do great at Bear Creek Lake, while big fifth wheels do better at Pocahontas or a Richmond private park.
Does Bear Creek Lake State Park have full hookups?
Not quite. Bear Creek Lake State Park offers water and electric hookups but no sewer connections at its campsites, which are spread across the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops. Several loops accommodate rigs up to 35 feet, while others are sized for smaller pop-ups and trailers up to 20 feet, so confirm your length when you reserve. The campground does have a dump station on-site, so you camp on water and electric and empty tanks on your way out. If you specifically need a full-hookup, sewer-at-the-site experience for a big rig, look to Pocahontas State Park or a private park in the Richmond metro instead.
How much does it cost to camp near Amelia Court House?
Public camping is the affordable route. Bear Creek Lake State Park runs about $35 a night for Virginia residents and $40 for non-residents on its water-and-electric sites, with standard non-hookup sites in the $25 to $35 range depending on the view. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond prices similarly for electric and water sites. If you need full hookups and 50-amp power, the Richmond-metro private parks generally run $40 to $70 a night, trading the lakeside quiet for sewer and big-rig convenience. A budget plan is to book a state park water-and-electric site, use the campground dump station, and pair camping with one Richmond supply run for groceries, fuel, and propane.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite near Amelia Court House?
For Bear Creek Lake State Park, reserve weekends ahead in spring and fall, since it is a small park and its water-and-electric sites are popular; booking is online through the Virginia State Parks system, with campsite-specific reservations in the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond is larger but also fills on peak weekends. Richmond-metro private parks usually have more flexibility on shorter notice. Midweek and the cooler months are the easiest times to find space anywhere in the area. If you want a specific lakeside or up-to-35-foot site at Bear Creek, earlier is definitely better, especially for the pretty spring and fall weekends.
When is the best time to camp near Amelia Court House?
April through June and September through October are the sweet spots. Spring brings dogwood and redbud color across the Piedmont with excellent weather, and fall delivers crisp days and strong foliage that pair perfectly with the Civil War history. Both are ideal for hiking at Bear Creek Lake and touring the Lee's Retreat sites. Summer is warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, though the Bear Creek swim beach is a nice relief and full hookups help run the AC. Winter is cool and generally mild, but the state park camping season winds down, so verify open dates or base at a year-round Richmond private park for a cold-month visit.
Can big rigs camp near Amelia Court House?
Yes, though with some planning. The driving itself is easy: gentle rolling Piedmont with good road surfaces and no mountain grades or notable low bridges, so a large rig travels comfortably on US-360 and the county roads. The catch is hookups. Bear Creek Lake State Park tops out around 35-foot sites with water and electric only, so a big 40-foot fifth wheel needing full hookups does better at Pocahontas State Park, which has larger sites, or at a Richmond-metro private park with sewer and 50-amp pull-throughs. Decide based on your length and hookup needs, then use the good highways to day-trip the historic village in your tow vehicle.
What is there to do around Amelia Court House?
History leads the list. Amelia Court House is where General Lee's retreating army concentrated in April 1865 on the road to Appomattox, and the courthouse district carries markers and a strong sense of that final week of the war. Pair it with a drive west to Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the surrender site, for a full Lee's Retreat loop. For recreation, Bear Creek Lake State Park offers swimming, fishing, boating, and trails through the Cumberland State Forest. And Richmond, about 40 minutes northeast, adds deep Civil War sites, the James River, museums, and a strong craft-brewery scene. It is an easy blend of history and quiet Piedmont outdoors.
Is there a dump station near Amelia Court House?
The most reliable one for campers is at Bear Creek Lake State Park, about 20 miles west, where the campground has a dump station on-site tied to the camping season. Since the state park sites are water and electric only with no sewer, you plan to empty tanks there on your way out. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond also has a campground dump station. The village of Amelia Court House itself has no public dump, so if you are not staying at a state park, plan a Richmond-area facility. For a full rundown of dump-station locations in the area, see our companion RV dump stations guide for Amelia Court House.
Can I visit both Amelia and Appomattox on one trip?
Yes, and it makes a memorable Lee's Retreat itinerary. Amelia Court House is where Lee's army gathered in early April 1865, and Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the site of the surrender days later, lies west via US-360 and US-460. Basing at Bear Creek Lake State Park puts you between the two, letting you trace the retreat route across the Piedmont over a day or two. Add Sailor's Creek and the Farmville stops along the way, and you have a complete final-campaign tour. It is one of the better reasons to plan a multi-day stay in this quiet corner of central Virginia rather than just passing through.
Are there private RV parks with full hookups near Amelia Court House?
Not in the immediate rural area, but the Richmond metro about 40 minutes northeast on US-360 holds the full-hookup private parks the countryside lacks. These offer 30 and 50-amp service, sewer at the site, and big-rig pull-throughs, generally in the $40 to $70 a night range, which is the practical choice if you run a large fifth wheel or want to plug in fully. The tradeoff is the drive out to the historic village and Bear Creek Lake. For many RVers the better plan is a state park water-and-electric site for the scenery, but if full hookups are non-negotiable, the metro parks are your answer.
Is Bear Creek Lake State Park good for families?
Yes, it is a solid family base near Amelia Court House. The park centers on a small lake with a swimming beach, fishing, and boat rentals, plus trails winding through the surrounding Cumberland State Forest for easy hiking and biking. The water-and-electric campsites in the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops are quiet and wooded, and the on-site dump station keeps tank logistics simple. It is about 20 miles west of the village on good roads, so you can mix lake days with day trips to the Civil War sites. Reserve weekends ahead in spring, summer, and fall through the Virginia State Parks system, since the small campground fills.
How do I handle propane, groceries, and repairs in this area?
Plan on Richmond for the serious stuff. The village of Amelia Court House keeps very limited services, so we stock up on full groceries, big-box supplies, propane, and anything RV-specific in the Richmond metro about 40 minutes northeast on US-360 before settling in. Fuel is available at stations along US-360, but specialized RV repair and parts are best handled in the city. Bear Creek Lake State Park has potable water for filling tanks. The simplest approach is to make one Richmond supply loop at the start of your stay so you are not hunting for scattered conveniences out among the farms during your trip.
Is winter camping realistic near Amelia Court House?
It is possible but takes planning. Central Virginia winters are cool and generally mild, with highs often in the upper 40s, so a well-insulated rig with a furnace handles the weather fine. The complication is that Bear Creek Lake State Park's camping season winds down in the colder months, so you must confirm open dates and available hookups before pointing the rig that way. A more reliable cold-weather option is a year-round private RV park in the Richmond metro, which stays open with full hookups. If you want the lakeside state-park experience, target spring through fall instead, when the campground is fully operating and the weather is at its best.
Where should I camp near Amelia Court House, Virginia?
The village itself has no campground, so you base nearby and day-trip in. The closest and best public option is Bear Creek Lake State Park, about 20 miles west near Cumberland, with water and electric sites in a quiet forest-and-lake setting. For a larger campground with more big-rig room, Pocahontas State Park is about 40 minutes northeast toward Richmond. If you need full hookups with sewer and 50-amp power, the Richmond metro holds the private RV parks the rural area lacks. Match your choice to your rig: mid-size rigs do great at Bear Creek Lake, while big fifth wheels do better at Pocahontas or a Richmond private park.
Does Bear Creek Lake State Park have full hookups?
Not quite. Bear Creek Lake State Park offers water and electric hookups but no sewer connections at its campsites, which are spread across the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops. Several loops accommodate rigs up to 35 feet, while others are sized for smaller pop-ups and trailers up to 20 feet, so confirm your length when you reserve. The campground does have a dump station on-site, so you camp on water and electric and empty tanks on your way out. If you specifically need a full-hookup, sewer-at-the-site experience for a big rig, look to Pocahontas State Park or a private park in the Richmond metro instead.
How much does it cost to camp near Amelia Court House?
Public camping is the affordable route. Bear Creek Lake State Park runs about $35 a night for Virginia residents and $40 for non-residents on its water-and-electric sites, with standard non-hookup sites in the $25 to $35 range depending on the view. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond prices similarly for electric and water sites. If you need full hookups and 50-amp power, the Richmond-metro private parks generally run $40 to $70 a night, trading the lakeside quiet for sewer and big-rig convenience. A budget plan is to book a state park water-and-electric site, use the campground dump station, and pair camping with one Richmond supply run for groceries, fuel, and propane.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite near Amelia Court House?
For Bear Creek Lake State Park, reserve weekends ahead in spring and fall, since it is a small park and its water-and-electric sites are popular; booking is online through the Virginia State Parks system, with campsite-specific reservations in the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond is larger but also fills on peak weekends. Richmond-metro private parks usually have more flexibility on shorter notice. Midweek and the cooler months are the easiest times to find space anywhere in the area. If you want a specific lakeside or up-to-35-foot site at Bear Creek, earlier is definitely better, especially for the pretty spring and fall weekends.
When is the best time to camp near Amelia Court House?
April through June and September through October are the sweet spots. Spring brings dogwood and redbud color across the Piedmont with excellent weather, and fall delivers crisp days and strong foliage that pair perfectly with the Civil War history. Both are ideal for hiking at Bear Creek Lake and touring the Lee's Retreat sites. Summer is warm and humid with afternoon thunderstorms, though the Bear Creek swim beach is a nice relief and full hookups help run the AC. Winter is cool and generally mild, but the state park camping season winds down, so verify open dates or base at a year-round Richmond private park for a cold-month visit.
Can big rigs camp near Amelia Court House?
Yes, though with some planning. The driving itself is easy: gentle rolling Piedmont with good road surfaces and no mountain grades or notable low bridges, so a large rig travels comfortably on US-360 and the county roads. The catch is hookups. Bear Creek Lake State Park tops out around 35-foot sites with water and electric only, so a big 40-foot fifth wheel needing full hookups does better at Pocahontas State Park, which has larger sites, or at a Richmond-metro private park with sewer and 50-amp pull-throughs. Decide based on your length and hookup needs, then use the good highways to day-trip the historic village in your tow vehicle.
What is there to do around Amelia Court House?
History leads the list. Amelia Court House is where General Lee's retreating army concentrated in April 1865 on the road to Appomattox, and the courthouse district carries markers and a strong sense of that final week of the war. Pair it with a drive west to Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the surrender site, for a full Lee's Retreat loop. For recreation, Bear Creek Lake State Park offers swimming, fishing, boating, and trails through the Cumberland State Forest. And Richmond, about 40 minutes northeast, adds deep Civil War sites, the James River, museums, and a strong craft-brewery scene. It is an easy blend of history and quiet Piedmont outdoors.
Is there a dump station near Amelia Court House?
The most reliable one for campers is at Bear Creek Lake State Park, about 20 miles west, where the campground has a dump station on-site tied to the camping season. Since the state park sites are water and electric only with no sewer, you plan to empty tanks there on your way out. Pocahontas State Park toward Richmond also has a campground dump station. The village of Amelia Court House itself has no public dump, so if you are not staying at a state park, plan a Richmond-area facility. For a full rundown of dump-station locations in the area, see our companion RV dump stations guide for Amelia Court House.
Can I visit both Amelia and Appomattox on one trip?
Yes, and it makes a memorable Lee's Retreat itinerary. Amelia Court House is where Lee's army gathered in early April 1865, and Appomattox Court House National Historical Park, the site of the surrender days later, lies west via US-360 and US-460. Basing at Bear Creek Lake State Park puts you between the two, letting you trace the retreat route across the Piedmont over a day or two. Add Sailor's Creek and the Farmville stops along the way, and you have a complete final-campaign tour. It is one of the better reasons to plan a multi-day stay in this quiet corner of central Virginia rather than just passing through.
Are there private RV parks with full hookups near Amelia Court House?
Not in the immediate rural area, but the Richmond metro about 40 minutes northeast on US-360 holds the full-hookup private parks the countryside lacks. These offer 30 and 50-amp service, sewer at the site, and big-rig pull-throughs, generally in the $40 to $70 a night range, which is the practical choice if you run a large fifth wheel or want to plug in fully. The tradeoff is the drive out to the historic village and Bear Creek Lake. For many RVers the better plan is a state park water-and-electric site for the scenery, but if full hookups are non-negotiable, the metro parks are your answer.
Is Bear Creek Lake State Park good for families?
Yes, it is a solid family base near Amelia Court House. The park centers on a small lake with a swimming beach, fishing, and boat rentals, plus trails winding through the surrounding Cumberland State Forest for easy hiking and biking. The water-and-electric campsites in the Acorn, Black Oak, and Chestnut loops are quiet and wooded, and the on-site dump station keeps tank logistics simple. It is about 20 miles west of the village on good roads, so you can mix lake days with day trips to the Civil War sites. Reserve weekends ahead in spring, summer, and fall through the Virginia State Parks system, since the small campground fills.
How do I handle propane, groceries, and repairs in this area?
Plan on Richmond for the serious stuff. The village of Amelia Court House keeps very limited services, so we stock up on full groceries, big-box supplies, propane, and anything RV-specific in the Richmond metro about 40 minutes northeast on US-360 before settling in. Fuel is available at stations along US-360, but specialized RV repair and parts are best handled in the city. Bear Creek Lake State Park has potable water for filling tanks. The simplest approach is to make one Richmond supply loop at the start of your stay so you are not hunting for scattered conveniences out among the farms during your trip.
Is winter camping realistic near Amelia Court House?
It is possible but takes planning. Central Virginia winters are cool and generally mild, with highs often in the upper 40s, so a well-insulated rig with a furnace handles the weather fine. The complication is that Bear Creek Lake State Park's camping season winds down in the colder months, so you must confirm open dates and available hookups before pointing the rig that way. A more reliable cold-weather option is a year-round private RV park in the Richmond metro, which stays open with full hookups. If you want the lakeside state-park experience, target spring through fall instead, when the campground is fully operating and the weather is at its best.
Are there free dump stations in Amelia Court House?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Amelia Court House.
All Dump Stations Near Amelia Court House (62)
RV Park with Dump StationsAmelia Family Campground
RV ParkCozy Acres Family Campground
RV ParkForestry Department
RV ParkSeay Park
RV ParkCartersville Estates
RV ParkTwin Lakes State Park
RV ParkRiver Bend Campground
RV Park with Dump Stations





