RV Parks In Carrollton, Virginia
36.9468° N, 76.5605° W
Quick Overview
Carrollton sits in Isle of Wight County in Tidewater Virginia, right at the foot of the James River Bridge where the river opens toward the Chesapeake Bay and the Hampton Roads metro. It is a small community, but its location makes it a genuinely good RV base, because you get public, private and state-park camping all within an easy drive. Just across the bridge, Newport News Park Campground offers 188 wooded sites with electric and water hookups, heated showers, laundry and a central dump station, and it is affordable and open year-round.
Want full hookups? The family-run Isle of Wight Family Campground in nearby Windsor has electric, water and sewer on concrete pads and also runs year-round. For a change of scenery, Chippokes State Park sits across the James River in Surry, a historic plantation park with full-hookup sites named after the original thirteen colonies, reachable by road or by the Jamestown-Scotland ferry. It closes for the winter, roughly December through March, so save it for the warmer months.
The real draw of basing here is everything within reach. Historic Smithfield, famous for its Virginia hams, antique shops and riverfront, is about ten minutes away. Across the bridge, Newport News adds museums and a huge city park, and the historic triangle of Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown is only about 35 minutes north. Getting around is easy on US-17 over the James River Bridge, a straightforward big-rig route, and mild fall weather makes autumn the best time to tour it all.
What ties it together is the mix of options in one small footprint. You can pick the affordable, wooded city campground, a year-round family park with full hookups, or a quieter historic state park across the water, and still have Smithfield, Newport News, Williamsburg and the bay all within an easy drive. That flexibility, plus mild shoulder-season weather and simple big-rig access, is what makes Carrollton and the Isle of Wight side of Hampton Roads a comfortable, rewarding base for a Tidewater trip rather than just a spot to overnight before moving on to the next place.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Carrollton
No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!
From the RVingLife Shop
Gear for Your Trip to Carrollton
All Dump Stations Near Carrollton
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Red Oaks Mobile Community | 1.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Jones Creek Landing Mobile Home Park | 1.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Blairs Creek Mobile Home Park | 6.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Davis Mobile Home & RV Park | 8.0 mi | 3.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bullock Mobile Home Park | 9.1 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Outlaw Mobile Home Park | 9.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Magnolia Meadows Mobile Home Park | 10.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hampton Mobile Park Inc | 11.0 mi | 3.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bethel Fam Camp Langley Afb | 12.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Isle Of Wight Family Campground | 13.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Red Oaks Mobile Community
1.8 miJones Creek Landing Mobile Home Park
1.9 miBlairs Creek Mobile Home Park
6.7 miDavis Mobile Home & RV Park
8.0 miBullock Mobile Home Park
9.1 miOutlaw Mobile Home Park
9.2 miMagnolia Meadows Mobile Home Park
10.8 miHampton Mobile Park Inc
11.0 miBethel Fam Camp Langley Afb
12.1 miIsle Of Wight Family Campground
13.0 miTraveling to Carrollton by RV
Carrollton is easy to reach and easy to use as a hub. The main artery is US-17, which crosses the James River Bridge to link Isle of Wight County with Newport News and the broader Hampton Roads bridge-and-tunnel network. It is a straightforward big-rig route with no tricky grades. US-258, VA-10 and VA-32 fill in the local roads, and I-664 ties into the Hampton Roads crossings for reaching Norfolk and Virginia Beach on the other side of the harbor. Just budget extra time for the bridges and tunnels, which back up in summer and at rush hour.
Once you are set up, the region opens right up. Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown are about 35 minutes north, Newport News and its museums are minutes across the bridge, and the Norfolk and Virginia Beach side is roughly 45 minutes to an hour. The one spot to handle carefully with a big rig is Olde Towne Smithfield, whose historic streets are tighter, so stage the RV at your campground and drive in with the tow vehicle. Newport News/Williamsburg International Airport is about 25 minutes out for fly-and-rent trips.
Useful Links
Find additional dump stations near Carrollton
Browse RV parks and campgrounds in Virginia
Helpful articles for RV travelers
Navigate to Carrollton, VA
National Weather Service forecast
Recreation.gov campground search
Find emergency medical care nearby
Find grocery shopping nearby
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Carrollton, 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 Carrollton
Camping costs around Carrollton are reasonable for a metro area, especially on the public side. Newport News Park Campground sits at the budget-friendly end for its water-and-electric sites with a central dump station, which is a big part of why RVers lean on it as a base. Chippokes State Park and the private Isle of Wight Family Campground run a bit higher for their full-hookup sites, but stay moderate compared with resort pricing, and each buys you a different setting, historic riverside or wooded family park.
Rates shift year to year and firm up on summer and holiday weekends, so confirm current pricing when you book through the City of Newport News, Virginia State Parks or the private park directly. If you are planning a multi-night Tidewater history trip built around Williamsburg, Jamestown and Smithfield, the public campground keeps your nightly costs low while still putting you minutes from the bridge and the whole Hampton Roads region. Ask about weekly rates for longer stays.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Carrollton
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!
Best Time to Visit Carrollton by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
32F - 50F
Crowds: Low
Mild but cool Tidewater winter. Newport News Park stays open year-round, while Chippokes State Park across the river closes roughly December through March.
Spring
Mar - May
48F - 69F
Crowds: Medium
Green and pleasant with occasional rain. A great time for the historic triangle, and Smithfield ham-and-history season gets going.
Summer
Jun - Aug
70F - 87F
Crowds: High
Warm, humid Tidewater summer. Shade and the rivers are the escape, and this is hurricane-watch season from late summer into fall. Book weekends ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
50F - 71F
Crowds: Medium
The best all-around season: mild, drier and comfortable, with ideal weather for touring Williamsburg, Jamestown and the waterfront towns.
Explore the Carrollton Area
Here is how we would approach a Carrollton stay. For the best all-around base, book Newport News Park Campground just across the James River Bridge; it is big, wooded, affordable, open year-round, and has water and electric sites with a dump station, making it the easy public choice. If you want full hookups, the Isle of Wight Family Campground in Windsor keeps you on the Isle of Wight side, and Chippokes State Park across the river adds a historic, quieter setting from April through November.
Do not skip Olde Towne Smithfield, about ten minutes from Carrollton, for its famous hams, antiques and pretty riverfront; it is the local highlight. Use the area as a launch pad for Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown, roughly 35 minutes north, and the Hampton Roads museums across the bridge. Aim for fall if you can, since the mild, drier Tidewater weather is ideal for history touring, and book summer and holiday weekends ahead. One scope note: we cover Carrollton as a stop for traveling and snowbird RVers, not for long-term or residential stays, which are a different kind of arrangement.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Carrollton
Are there RV parks with hookups near Carrollton, VA?
Yes, and you have good variety for a small community. Just across the James River Bridge, Newport News Park Campground has 188 sites with electric and water hookups, heated showers, laundry and a central dump station in a huge wooded setting. For full hookups, the family-run Isle of Wight Family Campground in nearby Windsor offers electric, water and sewer on concrete pads year-round. Across the river in Surry, Chippokes State Park has full-hookup sites in a historic plantation park. Carrollton sits right at the foot of the bridge, so all three are an easy drive from the hamlet.
What is the best campground base for visiting Smithfield and Hampton Roads?
Newport News Park Campground is the workhorse base. It is large, affordable, open year-round, and sits just across the James River Bridge from Carrollton and Isle of Wight County, with water and electric sites and a dump station. From there you are minutes from Historic Smithfield, close to the Hampton Roads museums, and within about 35 minutes of Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown. If you want full hookups instead, the Isle of Wight Family Campground in Windsor keeps you on the Isle of Wight side. Either puts the whole Tidewater region within comfortable day-trip range.
Can big rigs camp near Carrollton?
They can. Newport News Park has paved roads and parking pads and handles larger rigs, and both the Isle of Wight Family Campground and Chippokes State Park accommodate big RVs on their sites. Getting there is straightforward too: US-17 over the James River Bridge is the main route from Isle of Wight into Newport News and the wider Hampton Roads bridge network, and it is an easy big-rig drive. The one place to be careful is Olde Towne Smithfield, where the historic streets are tighter. Stage the rig at your campground and drive into the old town with a tow vehicle.
Is Chippokes State Park worth the trip across the river?
For many RVers, yes. Chippokes is a historic plantation park on the south bank of the James River in Surry, with full-hookup sites charmingly named after the original thirteen colonies, trails, and a genuinely peaceful setting away from the Hampton Roads bustle. You reach it either by road around through Surry County or, more memorably, via the Jamestown-Scotland ferry across the James. Note that the campground closes roughly December through March, so it is an April-to-November option. If you want a quieter, more scenic base than the city campground and do not mind the drive, Chippokes delivers.
Do I need reservations to camp around Carrollton?
For summer and holiday weekends, yes. Newport News Park and Chippokes State Park both fill their popular sites, so book a few weeks ahead through the City of Newport News or Virginia State Parks respectively. The Isle of Wight Family Campground can often take you on shorter notice. Shoulder-season weekdays across all of them are easy and you can frequently roll in without much planning. Because this is a populated Hampton Roads area rather than remote country, camping is reservation-driven overall, so it pays to lock in your dates when you know them, especially around Williamsburg-area events.
When is the best time to RV in the Carrollton area?
Fall is the standout season in Tidewater Virginia. Days are mild and drier, the humidity backs off, and the weather is ideal for touring Williamsburg, Jamestown and the waterfront towns. Spring is a close second, green and pleasant with a bit more rain, and it kicks off the Smithfield ham-and-history season. Summer is warm, humid and peak family-camping time, so the shade and rivers are your friends, and you should book ahead. Do keep an eye on the tropics from late summer into fall, since Hampton Roads sees the occasional hurricane or coastal storm.
How hot and humid does it get camping here in summer?
This is Tidewater Virginia, so summers are warm and notably humid. July and August highs run in the upper 80s with overnight lows around 70F, and the moisture makes it feel warmer. Electric hookups for air conditioning are worth having in that stretch, which is why Newport News Park and the full-hookup private parks are comfortable summer choices. The upside is easy access to the James River, the bay and shaded wooded campsites to cool off. If you would rather skip the peak heat and humidity, plan a spring or fall visit when the Tidewater weather is at its most pleasant.
What is there to do around Carrollton besides camping?
Quite a lot, because you are on the edge of historic Hampton Roads. Ten minutes away, Olde Towne Smithfield offers its famous Virginia hams, antique shops and a pretty riverfront. Across the James River Bridge, Newport News has the Mariners Museum, a sprawling city park with lakes and trails, and more. About 35 minutes north lies the historic triangle of Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown, some of the most significant early-American history in the country. Add James River and Chesapeake Bay boating and fishing, and a stay near Carrollton easily fills several days of history, water and small-town charm.
How far is Carrollton from Williamsburg and Virginia Beach?
Both are day-trip close. Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown sit about 35 minutes north of Carrollton, making the historic triangle an easy outing from any of the area campgrounds. Virginia Beach and the Norfolk side of Hampton Roads are farther, roughly 45 minutes to an hour depending on which bridges and tunnels you take across the harbor. Keep in mind that the Hampton Roads crossings can back up in summer and at rush hour. That central Tidewater location is a big part of why RVers like basing here: history, beaches, cities and rivers are all within a reasonable drive.
What does it cost to camp near Carrollton, VA?
It is reasonable for a metro area, especially on the public side. Newport News Park Campground sits at the budget-friendly end for its water-and-electric sites with a dump station, which is a big part of its appeal. Chippokes State Park and the private Isle of Wight Family Campground run a bit higher for their full-hookup sites, but remain moderate compared with resort pricing. Exact rates change year to year, so confirm when you book through the City of Newport News, Virginia State Parks or the private park directly. For a multi-night Tidewater history trip, the public campground keeps your nightly costs low.
Is Carrollton a good stop for snowbirds heading south?
It can be a pleasant pause rather than a winter-long base. Tidewater winters are mild but cool, with January highs around 50F, and Newport News Park stays open year-round, so Carrollton and the Isle of Wight area work as a comfortable stopover for snowbirds traveling the I-95 and coastal corridors to and from the deep South. You get history, waterfront and services without deep cold. For a months-long winter stay you would likely continue farther south to the Carolinas, Georgia or Florida, but as a warm-enough, interesting waypoint with open camping, it earns a night or two on the route.
Do these parks target long-term or residential RV stays?
That is not the audience these guides serve. Some parks in any region offer monthly or seasonal sites, but our focus is travelers: overnight and multi-week transient stays and snowbirds passing through, not long-term or residential RV living. Around Carrollton that traveler focus fits naturally, since the standout options are a city park, a state park and a family campground all geared toward visitors exploring Smithfield, Hampton Roads and the historic triangle. If you were looking for permanent or residential arrangements you would research individual park monthly terms directly, which is a different kind of stay from the trips we help plan.
Are there RV parks with hookups near Carrollton, VA?
Yes, and you have good variety for a small community. Just across the James River Bridge, Newport News Park Campground has 188 sites with electric and water hookups, heated showers, laundry and a central dump station in a huge wooded setting. For full hookups, the family-run Isle of Wight Family Campground in nearby Windsor offers electric, water and sewer on concrete pads year-round. Across the river in Surry, Chippokes State Park has full-hookup sites in a historic plantation park. Carrollton sits right at the foot of the bridge, so all three are an easy drive from the hamlet.
What is the best campground base for visiting Smithfield and Hampton Roads?
Newport News Park Campground is the workhorse base. It is large, affordable, open year-round, and sits just across the James River Bridge from Carrollton and Isle of Wight County, with water and electric sites and a dump station. From there you are minutes from Historic Smithfield, close to the Hampton Roads museums, and within about 35 minutes of Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown. If you want full hookups instead, the Isle of Wight Family Campground in Windsor keeps you on the Isle of Wight side. Either puts the whole Tidewater region within comfortable day-trip range.
Can big rigs camp near Carrollton?
They can. Newport News Park has paved roads and parking pads and handles larger rigs, and both the Isle of Wight Family Campground and Chippokes State Park accommodate big RVs on their sites. Getting there is straightforward too: US-17 over the James River Bridge is the main route from Isle of Wight into Newport News and the wider Hampton Roads bridge network, and it is an easy big-rig drive. The one place to be careful is Olde Towne Smithfield, where the historic streets are tighter. Stage the rig at your campground and drive into the old town with a tow vehicle.
Is Chippokes State Park worth the trip across the river?
For many RVers, yes. Chippokes is a historic plantation park on the south bank of the James River in Surry, with full-hookup sites charmingly named after the original thirteen colonies, trails, and a genuinely peaceful setting away from the Hampton Roads bustle. You reach it either by road around through Surry County or, more memorably, via the Jamestown-Scotland ferry across the James. Note that the campground closes roughly December through March, so it is an April-to-November option. If you want a quieter, more scenic base than the city campground and do not mind the drive, Chippokes delivers.
Do I need reservations to camp around Carrollton?
For summer and holiday weekends, yes. Newport News Park and Chippokes State Park both fill their popular sites, so book a few weeks ahead through the City of Newport News or Virginia State Parks respectively. The Isle of Wight Family Campground can often take you on shorter notice. Shoulder-season weekdays across all of them are easy and you can frequently roll in without much planning. Because this is a populated Hampton Roads area rather than remote country, camping is reservation-driven overall, so it pays to lock in your dates when you know them, especially around Williamsburg-area events.
When is the best time to RV in the Carrollton area?
Fall is the standout season in Tidewater Virginia. Days are mild and drier, the humidity backs off, and the weather is ideal for touring Williamsburg, Jamestown and the waterfront towns. Spring is a close second, green and pleasant with a bit more rain, and it kicks off the Smithfield ham-and-history season. Summer is warm, humid and peak family-camping time, so the shade and rivers are your friends, and you should book ahead. Do keep an eye on the tropics from late summer into fall, since Hampton Roads sees the occasional hurricane or coastal storm.
How hot and humid does it get camping here in summer?
This is Tidewater Virginia, so summers are warm and notably humid. July and August highs run in the upper 80s with overnight lows around 70F, and the moisture makes it feel warmer. Electric hookups for air conditioning are worth having in that stretch, which is why Newport News Park and the full-hookup private parks are comfortable summer choices. The upside is easy access to the James River, the bay and shaded wooded campsites to cool off. If you would rather skip the peak heat and humidity, plan a spring or fall visit when the Tidewater weather is at its most pleasant.
What is there to do around Carrollton besides camping?
Quite a lot, because you are on the edge of historic Hampton Roads. Ten minutes away, Olde Towne Smithfield offers its famous Virginia hams, antique shops and a pretty riverfront. Across the James River Bridge, Newport News has the Mariners Museum, a sprawling city park with lakes and trails, and more. About 35 minutes north lies the historic triangle of Colonial Williamsburg, Jamestown and Yorktown, some of the most significant early-American history in the country. Add James River and Chesapeake Bay boating and fishing, and a stay near Carrollton easily fills several days of history, water and small-town charm.
How far is Carrollton from Williamsburg and Virginia Beach?
Both are day-trip close. Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown sit about 35 minutes north of Carrollton, making the historic triangle an easy outing from any of the area campgrounds. Virginia Beach and the Norfolk side of Hampton Roads are farther, roughly 45 minutes to an hour depending on which bridges and tunnels you take across the harbor. Keep in mind that the Hampton Roads crossings can back up in summer and at rush hour. That central Tidewater location is a big part of why RVers like basing here: history, beaches, cities and rivers are all within a reasonable drive.
What does it cost to camp near Carrollton, VA?
It is reasonable for a metro area, especially on the public side. Newport News Park Campground sits at the budget-friendly end for its water-and-electric sites with a dump station, which is a big part of its appeal. Chippokes State Park and the private Isle of Wight Family Campground run a bit higher for their full-hookup sites, but remain moderate compared with resort pricing. Exact rates change year to year, so confirm when you book through the City of Newport News, Virginia State Parks or the private park directly. For a multi-night Tidewater history trip, the public campground keeps your nightly costs low.
Is Carrollton a good stop for snowbirds heading south?
It can be a pleasant pause rather than a winter-long base. Tidewater winters are mild but cool, with January highs around 50F, and Newport News Park stays open year-round, so Carrollton and the Isle of Wight area work as a comfortable stopover for snowbirds traveling the I-95 and coastal corridors to and from the deep South. You get history, waterfront and services without deep cold. For a months-long winter stay you would likely continue farther south to the Carolinas, Georgia or Florida, but as a warm-enough, interesting waypoint with open camping, it earns a night or two on the route.
Do these parks target long-term or residential RV stays?
That is not the audience these guides serve. Some parks in any region offer monthly or seasonal sites, but our focus is travelers: overnight and multi-week transient stays and snowbirds passing through, not long-term or residential RV living. Around Carrollton that traveler focus fits naturally, since the standout options are a city park, a state park and a family campground all geared toward visitors exploring Smithfield, Hampton Roads and the historic triangle. If you were looking for permanent or residential arrangements you would research individual park monthly terms directly, which is a different kind of stay from the trips we help plan.
Are there free dump stations in Carrollton?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Carrollton.
All Dump Stations Near Carrollton (97)
RV ParkGosnold's Hope Park Campground
RV ParkA Loop Campground
RV ParkThe Colonies RV & Travel Park
RV ParkThe Colonies RV And Travel Park
RV ParkCarter's Cove Campground
RV Park with Dump StationsChesapeake Campground
RV ParkTriple R Ranch Lodge
RV Park





