RV Parks In Bridgeport, Washington
48.0082° N, 119.6712° W
Quick Overview
Bridgeport is a small high-desert town on the Columbia River in north-central Washington, sitting right below Bridgeport State Park and Chief Joseph Dam. For RVers it is a quiet, affordable base for fishing and boating on Rufus Woods Lake, and it has a genuinely useful spread of places to park a rig for a night or a week.
The public anchor is Bridgeport State Park, a 622-acre park with 7,500 feet of shoreline about three miles north of town on WA-17. It has 20 water-and-electric utility sites and 14 tent sites, a trailer dump station, a boat ramp, showers, and the signature Haystacks volcanic rock formations, but no sewer at the individual sites. If you want true full hookups including sewer, the two city-run parks on the river are the answer: Conklin Landing RV Park and Bridgeport Marina RV Park both offer water, sewer, and 50/30/20 amp electric on pull-through and back-in sites, with boat launches, Wi-Fi, showers, and fire pits. Reservations at the state park run May 15 through September 15 through Washington State Parks, while the city parks are booked through the Bridgeport city office.
Bridgeport rewards RVers who like their stops uncrowded and on the water. The big draw is Rufus Woods Lake, famous for oversized triploid rainbow trout raised in net pens, plus walleye and kokanee, and you can launch straight from the state or city parks. Add the free U.S. Army Corps of Engineers interpretive programs at Chief Joseph Dam, the easy paved bike path from the state park to the dam, and a small local golf course, and you have more than a one-night stop. Roll in on WA-17 up from US-2 or across the river from Brewster, sort out your Discover Pass and fishing permits, and settle in. Late spring through early fall is the sweet spot, with hot dry summer days and cool nights, while September brings settled weather and thinner crowds before the reservation window closes. Just plan for freezing nights and reduced services if you come in winter, because this is open high-desert country where summers are hot and winters bite.
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All Dump Stations Near Bridgeport
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bridgeport Marina RV Park | 0.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bridgeport RV Parks/marina Park | 0.5 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Conklin Landing RV Park | 1.0 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bridgeport State Park Campground | 2.9 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Columbia Cove RV Park | 7.8 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Summerhill Farm RV Park | 18.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lakeshore RV Park, City Of Chelan | 19.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lakeshore RV Park | 19.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Jameson Lake Resort | 21.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Four Lakes RV Park. | 23.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Bridgeport Marina RV Park
0.5 miBridgeport RV Parks/marina Park
0.5 miConklin Landing RV Park
1.0 miBridgeport State Park Campground
2.9 miColumbia Cove RV Park
7.8 miSummerhill Farm RV Park
18.8 miLakeshore RV Park, City Of Chelan
19.9 miLakeshore RV Park
19.9 miJameson Lake Resort
21.7 miFour Lakes RV Park.
23.0 miTraveling to Bridgeport by RV
Bridgeport sits along the Columbia at the junction of WA-17 and WA-173 in north-central Washington. WA-17 runs south toward US-2, and WA-173 crosses the river to Brewster and connects to US-97, the main north-south route through the Okanogan and Methow country. These are open, well-graded high-desert highways used daily by orchard and ag trucks, with no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a 40-foot rig tows in comfortably. Most RVers arrive on WA-17 up from US-2 or across the river from Brewster; I-90 is roughly 90 miles south if you are coming off the interstate.
The town itself is small, flat, and easy to move through, so maneuvering a big rig is low stress compared with a mountain town. Fuel up on gas or diesel in Bridgeport or nearby Brewster, and top off fresh water and propane before a longer haul. For state-park reservations, book through the Washington State Parks system between May 15 and September 15; the city-run river parks are reserved through the Bridgeport city office.
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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 Bridgeport, Washington, 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 Bridgeport
Bridgeport is an easy stop on the wallet. The city-run full-hookup parks, Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina, sit in the moderate range typical of small municipal riverside parks, and you can confirm current nightly rates through the Bridgeport city office. Bridgeport State Park charges standard Washington State Parks rates, with the water-and-electric utility sites costing a little more than the tent sites, and you will want a Discover Pass for day-use vehicle access on top of the camping fee.
The rest of a Bridgeport stay stays cheap. Fishing, boating, walking the Haystacks trails, and the free Army Corps interpretive programs at Chief Joseph Dam cost little to nothing, and a small local golf course rounds out a rest day. Anglers chasing the big triploid trout often settle in for several nights and lean on the full-hookup city parks as a comfortable base. Between low site rates and low-cost attractions, a few days here runs a fraction of what the same stay costs in a tourist-heavy resort town.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Bridgeport by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
22F - 35F
Crowds: Low
Cold, snowy, and quiet. Bridgeport State Park sites go first-come and the lake fishing continues, but expect freezing nights and call the city RV parks to confirm which utilities are running.
Spring
Mar - May
38F - 62F
Crowds: Low
Windy and changeable with the river greening up by May. Before the mid-May reservation season opens the state park is wide open, and rates are at their easiest.
Summer
Jun - Aug
58F - 90F
Crowds: High
Hot, dry, and busy. This is prime boating and triploid-trout season, so reserve the state park hookup sites early and book the city full-hookup parks ahead for weekends.
Fall
Sep - Oct
40F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
The sweet spot. September and early October bring settled weather and thinner crowds. State-park reservations run through Sept 15, then sites flip back to first-come.
Explore the Bridgeport Area
A few things we would tell a friend heading to Bridgeport. First, if you want a hookup site at Bridgeport State Park for a summer weekend, book it early, because there are only 20 utility sites and they go fast; midweek is far easier to grab. Second, if you need sewer at your pad, skip the state park and use the city-run Conklin Landing or Bridgeport Marina parks on the river, which have full hookups and boat launches right out front.
Third, sort your paperwork before you fish. Rufus Woods Lake borders the Colville Reservation, so shore fishing off state-park property generally needs both a Washington license and a Colville Tribe permit, and day use at the state park wants a Discover Pass. Fourth, do not skip the free Chief Joseph Dam interpretive programs from the Army Corps of Engineers, and ride the easy paved path from the state park out to the dam. Finally, come prepared for the climate: summer afternoons get hot and open, and winter nights drop below freezing, so pack for whichever end you are visiting.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Bridgeport
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Bridgeport, WA?
Bridgeport packs a lot into a small riverside town. The public choice is Bridgeport State Park, a 622-acre park on Rufus Woods Lake behind Chief Joseph Dam with 20 water-and-electric utility sites and 14 tent sites. For full hookups including sewer, the two city-run parks on the Columbia are Conklin Landing RV Park and Bridgeport Marina RV Park, both with 50/30/20 amp service, boat launches, Wi-Fi, and showers. Between the state park scenery and the full-hookup riverside sites, most RVers find exactly what they need for a fishing or boating stop here.
Do Bridgeport, WA campgrounds have full hookups with sewer?
It depends on where you stay. The two city-run parks, Conklin Landing RV Park and Bridgeport Marina RV Park, both offer true full hookups with water, sewer, and 50/30/20 amp electric at the site, plus pull-through and back-in options. Bridgeport State Park is different: its 20 utility sites have water and 30 amp electric but no sewer at the individual site, so you use the park trailer dump station on your way in or out. If sewer at your pad matters, choose one of the two city riverside parks; if you want lake scenery, the state park trades sewer for the view.
How much does RV camping cost in Bridgeport, WA?
Bridgeport is an affordable stop compared with resort towns. The city-run full-hookup parks, Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina, sit in the moderate range typical of small municipal riverside parks, and you can confirm current nightly rates through the Bridgeport city office. Bridgeport State Park charges standard Washington State Parks rates, with utility sites costing a bit more than the tent sites, plus you will want a Discover Pass for day use. Fishing, boating, and the free interpretive programs at Chief Joseph Dam keep the rest of a stay cheap, so a few days here costs far less than a comparable stay in a tourist-heavy destination.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Bridgeport, WA?
For Bridgeport State Park, reservations run May 15 through September 15 and are strongly recommended for summer weekends because there are only 20 hookup sites and the park sees heavy use. You can book through the Washington State Parks reservation system, and midweek is noticeably easier to grab than Friday and Saturday nights. Outside that window the state park sites are first-come, first-served. The city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks are reserved through the Bridgeport city office, and calling ahead in peak fishing and boating season is smart since these are small parks that can fill on good-weather weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Bridgeport, WA?
Late spring through early fall is the window. Summer brings hot, dry, clear high-desert days with cool nights, ideal for boating and the famous Rufus Woods triploid-trout fishing, though it is also the busiest and hottest stretch. September and early October are arguably the best of all, with settled weather, thinning crowds, and state-park reservations still available through September 15. Spring greens up the river by May with wide-open sites before the reservation season starts. Winters are genuinely cold and snowy with freezing nights, and the state park empties out, so plan a cold-weather setup if you come off-season.
Can big rigs camp in Bridgeport, WA?
Yes, with the right park. The city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks both have pull-through and back-in sites and full hookups, which makes them the easier bet for a 40-foot coach or a long fifth-wheel combo. Bridgeport itself is a small, flat riverside town with simple, low-stress maneuvering compared with a mountain town. Bridgeport State Park can handle RVs at its utility sites, but as with many older state parks, it is worth confirming the length of a specific site when you reserve. Call ahead in either case to lock in a pull-through if you are running a big rig.
Are there first-come or boondocking options near Bridgeport, WA?
Your main first-come option is Bridgeport State Park itself, which switches to first-come, first-served outside the May 15 to September 15 reservation window, so shoulder-season and winter travelers can usually find a site without booking. True dispersed boondocking is limited right around town: much of the land across Rufus Woods Lake is Colville Reservation and requires tribal permits, so the developed state park and the two city riverside parks are the practical choices. If you want a cheap night in the off-season, the first-come state-park sites are your best bet, just come prepared for cold nights.
What is there to do around Bridgeport besides camping?
The headline attraction is Chief Joseph Dam, one of the largest hydropower producers in the country, where the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers runs interpretive programs on dam operation and area wildlife. Rufus Woods Lake draws anglers from all over for its big triploid rainbow trout, plus walleye and kokanee, with boat launches at both the state and city parks. Inside Bridgeport State Park you can walk the trails around the Haystacks volcanic rock formations and ride the easy paved bike path out to the dam. There is also a small golf course near town for a relaxed rest day.
What highways lead into Bridgeport, WA for an RV?
Bridgeport sits along the Columbia River at the junction of WA-17 and WA-173 in north-central Washington. WA-17 runs south down toward US-2, and WA-173 crosses the river to Brewster and connects to US-97, the main north-south route through the Okanogan and Methow country. These are open, well-graded high-desert highways used daily by orchard and ag trucks, with no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a big rig tows in comfortably. Most RVers arrive on WA-17 up from US-2 or across the river from Brewster. I-90 is roughly 90 miles south if you are coming off the interstate.
Do I need a Discover Pass or fishing permits in Bridgeport, WA?
For Bridgeport State Park, you need a Washington Discover Pass for day-use vehicle access; your camping fee covers the overnight stay itself. Fishing on Rufus Woods Lake is a little unusual because the reservoir borders the Colville Reservation. To fish from shore off state-park property, you generally need both a Washington state fishing license and a Colville Tribe permit, so check the current rules before you cast. Boating and launching from the state or city park ramps is straightforward. It is worth sorting the passes and permits before you arrive so you are not scrambling once you are set up.
Can I get sewer and dump service at Bridgeport State Park?
Bridgeport State Park does not have sewer hookups at individual sites, but it does have a trailer dump station on the grounds, so you can empty your tanks on your way in or out. Its 20 utility sites offer water and 30 amp electric, which covers most needs for a lake stay, and the park has restrooms with showers and drinking water. If full hookups including sewer at your pad are a must, book Conklin Landing RV Park or Bridgeport Marina RV Park in town instead, where sewer is at the site, and treat the state park as the scenic, hookup-lite lakeside alternative.
Is Bridgeport, WA a good base for fishing Rufus Woods Lake?
It is one of the best. Rufus Woods Lake is a long Columbia River reservoir behind Chief Joseph Dam that is well known for oversized triploid rainbow trout raised in net pens, and anglers also pull walleye and kokanee. You can launch a boat from Bridgeport State Park or from the city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks, all of which have ramps and docks. Staying right on the water means you can fish early and late without a long drive. Just remember the shared state and tribal jurisdiction on the lake, and buy the right licenses and permits before you fish.
How many days should I plan for a Bridgeport, WA RV stop?
One or two nights works for a quick fishing or dam stop, but two to three days lets Bridgeport breathe. Give yourself a day for Rufus Woods Lake and the boat launch, a half day for the Chief Joseph Dam interpretive program and the paved bike path, and time to walk the Haystacks trails in the state park. Anglers chasing the big triploid trout often stay longer and lean on the full-hookup city parks for a comfortable base. With affordable sites and low-cost attractions, there is little reason to rush through if the weather is good.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Bridgeport, WA?
Bridgeport packs a lot into a small riverside town. The public choice is Bridgeport State Park, a 622-acre park on Rufus Woods Lake behind Chief Joseph Dam with 20 water-and-electric utility sites and 14 tent sites. For full hookups including sewer, the two city-run parks on the Columbia are Conklin Landing RV Park and Bridgeport Marina RV Park, both with 50/30/20 amp service, boat launches, Wi-Fi, and showers. Between the state park scenery and the full-hookup riverside sites, most RVers find exactly what they need for a fishing or boating stop here.
Do Bridgeport, WA campgrounds have full hookups with sewer?
It depends on where you stay. The two city-run parks, Conklin Landing RV Park and Bridgeport Marina RV Park, both offer true full hookups with water, sewer, and 50/30/20 amp electric at the site, plus pull-through and back-in options. Bridgeport State Park is different: its 20 utility sites have water and 30 amp electric but no sewer at the individual site, so you use the park trailer dump station on your way in or out. If sewer at your pad matters, choose one of the two city riverside parks; if you want lake scenery, the state park trades sewer for the view.
How much does RV camping cost in Bridgeport, WA?
Bridgeport is an affordable stop compared with resort towns. The city-run full-hookup parks, Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina, sit in the moderate range typical of small municipal riverside parks, and you can confirm current nightly rates through the Bridgeport city office. Bridgeport State Park charges standard Washington State Parks rates, with utility sites costing a bit more than the tent sites, plus you will want a Discover Pass for day use. Fishing, boating, and the free interpretive programs at Chief Joseph Dam keep the rest of a stay cheap, so a few days here costs far less than a comparable stay in a tourist-heavy destination.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Bridgeport, WA?
For Bridgeport State Park, reservations run May 15 through September 15 and are strongly recommended for summer weekends because there are only 20 hookup sites and the park sees heavy use. You can book through the Washington State Parks reservation system, and midweek is noticeably easier to grab than Friday and Saturday nights. Outside that window the state park sites are first-come, first-served. The city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks are reserved through the Bridgeport city office, and calling ahead in peak fishing and boating season is smart since these are small parks that can fill on good-weather weekends.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Bridgeport, WA?
Late spring through early fall is the window. Summer brings hot, dry, clear high-desert days with cool nights, ideal for boating and the famous Rufus Woods triploid-trout fishing, though it is also the busiest and hottest stretch. September and early October are arguably the best of all, with settled weather, thinning crowds, and state-park reservations still available through September 15. Spring greens up the river by May with wide-open sites before the reservation season starts. Winters are genuinely cold and snowy with freezing nights, and the state park empties out, so plan a cold-weather setup if you come off-season.
Can big rigs camp in Bridgeport, WA?
Yes, with the right park. The city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks both have pull-through and back-in sites and full hookups, which makes them the easier bet for a 40-foot coach or a long fifth-wheel combo. Bridgeport itself is a small, flat riverside town with simple, low-stress maneuvering compared with a mountain town. Bridgeport State Park can handle RVs at its utility sites, but as with many older state parks, it is worth confirming the length of a specific site when you reserve. Call ahead in either case to lock in a pull-through if you are running a big rig.
Are there first-come or boondocking options near Bridgeport, WA?
Your main first-come option is Bridgeport State Park itself, which switches to first-come, first-served outside the May 15 to September 15 reservation window, so shoulder-season and winter travelers can usually find a site without booking. True dispersed boondocking is limited right around town: much of the land across Rufus Woods Lake is Colville Reservation and requires tribal permits, so the developed state park and the two city riverside parks are the practical choices. If you want a cheap night in the off-season, the first-come state-park sites are your best bet, just come prepared for cold nights.
What is there to do around Bridgeport besides camping?
The headline attraction is Chief Joseph Dam, one of the largest hydropower producers in the country, where the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers runs interpretive programs on dam operation and area wildlife. Rufus Woods Lake draws anglers from all over for its big triploid rainbow trout, plus walleye and kokanee, with boat launches at both the state and city parks. Inside Bridgeport State Park you can walk the trails around the Haystacks volcanic rock formations and ride the easy paved bike path out to the dam. There is also a small golf course near town for a relaxed rest day.
What highways lead into Bridgeport, WA for an RV?
Bridgeport sits along the Columbia River at the junction of WA-17 and WA-173 in north-central Washington. WA-17 runs south down toward US-2, and WA-173 crosses the river to Brewster and connects to US-97, the main north-south route through the Okanogan and Methow country. These are open, well-graded high-desert highways used daily by orchard and ag trucks, with no notable low bridges or weight limits, so a big rig tows in comfortably. Most RVers arrive on WA-17 up from US-2 or across the river from Brewster. I-90 is roughly 90 miles south if you are coming off the interstate.
Do I need a Discover Pass or fishing permits in Bridgeport, WA?
For Bridgeport State Park, you need a Washington Discover Pass for day-use vehicle access; your camping fee covers the overnight stay itself. Fishing on Rufus Woods Lake is a little unusual because the reservoir borders the Colville Reservation. To fish from shore off state-park property, you generally need both a Washington state fishing license and a Colville Tribe permit, so check the current rules before you cast. Boating and launching from the state or city park ramps is straightforward. It is worth sorting the passes and permits before you arrive so you are not scrambling once you are set up.
Can I get sewer and dump service at Bridgeport State Park?
Bridgeport State Park does not have sewer hookups at individual sites, but it does have a trailer dump station on the grounds, so you can empty your tanks on your way in or out. Its 20 utility sites offer water and 30 amp electric, which covers most needs for a lake stay, and the park has restrooms with showers and drinking water. If full hookups including sewer at your pad are a must, book Conklin Landing RV Park or Bridgeport Marina RV Park in town instead, where sewer is at the site, and treat the state park as the scenic, hookup-lite lakeside alternative.
Is Bridgeport, WA a good base for fishing Rufus Woods Lake?
It is one of the best. Rufus Woods Lake is a long Columbia River reservoir behind Chief Joseph Dam that is well known for oversized triploid rainbow trout raised in net pens, and anglers also pull walleye and kokanee. You can launch a boat from Bridgeport State Park or from the city-run Conklin Landing and Bridgeport Marina parks, all of which have ramps and docks. Staying right on the water means you can fish early and late without a long drive. Just remember the shared state and tribal jurisdiction on the lake, and buy the right licenses and permits before you fish.
How many days should I plan for a Bridgeport, WA RV stop?
One or two nights works for a quick fishing or dam stop, but two to three days lets Bridgeport breathe. Give yourself a day for Rufus Woods Lake and the boat launch, a half day for the Chief Joseph Dam interpretive program and the paved bike path, and time to walk the Haystacks trails in the state park. Anglers chasing the big triploid trout often stay longer and lean on the full-hookup city parks for a comfortable base. With affordable sites and low-cost attractions, there is little reason to rush through if the weather is good.
Are there free dump stations in Bridgeport?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Bridgeport.







