RV Parks In Kettle Falls, Washington
48.6107° N, 118.0558° W
Quick Overview
Kettle Falls sits in the far northeast corner of Washington on the shores of Lake Roosevelt, the 130-mile reservoir formed by Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River, in a region of forested mountains, big water, and small-town quiet. For RVers it is a relaxed and scenic base built around the lake: boating, fishing, swimming, and houseboating in summer, with the Colville National Forest rising all around and the Sherman Pass scenic drive heading west. The town is a friendly stop on US-395, the main route north toward the Canadian border, and it makes an excellent hub for exploring this uncrowded corner of the Inland Northwest. Summers are hot and dry, the prime RV season, with the main caveats being wildfire smoke late in the season and the lake's fluctuating water levels.
The signature camping is public and right on the water, run by the National Park Service as part of Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area. Kettle Falls Campground, 3 miles south of town, has 74 standard sites, a dump station, seasonal water, and a multi-lane boat launch on a forested overlook of the lake. Evans Campground, on the northeast shore, adds 44 sites and a playground. These are non-electric, so you camp self-contained. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Columbia Point Resort on US-395 has full-hookup lake-view sites with 30-amp service and pull-throughs, and North Lake RV Park on the Kettle River offers 30 and 50-amp full hookups with cabins. The Colville National Forest adds more public sites and dispersed camping.
Reservations for the NPS campgrounds go through Recreation.gov, though some Lake Roosevelt sites remain first-come, and a boating permit is required on the lake year-round. The private parks book directly. The season runs June through September, since winters are cold and snowy and Sherman Pass on SR-20 closes from November to April. Check lake levels before you go, as drawdown affects boat launches. Between the lakeside NPS campgrounds, the full-hookup private parks, the national forest, and a big, beautiful reservoir for boating, Kettle Falls gives RVers a tranquil, water-focused base in northeast Washington.
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Gear for Your Trip to Kettle Falls
All Dump Stations Near Kettle Falls
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columbia Point Resort | 1.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| North Lake RV Park And Campground | 6.1 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Colville Fairgrounds RV Park | 8.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Mobile Ranch Park | 8.6 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Panorama Mobile Home Park | 10.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rocky Lake Campgrounds | 11.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Beaver Lodge Resort & Campground | 15.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sherman Pass Campground | 18.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Chewelah Golf And Country Club RV Park | 24.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Upper Columbia RV Park | 27.8 mi | 4.8 | RV Park | Free |
Columbia Point Resort
1.0 miNorth Lake RV Park And Campground
6.1 miColville Fairgrounds RV Park
8.3 miMobile Ranch Park
8.6 miPanorama Mobile Home Park
10.6 miRocky Lake Campgrounds
11.5 miBeaver Lodge Resort & Campground
15.3 miSherman Pass Campground
18.6 miChewelah Golf And Country Club RV Park
24.5 miUpper Columbia RV Park
27.8 miTraveling to Kettle Falls by RV
Kettle Falls is reached mainly on US-395, which runs north from Spokane, about 140 km south, through Colville, 16 km southeast, and on toward the Canadian border roughly 50 km north. US-395 is paved and RV-friendly year-round, making the town an easy stop on a north-south route. The scenic alternative is SR-20, the Sherman Pass Scenic Byway, which climbs west over Sherman Pass at 5,575 feet, the highest maintained pass in Washington, through the Colville National Forest, a beautiful drive in summer but closed from November to April due to snow. Plan winter routing on US-395, and take the pass at a relaxed pace with a big rig when it is open.
The town and nearby Colville cover RV needs. Fuel and groceries are available in Kettle Falls, with full supermarkets in Colville, propane comes from AmeriGas and Ferrellgas, and there are local and mobile RV repair services, with more in Colville. The NPS campgrounds have a dump station and seasonal water, and the private parks include full hookups. Plan your visit for June through September, when the weather is hot and dry and the lake is at its best, but watch two things: wildfire smoke can drift in from regional fires from mid-summer into fall, and Lake Roosevelt's water level fluctuates with dam operations, affecting boat launches and shoreline. Check current lake levels and conditions through the National Park Service before you travel.
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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 Kettle Falls, 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 Kettle Falls
Kettle Falls is an affordable, value-oriented destination, with the public lakeside camping leading the way. The National Park Service campgrounds at Kettle Falls and Evans charge modest nightly rates for standard non-electric sites in beautiful waterfront settings, with the dump station a small extra and federal senior and access passes cutting fees further for eligible campers. For self-contained RVers who want to be right on Lake Roosevelt with a boat launch at hand, that is excellent value, and it is the heart of the camping experience here.
The private parks cost more but add full hookups and amenities. Columbia Point Resort and North Lake RV Park provide full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp service, pull-throughs, laundry, and other comforts, worth it when you want sewer at the site or are staying longer; North Lake's rates reflect its range of site and cabin options. Cheapest of all is dispersed camping on the Colville National Forest for self-contained rigs, free where allowed, subject to fire restrictions. Your main variable cost is fuel, easy to source in town and Colville. A smart plan mixes inexpensive NPS lakeside nights with an occasional full-hookup private night for laundry and dumping, keeping the average low on a lake-focused trip.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Kettle Falls
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Best Time to Visit Kettle Falls by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
20F - 29F
Crowds: Low
Freezing and snowy with campground water shut off and Sherman Pass closed; not an RV season.
Spring
Mar - May
35F - 58F
Crowds: Low
Variable with rapid lake drawdown affecting boat launches; some campground water limited.
Summer
Jun - Aug
52F - 85F
Crowds: High
Hot, dry, and clear; the best season for boating, though wildfire smoke is possible July through October.
Fall
Sep - Oct
38F - 62F
Crowds: Low
Cool and pleasant if clear; lingering wildfire smoke possible into early fall.
Explore the Kettle Falls Area
Make the lake the heart of your trip. Lake Roosevelt is a boater's paradise, with 130 miles of water, over 600 miles of shoreline, and excellent fishing for walleye, bass, trout, and even sturgeon, plus the unique option of houseboating or boat-in camping if you want to sleep on the water; note that overnight mooring carries limits and a boating permit is required year-round. The Kettle Falls Campground has a multi-lane launch right at the campground, which makes bringing your own boat easy. Before you go, check the lake level, because spring and early-summer drawdowns can leave launches high and dry and change the shoreline dramatically, a key planning detail unique to this managed reservoir.
On land, there is history and scenery to explore. St. Paul's Mission, just north of town, is an 1847 log church, the oldest in Washington, overlooking the site of the historic Kettle Falls fishery that drew Native peoples for millennia before the dam submerged it, and the nearby historical center tells that story. The Sherman Pass Scenic Byway west on SR-20 offers a gorgeous forest drive with viewpoints and the Log Flume Heritage Site when the pass is open. The surrounding Colville National Forest has hiking, like the Hoodoo Canyon Trail, and dispersed camping. Reserve your NPS campsite ahead where required, watch for summer fire restrictions and smoke, and enjoy a genuinely uncrowded slice of the Northwest.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Kettle Falls
Where can I camp with an RV in Kettle Falls, Washington?
The signature camping is public, on Lake Roosevelt, run by the National Park Service. Kettle Falls Campground, 3 miles south of town, has 74 standard sites, a dump station, seasonal water, and a multi-lane boat launch, and Evans Campground on the northeast shore adds 44 sites and a playground. These are non-electric. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Columbia Point Resort on US-395 has full-hookup lake-view sites with 30-amp service and pull-throughs, and North Lake RV Park on the Kettle River offers 30 and 50-amp full hookups plus cabins. The Colville National Forest provides additional public sites and dispersed camping for self-contained rigs.
Do the Lake Roosevelt campgrounds have hookups?
The National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt are non-electric, so they do not have hookups at the sites. Kettle Falls Campground and Evans Campground offer standard sites with seasonal water taps, vault or flush toilets, and a dump station, but no electric, water, or sewer at the individual sites, meaning you camp self-contained. For full hookups, you need a private RV park: Columbia Point Resort has full-hookup sites with 30-amp service, and North Lake RV Park offers 30 and 50-amp full hookups. So if you want sewer and power at your site, choose a private park; if you are self-contained and want to be right on the lake, the NPS campgrounds are ideal.
When is the best time to RV in Kettle Falls?
June through September is the prime season. Summers in northeast Washington are hot, dry, and clear, with highs around 85F, perfect for boating, fishing, and swimming on Lake Roosevelt, and all the campgrounds are open. The two things to watch are wildfire smoke, which can drift in from regional fires anytime from mid-July into October, and the lake level, which fluctuates with dam operations. Winters are cold and snowy, the campground water is shut off, and Sherman Pass on SR-20 closes from November to April, so it is not an RV season. Plan a summer trip and check both air quality and lake levels before you go.
Do I need reservations for Kettle Falls campgrounds?
For the main NPS campgrounds, yes. Kettle Falls Campground and Evans Campground on Lake Roosevelt are reservation-required and book through Recreation.gov, typically on a six-month window, with no first-come sites at these two, so reserve ahead for summer. Some smaller Lake Roosevelt sites and certain Colville National Forest campgrounds operate first-come, first-served, so check Recreation.gov for each. The private parks, Columbia Point Resort and North Lake RV Park, book directly. In peak summer the popular lakeside sites fill, so reserving the NPS campgrounds in advance is the safe move, while you can sometimes find first-come space at the smaller or forest sites midweek.
Is Lake Roosevelt good for boating and fishing?
Excellent, it is the main reason to visit. Lake Roosevelt is a 130-mile reservoir on the Columbia River with over 600 miles of shoreline, more than 20 public boat launches, and outstanding fishing for walleye, smallmouth bass, rainbow trout, kokanee, and even sturgeon. The Kettle Falls Campground has a multi-lane launch right there, making it easy to bring your own boat. You can also rent or bring a houseboat for multi-day trips, with boat-in camping along the shore, subject to mooring limits. A boating permit is required year-round. Just check the lake level before you go, since drawdowns can affect launch access, and you have a premier inland boating destination.
Why does Lake Roosevelt water level change so much?
Lake Roosevelt is a managed reservoir behind Grand Coulee Dam, so its level rises and falls with dam operations for power, flood control, and irrigation, ranging by many feet through the year. The biggest drawdowns typically come in spring and early summer, which can leave some boat launches high and dry and significantly change the shoreline and beach areas, before the lake refills toward full pool in summer. For RVers this matters because it affects whether you can launch a boat and what the waterfront looks like at your campground. Always check current lake levels through the National Park Service before your trip, especially if boating is a priority, and plan accordingly.
Are there full-hookup RV parks in Kettle Falls?
Yes. While the National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt are non-electric, the private parks offer full hookups. Columbia Point Resort, on US-395 in Kettle Falls, has full-hookup sites with 30-amp service, including lake-view options, plus pull-throughs, a bathhouse, and laundry. North Lake RV Park and Campground, on the Kettle River, offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp service and pull-throughs, along with glamping cabins and tent sites. These private parks give you sewer and power at the site, which the NPS campgrounds lack, so they are the choice when you want full hookups or are settling in for a longer, more comfortable stay in the area.
What is there to do around Kettle Falls besides boating?
Plenty. St. Paul's Mission, just north of town, is an 1847 log church, the oldest in Washington, set above the historic Kettle Falls fishery site, with a nearby historical center interpreting the area's rich Native and fur-trade past. The Sherman Pass Scenic Byway on SR-20, open in summer, is a gorgeous forest drive over Washington's highest maintained pass, with viewpoints and the Log Flume Heritage Site. The surrounding Colville National Forest offers hiking, such as the Hoodoo Canyon Trail, plus wildlife viewing and dispersed camping. Add fishing, swimming, and the small-town charm of Kettle Falls itself, and there is more than enough to fill a relaxed multi-day stay beyond the boating.
Is there public forest camping near Kettle Falls?
Yes. Beyond the National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt, the surrounding Colville National Forest has numerous public campgrounds east and north of town, with sites accommodating various RV lengths, most without hookups, reserved through Recreation.gov or available first-come. The forest also allows dispersed camping on its roads for self-contained rigs, free where permitted, subject to fire restrictions. These public forest options are quieter and more rustic than the lakeside campgrounds and offer access to hiking and the mountains. For RVers who enjoy national-forest camping, they are an excellent and economical complement to the busier waterfront NPS sites on the lake.
Can I drive the Sherman Pass Scenic Byway in an RV?
Yes, in summer and at a relaxed pace. SR-20, the Sherman Pass Scenic Byway, climbs west from near Kettle Falls over Sherman Pass at 5,575 feet, Washington's highest maintained pass, through the Colville National Forest, and it is a paved, scenic route that RVs can drive, with grades and curves that call for an easy pace and low gears on the descents. The crucial point is timing: the pass closes from November to April due to snow, so it is a summer-only drive. When open, it offers beautiful forest scenery, viewpoints, and the Log Flume Heritage Site. For winter travel, use US-395 instead, which stays open year-round.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Kettle Falls?
The main public option is the dump station at Kettle Falls Campground in Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area, which charges around $10 for reservation holders, with a reduced rate for senior and access pass holders. Evans Campground also has dump facilities. The private parks, Columbia Point Resort and North Lake RV Park, include dumping and offer full hookups at the sites, so staying at one simplifies tank service. Because the NPS campgrounds are non-electric and dispersed forest camping has no services, plan to use one of these dump stations on your trip. Note that campground water is seasonal and shut off in winter, so factor that in for shoulder-season visits.
Can I camp for free near Kettle Falls?
Yes, if you are self-contained. The surrounding Colville National Forest allows dispersed camping on many of its roads, suited to self-contained rigs, which makes the nightly cost free where it is permitted. You should check current access, motor-vehicle-use rules, and especially summer fire restrictions, which are common during the dry, fire-prone months in northeast Washington. These dispersed sites have no services, so arrive with full water and a plan for waste, and pair them with a dump and refill at an NPS campground or private park in town. For budget travelers who enjoy rustic forest camping between serviced nights, the national forest around Kettle Falls offers genuine free options.
How far is Kettle Falls from Spokane?
Kettle Falls is about 140 km, or roughly 90 miles, north of Spokane via US-395, a drive of around two hours through Colville and the Colville River valley. That makes it an easy weekend or road-trip destination from Spokane and the Interstate 90 corridor, yet far enough to feel genuinely removed in the quiet, forested northeast corner of the state. Spokane is the nearest large city for any major services, supplies, or RV repair you cannot get in Kettle Falls or nearby Colville. The town also sits about 50 km south of the Canadian border, so it is a logical stop for travelers heading to or from British Columbia on US-395.
Where can I camp with an RV in Kettle Falls, Washington?
The signature camping is public, on Lake Roosevelt, run by the National Park Service. Kettle Falls Campground, 3 miles south of town, has 74 standard sites, a dump station, seasonal water, and a multi-lane boat launch, and Evans Campground on the northeast shore adds 44 sites and a playground. These are non-electric. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Columbia Point Resort on US-395 has full-hookup lake-view sites with 30-amp service and pull-throughs, and North Lake RV Park on the Kettle River offers 30 and 50-amp full hookups plus cabins. The Colville National Forest provides additional public sites and dispersed camping for self-contained rigs.
Do the Lake Roosevelt campgrounds have hookups?
The National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt are non-electric, so they do not have hookups at the sites. Kettle Falls Campground and Evans Campground offer standard sites with seasonal water taps, vault or flush toilets, and a dump station, but no electric, water, or sewer at the individual sites, meaning you camp self-contained. For full hookups, you need a private RV park: Columbia Point Resort has full-hookup sites with 30-amp service, and North Lake RV Park offers 30 and 50-amp full hookups. So if you want sewer and power at your site, choose a private park; if you are self-contained and want to be right on the lake, the NPS campgrounds are ideal.
When is the best time to RV in Kettle Falls?
June through September is the prime season. Summers in northeast Washington are hot, dry, and clear, with highs around 85F, perfect for boating, fishing, and swimming on Lake Roosevelt, and all the campgrounds are open. The two things to watch are wildfire smoke, which can drift in from regional fires anytime from mid-July into October, and the lake level, which fluctuates with dam operations. Winters are cold and snowy, the campground water is shut off, and Sherman Pass on SR-20 closes from November to April, so it is not an RV season. Plan a summer trip and check both air quality and lake levels before you go.
Do I need reservations for Kettle Falls campgrounds?
For the main NPS campgrounds, yes. Kettle Falls Campground and Evans Campground on Lake Roosevelt are reservation-required and book through Recreation.gov, typically on a six-month window, with no first-come sites at these two, so reserve ahead for summer. Some smaller Lake Roosevelt sites and certain Colville National Forest campgrounds operate first-come, first-served, so check Recreation.gov for each. The private parks, Columbia Point Resort and North Lake RV Park, book directly. In peak summer the popular lakeside sites fill, so reserving the NPS campgrounds in advance is the safe move, while you can sometimes find first-come space at the smaller or forest sites midweek.
Is Lake Roosevelt good for boating and fishing?
Excellent, it is the main reason to visit. Lake Roosevelt is a 130-mile reservoir on the Columbia River with over 600 miles of shoreline, more than 20 public boat launches, and outstanding fishing for walleye, smallmouth bass, rainbow trout, kokanee, and even sturgeon. The Kettle Falls Campground has a multi-lane launch right there, making it easy to bring your own boat. You can also rent or bring a houseboat for multi-day trips, with boat-in camping along the shore, subject to mooring limits. A boating permit is required year-round. Just check the lake level before you go, since drawdowns can affect launch access, and you have a premier inland boating destination.
Why does Lake Roosevelt water level change so much?
Lake Roosevelt is a managed reservoir behind Grand Coulee Dam, so its level rises and falls with dam operations for power, flood control, and irrigation, ranging by many feet through the year. The biggest drawdowns typically come in spring and early summer, which can leave some boat launches high and dry and significantly change the shoreline and beach areas, before the lake refills toward full pool in summer. For RVers this matters because it affects whether you can launch a boat and what the waterfront looks like at your campground. Always check current lake levels through the National Park Service before your trip, especially if boating is a priority, and plan accordingly.
Are there full-hookup RV parks in Kettle Falls?
Yes. While the National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt are non-electric, the private parks offer full hookups. Columbia Point Resort, on US-395 in Kettle Falls, has full-hookup sites with 30-amp service, including lake-view options, plus pull-throughs, a bathhouse, and laundry. North Lake RV Park and Campground, on the Kettle River, offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50-amp service and pull-throughs, along with glamping cabins and tent sites. These private parks give you sewer and power at the site, which the NPS campgrounds lack, so they are the choice when you want full hookups or are settling in for a longer, more comfortable stay in the area.
What is there to do around Kettle Falls besides boating?
Plenty. St. Paul's Mission, just north of town, is an 1847 log church, the oldest in Washington, set above the historic Kettle Falls fishery site, with a nearby historical center interpreting the area's rich Native and fur-trade past. The Sherman Pass Scenic Byway on SR-20, open in summer, is a gorgeous forest drive over Washington's highest maintained pass, with viewpoints and the Log Flume Heritage Site. The surrounding Colville National Forest offers hiking, such as the Hoodoo Canyon Trail, plus wildlife viewing and dispersed camping. Add fishing, swimming, and the small-town charm of Kettle Falls itself, and there is more than enough to fill a relaxed multi-day stay beyond the boating.
Is there public forest camping near Kettle Falls?
Yes. Beyond the National Park Service campgrounds on Lake Roosevelt, the surrounding Colville National Forest has numerous public campgrounds east and north of town, with sites accommodating various RV lengths, most without hookups, reserved through Recreation.gov or available first-come. The forest also allows dispersed camping on its roads for self-contained rigs, free where permitted, subject to fire restrictions. These public forest options are quieter and more rustic than the lakeside campgrounds and offer access to hiking and the mountains. For RVers who enjoy national-forest camping, they are an excellent and economical complement to the busier waterfront NPS sites on the lake.
Can I drive the Sherman Pass Scenic Byway in an RV?
Yes, in summer and at a relaxed pace. SR-20, the Sherman Pass Scenic Byway, climbs west from near Kettle Falls over Sherman Pass at 5,575 feet, Washington's highest maintained pass, through the Colville National Forest, and it is a paved, scenic route that RVs can drive, with grades and curves that call for an easy pace and low gears on the descents. The crucial point is timing: the pass closes from November to April due to snow, so it is a summer-only drive. When open, it offers beautiful forest scenery, viewpoints, and the Log Flume Heritage Site. For winter travel, use US-395 instead, which stays open year-round.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Kettle Falls?
The main public option is the dump station at Kettle Falls Campground in Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area, which charges around $10 for reservation holders, with a reduced rate for senior and access pass holders. Evans Campground also has dump facilities. The private parks, Columbia Point Resort and North Lake RV Park, include dumping and offer full hookups at the sites, so staying at one simplifies tank service. Because the NPS campgrounds are non-electric and dispersed forest camping has no services, plan to use one of these dump stations on your trip. Note that campground water is seasonal and shut off in winter, so factor that in for shoulder-season visits.
Can I camp for free near Kettle Falls?
Yes, if you are self-contained. The surrounding Colville National Forest allows dispersed camping on many of its roads, suited to self-contained rigs, which makes the nightly cost free where it is permitted. You should check current access, motor-vehicle-use rules, and especially summer fire restrictions, which are common during the dry, fire-prone months in northeast Washington. These dispersed sites have no services, so arrive with full water and a plan for waste, and pair them with a dump and refill at an NPS campground or private park in town. For budget travelers who enjoy rustic forest camping between serviced nights, the national forest around Kettle Falls offers genuine free options.
How far is Kettle Falls from Spokane?
Kettle Falls is about 140 km, or roughly 90 miles, north of Spokane via US-395, a drive of around two hours through Colville and the Colville River valley. That makes it an easy weekend or road-trip destination from Spokane and the Interstate 90 corridor, yet far enough to feel genuinely removed in the quiet, forested northeast corner of the state. Spokane is the nearest large city for any major services, supplies, or RV repair you cannot get in Kettle Falls or nearby Colville. The town also sits about 50 km south of the Canadian border, so it is a logical stop for travelers heading to or from British Columbia on US-395.
Are there free dump stations in Kettle Falls?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Kettle Falls.
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