RV Dump Stations In Antigo, Wisconsin
45.1403° N, 89.1523° W
Quick Overview
Antigo sits in the heart of Wisconsins north woods, about 35 miles north of Wausau on US-45, and dumping an RV here means heading to the Langlade County parks rather than anything in the city itself. The county runs a couple of solid lake campgrounds with dump stations, and the area is a fine base for the Wolf River, the Ice Age Trail, and the Nicolet National Forest. The main thing to understand is that this is seasonal country: the dump stations and most RV options run from late spring through early fall, then shut down for the long, cold winter.
The two reliable dumps are at the Langlade County parks. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north on a spring-fed lake, has a dump station on-site with showers, flush toilets, and 48 sites. Perch Lake Campground at the Charles De Langlade Recreation Area, 30 miles northeast, has a dump station that costs $15 for non-campers, plus freshwater fill, 50-amp service, and 57 sites. If you camp, the dump is included; non-campers pay the modest county fee. There is no public dump in the city of Antigo itself, so plan around the county parks.
Access runs on US-45, the main north-south highway, plus WI-64, which conveniently bypasses downtown and keeps big rigs out of the tight city streets. There is no interstate closer than I-41, about 75 miles southeast at Appleton. Two cautions shape a visit. First, the city enforces a 48-hour street-parking limit and a winter ban from November 1 to March 31, so do not plan to overnight on city streets; camp at a county park or boondock on Langlade County Forest land instead. Second, watch for spring weight restrictions on county roads, typically March through May, if you travel heavy. Fill diesel and propane in Antigo or back in Wausau before heading into the forest, where services thin out. The sections below cover dumping costs, services, the seasonal picture, and the campgrounds worth basing at.
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All Dump Stations Near Antigo
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langlade County Fairgrounds | 1.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mohican North Star Casino & Bingo | 23.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| River Forest Rafting Campground | 23.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Merrill Wastewater Treatment Facility | 25.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tilleda Falls Campgrounds | 25.3 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pelican Lake Campground | 26.2 mi | 4.8 | Dump Station | Free |
| Marathon County Park | 27.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Council Grounds State Park | 28.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Forest County Veterans Memorial Park | 28.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Gander RV of Rothschild | 30.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Langlade County Fairgrounds
1.1 miMohican North Star Casino & Bingo
23.6 miRiver Forest Rafting Campground
23.8 miMerrill Wastewater Treatment Facility
25.0 miTilleda Falls Campgrounds
25.3 miPelican Lake Campground
26.2 miMarathon County Park
27.5 miCouncil Grounds State Park
28.5 miForest County Veterans Memorial Park
28.9 miGander RV of Rothschild
30.5 miTraveling to Antigo by RV
Antigo is served by US-45, the primary north-south highway through town, along with WI-64, WI-47, WI-52, and WI-55. There is no interstate here: the nearest is I-41 about 75 miles southeast via WI-29 at Appleton. Antigo sits about 35 miles north of Wausau on US-45, so plan for two-lane highway driving on the approach. WI-64 bypasses around downtown Antigo, which keeps larger RVs out of the tighter city-center streets, so use the bypass with a big rig. No specific low-bridge restrictions were identified, but Wisconsin imposes seasonal weight restrictions on local and county roads during the spring thaw, typically March through May, which can affect heavy RVs, so check the WisDOT and Wisconsin DNR seasonal information before spring travel.
For overnight stays, avoid the city streets: Antigo enforces a 48-hour parking limit on all public streets and lots, plus a winter ban from November 1 to March 31, no parking 2:30 to 7 a.m. The Walmart Supercenter at 200 E State Hwy 64 may allow overnight parking, but call ahead at 715-627-1382 to confirm. The better options are a county-park campground like Jack Lake or Perch Lake, or dispersed camping on Langlade County Forest lands, allowed with a 14-day limit if you stay more than half a mile from a developed facility. Fill diesel before leaving Wausau or Antigo, since fuel options thin significantly heading north into the Nicolet National Forest, and cell signal drops considerably in the county forests, so download maps before heading out.
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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 Antigo, Wisconsin, 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 Antigo
Dumping around Antigo runs through the Langlade County parks. The county campground dump stations charge $15 for non-camper use, the standard rate at facilities like Perch Lake. If you are camping there, the dump is included with your site, so you pay nothing extra beyond the nightly fee, which runs about $40 at Perch Lake and similar county pricing at Jack Lake. So the cheapest path is to camp a night and use the included dump on your way out. If your route also takes you onto Wisconsin DNR state lands, note those require a vehicle admission sticker, around $28 annually for residents and $38 for non-residents, though the county parks are separate from that.
For a quick non-camper dump, budget $15 and carry cash, since these seasonal county facilities may not process cards. To save money overall, combine your dump with the freshwater fill at Perch Lake in a single stop, and resupply diesel, propane, and groceries at the Antigo Walmart before heading into the forest, where prices and options thin out. Remember that all of these are warm-season facilities that close for winter, so there is no off-season budget dump up here. Plan your dumping for late spring through early fall, camp a night at a county lake to fold the dump into the site fee, and you will keep your costs minimal while enjoying the north woods.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Antigo
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Best Time to Visit Antigo by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
9F - 25F
Crowds: Low
Freezing, snowy, and windy, with December averaging over six inches of snow and lows that can dip below -15F. Nearly all county-park dump stations close for the season, so RV dumping options are very limited. The city also enforces a winter parking ban from November 1 to March 31, no parking 2:30 to 7 a.m. Plan around a year-round facility and serious freeze protection if you travel through.
Spring
Mar - May
32F - 53F
Crowds: Low
Slow warmup with snow possible into April and muddy forest roads during the thaw. Watch for seasonal weight restrictions on county and local roads, typically March through May, which can affect heavy rigs. County-park dump stations reopen later in the season, so confirm by phone. A quiet shoulder window before the summer camping crowds arrive.
Summer
Jun - Aug
56F - 79F
Crowds: Medium
Warm and wet, with June the rainiest month and afternoon thunderstorms common. This is prime camping season, so the county parks at Jack Lake and Perch Lake are running and their dump stations are open. Book ahead on weekends. The best time to enjoy the lakes, the Wolf River, and the forest trails. Watch for bugs in early summer.
Fall
Sep - Oct
36F - 54F
Crowds: Medium
Peak fall color runs mid-September into early October and is a real draw, so campgrounds fill on weekends, book ahead. September stays pleasant with highs near 68F, tapering to the 40s by November. Dump stations stay open through the color season then start closing as hard frosts arrive. Crisp, beautiful, and fewer bugs than summer. A favorite window up here.
Explore the Antigo Area
A few things we have learned camping around Antigo. Skip overnighting in town: the city has a 48-hour parking limit and a winter overnight ban, so camp at a county park like Jack Lake or Perch Lake, or boondock on Langlade County Forest land with the 14-day limit. The county-park dumps are your facilities here, included if you camp or $15 for non-campers at Perch Lake, which also has freshwater fill so you can dump and fill in one stop. Carry cash for the county fees.
Fill diesel and propane in Antigo or back in Wausau, about 35 miles south, before heading north into the Nicolet National Forest, where fuel options thin out fast. Draeger Propane and AmeriGas handle propane in town, and Skarlupka Service does RV and diesel repair. Cell signal drops considerably in the forests east of town, so download maps before you go. Fall color peaks mid-September into early October and fills campgrounds on weekends, so book ahead for that window. In spring, mind the seasonal weight restrictions on county roads, March through May. The Walmart on E State Hwy 64 is your main resupply point before heading to the remote lakes.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Antigo
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Antigo, Wisconsin?
The dump stations around Antigo are at the Langlade County parks rather than in the city itself. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north on a spring-fed lake, has a dump station on-site along with showers, flush toilets, and 20/30-amp electric across 48 sites. Perch Lake Campground at the Charles De Langlade Recreation Area, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has a dump station that costs $15 for non-campers, plus freshwater fill and 20/30/50-amp electric across 57 sites. Both are reliable warm-season options. The Langlade County fairgrounds campground near Antigo is another possibility, though details are limited, so contact the county. In town itself there is no public dump, so plan to use one of the county-park stations, ideally as part of a stay or for the modest non-camper fee at Perch Lake.
Is there a free dump station in Antigo?
Free dumping around Antigo generally means dumping as part of a paid campground stay rather than at a standalone free public station. At the Langlade County parks like Jack Lake and Perch Lake, the dump is included when you camp there, while non-campers pay a fee, for example $15 at Perch Lake. So if you are already paying for a site, your dump is effectively covered. There is no free public RV dump in the city of Antigo itself. Wisconsin generally prohibits overnight parking at interstate rest areas, and the nearest interstate is well south anyway, so that is not an option here. The most economical route is to camp a night at a county park and use the included dump on your way out. For a non-camper dump, budget the modest county fee and call ahead, since these are seasonal facilities.
How much does it cost to dump an RV near Antigo?
Langlade County campground dump stations charge $15 for non-camper use, which is the standard rate at the area facilities like Perch Lake. If you are camping there, the dump is included with your site, so you pay nothing extra: Perch Lake runs about $40 a night for a standard site, and Jack Lake has similar county-park pricing. Note that Wisconsin DNR properties also require a vehicle admission sticker for entry, around $28 annually for residents and $38 for non-residents, if your route takes you onto state lands, though the county parks are separate. The cheapest approach is to camp a night at a county park and dump on your way out, included with the site. For a quick non-camper dump, budget $15 and carry cash, since these seasonal county facilities may not process cards. Confirm availability by phone, since the stations close for winter.
Can I park my RV overnight in Antigo?
Be careful with overnight parking in the city of Antigo. The city enforces a 48-hour limit on all public streets and lots, plus a winter parking ban from November 1 through March 31 that prohibits parking on any city street between 2:30 and 7 a.m., with a $25 fine rising to $35 if unpaid within 48 hours. So city streets are not a good overnight option, especially in winter. The Walmart Supercenter at 200 E State Hwy 64 may allow overnight parking, but call ahead at 715-627-1382 to confirm, since policies vary. The far better option is a county-park campground like Jack Lake or Perch Lake, or dispersed camping on Langlade County Forest lands, which allow it with a 14-day limit if you stay more than half a mile from any developed recreation facility. For a proper overnight, camp at a county park or boondock on forest land rather than parking in town.
Where do I get propane and RV repair in Antigo?
Antigo covers the basics. For propane, Draeger Propane is a local option serving the Antigo area at 715-623-7667, and AmeriGas also serves the area. For RV and diesel repair, Skarlupka Service Inc handles automotive and diesel work with locations in Antigo and Wausau. Diesel fuel is available in town, including at the Walmart Supercenter fuel station on E State Hwy 64, but there are no major truck-stop chains like Loves or Pilot in Antigo itself; the nearest are along the US-51 and WI-29 corridor near Wausau, about 35 miles south. The smart move is to fill up on diesel and propane in Antigo or back in Wausau before heading north into the Nicolet National Forest, where fuel options thin out significantly. The Walmart is the main resupply point for groceries and propane, so stock up there before heading to the more remote county campgrounds.
Are Antigo dump stations open in winter?
No, almost none are. The dump stations around Antigo are at seasonal county-park campgrounds like Jack Lake and Perch Lake, which close for the winter, since north-central Wisconsin gets freezing temperatures regularly below 0F and heavy snow from November through April. RV camping options up here are very limited in winter due to the extreme cold. The city of Antigo also enforces a winter parking ban from November 1 to March 31, so the whole area is geared down for the cold months. If you are traveling through in winter, you will need to find a year-round facility, likely well south toward Wausau or beyond, and take serious freeze precautions: dump while above freezing, drain hoses completely, and add RV antifreeze to your tanks. Do not count on any Antigo-area county dump being open in winter. Plan your dumping for the warm-season window, roughly late spring through early fall.
Where can I fill fresh water near Antigo?
Fresh potable water is available at the county-park campgrounds. Perch Lake Campground, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has a freshwater fill station along with its dump, so you can handle both in one stop. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north, also has water at the campground. The Walmart and other in-town stops cover other resupply needs, but Antigo itself does not have a dedicated public RV water fill, so plan to top off at one of the county parks where you also dump. Always use a drinking-water-safe hose. Because cell signal and services thin out as you head into the county forests and the Nicolet National Forest east of town, fill your fresh tank before venturing into the more remote camping areas. Stock up on water at a county park, and carry extra if you plan to boondock on the forest lands where there is no developed water source.
What highways access Antigo for RVs?
Antigo is served by US-45, the primary north-south highway through town, along with WI-64, WI-47, WI-52, and WI-55. There is no interstate here: the nearest is I-41 about 75 miles southeast via WI-29 at Appleton, and US-41/I-41 connections run through that corridor. Antigo is about 35 miles north of Wausau on US-45, so plan for two-lane highway driving on the approach. WI-64 bypasses around downtown Antigo, which keeps larger RVs out of the tighter city-center streets, so use the bypass with a big rig. No specific low-bridge restrictions were identified, but Wisconsin imposes seasonal weight restrictions on local and county roads during the spring thaw, typically March through May, which can affect heavy RVs, so check WisDOT seasonal postings before spring travel. Fill diesel before leaving Wausau or Antigo, since fuel options thin out heading north into the national forest.
Are there campgrounds with dump stations near Antigo?
Yes, at the Langlade County parks. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north on a spring-fed lake, has 48 sites plus group sites and cabins, with a dump station on-site, showers, flush toilets, a boat ramp, and a swimming beach, reachable at 715-623-6214. Perch Lake Campground at the Charles De Langlade Recreation Area, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has 57 sites including drive-through and lakeside options, a dump station ($15 non-camper), freshwater fill, flush restrooms with showers, and ATV/UTV trail access, at about $40 a night. The Langlade County fairgrounds campground near Antigo is another possibility, though details are limited. High Lake is primitive hike-in tent sites only, not suitable for RVs. For RV camping with a dump, Jack Lake and Perch Lake are your two solid choices. Reserve ahead for summer and fall-color weekends, when they fill up.
What is there to do near Antigo besides dump tanks?
Antigo sits in the heart of Wisconsins north woods with plenty of outdoor recreation. The Wolf River, about 25 miles east, is one of the best whitewater rivers in the Midwest with rafting and kayaking, plus nearly 400 miles of trout streams. The Ice Age National Scenic Trail runs a 50-mile segment through Langlade County across glacial moraines and hardwood forests. The Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest spreads across over 1.5 million acres in eastern Langlade County, accessed via the Nicolet-Wolf River Scenic Byway on WI-55, with hiking, fishing, and dispersed camping. ATV and UTV riders have 106-plus miles of trails across four systems, and snowmobilers have 500-plus miles of groomed trails in winter. Kettlebowl Ski Hill offers family downhill skiing. Antigo Lake Park in town has an accessible fishing pier for a quick stop. Leave the rig at a county campground and explore the forests and rivers by tow vehicle.
Do I need to worry about spring weight restrictions near Antigo?
Yes, if you travel in spring with a heavy rig. Wisconsin imposes seasonal weight restrictions on local and county roads during the spring thaw, typically March through May, to protect roads softened by frost coming out of the ground. These postings can limit or affect heavy RVs on the secondary roads you might use to reach the county-park campgrounds, so check the WisDOT seasonal postings before you travel in those months and plan a route on the main highways where possible. The thaw also makes forest roads muddy, which is a concern if you are boondocking on Langlade County Forest lands or heading into the Nicolet National Forest. Outside the spring thaw window, weight restrictions are not an issue. If you are visiting in summer or fall, you will not encounter them. For spring trips, just verify the current postings and stick to US-45 and the state highways where the restrictions rarely apply.
Can big rigs navigate Antigo and its campgrounds?
Yes, with a little planning. US-45 is the main route into Antigo and handles big rigs fine, and WI-64 bypasses around downtown, keeping larger RVs out of the tighter city-center streets, so use the bypass to skirt town. The approach from Wausau, about 35 miles south on US-45, is two-lane but manageable. For camping, Perch Lake Campground includes drive-through sites and 50-amp service that suit larger rigs, and Jack Lake has 48 sites though with 20/30-amp electric, so check site dimensions when you book. The roads into the county parks are secondary and can be narrow, so go slow and watch for tight turns. In spring, mind the seasonal weight restrictions on county roads. Cell signal drops in the forests, so download maps before heading out. With the bypass, the main highways, and the drive-through sites at Perch Lake, a big rig handles the Antigo area comfortably in the warm season.
When is the best time to visit Antigo in an RV?
Summer, June through August, is the prime camping season up here, with warm days, open county-park dump stations, and full access to the lakes, the Wolf River, and the forest trails, though early summer brings bugs and June is the wettest month. Early fall, September into early October, is our other favorite: the fall color peaks mid-September through early October and is genuinely spectacular, the bugs ease off, and the weather stays pleasant, though campgrounds fill on color-season weekends, so book ahead. Spring is a slow, muddy warmup with possible snow into April and seasonal road weight restrictions. Winter is freezing and snowy with dump stations closed and a city parking ban, so it is really only for snowmobilers. For the best mix of weather, open facilities, and scenery, target summer for water recreation or early fall for the color, and reserve your county-park site ahead.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Antigo, Wisconsin?
The dump stations around Antigo are at the Langlade County parks rather than in the city itself. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north on a spring-fed lake, has a dump station on-site along with showers, flush toilets, and 20/30-amp electric across 48 sites. Perch Lake Campground at the Charles De Langlade Recreation Area, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has a dump station that costs $15 for non-campers, plus freshwater fill and 20/30/50-amp electric across 57 sites. Both are reliable warm-season options. The Langlade County fairgrounds campground near Antigo is another possibility, though details are limited, so contact the county. In town itself there is no public dump, so plan to use one of the county-park stations, ideally as part of a stay or for the modest non-camper fee at Perch Lake.
Is there a free dump station in Antigo?
Free dumping around Antigo generally means dumping as part of a paid campground stay rather than at a standalone free public station. At the Langlade County parks like Jack Lake and Perch Lake, the dump is included when you camp there, while non-campers pay a fee, for example $15 at Perch Lake. So if you are already paying for a site, your dump is effectively covered. There is no free public RV dump in the city of Antigo itself. Wisconsin generally prohibits overnight parking at interstate rest areas, and the nearest interstate is well south anyway, so that is not an option here. The most economical route is to camp a night at a county park and use the included dump on your way out. For a non-camper dump, budget the modest county fee and call ahead, since these are seasonal facilities.
How much does it cost to dump an RV near Antigo?
Langlade County campground dump stations charge $15 for non-camper use, which is the standard rate at the area facilities like Perch Lake. If you are camping there, the dump is included with your site, so you pay nothing extra: Perch Lake runs about $40 a night for a standard site, and Jack Lake has similar county-park pricing. Note that Wisconsin DNR properties also require a vehicle admission sticker for entry, around $28 annually for residents and $38 for non-residents, if your route takes you onto state lands, though the county parks are separate. The cheapest approach is to camp a night at a county park and dump on your way out, included with the site. For a quick non-camper dump, budget $15 and carry cash, since these seasonal county facilities may not process cards. Confirm availability by phone, since the stations close for winter.
Can I park my RV overnight in Antigo?
Be careful with overnight parking in the city of Antigo. The city enforces a 48-hour limit on all public streets and lots, plus a winter parking ban from November 1 through March 31 that prohibits parking on any city street between 2:30 and 7 a.m., with a $25 fine rising to $35 if unpaid within 48 hours. So city streets are not a good overnight option, especially in winter. The Walmart Supercenter at 200 E State Hwy 64 may allow overnight parking, but call ahead at 715-627-1382 to confirm, since policies vary. The far better option is a county-park campground like Jack Lake or Perch Lake, or dispersed camping on Langlade County Forest lands, which allow it with a 14-day limit if you stay more than half a mile from any developed recreation facility. For a proper overnight, camp at a county park or boondock on forest land rather than parking in town.
Where do I get propane and RV repair in Antigo?
Antigo covers the basics. For propane, Draeger Propane is a local option serving the Antigo area at 715-623-7667, and AmeriGas also serves the area. For RV and diesel repair, Skarlupka Service Inc handles automotive and diesel work with locations in Antigo and Wausau. Diesel fuel is available in town, including at the Walmart Supercenter fuel station on E State Hwy 64, but there are no major truck-stop chains like Loves or Pilot in Antigo itself; the nearest are along the US-51 and WI-29 corridor near Wausau, about 35 miles south. The smart move is to fill up on diesel and propane in Antigo or back in Wausau before heading north into the Nicolet National Forest, where fuel options thin out significantly. The Walmart is the main resupply point for groceries and propane, so stock up there before heading to the more remote county campgrounds.
Are Antigo dump stations open in winter?
No, almost none are. The dump stations around Antigo are at seasonal county-park campgrounds like Jack Lake and Perch Lake, which close for the winter, since north-central Wisconsin gets freezing temperatures regularly below 0F and heavy snow from November through April. RV camping options up here are very limited in winter due to the extreme cold. The city of Antigo also enforces a winter parking ban from November 1 to March 31, so the whole area is geared down for the cold months. If you are traveling through in winter, you will need to find a year-round facility, likely well south toward Wausau or beyond, and take serious freeze precautions: dump while above freezing, drain hoses completely, and add RV antifreeze to your tanks. Do not count on any Antigo-area county dump being open in winter. Plan your dumping for the warm-season window, roughly late spring through early fall.
Where can I fill fresh water near Antigo?
Fresh potable water is available at the county-park campgrounds. Perch Lake Campground, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has a freshwater fill station along with its dump, so you can handle both in one stop. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north, also has water at the campground. The Walmart and other in-town stops cover other resupply needs, but Antigo itself does not have a dedicated public RV water fill, so plan to top off at one of the county parks where you also dump. Always use a drinking-water-safe hose. Because cell signal and services thin out as you head into the county forests and the Nicolet National Forest east of town, fill your fresh tank before venturing into the more remote camping areas. Stock up on water at a county park, and carry extra if you plan to boondock on the forest lands where there is no developed water source.
What highways access Antigo for RVs?
Antigo is served by US-45, the primary north-south highway through town, along with WI-64, WI-47, WI-52, and WI-55. There is no interstate here: the nearest is I-41 about 75 miles southeast via WI-29 at Appleton, and US-41/I-41 connections run through that corridor. Antigo is about 35 miles north of Wausau on US-45, so plan for two-lane highway driving on the approach. WI-64 bypasses around downtown Antigo, which keeps larger RVs out of the tighter city-center streets, so use the bypass with a big rig. No specific low-bridge restrictions were identified, but Wisconsin imposes seasonal weight restrictions on local and county roads during the spring thaw, typically March through May, which can affect heavy RVs, so check WisDOT seasonal postings before spring travel. Fill diesel before leaving Wausau or Antigo, since fuel options thin out heading north into the national forest.
Are there campgrounds with dump stations near Antigo?
Yes, at the Langlade County parks. Jack Lake Recreation Area, 15 miles north on a spring-fed lake, has 48 sites plus group sites and cabins, with a dump station on-site, showers, flush toilets, a boat ramp, and a swimming beach, reachable at 715-623-6214. Perch Lake Campground at the Charles De Langlade Recreation Area, 30 miles northeast near Post Lake, has 57 sites including drive-through and lakeside options, a dump station ($15 non-camper), freshwater fill, flush restrooms with showers, and ATV/UTV trail access, at about $40 a night. The Langlade County fairgrounds campground near Antigo is another possibility, though details are limited. High Lake is primitive hike-in tent sites only, not suitable for RVs. For RV camping with a dump, Jack Lake and Perch Lake are your two solid choices. Reserve ahead for summer and fall-color weekends, when they fill up.
What is there to do near Antigo besides dump tanks?
Antigo sits in the heart of Wisconsins north woods with plenty of outdoor recreation. The Wolf River, about 25 miles east, is one of the best whitewater rivers in the Midwest with rafting and kayaking, plus nearly 400 miles of trout streams. The Ice Age National Scenic Trail runs a 50-mile segment through Langlade County across glacial moraines and hardwood forests. The Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest spreads across over 1.5 million acres in eastern Langlade County, accessed via the Nicolet-Wolf River Scenic Byway on WI-55, with hiking, fishing, and dispersed camping. ATV and UTV riders have 106-plus miles of trails across four systems, and snowmobilers have 500-plus miles of groomed trails in winter. Kettlebowl Ski Hill offers family downhill skiing. Antigo Lake Park in town has an accessible fishing pier for a quick stop. Leave the rig at a county campground and explore the forests and rivers by tow vehicle.
Do I need to worry about spring weight restrictions near Antigo?
Yes, if you travel in spring with a heavy rig. Wisconsin imposes seasonal weight restrictions on local and county roads during the spring thaw, typically March through May, to protect roads softened by frost coming out of the ground. These postings can limit or affect heavy RVs on the secondary roads you might use to reach the county-park campgrounds, so check the WisDOT seasonal postings before you travel in those months and plan a route on the main highways where possible. The thaw also makes forest roads muddy, which is a concern if you are boondocking on Langlade County Forest lands or heading into the Nicolet National Forest. Outside the spring thaw window, weight restrictions are not an issue. If you are visiting in summer or fall, you will not encounter them. For spring trips, just verify the current postings and stick to US-45 and the state highways where the restrictions rarely apply.
Can big rigs navigate Antigo and its campgrounds?
Yes, with a little planning. US-45 is the main route into Antigo and handles big rigs fine, and WI-64 bypasses around downtown, keeping larger RVs out of the tighter city-center streets, so use the bypass to skirt town. The approach from Wausau, about 35 miles south on US-45, is two-lane but manageable. For camping, Perch Lake Campground includes drive-through sites and 50-amp service that suit larger rigs, and Jack Lake has 48 sites though with 20/30-amp electric, so check site dimensions when you book. The roads into the county parks are secondary and can be narrow, so go slow and watch for tight turns. In spring, mind the seasonal weight restrictions on county roads. Cell signal drops in the forests, so download maps before heading out. With the bypass, the main highways, and the drive-through sites at Perch Lake, a big rig handles the Antigo area comfortably in the warm season.
When is the best time to visit Antigo in an RV?
Summer, June through August, is the prime camping season up here, with warm days, open county-park dump stations, and full access to the lakes, the Wolf River, and the forest trails, though early summer brings bugs and June is the wettest month. Early fall, September into early October, is our other favorite: the fall color peaks mid-September through early October and is genuinely spectacular, the bugs ease off, and the weather stays pleasant, though campgrounds fill on color-season weekends, so book ahead. Spring is a slow, muddy warmup with possible snow into April and seasonal road weight restrictions. Winter is freezing and snowy with dump stations closed and a city parking ban, so it is really only for snowmobilers. For the best mix of weather, open facilities, and scenery, target summer for water recreation or early fall for the color, and reserve your county-park site ahead.
Are there free dump stations in Antigo?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Antigo.
All Dump Stations Near Antigo (35)
RV Dump StationsLanglade County Fairgrounds
RV Dump StationsPelican Lake Campground
RV Dump StationsMohican North Star Casino & Bingo
RV Dump StationsTilleda Falls Campgrounds
RV Dump StationsForest County Veterans Memorial Park
RV Dump StationsRiver Forest Rafting Campground
RV Dump StationsLake George Campsite
RV Dump Stations



