RV Parks In Basin, Wyoming
44.3800° N, 108.0390° W
Quick Overview
Basin is a small farm town on the floor of the Bighorn Basin in north-central Wyoming, sitting on US-16/20 between Worland and Greybull. It is not a resort town, and that is part of the appeal for RVers. Basin makes a quiet, affordable base for a region loaded with big country, from Bighorn Canyon to the Big Horn Mountains to the hot springs at Thermopolis. You will not find a wall of RV resorts in town, so the smart plan is to think of the whole US-16/20 corridor as your camping options.
For full hookups, the two dependable private parks sit just up and down the highway. Greybull KOA, about 11 miles north at the base of the Big Horn Mountains, offers full-hookup pull-through sites with 50-amp, a pool, and cabins, and it is a popular stopover on the Yellowstone-to-Mount Rushmore route. Worland RV Park, roughly 30 miles south, runs about 46 full-hookup sites with stable 50-amp power, good water, WiFi, and laundry. Both handle big rigs without drama and stay open through the travel season.
The public camping is where the scenery lives. To the north, Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area has first-come campgrounds like Horseshoe Bend Campground, with some electric and water sites, a dump station, and modern restrooms near Lovell. To the east, the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds line the Cloud Peak and Bighorn Scenic Byways along US-16 and US-14, giving you cool high-elevation sites with vault toilets and drinking water, plus legal dispersed camping if you want to go free and self-contained.
The trade-off here is the usual one, sharpened by geography. Private parks in Greybull and Worland give you full hookups, 50-amp, and easy access, while the public lake and forest sites give you scenery and low fees but few or no hookups and first-come availability. Summer brings heavy Yellowstone traffic, so book the private parks weeks ahead and hit the first-come public sites early in the day. Staying a while and need to service tanks between stops? See our guide to RV dump stations in Basin.
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All Dump Stations Near Basin
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rose Garden RV Park | 0.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Liberty Ranch Campground | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Greybull KOA | 7.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Greybull Koa Holiday | 7.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Green Oasis RV Park + Cabin | 8.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Cottonwood RV Park | 8.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Veterans Park - City Of Worland Parks | 25.2 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Worland RV Park and Campground | 25.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lovell Camper Park | 36.2 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| Horseshoe Bend Campground Loop A | 41.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Rose Garden RV Park
0.4 miLiberty Ranch Campground
0.6 miGreybull KOA
7.8 miGreybull Koa Holiday
7.8 miGreen Oasis RV Park + Cabin
8.4 miCottonwood RV Park
8.6 miVeterans Park - City Of Worland Parks
25.2 miWorland RV Park and Campground
25.6 miLovell Camper Park
36.2 miHorseshoe Bend Campground Loop A
41.7 miTraveling to Basin by RV
Getting to Basin with an RV is refreshingly simple. US Highways 16 and 20 run right through town on flat, open basin-floor pavement, linking Worland to the south and Greybull to the north. Those are comfortable roads for any size rig, with easy fuel and grocery stops in both neighboring towns. If you are coming from the east, be ready for a workout: US-16 climbs Ten Sleep Canyon and US-14 crosses the Big Horn Mountains, and both are steep, winding scenic byways best taken slowly with a heavy RV and cool brakes.
Distances out here are real, so plan drive days. Cody and its Yellowstone Regional Airport sit about 60 miles west, making Cody the closer Yellowstone gateway if that is your target. Billings, Montana, roughly 130 miles north, is the nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent a rig for a Wyoming loop. Bighorn Canyon is about an hour north through Lovell, and Thermopolis with its hot springs is about 40 miles south on the same US-16/20 route. Because towns are spaced out, top off fuel and water whenever you pass through Greybull or Worland rather than counting on services in Basin itself.
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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 Basin, Wyoming, 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 Basin
Camping around Basin can be genuinely cheap if you lean public. Bighorn National Forest campgrounds and the first-come sites at Bighorn Canyon typically run well under $30 a night, and basic forest sites can be closer to $15 to $20, with free dispersed camping available on forest land for fully self-contained rigs. The trade is no hookups and no reservations, so you camp on availability and dump elsewhere.
The private full-hookup parks cost more but buy you convenience. Worland RV Park and Greybull KOA generally land in the $35 to $55 a night range, and peak summer around the Yellowstone rush can push toward the top of that. For that you get 50-amp power, sewer at the site, WiFi, and laundry. If you are staying several nights, ask about weekly rates at the private parks to trim the nightly cost. Our rule of thumb here: use the public forest and canyon sites to keep the trip budget low, then splurge on a private park when you need to do laundry, dump, refill, and recharge before the next leg.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Basin by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
13F - 38F
Crowds: Low
Cold, snowy, and not really a camping season here. Most public campgrounds at Bighorn Canyon and in the forest close, and few private parks stay open. Skip it unless you are just passing through.
Spring
Mar - May
35F - 62F
Crowds: Low
Quiet and cheap down on the basin floor, but the Big Horn Mountains stay snowbound into June. Low-elevation sites near Greybull and Worland open first, so start low and wait on the high country.
Summer
Jun - Aug
55F - 90F
Crowds: High
Peak season and the reason to book ahead. Hot, dry days and heavy Yellowstone traffic fill the private parks. Reserve Greybull KOA or Worland RV Park early, and arrive at first-come lake sites by midday.
Fall
Sep - Oct
35F - 65F
Crowds: Medium
Our favorite window: cool nights, thin crowds, and great fishing on the Bighorn River. Higher forest campgrounds start closing after the first snows, so keep an eye on elevation and dates.
Explore the Basin Area
Here is how we would play Basin. Treat it as a cheap, central base and day-trip out, rather than expecting a full-service resort in town. If you need full hookups and 50-amp, book Greybull KOA or Worland RV Park, both a short highway hop away and both big-rig ready. If you would rather save money and chase scenery, aim for the first-come sites at Bighorn Canyon or the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds and come self-contained.
Timing matters more than usual out here. In peak summer the whole region fills with Yellowstone traffic, so reserve the private parks weeks ahead and arrive at first-come public sites by early afternoon. For the best experience, target late summer and fall, when nights cool off, crowds thin, and the Bighorn River fishing gets good. Watch elevation with the calendar: the Big Horn Mountains hold snow into June and start closing high campgrounds after the first fall storms. On a travel day, work in a soak at Hot Springs State Park in Thermopolis, which is free to enter, and stop at the Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite near Greybull for a quick, free break with the kids.
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Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Basin
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Basin, Wyoming?
Basin is a small farm town, so the best RV options fan out along the US-16/20 corridor. For full hookups, Greybull KOA about 11 miles north and Worland RV Park about 30 miles south are the two reliable private parks, both built for big rigs. On the public side, Horseshoe Bend Campground in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area offers first-come lakeside sites with some electric and water, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds to the east give you cool high-country camping. Basin works best as an affordable base for exploring the whole region.
Do RV parks near Basin have full hookups with water, electric, and sewer?
The private parks do. Worland RV Park runs full hookups with stable 50-amp service, good water, WiFi, and laundry, and Greybull KOA offers full-hookup pull-through sites with 50-amp. Those are your choices if you need sewer at the pad. The public campgrounds are a step down on utilities. Horseshoe Bend Campground has 19 sites with electric and water but no in-site sewer, relying on a trailer dump station, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds generally have no hookups at all. So book private for full service, or plan to boondock and dump on your way out at the public sites.
How much does RV camping cost near Basin?
It splits sharply by type. Public sites are cheap: Bighorn National Forest campgrounds and the first-come sites at Bighorn Canyon typically run well under $30 a night, sometimes closer to $15 to $20 for a basic site. Private full-hookup parks cost more, generally landing in the $35 to $55 a night range at Worland RV Park and Greybull KOA, since you get sewer, 50-amp power, WiFi, and laundry. Peak summer around the Yellowstone rush can push private rates toward the top of that band. If you are on a budget, the public sites paired with a dump-station stop are the value move.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Basin?
For the private parks in summer, book several weeks out. Greybull KOA and Worland RV Park sit on the main route between Yellowstone and Mount Rushmore, so July and August fill with through-travelers. The public sites work differently. Horseshoe Bend Campground and most Bighorn National Forest campgrounds are first-come, first-served with no reservations, so plan to arrive by early afternoon on summer weekends to claim a spot. Some forest sites can be booked on Recreation.gov. Outside of peak summer, availability opens up a lot and you can often roll in same-day.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Basin?
Late summer into fall is the sweet spot. From late August through October you get cooler nights, thinner crowds once Yellowstone traffic eases, and excellent fishing on the Bighorn River. Summer is the busy peak, hot and dry down in the basin with heavy tourist traffic, so it is fine if you book ahead. Spring is quiet and cheap on the basin floor, but the Big Horn Mountains stay under snow into June, which limits high-country camping. Winter is cold and snowy with most campgrounds closed, so it is not a camping season here.
Can big rigs 35 to 40 feet and longer camp near Basin?
Yes, at the private parks. Worland RV Park takes full hookups for all sizes, and Greybull KOA has big-rig pull-through sites, so a 40-foot rig is no problem at either. The public options are tighter. Horseshoe Bend Campground caps RVs at 35 feet, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds tend toward shorter mountain sites with tight turns. If you are running a big fifth-wheel or a long motorhome, stick to Greybull or Worland for your base and day-trip into the parks and forest rather than trying to squeeze a large rig into a small public site.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Basin?
Plenty, which is a real strength of this area. The Bighorn National Forest to the east offers first-come campgrounds and legal dispersed camping, where you can often camp for free on forest land away from developed sites. Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area campgrounds, including Horseshoe Bend Campground, are all first-come with no reservations, and fees are low. That makes the Basin region a good spot for flexible, budget-minded RVers who do not want to lock into reservations. Just come prepared to be self-contained, since dispersed and forest sites have few or no services.
What public campgrounds are near Basin, Wyoming?
The public camping is spread across two big draws. To the north, Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area has first-come campgrounds like Horseshoe Bend Campground, with some electric and water sites, a dump station, and modern restrooms about 14 miles north of Lovell. To the east, the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds line the Cloud Peak and Bighorn Scenic Byways along US-16 and US-14, offering cooler high-elevation sites with vault toilets and drinking water. Both are managed by federal agencies, keep fees low, and give you scenery the private parks cannot match, at the cost of hookups.
Is Basin a good base for visiting Yellowstone?
It can be, as a budget-friendly staging point rather than a doorstep. Basin sits in the Bighorn Basin roughly 60 miles east of Cody, which is itself an eastern gateway to Yellowstone, so you are looking at a longer day drive to reach the park entrance. Many travelers use Greybull KOA or Worland RV Park as an overnight stop on the Yellowstone-to-Mount Rushmore route. If your goal is daily Yellowstone access, Cody is closer, but if you want cheaper sites and a quieter home base with easy access to Bighorn Canyon and the mountains too, Basin holds up well.
Do I need a dump station, or do the campgrounds have sewer?
Plan around it. The private parks, Worland RV Park and Greybull KOA, have full hookups with sewer at the site, so you can dump as you go. The public campgrounds do not. Horseshoe Bend Campground offers electric and water on some sites but uses a shared trailer dump station rather than in-site sewer, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds generally have no sewer or dump on-site at all. If you are camping public or dispersed for several days, know where the nearest dump station is before your tanks fill. There are a few dump options in the Greybull and Worland area to use between stops.
What is there to do near Basin campgrounds?
A lot of it is why people linger here. Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area to the north has dramatic canyon views, boating, and fishing on the reservoir. Hot Springs State Park in Thermopolis, about 40 miles south, has free hot mineral pools and a state buffalo herd. The Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite near Greybull shows real Jurassic footprints, and the Bighorn National Forest offers the Medicine Wheel, scenic byways, and mountain hiking. Add in fishing and floating the Bighorn River, and Basin gives you an easy mix of water, fossils, hot springs, and high country within a short drive.
How do I get to Basin with an RV?
Basin is easy to reach on flat, open roads. US Highways 16 and 20 run right through town, connecting Worland to the south with Greybull to the north on level basin-floor pavement that is comfortable for any rig. From the east, US-16 climbs Ten Sleep Canyon and US-14 crosses the Big Horn Mountains, both steep, winding scenic byways to take slowly with a heavy RV. Cody and its regional airport sit about 60 miles west, and Billings, Montana, roughly 130 miles north, is the nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent. Fuel and groceries are easy to find in Greybull and Worland.
Are pets allowed at RV parks near Basin?
Generally yes. Private parks like Greybull KOA and Worland RV Park welcome pets, and the KOA even has a dedicated pet walking area. The public sites are pet-friendly too: Bighorn Canyon campgrounds including Horseshoe Bend Campground allow leashed pets, and dogs are welcome at Bighorn National Forest campgrounds under standard leash rules. As always, keep dogs leashed, clean up after them, and do not leave them unattended at the site, especially given the hot, dry summer days in the basin. Check each park directly for any specific breed or number limits, since private parks set their own policies.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Basin, Wyoming?
Basin is a small farm town, so the best RV options fan out along the US-16/20 corridor. For full hookups, Greybull KOA about 11 miles north and Worland RV Park about 30 miles south are the two reliable private parks, both built for big rigs. On the public side, Horseshoe Bend Campground in Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area offers first-come lakeside sites with some electric and water, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds to the east give you cool high-country camping. Basin works best as an affordable base for exploring the whole region.
Do RV parks near Basin have full hookups with water, electric, and sewer?
The private parks do. Worland RV Park runs full hookups with stable 50-amp service, good water, WiFi, and laundry, and Greybull KOA offers full-hookup pull-through sites with 50-amp. Those are your choices if you need sewer at the pad. The public campgrounds are a step down on utilities. Horseshoe Bend Campground has 19 sites with electric and water but no in-site sewer, relying on a trailer dump station, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds generally have no hookups at all. So book private for full service, or plan to boondock and dump on your way out at the public sites.
How much does RV camping cost near Basin?
It splits sharply by type. Public sites are cheap: Bighorn National Forest campgrounds and the first-come sites at Bighorn Canyon typically run well under $30 a night, sometimes closer to $15 to $20 for a basic site. Private full-hookup parks cost more, generally landing in the $35 to $55 a night range at Worland RV Park and Greybull KOA, since you get sewer, 50-amp power, WiFi, and laundry. Peak summer around the Yellowstone rush can push private rates toward the top of that band. If you are on a budget, the public sites paired with a dump-station stop are the value move.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Basin?
For the private parks in summer, book several weeks out. Greybull KOA and Worland RV Park sit on the main route between Yellowstone and Mount Rushmore, so July and August fill with through-travelers. The public sites work differently. Horseshoe Bend Campground and most Bighorn National Forest campgrounds are first-come, first-served with no reservations, so plan to arrive by early afternoon on summer weekends to claim a spot. Some forest sites can be booked on Recreation.gov. Outside of peak summer, availability opens up a lot and you can often roll in same-day.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Basin?
Late summer into fall is the sweet spot. From late August through October you get cooler nights, thinner crowds once Yellowstone traffic eases, and excellent fishing on the Bighorn River. Summer is the busy peak, hot and dry down in the basin with heavy tourist traffic, so it is fine if you book ahead. Spring is quiet and cheap on the basin floor, but the Big Horn Mountains stay under snow into June, which limits high-country camping. Winter is cold and snowy with most campgrounds closed, so it is not a camping season here.
Can big rigs 35 to 40 feet and longer camp near Basin?
Yes, at the private parks. Worland RV Park takes full hookups for all sizes, and Greybull KOA has big-rig pull-through sites, so a 40-foot rig is no problem at either. The public options are tighter. Horseshoe Bend Campground caps RVs at 35 feet, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds tend toward shorter mountain sites with tight turns. If you are running a big fifth-wheel or a long motorhome, stick to Greybull or Worland for your base and day-trip into the parks and forest rather than trying to squeeze a large rig into a small public site.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Basin?
Plenty, which is a real strength of this area. The Bighorn National Forest to the east offers first-come campgrounds and legal dispersed camping, where you can often camp for free on forest land away from developed sites. Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area campgrounds, including Horseshoe Bend Campground, are all first-come with no reservations, and fees are low. That makes the Basin region a good spot for flexible, budget-minded RVers who do not want to lock into reservations. Just come prepared to be self-contained, since dispersed and forest sites have few or no services.
What public campgrounds are near Basin, Wyoming?
The public camping is spread across two big draws. To the north, Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area has first-come campgrounds like Horseshoe Bend Campground, with some electric and water sites, a dump station, and modern restrooms about 14 miles north of Lovell. To the east, the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds line the Cloud Peak and Bighorn Scenic Byways along US-16 and US-14, offering cooler high-elevation sites with vault toilets and drinking water. Both are managed by federal agencies, keep fees low, and give you scenery the private parks cannot match, at the cost of hookups.
Is Basin a good base for visiting Yellowstone?
It can be, as a budget-friendly staging point rather than a doorstep. Basin sits in the Bighorn Basin roughly 60 miles east of Cody, which is itself an eastern gateway to Yellowstone, so you are looking at a longer day drive to reach the park entrance. Many travelers use Greybull KOA or Worland RV Park as an overnight stop on the Yellowstone-to-Mount Rushmore route. If your goal is daily Yellowstone access, Cody is closer, but if you want cheaper sites and a quieter home base with easy access to Bighorn Canyon and the mountains too, Basin holds up well.
Do I need a dump station, or do the campgrounds have sewer?
Plan around it. The private parks, Worland RV Park and Greybull KOA, have full hookups with sewer at the site, so you can dump as you go. The public campgrounds do not. Horseshoe Bend Campground offers electric and water on some sites but uses a shared trailer dump station rather than in-site sewer, and the Bighorn National Forest campgrounds generally have no sewer or dump on-site at all. If you are camping public or dispersed for several days, know where the nearest dump station is before your tanks fill. There are a few dump options in the Greybull and Worland area to use between stops.
What is there to do near Basin campgrounds?
A lot of it is why people linger here. Bighorn Canyon National Recreation Area to the north has dramatic canyon views, boating, and fishing on the reservoir. Hot Springs State Park in Thermopolis, about 40 miles south, has free hot mineral pools and a state buffalo herd. The Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite near Greybull shows real Jurassic footprints, and the Bighorn National Forest offers the Medicine Wheel, scenic byways, and mountain hiking. Add in fishing and floating the Bighorn River, and Basin gives you an easy mix of water, fossils, hot springs, and high country within a short drive.
How do I get to Basin with an RV?
Basin is easy to reach on flat, open roads. US Highways 16 and 20 run right through town, connecting Worland to the south with Greybull to the north on level basin-floor pavement that is comfortable for any rig. From the east, US-16 climbs Ten Sleep Canyon and US-14 crosses the Big Horn Mountains, both steep, winding scenic byways to take slowly with a heavy RV. Cody and its regional airport sit about 60 miles west, and Billings, Montana, roughly 130 miles north, is the nearest major airport if you are flying in to rent. Fuel and groceries are easy to find in Greybull and Worland.
Are pets allowed at RV parks near Basin?
Generally yes. Private parks like Greybull KOA and Worland RV Park welcome pets, and the KOA even has a dedicated pet walking area. The public sites are pet-friendly too: Bighorn Canyon campgrounds including Horseshoe Bend Campground allow leashed pets, and dogs are welcome at Bighorn National Forest campgrounds under standard leash rules. As always, keep dogs leashed, clean up after them, and do not leave them unattended at the site, especially given the hot, dry summer days in the basin. Check each park directly for any specific breed or number limits, since private parks set their own policies.
Are there free dump stations in Basin?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Basin.
All Dump Stations Near Basin (15)
RV ParkRose Garden RV Park
RV ParkLiberty Ranch Campground
RV ParkGreybull KOA
RV ParkGreybull Koa Holiday
RV ParkGreen Oasis RV Park + Cabin
RV ParkCottonwood RV Park
RV ParkVeterans Park - City Of Worland Parks
RV Park



