RV Parks In Pinedale, Wyoming
42.8666° N, 109.8610° W
Quick Overview
Pinedale is the quiet southwestern gateway to the Wind River Range, a high, uncrowded basecamp at 7,175 feet where the granite peaks of the Bridger Wilderness rise just east of town and Fremont Lake, one of Wyoming's largest and deepest natural lakes, sits four miles up the road. For RVers who want world-class alpine backpacking, trout fishing, and big mountain scenery without the prices or crowds of Jackson, Pinedale is hard to beat. The trade-off is a short, cold-nighted season, and that shapes how and when you camp here.
For full hookups, the private parks deliver. Yellowstone Trail RV Park anchors the in-town options with 51 full-hookup sites, showers, and laundry, open May through October. Just south near Boulder, Highline Trail RV Park sits right at the foot of the Winds with 47 full-hookup sites, and Wind River View Campground adds big-rig, full-hookup sites with mountain views. These are where you plug in for power, water, and sewer, and where most travelers base to stage day hikes and backpacking trips into the range.
For scenery on the cheap, the Bridger-Teton National Forest surrounds town with primitive lake campgrounds and abundant dispersed camping. Fremont Lake Campground offers shaded sites on the big lake, and Half Moon Lake Campground is quieter still, but both are no-hookup, and Fremont Lake has no on-site water or dump, so come fully self-contained. Farther north, Green River Lakes delivers one of Wyoming's most iconic mountain views. Our honest take: base a big rig in town with hookups, service tanks and fill water before you go up, and explore the lakes and trailheads in a tow vehicle. And whatever you do, pack for cold nights even in July, when temperatures here regularly fall toward freezing after dark. Pinedale rewards RVers who plan around its short, sharp summer, and the payoff is some of the most spectacular and least crowded mountain country in the Rockies. Below we cover the campgrounds, hookups, reservations, and seasonal costs in detail so you can build the right trip.
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All Dump Stations Near Pinedale
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boyd Skinner Park | 0.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pinedale Tent Dry Campground | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fremont Lake Campground | 6.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Willow Lake Campground | 8.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Wind River View Campground | 9.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Daniel Junction | 10.9 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Highline Trail RV Park Llc | 11.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rob's Roost RV Park | 24.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Moose Flat Campground | 46.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hoback RV Park | 54.1 mi | 2.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
Boyd Skinner Park
0.2 miPinedale Tent Dry Campground
0.6 miFremont Lake Campground
6.2 miWillow Lake Campground
8.9 miWind River View Campground
9.7 miDaniel Junction
10.9 miHighline Trail RV Park Llc
11.6 miRob's Roost RV Park
24.9 miMoose Flat Campground
46.6 miHoback RV Park
54.1 miTraveling to Pinedale by RV
Pinedale sits on US-191, the main highway between Jackson (about 75 miles north) and Rock Springs with Interstate 80 (about 100 miles south), with full fuel, diesel, and services in town. US-189 joins from the southwest. These are straightforward, RV-friendly highways without low-clearance worries, and Jackson Hole Airport is the nearest major airport for fly-and-rent trips, with Rock Springs an option to the south. The town is small and easy to navigate with a rig.
The tricky driving is on the way to the trailheads, not the highways. The roads up to Fremont Lake and the Elkhart Park trailhead are mostly paved but narrow and steep in places, and the dispersed forest roads beyond are not suited to big rigs. Plan to base in town or at a nearby park and take a tow vehicle up to the lakes and trailheads. Remember the elevation: at over 7,000 feet, nights are cold all summer and snow can fall at the trailheads in any month, so prepare your rig and your gear for real cold. Fuel and stock up in Pinedale, since services are sparse once you head into the forest.
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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 Pinedale, 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 Pinedale
Pinedale is a comparative bargain among Wind River and Greater Yellowstone basecamps. The Bridger-Teton National Forest campgrounds at Fremont and Half Moon lakes are inexpensive, often just a low nightly fee for no-hookup sites in beautiful lakeside settings, and dispersed camping in the surrounding forest is free for self-contained rigs. These are the budget backbone of a Pinedale trip, ideal for staging backpacking outings into the range.
The private full-hookup parks in and near town are the higher tier but stay moderate by mountain standards, commonly in the thirties to forties per night for a full-hookup site, since Pinedale lacks the resort pricing of nearby Jackson. The smart budget approach is to camp the forest lakes or dispersed sites for scenery while you explore the high country, and book a private park only on the nights you want to plug in, refill fresh water, and dump tanks. Because the season is so short, also factor in that you are paying for a narrow summer window, so plan your dates to make the most of the warm, open weeks.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Pinedale by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
2F - 26F
Crowds: Low
Bitterly cold, with lows near zero; Pinedale is one of the chilliest towns in the Lower 48. RV parks and the forest campgrounds close, so winter camping here means full self-containment and serious cold-weather gear, mostly for snowmobilers and skiers.
Spring
Mar - May
28F - 52F
Crowds: Low
Slow to arrive at 7,175 feet. The high lakes and Wind River trailheads stay snowbound into June, and mud and lingering snow are common in May. Plan valley camping early and expect cold nights even as days warm.
Summer
Jun - Aug
38F - 78F
Crowds: High
The short, glorious peak. Days are sunny and dry, nights are genuinely cold near freezing, and the Wind River backpacking crowd fills town. Book a private full-hookup site ahead for July and August, and run propane heat at night.
Fall
Sep - Oct
28F - 56F
Crowds: Low
Brief and beautiful, with golden aspen and quiet trails, but the first snows can come early and the high-country campgrounds close by late September. A great, uncrowded window if you watch the forecast and are ready for cold.
Explore the Pinedale Area
What we have learned about basing in Pinedale. First, book a private full-hookup park ahead for July and August; the season is short and the Wind River backpacking crowd fills town, so do not assume you can roll in and find a spot on a peak weekend. Second, service your tanks and fill fresh water in town before heading up, because the forest lake campgrounds have no dump and Fremont Lake has no on-site water. Third, drive up to Fremont Lake and the Elkhart Park trailhead for the classic entry into Titcomb Basin and the alpine heart of the Bridger Wilderness, one of the great backpacking destinations in the Rockies.
Prepare for cold nights no matter the forecast: at 7,175 feet, summer lows routinely hit the upper 30s and a heater is often welcome in July, so bring real bedding and extra propane. Visit the Museum of the Mountain Man in town for the area's fur-trade and Green River Rendezvous history, a genuine highlight on a rest day. If you have time, make the drive north to Green River Lakes for the iconic Square Top Mountain view. And watch the calendar: the high country is snowbound into June and closing by late September, so the reliable window is mid-to-late summer.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Pinedale
What are the best RV parks in Pinedale, Wyoming?
For full hookups, Yellowstone Trail RV Park is the in-town headliner, with 51 full-hookup sites, showers, and laundry, open May through October. Just south near Boulder, Highline Trail RV Park sits at the base of the Wind River Range with 47 full-hookup sites including buddy sites, and Wind River View Campground offers full-hookup, big-rig sites with mountain views. On the public side, the Bridger-Teton National Forest campgrounds at Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake put you on the water in a primitive setting with no hookups. Pick a private park to plug in and base for the mountains, the forest lakes for scenery if you are self-contained.
Do Pinedale RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, the private ones do. Yellowstone Trail RV Park in town, Highline Trail RV Park near Boulder, and Wind River View Campground all offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50 amp electric, and they handle big rigs. The public campgrounds are a different story: the Bridger-Teton National Forest sites at Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake have no hookups, no dump, and in some cases no potable water, just vault toilets and a beautiful lakeside setting. So if you want to plug in, book a private park in or near Pinedale and use it as your base for day trips and backpacking staging into the Wind River Range.
How close is Pinedale to the Wind River Range?
Pinedale is the classic southwestern gateway to the Wind River Range, sitting right at its foot. Fremont Lake, just four miles northeast of town, is the doorway: the road continues up to the Elkhart Park trailhead, one of the most popular launch points for backpacking into Titcomb Basin and the alpine heart of the Bridger Wilderness. From town you can reach trailheads in 20 to 40 minutes and be among granite peaks and alpine lakes within a day's hike. The Winds here offer some of the best high-country backpacking in the Rockies. Most RVers base in Pinedale or at Fremont Lake and stage longer trips from there, since the wilderness itself has no vehicle access.
Can big rigs camp near Pinedale?
Yes, at the private parks. Yellowstone Trail RV Park, Highline Trail RV Park, and Wind River View Campground all have level full-hookup sites built for big rigs, including pull-throughs. Where big rigs struggle is up at the forest lakes and trailheads: the Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake campgrounds are small and primitive, and the roads to the high trailheads, while mostly paved, are narrow and steep in places, with dispersed forest roads that are not big-rig terrain at all. The sensible approach is to base a big rig at an in-town or nearby park with hookups and explore the lakes and trailheads in a tow vehicle, especially given the cold nights at 7,175 feet.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Pinedale?
For the short summer season, book ahead. Pinedale's frost-free window is brief, so July and August are the busy stretch when the Wind River backpacking crowd is in town, and the private full-hookup parks can fill on weekends, making a couple of weeks ahead wise. Fremont Lake Campground has some sites reservable on recreation.gov and some first-come, so it pays to check early. Half Moon Lake and the dispersed forest sites are first-come. Outside the peak, availability is easy, but remember the high country is snowbound into June and closing by late September, so the practical camping season is genuinely short. Plan around that narrow window.
Are there public campgrounds near Pinedale?
Yes, in a primitive form. The Bridger-Teton National Forest operates the Fremont Lake Campground, with shaded sites on Wyoming's second-largest natural lake, and the smaller Half Moon Lake Campground nearby, both with no hookups and at most vault toilets, and Fremont Lake notably has no on-site water or dump. Farther north, Green River Lakes offers iconic lakeside camping under Square Top Mountain. Dispersed camping is also widely allowed in the surrounding national forest for self-contained rigs. These public options are scenic and cheap but bare-bones, so come fully self-contained, fill fresh water in town, and plan to dump tanks back in Pinedale, since the forest sites cannot service your rig.
When is the best time to RV camp near Pinedale?
July through early September is really the only reliable window, and it is the prime time for hiking, backpacking, and fishing the Wind River high country. Even then, nights are cold near freezing at this elevation, so bring real bedding. Late September can be gorgeous with golden aspen and empty trails, but the first snows arrive early and the high campgrounds close. Spring barely exists here, with the mountains snowbound into June, and winter is bitterly cold with everything closed except for self-contained snow travelers. If you want warm days and open trails, aim squarely for mid-to-late summer and watch the mountain forecast closely.
What is there to do around Pinedale besides backpacking?
More than you might expect for a small town. Fremont Lake, one of Wyoming's largest and deepest natural lakes, is right above town for boating, kayaking, and trout fishing, with a day-use area and boat ramp. The Museum of the Mountain Man in town tells the rich fur-trade and Green River Rendezvous history of the area, a genuine highlight. Green River Lakes to the north offers one of the most photographed mountain scenes in Wyoming under Square Top Mountain. Add fly fishing on the New Fork and Green rivers, wildlife viewing, and quiet scenic drives, and Pinedale rewards more than just a trailhead stop. It is a relaxed, uncrowded basecamp with real character.
Are the campgrounds near Pinedale pet-friendly?
Yes, generally. The private RV parks in and near Pinedale welcome leashed dogs, and the Bridger-Teton National Forest is open to leashed, well-behaved pets on trails and at campgrounds, including the Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake areas. Because the camping here is on national forest rather than inside a national park, you have a lot of freedom to hike with your dog, including toward the Wind River high country. Always keep pets leashed where required, pack out waste, watch for wildlife and cold nights, and never leave a dog in a hot rig during the sunny summer days. Bring extra bedding for your pet too, since high-elevation nights get cold.
Where can I dump and fill water near Pinedale?
The private RV parks are your main resource. Yellowstone Trail RV Park, Highline Trail RV Park, and Wind River View Campground include a dump station and potable water with a stay, and may allow non-guests to dump for a fee if you call ahead. The forest lake campgrounds at Fremont and Half Moon do not have dump stations, and Fremont Lake has no on-site water, so plan to service tanks and fill fresh water in town before heading up. Always use a marked potable spigot for drinking water. For the full breakdown of dump options, hours, and seasonal closures in the area, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Pinedale.
How cold does it get at night in Pinedale in summer?
Cold enough to surprise people. At 7,175 feet, Pinedale has one of the shortest frost-free seasons in the Lower 48, and summer nights routinely drop into the upper 30s, sometimes to freezing, even after a warm, sunny day. It is not unusual to need a heater in July. Pack genuine cold-weather bedding, run your propane furnace at night, and be ready for a frosty morning at the higher lakes and trailheads, where it is colder still. Days are pleasant and dry in the 70s, but the temperature swing is dramatic. This is high mountain camping, so prepare for cold nights regardless of the forecast high, and carry extra propane.
How much does RV camping cost around Pinedale?
It ranges from cheap public sites to moderate private parks. The Bridger-Teton National Forest campgrounds at Fremont and Half Moon lakes, and dispersed forest camping, are inexpensive or free, suiting self-contained rigs that can go without hookups. The private full-hookup parks in and near Pinedale are the higher tier but reasonable for a mountain town, commonly in the thirties to forties per night for a full-hookup site. Because Pinedale is not a marquee park gateway like Jackson, rates stay more moderate. The smart budget play is to use a forest or dispersed site for scenery while staging mountain trips and book a private park only when you need to plug in, refill water, and dump tanks.
What are the best RV parks in Pinedale, Wyoming?
For full hookups, Yellowstone Trail RV Park is the in-town headliner, with 51 full-hookup sites, showers, and laundry, open May through October. Just south near Boulder, Highline Trail RV Park sits at the base of the Wind River Range with 47 full-hookup sites including buddy sites, and Wind River View Campground offers full-hookup, big-rig sites with mountain views. On the public side, the Bridger-Teton National Forest campgrounds at Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake put you on the water in a primitive setting with no hookups. Pick a private park to plug in and base for the mountains, the forest lakes for scenery if you are self-contained.
Do Pinedale RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, the private ones do. Yellowstone Trail RV Park in town, Highline Trail RV Park near Boulder, and Wind River View Campground all offer full hookups with water, sewer, and 30 or 50 amp electric, and they handle big rigs. The public campgrounds are a different story: the Bridger-Teton National Forest sites at Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake have no hookups, no dump, and in some cases no potable water, just vault toilets and a beautiful lakeside setting. So if you want to plug in, book a private park in or near Pinedale and use it as your base for day trips and backpacking staging into the Wind River Range.
How close is Pinedale to the Wind River Range?
Pinedale is the classic southwestern gateway to the Wind River Range, sitting right at its foot. Fremont Lake, just four miles northeast of town, is the doorway: the road continues up to the Elkhart Park trailhead, one of the most popular launch points for backpacking into Titcomb Basin and the alpine heart of the Bridger Wilderness. From town you can reach trailheads in 20 to 40 minutes and be among granite peaks and alpine lakes within a day's hike. The Winds here offer some of the best high-country backpacking in the Rockies. Most RVers base in Pinedale or at Fremont Lake and stage longer trips from there, since the wilderness itself has no vehicle access.
Can big rigs camp near Pinedale?
Yes, at the private parks. Yellowstone Trail RV Park, Highline Trail RV Park, and Wind River View Campground all have level full-hookup sites built for big rigs, including pull-throughs. Where big rigs struggle is up at the forest lakes and trailheads: the Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake campgrounds are small and primitive, and the roads to the high trailheads, while mostly paved, are narrow and steep in places, with dispersed forest roads that are not big-rig terrain at all. The sensible approach is to base a big rig at an in-town or nearby park with hookups and explore the lakes and trailheads in a tow vehicle, especially given the cold nights at 7,175 feet.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Pinedale?
For the short summer season, book ahead. Pinedale's frost-free window is brief, so July and August are the busy stretch when the Wind River backpacking crowd is in town, and the private full-hookup parks can fill on weekends, making a couple of weeks ahead wise. Fremont Lake Campground has some sites reservable on recreation.gov and some first-come, so it pays to check early. Half Moon Lake and the dispersed forest sites are first-come. Outside the peak, availability is easy, but remember the high country is snowbound into June and closing by late September, so the practical camping season is genuinely short. Plan around that narrow window.
Are there public campgrounds near Pinedale?
Yes, in a primitive form. The Bridger-Teton National Forest operates the Fremont Lake Campground, with shaded sites on Wyoming's second-largest natural lake, and the smaller Half Moon Lake Campground nearby, both with no hookups and at most vault toilets, and Fremont Lake notably has no on-site water or dump. Farther north, Green River Lakes offers iconic lakeside camping under Square Top Mountain. Dispersed camping is also widely allowed in the surrounding national forest for self-contained rigs. These public options are scenic and cheap but bare-bones, so come fully self-contained, fill fresh water in town, and plan to dump tanks back in Pinedale, since the forest sites cannot service your rig.
When is the best time to RV camp near Pinedale?
July through early September is really the only reliable window, and it is the prime time for hiking, backpacking, and fishing the Wind River high country. Even then, nights are cold near freezing at this elevation, so bring real bedding. Late September can be gorgeous with golden aspen and empty trails, but the first snows arrive early and the high campgrounds close. Spring barely exists here, with the mountains snowbound into June, and winter is bitterly cold with everything closed except for self-contained snow travelers. If you want warm days and open trails, aim squarely for mid-to-late summer and watch the mountain forecast closely.
What is there to do around Pinedale besides backpacking?
More than you might expect for a small town. Fremont Lake, one of Wyoming's largest and deepest natural lakes, is right above town for boating, kayaking, and trout fishing, with a day-use area and boat ramp. The Museum of the Mountain Man in town tells the rich fur-trade and Green River Rendezvous history of the area, a genuine highlight. Green River Lakes to the north offers one of the most photographed mountain scenes in Wyoming under Square Top Mountain. Add fly fishing on the New Fork and Green rivers, wildlife viewing, and quiet scenic drives, and Pinedale rewards more than just a trailhead stop. It is a relaxed, uncrowded basecamp with real character.
Are the campgrounds near Pinedale pet-friendly?
Yes, generally. The private RV parks in and near Pinedale welcome leashed dogs, and the Bridger-Teton National Forest is open to leashed, well-behaved pets on trails and at campgrounds, including the Fremont Lake and Half Moon Lake areas. Because the camping here is on national forest rather than inside a national park, you have a lot of freedom to hike with your dog, including toward the Wind River high country. Always keep pets leashed where required, pack out waste, watch for wildlife and cold nights, and never leave a dog in a hot rig during the sunny summer days. Bring extra bedding for your pet too, since high-elevation nights get cold.
Where can I dump and fill water near Pinedale?
The private RV parks are your main resource. Yellowstone Trail RV Park, Highline Trail RV Park, and Wind River View Campground include a dump station and potable water with a stay, and may allow non-guests to dump for a fee if you call ahead. The forest lake campgrounds at Fremont and Half Moon do not have dump stations, and Fremont Lake has no on-site water, so plan to service tanks and fill fresh water in town before heading up. Always use a marked potable spigot for drinking water. For the full breakdown of dump options, hours, and seasonal closures in the area, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Pinedale.
How cold does it get at night in Pinedale in summer?
Cold enough to surprise people. At 7,175 feet, Pinedale has one of the shortest frost-free seasons in the Lower 48, and summer nights routinely drop into the upper 30s, sometimes to freezing, even after a warm, sunny day. It is not unusual to need a heater in July. Pack genuine cold-weather bedding, run your propane furnace at night, and be ready for a frosty morning at the higher lakes and trailheads, where it is colder still. Days are pleasant and dry in the 70s, but the temperature swing is dramatic. This is high mountain camping, so prepare for cold nights regardless of the forecast high, and carry extra propane.
How much does RV camping cost around Pinedale?
It ranges from cheap public sites to moderate private parks. The Bridger-Teton National Forest campgrounds at Fremont and Half Moon lakes, and dispersed forest camping, are inexpensive or free, suiting self-contained rigs that can go without hookups. The private full-hookup parks in and near Pinedale are the higher tier but reasonable for a mountain town, commonly in the thirties to forties per night for a full-hookup site. Because Pinedale is not a marquee park gateway like Jackson, rates stay more moderate. The smart budget play is to use a forest or dispersed site for scenery while staging mountain trips and book a private park only when you need to plug in, refill water, and dump tanks.
Are there free dump stations in Pinedale?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Pinedale.
All Dump Stations Near Pinedale (16)
RV ParkBoyd Skinner Park
RV ParkPinedale Tent Dry Campground
RV ParkFremont Lake Campground
RV ParkWillow Lake Campground
RV ParkWind River View Campground
RV ParkHighline Trail RV Park Llc
RV ParkDaniel Junction
RV Park





