Florida RV Parks

Florida's RV-friendly camping splits into two worlds. Privately operated RV resorts — Encore, Thousand Trails, KOA franchises, Disney's Fort Wilderness Resort, and independent parks from Lazy Days RV Resort in Tampa to Sunshine Key and Fiesta Key in the Florida Keys — dominate the hookup-heavy, long-stay end of the market. State and county parks make up the other half: Topsail Hill Preserve, Henderson Beach, Myakka River, Wekiwa Springs, and Gold Head Branch all have RV-suitable loops with water and electric, though sewer hookups are the exception rather than the rule outside the private sector.

Reservation windows tighten dramatically from November through April, when snowbird demand pushes private resorts into premium pricing — $80–$150 per night is typical on the coasts, higher in the Keys — and state parks fill instantly at the 11-month booking window. Summer availability is easier everywhere, but Florida humidity, afternoon thunderstorms, and Atlantic hurricane season (June–November) change the calculus. Verify maximum rig length at public campgrounds before booking: older state-park loops routinely cap at 35 feet or less, and a few cap at 30.

All 345 campgrounds