Oregon State Parks says a new $10 fee for RV dump stations will take effect March 30, 2026, marking a shift from the system’s long-standing practice where dumping was often included with camping.
The charge will apply at 19 dump stations across 18 state parks. RVers will pay by scanning a QR code posted at the station or through an online payment system.
Park officials say the change will help cover the cost of maintaining and operating the wastewater facilities.
For RV travelers used to pulling through a dump station on the way out of a campground, the change may come as a surprise.
A small fee that could add up
A single $10 charge may not sound like much. But for RVers traveling through Oregon for a week or two, it could become a regular expense.
Many RVers without sewer hookups dump tanks every three to five days. On a longer trip, that could mean several dump fees.
The change also affects travelers who rely on state parks simply as a place to empty tanks between boondocking stops.
Part of a broader park funding squeeze
Oregon officials say the fee is part of a broader effort to address rising operating costs in the state park system.
Unlike many park systems, Oregon State Parks does not receive general-fund tax support for daily operations. Instead, the system relies largely on:
- Lottery funds
- Fees from the state’s RV license plate program
- Visitor fees such as camping and parking charges
Officials say those sources have not kept pace with maintenance costs and increased visitation.
In recent years, the agency has also expanded day-use parking permits at more parks and tightened reservation cancellation policies.
Where the $10 dump station fee may apply
Oregon State Parks says the new fee will apply to 19 dump stations across 18 parks starting March 30. The agency has not yet published a single systemwide list of locations.
However, park pages and campground information suggest the program will likely include several of the state’s busiest RV parks.
Oregon Coast
These parks handle a large share of Oregon’s RV camping traffic.
- Fort Stevens State Park — Astoria
- Nehalem Bay State Park — Nehalem
- Cape Lookout State Park — near Tillamook
- Beverly Beach State Park — Newport
- South Beach State Park — Newport
- Jessie M. Honeyman Memorial State Park — Florence
- William M. Tugman State Park — Reedsport area
- Umpqua Lighthouse State Park — Winchester Bay
- Bullards Beach State Park — Bandon
- Cape Blanco State Park — near Port Orford
- Harris Beach State Recreation Area — Brookings
- Columbia River Gorge and northwest Oregon
- Ainsworth State Park — Columbia River Gorge
- Memaloose State Park — near The Dalles
- Milo McIver State Park — Estacada
Central and Eastern Oregon
- LaPine State Park — south of Bend
- Prineville Reservoir State Park — Prineville
- The Cove Palisades State Park — Culver
- Clyde Holliday State Recreation Site — John Day
As for the fee applying to 19 dump stations at 18 parks, that means one park likely has two dump stations included in the program.
Why states are starting to charge dump fees
For years, dump stations at many state parks were treated as a free service, especially for overnight campers. That approach is beginning to change.
Maintaining dump stations is not cheap. Parks must maintain plumbing, pumps, concrete pads, and rinse water systems. They also pay wastewater treatment charges from local sewer districts.
As visitation climbs, those costs climb with it.
Many park systems now treat dump stations as a cost-recovery service rather than a perk bundled into camping fees.
Across the West, the shift is already underway.
California state parks commonly charge about $10 per use at automated dump stations.
Washington state parks typically charge about $5, often waived for registered campers.
Arizona state parks usually include dumping for campers but may charge non-campers.
Oregon’s new $10 fee places it closer to the California model.
For RV travelers, the cost may not break the trip budget. But it is another sign that park systems facing tight budgets are looking for ways to recover the costs of maintaining heavily used facilities.
Water doesn’t run uphill, but sometimes dump fees have to.
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