Best Campgrounds near Sacramento, CA

Sacramento puts Northern California's diverse camping within easy reach. Bothe-Napa Valley State Park, just a short drive away, has campsites among redwoods and hiking trails leading to great views. Beals Point Campground in Folsom Lake State Recreation Area lets you quickly get to the lake for swimming and boating. Ritchey Creek Campground offers more quiet spots where you can camp with the sound of flowing water nearby. These campgrounds each give you different ways to enjoy the outdoors and relax. From Sacramento, you can quickly reach these natural areas without traveling far. During dry seasons, fire rules might limit what you can do at camp. It's smart to book ahead, particularly in summer months when these places fill up fast. Some campgrounds have regular bathrooms and drinking water, while others are more basic. Around Sacramento, you'll find everything from thick forests to hills and big lakes. Many campers come for the hiking and fishing, with plenty of trails and fishing spots close to where you'll set up camp. Some sites give you more space from neighbors than others. Remember to follow the rules about how long you can stay and take all your trash with you when you leave. The campgrounds near Sacramento work well for families or anyone wanting some quiet time outdoors. Always double-check any specific rules before your trip to avoid surprises.

Best Camping Sites Near Sacramento, California (158)

    1. SacWest RV Park & Campground

    17 Reviews
    West Sacramento Vmf, CA
    6 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 371-6771

    $52 - $100 / night

    "Great little campsite with a 50s vibe right outside the city of Sacramento. The bathrooms and showers are clean the staff are friendly and helpful."

    "It is the only RV parking in Sacramento that will allow you to stay for one night. Great campground! Hospitality and professionalism- that how you can describe this place!"

    2. Beals Point Campground — Folsom Lake State Recreation Area

    32 Reviews
    Granite Bay, CA
    19 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 791-1531

    $33 - $58 / night

    "Folsom Lake is a very large lake which touches 3 counties (Sacramento, Placer & El Dorado). Beals Point is right on the border of Folsom & Granite Bay on Folsom-Auburn Rd."

    "As with most of California everything is dry. The lake is very low and a half mile walk from park to get to. The sites are surrounded by dry tall grass and spaced out nicely."

    3. Cal Expo RV Park

    10 Reviews
    Sacramento, CA
    3 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 263-3187

    $50 - $1000 / night

    "Great Bike paths adjacent along the river into Downtown or up to Folsom. All Full hook up sites on gravel or asphalt, daily, weekly, monthly rates."

    "...then you want a good location for your home base. Cal Expo definitely has the centralized location for exploring Old Sac, Cal Expo, State Capitol, the rivers and beyond."

    4. Sherwood Harbor Marina & RV Park

    7 Reviews
    West Sacramento Vmf, CA
    4 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 371-3471

    "Tons of beautiful, shady spots overlooking or near the Sacramento river. Very Breezy and well maintained park with good prices for electrical and water hookup and a dump station."

    "Everything you need to “get away” is here and big city amenities a short drive away."

    5. Sacramento Shade RV Park

    4 Reviews
    Rio Linda, CA
    5 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 922-0814

    "Also while setting up, every person that walked by said hi and welcome! We have never experienced that much friendliness in a campground."

    6. Capitol West RV Park

    1 Review
    West Sacramento Vmf, CA
    5 miles
    +1 (916) 371-6671

    7. Holiday Mobile Village & RV Park

    1 Review
    Elk Grove, CA
    6 miles
    +1 (916) 423-1087

    8. Mark J RV Park

    3 Reviews
    Carmichael, CA
    9 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 332-6244

    9. El Camino Mobile Home & RV Park

    2 Reviews
    Sacramento, CA
    4 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 925-8778

    10. Peninsula Campground — Folsom Lake State Recreation Area

    15 Reviews
    Granite Bay, CA
    23 miles
    Website
    +1 (916) 988-0215

    $33 / night

    "Very quite camping spot very clean.coin operated showers😭 lake is very close by."

    "Folsom lake is a great place to take the boat, beals point has a snack bar, life guards and equipment rentals, there are plenty of places you can drive or boat to get away from the crowds if you prefer"

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Recent Reviews near Sacramento, CA

540 Reviews of 158 Sacramento Campgrounds


  • S
    Aug. 28, 2025

    smittle creek

    Hidden Gem

    This sweet little spot is a paddle boarding and fishing dream. Primitive site where Smittle Creek flows into Lake Berryessa.

  • B. Douglas J.
    Aug. 7, 2025

    Sycamore Ranch RV Park

    One of our favorite campgrounds

    We live just up the road (Nevada City) yet we ignored this campground for years thinking it was full of trailer trash. But years ago Yuba County did a great job of cleaning this place up and putting in hookups and paving the campground and adding irrigation systems that keep the grass green all year long.

    My favorite thing about this campground is the birds! I use the Merlin app to identify the birds here and so far this place holds my record of around 18 birds not including the more silent ones we saw. There are turtles and otters in the creek to check out as well. 

    The camp host (Jan The Man) is the best camp host ever!

    Weekdays are the best when there are few people but on weekends it does fill up. We did camp one time and some folks were having a karaoke party late into the night (somehow I suspect they will never be back). Usually everyone's respectful and its a great place to be.

  • Shiva S.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jul. 21, 2025

    Steele Canyon (formerly Lupine Shores)

    Great place to visit

    I came to check out the more calm waters in the canyon for my paddleboard. The site was great layout and I had a really enjoyable time out on the water. Other boaters where very respectful of the no wake zones.The campsites on the bluff of the hill can get windy so be prepared for that. Regardless, I'll be back.

  • Adam  B.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jul. 1, 2025

    Skyline Wilderness Park

    Nice but pricy

    This place is nice. RV location is basically a gravel parking area pretty close to one another. Sites are level with minimal need for blocks. Staff are friendly. Native garden is very nice. Hiking is nice too especially in winter when everything is green. It’s like a fairy wonderland on the Manzanita trail. Cell phone coverage is good. Have both Verizon and Att with at least 2-3 bars. 10-12 Mbps down 4-5 Mbps up. Wild turkey, deer, wood peckers regularly seen!

  • Jules S.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jun. 23, 2025

    Skyline Wilderness Park

    June 2025

    Stayed here for a long weekend with friends in Napa Valley.

    Location itself is GREAT. 5 mins from everything in town. Had good cell service and park was clean. Was quiet busy during the day as it is also a day use park with lots of activities.

    Sites were cramped in tight. $65/night for water and electricity. They have a dog run area that is nice and large! Bath houses were also nice. Good hot showers.

    Knocking it down a star for the tight sites and the check in staff were rude almost every time I talked to her. Also lots of little bitty rules of being picky. Overall would stay here again.

  • Bryce
    Jun. 17, 2025

    Thousand Trails Lake Minden

    Tiny Park, Giant Heart

    Thousand Trails Lake Minden

    Tiny Park, Giant Heart

    We spent three weeks at Lake Minden and, to be honest, judged it too quickly. It’s one of the smaller Thousand Trails parks, and when we first rolled in, we weren’t sure it was going to be our kind of place. That changed fast.

    Right off the bat, we were greeted warmly at the gate- no awkward waiting or guessing, just a “Hey there, welcome!” kind of vibe. Our assigned spot had a bad electric hookup, but moving one space over solved that and actually gave us a better view. So, win-win. 

    The park, like many Thousand Trails locations, is clearly from a different era. The facilities, the grounds, even the layout- it all shows its age in the same way most of these long-standing parks do. But here’s the difference: it’s obvious they take care of what they have. You can feel the pride in the upkeep, and honestly, I’d take a clean, cared-for 50-year-old park over a neglected new one any day.

    The community here is what made the trip. The staff pour real effort into the activities- they’re on time, thoughtful, and welcoming. Friday potlucks were the soul of the park. We forgot our plates and silverware more than once (parent brain), and Barbara, the activities director, always had us covered without missing a beat. That kind of care doesn’t go unnoticed.

    Easter weekend took it to another level. My toddler had the time of his life painting eggs and coloring puzzles, and my wife - who’d never painted an egg before - might’ve had more fun than he did. The Easter egg hunt was packed with families and even staff with their kids. Prizes for the winners, candy in the eggs for the rest of us- my toddler’s too young for the sweets, so I had no choice but to help. That’s what dads are for, right?

    There’s an ice cream social every Saturday, and it’s as delightful as it sounds. Tons of toppings, lots of conversation, and just a genuinely happy way to spend a weekend afternoon. We missed candy bar bingo this time, but it's already on the list for our return trip.

    Special thanks to Gwen, the park manager, who couldn’t have been more welcoming. The assistant manager warmed up by the end of our stay, which made us feel even more like part of the community.

    Facilities were surprisingly polished. The showers were spotless, stocked, and looked freshly upgraded with woodgrain tile and real stall doors. Toilets and sinks were just as clean, and even when I accidentally left my shampoo in the shower, I found it days later placed neatly on the side counter. That’s rare. Housekeeping here clearly cares.

    The lodge is small- more like a retrofitted mobile trailer - but full of charm. It’s where most activities are held, and there's a cozy back room with a pool table, board games, a decent little DVD collection, and a small library. My toddler played Connect 4 like a champion (even though he mostly used it as a coin-drop game), and, tried valiantly to reach the pool balls.

    Now, the lake. It’s... functional. Let’s be honest, it’s a man-made basin with some concrete leftovers that litter the sides that look like the Ghost of Swimming Pools Past. Not the prettiest, but they do stock it with fish and the docks looked newly redone- one rebuilt while we were there, looked really nice when they finished. I didn’t bring my gear, but next time, I’m sneaking out for some dad-time with a rod and reel.

    There’s no pool at this park, but the grassy areas made up for it. Annual sites had a huge open field behind them where my son ran wild playing ball and chase. Minden must’ve mowed the day we arrived because the smell of cut grass hit us like nostalgia. They kept it mowed weekly, and my kid was hypnotized by the riding mower going up and down the stretch. In fact there's enough gassy area I thought a great spring/summertime regular event would be water days- think slip'n slides and mist sprinklers set up for the kids. That would be fun... and a cool relief in those hotter days.

    There’s a playground with a raised soft-chip base, multiple slides, and just the right level of challenge for a toddler. He had a blast. Even the dog park, while nothing fancy (just a weed-sprouting rectangle), gave our Silky terriers a space to run a few laps. I may or may not have snuck them into the field after hours for some frisbee time. Nobody tell.

    Connectivity was solid- I had full AT&T service for calls, texts, and data the entire time. It was a quiet park, minus one domestic dispute from a neighboring site that cleared up fast (and they moved out the next day). Otherwise, peaceful and calm.

    Now, let’s talk about traffic flow- because this one got me. The park is built around a lake, and the road looping around it is one-way, enforced with a strict 5 mph speed limit. That’s great if you have kids or dogs and you want a calm environment. Not so great when you realize halfway to the store that you forgot your wallet. What should’ve been a quick grab turned into a 10-minute drive out, a 10-minute drive back in, and then… yep, 10 minutes out again. I’ve taken shorter road trips just to get ice cream. Lesson learned.

    ---

    Stay Summary & Scores

    Restroom & Shower Facilities: ★★★★★

    Exceptionally clean, stocked, and well-maintained. Modern-feeling shower stalls with privacy and woodgrain tile. Toilets and sinks equally spotless.

    Lodge Amenities & Common Spaces: ★★★★☆

    Compact but full of charm. Activities room, pool table, games, small library. Retrofitted mobile unit, but used thoughtfully and consistently.

    Overall Cleanliness & Maintenance: ★★★★★

    Top-tier. Grass is cut regularly, restrooms shine, playground looks freshly maintained, and even left-behind items are handled with care.

    Recreational Activities & Family Engagement: ★★★★★

    Thoughtfully organized events (especially Easter), ice cream socials, egg painting, RC airplane shows, dog races, and a family-friendly vibe across the board.

    Staff Hospitality & Park Culture: ★★★★★

    Gwen leads with warmth. Barbara is the MVP of activities. Assistant manager needed some time to warm up, but did. Felt truly welcomed.

    Lake & Waterfront Quality: ★★☆☆☆

    Man-made and a little tired. Some concrete remnants along the edge. Not great for swimming, but fish-stocked and dock area recently improved.

    Pet-Friendliness: ★★★☆☆

    Dog park was weedy and basic, but functional. Open spaces nearby helped. Waste bins were present and clean.

    Site Utility Functionality: ★★★★☆ First electric hookup was faulty, but the second was fine. Rest of the site utilities performed without issue. Easy to park and level.

    Traffic Flow & Accessibility: ★★★☆☆ 

    Strict 5 mph limit is great for safety (especially with kids) but makes trips around the loop feel like slow motion. One-way loop adds time - especially painful if you forget your wallet and turn your day into a 30-minute regret. 

    General Atmosphere & Community Vibe: ★★★★★ Welcoming, peaceful, and filled with community spirit. The kind of place where strangers become friends over potluck and board games.

  • Jazmin The Dyrt PRO User
    Jun. 17, 2025

    Sandy Beach County Park

    Decent campground

    We enjoyed our first time camping out here made me fall in love into camping. Felt very safe and secured with rangers on patrol. The public bathroom has roaches that can improve but they have soap and tissue roll inside. Id camp out again in here. No mice in our experience. Peaceful and quiet we went on a Sunday.

  • Steven A.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jun. 13, 2025

    SacWest RV Park & Campground

    Great spot!

    This is a nice little place on the edge of town. A maverik next door that can be noisy-as any gas station can be- but even closer to it it's not too much.


Guide to Sacramento

Camping near Sacramento, CA, offers a variety of beautiful spots for outdoor enthusiasts. Whether you’re looking for a peaceful retreat or a family-friendly adventure, there’s something for everyone.

What to do:

What campers like:

  • Clean Facilities: Campers appreciate the cleanliness at Collins Lake Recreation Area. A guest said, “The facilities are clean, great views.”
  • Family-Friendly Atmosphere: Many families enjoy Coloma Resort. One family mentioned, “The campground is walking distance from the historic town of Coloma and the Argonaut for breakfast and lunch.”
  • Quiet Environment: Campers at Live Oak Campground — Mount Diablo State Park appreciate the peacefulness. A reviewer noted, “Very quiet, no issues. We had friendly neighbors.”

What you should know:

  • Reservations: Popular spots like Sugarloaf Ridge State Park Campground can be tough to book. One camper said, “Always tough to get a reservation, but it never disappoints if you can get one.”
  • Limited Cell Service: Many campgrounds, including Beals Point Campground, have poor cell reception. A visitor mentioned, “No cell coverage for any of the major providers.”
  • Wildlife Caution: At Ritchey Creek Campground, be aware of local wildlife. One camper warned, “It’s full of poison oak!!!! But you can get around it.”

Tips for camping with families:

  • Activities for Kids: Look for campgrounds with playgrounds, like Coloma Resort. A parent shared, “Pool, playground, basketball and soccer - will definitely be back with the kids soon.”
  • Pack Snacks: Bring plenty of snacks and drinks, especially for hot days at places like Lake Camanche. One camper noted, “We love it at this lake.”
  • Plan for Cleanliness: Ensure you have cleaning supplies, as some campgrounds may have limited restroom facilities. A visitor at Acorn Campground mentioned, “Bathrooms are a problem for cleanliness.”

Tips from RVers:

  • Check Hookups: Make sure your chosen campground has the right hookups for your RV. Woodward Reservoir offers full hookups, which many RVers appreciate. One reviewer said, “Nice campsites full hookups.”
  • Be Prepared for Crowds: Popular spots can get crowded, especially on weekends. A visitor at Lake Camanche mentioned, “Got very crowded on the weekend.”
  • Bring Water Shoes: If you’re camping near water, like at Collins Lake Recreation Area, water shoes can help navigate rocky shores. A camper advised, “Recommend water shoes, although this may only help a little as the rocks are quite large.”

Camping near Sacramento, CA, has its perks and quirks. With the right preparation, you can enjoy a fantastic outdoor experience!

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I find free camping near Sacramento?

Free camping options near Sacramento are limited but available if you're willing to drive about 1-2 hours from the city. The Tahoe National Forest offers free dispersed camping along forest service roads, particularly in areas near Greenhorn Campground at Rollins Lake, which itself is a paid campground but indicates the general region where free dispersed camping is permitted. BLM land east of Sacramento also provides free camping opportunities with a 14-day stay limit. For those heading toward the Sierra Nevada mountains, Ghost Mountain RV Campground area has nearby public lands with free camping spots. Always check local regulations, as fire restrictions are common, especially during summer months.

What are the best dispersed camping areas near Sacramento?

The best dispersed camping areas near Sacramento can be found within an hour or two drive from the city. Lake Clementine Boat In — Auburn State Recreation Area offers camping along the American River about an hour from Sacramento, with sites that feel more dispersed despite being in a designated area. For true dispersed camping, head to the El Dorado National Forest east of Sacramento, where you'll find numerous forest service roads with pull-offs for legal dispersed camping. Near Brannan Island State Recreation Area, you can find some dispersed camping opportunities in the Delta region. Remember that dispersed camping requires proper waste management and adherence to fire regulations, especially during dry seasons.

What are the top-rated campgrounds in the Sacramento area?

Sly Park Recreation Area consistently receives excellent reviews for its well-maintained facilities, dense forest setting, and numerous recreational activities including a 9.5-mile lake loop trail with a waterfall. The campground offers opportunities for kayaking, fishing, swimming, and horseback riding. Another highly-rated option is Beals Point Campground — Folsom Lake State Recreation Area, which features both tent and RV sites with plenty of trails and fishing opportunities. For RV travelers, SacWest RV Park & Campground stands out with its 50s vibe, clean facilities, friendly staff, and family-friendly amenities including playgrounds and a swimming pool.