Best Glamping near Davidsonville, MD

Located just minutes from Davidsonville, Washington DC / Capitol KOA and Cherry Hill Park both offer premium glamping accommodations that blend outdoor adventure with upscale comfort. These destinations feature deluxe yurts and safari-style canvas tents equipped with real beds, climate control, and electrical outlets. "Phenomenal, clean sites in a beautiful wooded area. It is all it's cracked up to be!" notes one guest about the Capitol KOA experience. The elevated camping options include private firepits, picnic tables, and proximity to well-maintained shower facilities. Cherry Hill Park stands out with its boutique camping atmosphere and convenient location for exploring the greater Washington DC region.

The glamping sites near Davidsonville provide access to both natural settings and metropolitan attractions. Capitol KOA maintains family-friendly amenities including a swimming pool, jumping pillow, and outdoor chess set that create a resort-like atmosphere. Lacy Oasis Campground offers a more secluded glamping experience with six specialized sites focusing on tranquility and natural immersion. According to a visitor, "If you are a nature lover, a person who loves peace, serenity, and tranquility, or just need some respite, Lacy Oasis is the place to be." Guests can easily travel to Washington DC, Baltimore, and Annapolis for day trips while returning to comfortable glamping accommodations. Most sites remain open seasonally from spring through fall, though some like Cherry Hill Park operate year-round with heated accommodations and indoor amenities.

Best Glamping Sites Near Davidsonville, Maryland (21)

    1. Cherry Hill Park

    42 Reviews
    Beltsville, MD
    18 miles
    Website
    +1 (301) 937-7116

    $282 - $999 / night

    "We stayed in a level pull-thru site(#1715) with picnic table on a paver patio, iron table and chairs, clean gravel surface, grill, and fire pit."

    "Every campsite has a patio, grill, and fire pit. Great pool, clubhouse, entertainment for the kids, great laundry facilities, and huge off leash dog area for the dogs."

    2. Washington DC / Capitol KOA

    16 Reviews
    Millersville, MD
    10 miles
    Website
    +1 (410) 923-2771

    "Staff was friendly and helpful with any information we needed. Nice play ground for the kids. They also really enjoyed the jumping pillow."

    "If you get an area to back into it’ll be more secluded, but the pull through spots offer no privacy. We enjoyed our stay. We would come again."

    3. Camp Meade RV Park

    2 Reviews
    Odenton, MD
    13 miles
    Website
    +1 (888) 722-4237

    "Friendly hostess and we had a nice shady spot, what was great with a heat of 94F."

    4. Lacy Oasis Campground

    2 Reviews
    Chesapeake Beach, MD
    17 miles
    +1 (202) 270-5189

    $90 - $190 / night

    "Whether you are an adult or a child, this place will have a positive effect on you. The owners are involved and designed this space with the visitors pleasure in mind."

    5. Pohick Bay Campground

    38 Reviews
    Lorton, VA
    34 miles
    Website
    +1 (703) 339-6104

    $37 - $170 / night

    "We were at site 133, non electric non water. I feel like the spots at the end of each loop might have slightly more privacy, but our site was fine."

    "We stayed on the big loop on site 48. Unfortunately there wasn’t anything on ReserveAmerica specifying the water situation, so when we arrived we found that we didn’t have water hook up."

    6. Louise F. Cosca Regional Park

    4 Reviews
    Clinton, MD
    20 miles
    Website
    +1 (301) 868-1397

    $10 - $45 / night

    "Only 5 sites have electric (2, 5, 18, 24, 25)but all 25 sites have water hookup. Weekends are some what noisy because of the games across the street in the park."

    "Close to town but far enough to enjoy yourself. Bathrooms are clean and have decent showers."

    7. Andrews AFB Military FamCamp

    2 Reviews
    Clinton, MD
    17 miles
    Website
    +1 (301) 981-4109

    $18 - $30 / night

    8. Tuckahoe State Park Campground

    31 Reviews
    Ridgely, MD
    38 miles
    Website
    +1 (410) 820-1668

    $21 - $70 / night

    "Parking pads on the electric loop are asphalt.

    • There's very finely crushed rock on the non-electric loop. This includes the parking pad and tent pad."

    "Small by some State Park standards, Tuckahoe offers two loops: a tent/cabin site, and an electric site for RVs. The sites are well maintained."

    9. Bull Run Regional Park

    42 Reviews
    Iron Gate, VA
    46 miles
    Website
    +1 (703) 631-0550

    $39 - $100 / night

    "Great Park, friendly staff, clean facilities. We stayed with our Pop Up for two nights at an electric -supported site. Portable water and dumping station located at the camp store."

    "Pros - Clean Bathrooms, Camp store open 8am - 8pm, Sites 62 - 92 (except #74 and 88) are all pretty  good.  Security was great, patrol throughout the night.  "

    10. Ramblin' Pines

    17 Reviews
    Woodbine, MD
    36 miles
    Website
    +1 (410) 795-5161

    $30 - $70 / night

    "We stay at Ramblin Pines because it is close to family and a good proximity to visiting Baltimore and Frederick."

    "Plenty of activities on site. And a live band on the weekends. Also close driving distance to many towns and cities."

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Glamping Reviews near Davidsonville, MD

281 Reviews of 21 Davidsonville Campgrounds


  • Mary S.
    Oct. 8, 2018

    Tuckahoe State Park Campground

    Small campground, large sites, lots of shade

    Two thumbs up on this small campground with spacious, wooded sites!

    We stayed here on a Thursday when the campground was almost empty, but there was a reservations list that showed the campground would be full for the Columbus Day weekend. We have good luck walking up to campgrounds during the week, but we look ahead to weekends and make reservations.

    Spacious, Wooded Sites

    - Lots of shade and trees on large sites and space between sites make this a pleasant campground.

    • Parking pads on the electric loop are asphalt.

    • There's very finely crushed rock on the non-electric loop. This includes the parking pad and tent pad.

    • There are 8 camper cabins, 4 on each loop. There are beds for 4 or 6 people, and the cabins have air conditioning, a ceiling fan and electricity. These are a nice alternative to camping in a tent.

    • Bathrooms are located in the middle of each loop, and there are spigots on the loops with potable water.

    Small Park But Many Activities

    • Canoe/kayak launch between sites 46 and 48. The walk to Tuckahoe Creek from the parking area is very short, and the creek leads to Tuckahoe Lake (no gasoline motors) with more of the creek on the other side of the lake.

    • Fishing

    • 20 miles of hiking trails are also open for biking and horseback riding.

    • Archery range

    • Disc golf

    • Hunting - as a hiker, I am extremely wary of hiking in parks at a time when hunting is allowed.

  • Matt S.The Dyrt PRO User
    Aug. 12, 2023

    Cherry Hill Park

    Awesome Campground near Washington, D.C.

    We had another great stay at Cherry Hill Park in College Park, MD. 

    We stayed in a level pull-thru site(#1715) with picnic table on a paver patio, iron table and chairs, clean gravel surface, grill, and fire pit. The site was just big enough for our motor home and Jeep. Full hook-ups with 50-amp service all worked fine. 

    If you’re visiting Washington, this is the place to stay. They offer a daily charter bus plus the Metro bus stops at the campground entrance. And if you have a car, it’s about 35-minutes drive time(maybe a bit longer with traffic). 

    To be honest, it’s a great place to stay even if you’re not visiting D.C. They have two swimming pools, a cafe, playgrounds, well-stocked camp store, delivery of firewood, ice, and cafe orders, and a concierge to help with travel and tourist sites. 

    The entire park is clean and well-maintained. 

    THINGS I ESPECIALLY LIKED: 

    1. Proximity to Washington, D.C. 

    2. Excellent condition and clean 

    3. Great staff to help with making the most of your stay

  • Stuart O.The Dyrt PRO User
    Apr. 18, 2025

    Bull Run Regional Park

    Expensive for what you get; and drainage problems.

    We have found municipal campgrounds in Northern Virginia are a bit spendy for being government sponsored.  Not as bad as South Carolina, but way more than Florida.  Fine.  Comes with the territory.  But Bull Run manages to goose you even more.  There are occupancy AND transaction fees that really add up if you're only there a few nights.  But the real kicker is a 2-night minimum stay.  Even mid-week.  In APRIL for gosh sakes!

    While we were here, there was a fairly heavy day of rain.  Couple inches, I suppose, but nothing Biblical.  The mouths of the metal culverts in our loop were bent downward from campers driving over them, which obstructed the flow.  Result was lots of standing water at our campsite.

    We're done with NOVA Parks campgrounds.  Better cost options exist with Fairfax County Parks.

  • Bill  G.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jul. 31, 2018

    Tuckahoe State Park Campground

    Great site near the bay

    Small by some State Park standards, Tuckahoe offers two loops: a tent/cabin site, and an electric site for RVs. The sites are well maintained. The bathroom/ showers are the cleanest I’ve ever seen, especially since we stayed in the hottest time of the year. There are a few trails here. Nearby is the Chesapeake bay with all its amenities, an Arbouretum that is a bit over priced. And access to the Tuckahoe River for fishing and kayaking. No swimming. There is a Bird Aviary that housesthose that cannot be fully healed. We tend to use Tuckahoe as a way station while camping our way up and down the Bay. I wish it had more to offer. One note is if you’re here for the annual Easter egg hunt GET There Early and make reservations, the campsites fill quickly. There is opportunity to see a great night sky if the clouds stay away.

  • Corey B.
    Sep. 3, 2018

    Bull Run Regional Park

    Great Stay at Bull Run Reg. Park

    Great Park, friendly staff, clean facilities. We stayed with our Pop Up for two nights at an electric -supported site. Portable water and dumping station located at the camp store. We stayed at site 146 on the first caul-de-sac off the first loop just another site away from the bath house (which was pretty clean). We got rained on the first night so things got a little muddy but nothing out of hand. Tons of free activities for the kiddos facilitated by the camp staff over the weekends. Face-painting, ice cream sundaes, S'Mores, hay rides and a rock wall. Park has a lot of things to do as well just outside the campground. We took a try at disc golf which was a lot of fun. Pet friendly. We'll be back!

  • Harry R.
    Sep. 20, 2022

    Bull Run Regional Park

    No truck bed tents or campers allowed

    Was excited to try first night out in a Kodiak Canvas Truck Bed Tent. Unfortunately, learned NOVA Parks regards anything in a truck bed whether a camper or tent is not welcome. I didn't realize NOVA Parks considers this campground as a resort and vehicle camping - ither than a class A or B - implies homeless and they don't want that image. They do also allow a travel trailer and tents can only be used on the ground not in a truck bed as designed. Beautiful park ... I live nearby in Arlington but was frustrated not able to use a nearby Park and Campground I pay taxes to support. I used another Campground in Fairfax County that was welcoming.

  • Tye S.
    Jun. 19, 2023

    Louise F. Cosca Regional Park

    Nice small campground

    This campground is about 25 sites. Only 5 sites have electric (2, 5, 18, 24, 25)but all 25 sites have water hookup. Weekends are some what noisy because of the games across the street in the park. This is not a gated campground so anyone can come through and have a tour. Park Police patrol the campground 2 times a day. Also the bathrooms are clean, their are 2 stalls and 1 shower, cleaned daily by park rangers. Raccoons run wild at night flipping trash can lids on your campsite hunting for food. Use repel spray to keep the raccoons off your site. Site 24 and 25 are very close together but the other sites are at a distance however, 6 of the 25 sites are unleveled so tent camping is probably the only option. This is not big rig friendly but there are pull through sites but the roads are very narrow and there is only 1 way in and 1 way out (same entrance) there is a dump station at the beginning of the campground with access to water as well. Free of charge. This is a quiet campground and it's cheap for maryland residents and about $20 for non-resident. There is no registration on site it's online only. www.pgparksdirect.com

  • Jen V.
    Jul. 14, 2017

    Tuckahoe State Park Campground

    Great, quiet park on MD's Eastern Shore

    Site was heavily wooded and very private; we were surrounded by woods on three sides, and could only see our neighbors across the narrow loop road. Site included a picnic table, fire ring, grill grate and lantern post. Pad was nice and level; didn’t need to use any blocks. Drive way was just long enough to accommodate our truck. Site was a little farther from the bath house than we usually prefer, but didn’t really matter as we were camping sans kids this time. I loved the privacy of this site, so I didn’t mind the little bit of extra walking. Almost all the sites looked relatively private, with a fair amount of trees in between, but our was on of the only sites that was truly surrounded by forest. Since we were here in November, the leaves were especially beautiful. Bath house was large, heated and extremely clean; looks recently renovated. There was also a nice large dishwashing station on the Men's side, which I love. The park itself is very quiet, pretty, and easy to get around. Lots of multi-use trails, which i believe are mostly flat, so maybe not the best for die-hard hiking enthusiasts. We took the Lake Trail down to the day-use area, and it was a very pleasant, scenic hike that took less than 20 minutes. The lake/day-use area is beautiful, with a pavilion, picnic tables, boat launch area, volleyball and large recycled-tire playground for kids. There were quite a few people out and about, more than I would have expected during November. The lake is popular for fishing, kayaking and canoeing (no swimming allowed). During the on-season, canoes and kayaks are available for rent to explore the lake and water trails in the adjacent Tuckahoe Creek. Would love to come back in the summer to check them out. There is also a disc golf course, challenge course, and archery range on-site.

    Overall, we really enjoyed this park. It has all the major elements we typically look for: privacy, lots of trees, electric hookups, clean bath house, large playground, and a place to fish. The fact that it’s only about an hour’s drive from us is a bonus. We can’t wait to come back in warmer weather with the kids!

  • M J.
    Sep. 28, 2020

    Pohick Bay Campground

    Great spot around Northern Virginina

    We were here for just one night during September. Our first time camping in the area and since COVID. Check in process was relatively simple, just pull up and pop out of your car to check in, with mask of course. We got a quick run down, some wood and a brochure with maps and area info. We were at site 133, non electric non water. I feel like the spots at the end of each loop might have slightly more privacy, but our site was fine. It included a picnic table and probably the best fire pit with grill that I've had in a while. It rained the night before we came, and the night we were there so the ground was pretty wet. Bathrooms had a sign for taking care with COVID precautions, and to wear your mask. Bathrooms were ok, but floors were a mess from muddy feet. Not much to be done about that. There were showers, and a dishwashing sink, plus laundry available. It's nice to know we've got a close spot to escape to if we don't have time to go far. This is a pet friendly campground. There's a lot to do out at the whole park, and its worth exploring (we just didn't have time). I'm sure its so pretty out near the water.


Guide to Davidsonville

Yurt camping near Davidsonville, Maryland provides convenient access to both rural landscapes and urban amenities. Positioned between the Patuxent River and the South River, this area features rolling hills and mixed deciduous forests with elevations ranging from 100-300 feet above sea level. Most campgrounds in this region remain open from mid-spring through late fall, though winter camping options exist with heated accommodations.

What to do

Fishing and boating activities: Pohick Bay Campground offers water-based recreation with kayak rentals and access to multiple water bodies. "Beautiful campground located near the National Harbor. Eagles everywhere!" notes a visitor about the wildlife viewing opportunities.

Metro access to DC monuments: Cherry Hill Park provides transportation options for exploring the capital. "The park itself has more than most... Just can't be beat. Great sites. So many other things in the park. Splash pad, paved roads for scootering. Just awesome!" according to one reviewer who appreciated the amenities.

Disc golf courses: Several parks near Davidsonville feature disc golf facilities. A visitor to Bull Run Regional Park shared, "The park has golf frisbe course, decent water park for kids, hiking trails, small creek/river you can explore, playgrounds." Perfect for active travelers seeking outdoor recreation beyond standard camping.

What campers like

Private sites with shade coverage: Campers value secluded spots with natural canopy. At Tuckahoe State Park Campground, reviewers appreciate the layout: "Small by some State Park standards, Tuckahoe offers two loops: a tent/cabin site, and an electric site for RVs. The sites are well maintained."

Outdoor game options: Washington DC / Capitol KOA includes recreation for various age groups. "We had a site near the pool, outdoor chess set, jumping pillow and gaga ball pit. Our kids (9, 10 and 14) all had fun and made friends," explains one family who enjoyed the social atmosphere.

Clean facilities throughout: Multiple campgrounds maintain high cleanliness standards. "The bathhouse is very clean. If you stay on the tent side there is a kayak launch. The sites are laid out in a circle with the bathhouse in the center," notes a Tuckahoe State Park visitor, highlighting the practical layout design.

What you should know

Seasonal operation differences: Most yurt camping sites near Davidsonville operate from spring through fall with limited winter availability. At Lacy Oasis Campground, facilities focus on three-season use: "My agency took about 25 children there last week and they did not want to leave, neither did I. The rates are very economical for what is being provided on the space."

Site levelness concerns: Some campgrounds feature uneven terrain. "The site was tiny and right on the road," reports a Tuckahoe visitor, while another notes: "We booked site 21, blind. The web site does not say site 21 is extremely small. We have a 25' camper, and it barely fit."

Price variations across parks: State parks typically offer lower rates than private facilities. "This campground is about 25 sites. Only 5 sites have electric (2, 5, 18, 24, 25) but all 25 sites have water hookup," explains a visitor to Louise F. Cosca Regional Park, providing specific site information for planning purposes.

Tips for camping with families

Wildlife education opportunities: Bull Run Regional Park provides nature programs for children. "The campground had a campfire complete with s'mores followed by hayrides. Great family friendly campground," shares a visitor who stayed in the cabins with grandchildren.

Playground proximity: Consider booking sites near play areas when traveling with young children. A visitor to Ramblin' Pines noted: "This is our local campground and our second time here and we really like it. It has a pool, jump pillow, mini golf, fishing pond, barnyard with goats, and multiple playgrounds."

Weather preparation: Spring camping can bring unexpected rainfall. "While we were here, there was a fairly heavy day of rain. Couple inches, I suppose, but nothing Biblical. The mouths of the metal culverts in our loop were bent downward from campers driving over them, which obstructed the flow," warns a Bull Run Regional Park visitor about potential drainage issues.

Tips from RVers

Site selection advice: When booking a yurt or cabin near Davidsonville, research specific site dimensions. "Check out your site before booking, some sites are steep but spacious. Close to town but far enough to enjoy yourself," recommends a camper from Louise F. Cosca Regional Park.

Utility hookups availability: Electric options vary significantly between parks. "The sites are pretty close together but on the ends at least you only have a neighbor on one side. The landscaping, trees and site placement does help the esthetics," explains a Cherry Hill Park visitor about maximizing privacy despite density.

Reservation timing: Book well in advance for holiday weekends. "One note is if you're here for the annual Easter egg hunt GET There Early and make reservations, the campsites fill quickly," advises a Tuckahoe State Park camper about popular seasonal events.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is the most popular glamping campsite near Davidsonville, MD?

According to TheDyrt.com, the most popular glamping campground near Davidsonville, MD is Cherry Hill Park with a 4.8-star rating from 42 reviews.

What is the best site to find glamping camping near Davidsonville, MD?

TheDyrt.com has all 21 glamping camping locations near Davidsonville, MD, with real photos and reviews from campers.