Best Cabin Camping near Beatty, OR
Looking for a place to cabin camp near Beatty? It's easy to find cabins in Beatty with The Dyrt. Each cabin rental offers quick access to one or more of Beatty's most popular destinations.
Looking for a place to cabin camp near Beatty? It's easy to find cabins in Beatty with The Dyrt. Each cabin rental offers quick access to one or more of Beatty's most popular destinations.
We welcome you to Fish Lake Resort. Located at 4,600 feet elevation in the Southern Oregon Cascades. A truly beautiful setting in the pristine old-growth forest at the foot of Mt. McLaughlin (9,495 ft). The resort offers 11 cabins for lodging, 45 full hook-up RV sites, electric-only sites, and no hook-up sites for tenting. Shower and laundry facilities for our registered guests. Fish Lake Lodge offers a general store & the Tadpole Cafe. Boat rentals and mooring on a lake with a 10 mph speed limit help make for a peaceful, relaxing stay at the resort. Or, if fishing is not your thing, how about great mountain biking or hiking trails.
$28 - $50 / night
$50 - $250 / night
Crater Lake Resort and Store offers affordable year-round lodging, camping and grocery shopping near Crater Lake National Park. Located in the Upper Klamath Basin—an area rich with history and natural beauty—Crater Lake Resort is great for extended stays and adventures beyond your visit to the National Park. We are close to many great opportunities for hiking, bird watching, biking, hunting, fly fishing and kayaking.
Our cabins are private, clean and beautifully done with motel-like interiors. All cabins include necessary linens, and have full bathrooms and kitchenettes stocked with cooking and dining necessities. We have eight cabins that can accommodate up to 4 guests, and two historic cabins perfect for a solo traveler or couple. Our creekside cabins offer beautiful views and private decks with gas BBQs.
For longer stays, events, or larger groups, we have three Full Kitchen Rentals. These can accommodate up to 6 guests depending on the unit selected and each features a large kitchen with full size appliances. Full Kitchen Rentals offer thoughtful amenities and complement the quiet beauty of our creekside resort. New Park Models 31 and 32 are especially great options for events when coupled with our Community Hall.
Tent sites are spacious and fully grassed, with room for multiple tents to accommodate up to 10 people. RV sites with full-hookups and partial hook-up sites are available to accommodate recreational vehicles of all types and up to 40’ long. Picnic tables, BBQs and fire pits are available at every tent and RV site. A large community fire pit and gas grill are available for all guest use.
You will have room to roam on our 12 acre property. We have two bridges across the creek to complete a great walking path for you and your dog. We have many outside games including a pickle ball court. Canoes are free for guest use on Fort Creek.
Our camp store is stocked with snacks and drinks for day trips, unique gifts as well as everything you’ll need for a delicious dinner, including local beer wine.
Rocky Point Resort is located on the peaceful Upper Klamath Lake amid gigantic Ponderosa pine trees. The resort is located 30 minutes from Klamath Falls, Oregon, and one hour from Medford, Oregon, and is open from April 1 through November 1. It adjacent to Rocky Point Day Use Area/Boat Launch. The resort offers a variety of accommodations including five tent camping sites, 24 RV sites, and five cabins, many with serene lake views. There is also a restaurant and general store on the property to make this a full-service resort in a natural and rustic setting. For recreation, Rocky Point Resort features access to excellent fishing, boating and bird watching opportunities. At the resort’s boat launch you can glide into the Upper Klamath Canoe Trail with a rented canoe, kayak, paddle boat, or small motor boat. Rentals are available by the hour, half-day or full day. For more information, visit: https://www.facebook.com/RockyPointOregon.
Bald Butte Lookout is perched atop the windy summit of Bald Butte in the Fremont-Winema National Forest in south-central Oregon. It is surrounded by forested hillsides and expansive views. The lookout was built in 1931 and served as a Forest Service fire detection site for over 50 years. It was constructed from an Aladdin L4 ground-mounted lookout kit in which all of the pieces were pre-cut in six-foot lengths or less so the entire kit could be packed by horses into the remote site. The total cost of the structure at the time was $668.49 and only took a few days to assemble. At one time, hundreds of these types of lookouts were in service throughout the Pacific Northwest. Today only two such structures remain in Oregon, providing a unique lodging experience for guests seeking recreation and relaxation. The lookout offers basic amenities, though for guests to enjoy their experience completely, they must bring several of their own supplies.
Hiking, birding, stargazing and wildlife viewing are popular activities. Bald Butte Trail is a quiet all-season trail that offers a variety of terrain and wildlife viewing opportunities. Hikers traverse large open meadows filled with summer wildflowers, heavily wooded forests and ridgetop scrambles along Oak Ridge Trail and Surveyor's Ridge Trail, overlooking the Hood River Valley. Trails in the Gearhart Mountain Wilderness are also nearby. At night the lookout provides an ideal setting for stargazing, as constellations and planets put on a dazzling display.
Fremont National Forest is known for its towering snow-capped peaks, volcanic landscapes, wide-open sage basins, scenic vistas and wild places where visitors can still find solitude. Nearby Gearhart Wilderness offers 22,823 acres of scenic views and primitive recreational opportunities. Throughout the remote area, streams rush through narrow meadows and Blue Lake lies nestled beneath a canopy of mixed-conifer forests. Rock formations cap most of the high elevation ridge tops.
$40 / night
For a classic, family-oriented lake destination, Lake of the Woods camping offers something for everyone. This high mountain historic lake resort sits beside one of the clearest natural lakes found in the southern Oregon Cascades. The highlight of this setting is Mt. McLoughlin with its almost 10,000 feet of grand beauty. The resort, located 40 minutes from Klamath Falls, Oregon, and 45 minutes from Medford, Oregon, is a full service property with everything you could ask for in a family vacation. The resort offers 34 cabins and 22 RV sites, as well as a restaurant, general store, pizza parlor and marina. Lake of the Woods Resort offers abundant of summer recreational activities and things to do including biking, boating, fishing, hiking, swimming, sightseeing or water skiing. When the snow flies the fun continues! Enjoy snowshoeing, cross-country skiing and snowmobiling. For more information, visit: http://lakeofthewoodsresort.com
$25 / night
Aspen Point, located on the banks of scenic Lake of the Woods, is a single-loop campground that offers visitors opportunities to experience both the serene and wild aspects of south central Oregon. Visitors enjoy hiking on trails leading into towering conifer forests or paddling a canoe along the shore at sunset.
Aspen Point Campground is a wonderful location for hiking, fishing, hunting, horseback riding and biking in summer and early fall. In the winter months, visitors can take advantage of skiing, snowshoeing, and snowmobiling. Adjacent to Lake of the Woods, anglers may want to cast a line out from boat or shore to reel in rainbow or brown trout. Kokanee salmon, bass, and perch, also thrive in the lake. Swimming, kayaking, and canoeing are wonderful ways for visitors to spend a warm afternoon along the waterfront.
Fremont National Forest is hemmed in by towering snow-capped peaks, volcanic landscapes and wide-open sage basins. The nearby Sky Lakes Wilderness, designated by Congress in 1984, is a land of lakes, rocky ridges and timbered slopes. It is approximately 6 miles wide and 27 miles long, with elevations ranging from 3,800 feet in the canyon of the Middle Fork of the Rogue River to a lofty 9,495 feet at the top of Mount McLoughlin. More than 200 pools of water, from mere ponds to lakes of 30 to 40 acres, dot the landscape. Large mammals, such as mule deer, Rocky Mountain elk, and pronghorn antelope, find homes in the the forests, while several varieties of trout inhabit lakes and streams. In the spring and fall, migrating geese, ducks and swans frame the Oregon sky. Black bears, mountain lions, and bobcats, also find homes in the forest.
The Crater Lake National Park is a popular attraction, where visitors can learn about its unique natural and cultural history. At 1,943 feet deep, Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States and one of the ten deepest lakes in the world. Visitors also enjoy the 172 miles of diverse river and mountain landscapes along the Rogue-Umpqua National Scenic Byway. The scenic drive travels from rolling oak-covered hills and towering coniferous forests to roaring white water rapids and incised intercanyon lava flows. The highway travels alongside the Upper Rogue and North Umpqua Wild and Scenic Rivers that contain world-class fisheries.
Between 05/15/2021 and 09/15/2021 this location is staffed. Please call (541) 274-0386 to speak with local staff. From 09/16/2021 to 05/14/2022 this location is unstaffed. Please call (866) 201-4194 for general information.
$140 / night
Clean campground with amazing views from the bathhouse. Full hookups on level pads and cabins if you left your rv at home. Hint. Take a warm, fluffy robe and good sandals for your walk to and from the soaking pools.
Stayed at site PRV 18. Site is right next to the road with no sound barrier. Very loud traffic late evening and early morning. You won’t get a decent nights rest. The positive: staff very friendly, clean bathrooms, and warm showers.
We are traveling in a 20’ van. We are at lake view. Big rigs around us, but we dont feel crowded. Trails around. Fishing and just relaxing
Bathrooms (showers and toilet) are close. Need some update but I have seen worst
Has a cafe. Havent been there for food but at check in looked pretty good
Strongly advise 4x4 to get up there, stayed outside the hut and surprisingly a lot of flys. Perfect star gazing spot.
Check in was very slow. The person checking everyone in also had to make coffee drinks and ring in diner sales. I was skipped over for someone else who rushed the line to check in. The store is not well stocked but has some useful items. The boats could use some attention and a fire extinguisher would be a good idea. The gentleman who helped us get the boat out and dock it was very nice! Campfires not allowed right now which is understandable with the fire risks. They have a shower for quarters and a two stall bathroom which are very small. The lake is beautiful!
Lake of the Woods does not entirely honor the "America the Beautiful" interagency pass, even tho it is privately run it is on public NFS land that those passes should cover.
Shame on Lake of the Woods for taking money from Gold Star Families, Veterans, and Active Duty Servicemen and Women.
It's a privatized mess. Don't go there. Diamond Lake, Odell Lake, Paulina Lake are MUCH better destinations AND honor "America the Beautiful" passes.
Gorgeous wooded campsites along the lake. VERY kind camp host (Mark) who helped me out even tho I arrived late and without rez. Clean facilities. I was in a quiet spot but lots of families/groups even on a weekday evening. Your quiet might depend on luck of who you’re situated with.
Beautiful location but stuffed full of people. I got in late on a Friday night for an RV spot for my campervan. No staff around so I found an open spot and started getting ready for bed. Staff comes and wanted me to move to my “reserved” spot, which isn’t shared with you until you arrive, down in a tightly crammed section by the lake, which means shining my headlights and making noise at 11 PM for probably 20 plus sites. After discussing she agreed moving wouldn’t be best since no one would be using the spot I was in. Felt crowded, complicated, and poorly managed.
We came in mid march so they were still technically in their “off season”. All the staff I spoke to were very kind and helpful. There was no one else tent camping so we had the whole area to ourselves. Since it was the off season the store, bathroom and restaurant were closed but it’s still a really nice area to camp. It also had good cell reception. Only thing is that it was buggy when we were there.
It is noisy due to fire station and roads. Sirens. Basic but has hookups. Nice guy in office. It’s kind of a depressing area.
Ashley here with The Dyrt. We're happy to have this property on our platform. Check them out and come back here to leave them some love.
Beautiful spot in the desert the pool and soaking pools are amazing camping was clean everyone super chill incredible views they are fixing and adding new changing areas in the pool area
Very well kept campground, super clean with a creek running through it. They have canoes, fire pits, clubhouse and large camp sites.
This was a beautiful place to stay that we got lucky booking on a holiday weekend at the last minute. We arrived around 1730 after visiting Crater Lake. There is a shop where you can buy food, drinks, alcohol, firewood, etc. The shop opens around 9am and closes at 7pm. The employees were very kind and helpful with whatever questions we had. There is access to toilets and coin showers but the men’s shower I was told from my partner was not working. Overall it’s a beautiful place to stay and I would definitely stay there again
We avoid KOAs and other full amenities campgrounds because they're pricey and not the camping experience we desire but when we have chore day, we like a one-stop shop and will seek these out to dump, shower, do laundry. This is our second stay at this particular KOA over a couple of different trips.
We'll definitely keep this on our favs list when we have chore day.
We arrived late in the dark. Woke up the next morning and what a wonderful surprise! Beautiful slow moving river right behind our camp site. Took the dogs for a walk and took in great views of tall pines, trout in the river and very well maintained grounds. Although a bit pricey for a nights stay, the area is very well kept.
Easy back in spots, looks to be 3 yurts and a dozen cabins all along the water. Walking trails are nice as well.
This funky little private resort and campground, on the way from nowhere to anywhere, has more than you might expect from first glance. The large, dry camping area offers a large field for folks to spread out without being on top of each other. While there are a handful of hookups sites for RV’s, we preferred the less expensive field option. They have a couple of pit toilets near the field, as well as a full bathroom and shower area. With our solar powered system, we were able to keep our battery topped off while taking advantage of all that the springs have to offer, which is just a short walk away.
They also offer some tiny cabins for rent, each with its own unique rustic charm. The public bath house has a large indoor swimming pool, clean changing rooms, sparkling bathrooms and showers. The outdoor, natural pools are what make this place so unique. Three pools, three differing temperatures helps folks find their own “just right.” The springs have a decidedly rustic charm, with lots of converted farm buildings and antique features, so you might want to adjust your city expectations to a more rural and rougher edged setting. But hot water on a very cold night with views of the starry sky above are just the right about the right cure for whatever ails you.
The springs are located about midway between the larger towns of La Pine and Lakeview, around 70ish miles from each, where you can find large grocery stores and services. A few convenience stores, gas, and post offices can be found in the tiny hamlets along the highway. It is a remote, lovely and quiet spot on the edge of this large lake.
Camping for 4 nights. Pay is per person and $10 extra for full RV hookups. It’s open, and hot. It would uncomfortable without air conditioning. The hot pool and outdoor smaller pools are hot but not super hot. It’s mineral water and lovely to float in the indoor pool. No picnic table or shade. There are cabins.
So I saw the Eagle Point park campground on the map and on a fancy Klamath County Mountain bike trail brochure. Two signs directed me right to it but when I got there a large sign up high on a tree stated DAY USE ONLY NO CAMPING OR OVERNIGHT PARKING. the place looks great but there are definitely mixed messages here.
Trying to find somewhere after a trip up crater lake, lake of the woods fully booked out and found space here instead, basic campground that has everything you need, not the prettiest of locations but friendly and helpful hosts with everything you need
We are at site 23 for a smaller travel trailer right on the water, with a partial hookup at this site. It’s a beautiful quiet space where the birds wake you (we have loved this bird song app https://merlin.allaboutbirds.org/download/ ); you can make your coffee and walk out on the dock to watch the sunrise. My partner made a 5-mile loop on the lake in just over 2 hours around and through a National Wildlife Refuge on a paddle board. I do not like that you pay to stay AND pay to take a shower, $1 for 2 1/2 minutes, and you can only go up in increments of $1. I used $3, and it was not enough. It takes 30+ secs for the water to warm, then I was caught with shampoo in my hair. My partner said I was lucky I could rinse in the sink, he had just full soaped his nethers when the water shut off. So be warned! $240 for five nights with partial hookup should cover a shower. Otherwise, the bathrooms on-site look new and are clean. The staff is genuinely friendly and helpful. It’s a well-run and cared-for spot. Cost to dump grey water is $25 , I’ve never seen a fee this high. I’d gladly pay $10.
In other places I've seen this place reviewed as dingy. What someone expected from a privately run campground on the edge of a massive salt pan expected...I don't know. If you're not into the perfectly imperfect it ain't for you, then again very little in the Oregon Outback will be. There are a few rusted cars hanging around, but the cabins are clean and well kitted, the spring pools are absolutely pleasant, and the scenery outstanding.
Great hot springs included in your stay! Really beautiful here
Very nice and well kept campground within 30mins of crater lake. I had a serious issue with how tight the spots were in relation to how much room is onsite. Our sewer drain was less than a foot away from our neighbors table, as was our other neighbors to ours. Also our pop out was almost over their table. Other than that, the creek was beautiful and clear, the lake is amazing, and I wouldn’t let it stop me from coming back
I had a blast on my dad's friends pontoon boat. He let me take 2 of my girlfriends and my boyfriend with us. We all had such a blast. It was a really nice day too. Definitely a trip to remember.
At Crater Lake taking the rim road it leads you the highest point in the park. This road is 7,860’ above sea level and the highest point around the rim drive. We stayed at Manama campground where our site D1 was facing the opposite way so that the fire ring, picnic table and amenities was on the non door and side of our trailer. So if you pick a numbered site be sure you pick a even numbered site so your rig is in the correct position.
Crater lake is amazing! Highly recommended!
Cabin camping near Beatty, Oregon offers a unique blend of natural beauty and cozy accommodations, perfect for those looking to escape into the wilderness.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is the most popular cabin campsite near Beatty, OR?
According to TheDyrt.com, the most popular cabin campground near Beatty, OR is Klamath Falls KOA with a 3.4-star rating from 13 reviews.
What is the best site to find cabin camping near Beatty, OR?
TheDyrt.com has all 13 cabin camping locations near Beatty, OR, with real photos and reviews from campers.