Established Camping
Live Oak — Lake Mineral Wells State Park
About
State Park
Campsites with Electricity (50-amp) Number of Sites: 47 People per Site: 8 Sites #12-58 In the Live Oak Camping Area. Sites #48 and 54 are wheelchair accessible..
Picnic table Outdoor grill Fire ring Water 50 amp hookup Lantern post Restrooms nearby Showers nearby
Fee Info
Information and prices can change. Parks charge a daily entrance fee in addition to any facility fees, unless otherwise stated.
Purchase a Texas State Park Pass to enjoy free entry to more than 80 state parks for you and your guests for one year.
You may bring pets to most state parks, but they cannot enter Texas State Park buildings. Learn about rules for pets at state parks. For park-specific pet restrictions, contact the park.
Call the park or the Customer Service Center (512) 389-8900 for more information.
Location
Live Oak — Lake Mineral Wells State Park is located in Texas
Coordinates
32.821 N
98.035 W
Access
- Drive-InPark next to your site
- Walk-InPark in a lot, walk to your site.
Stay Connected
- WiFiUnknown
- VerizonUnknown
- AT&TUnknown
- T-MobileUnknown
Site Types
- Standard (Tent/RV)
Features
For Campers
- Picnic Table
- Reservable
- Showers
- Drinking Water
- Electric Hookups
- Toilets
- Fires
For Vehicles
- Sanitary Dump
Lovely place
Loved this campground. Would have liked to have stayed there more than one night. Beautiful lake for fishing, lots of trails. Campsites were very private. Bathroom could use updating.
- (5) View All
Nice campsites, quiet lake and good hiking and biking
Large campground with nicely spaced sites. Some back up to the lake. The park has hiking and mountain biking trails and easy access to the Mineral Wells rails to trails Trailway.
- (4) View All
Would stay again!
Really cool area to stay in, lots of armadillos running around! We stayed during the week, it was very quiet and relaxing. No sewer hookup but there is a dump station on the way out. Electric and water hookups. Verizon service was spotty but we had it.
First time coming here
Came for a weekend getaway from all the hustle and bustle of our lives. Had a great time here at the lake and hiking around this state park
- (8) View All
Great for hiking and climbing
Pretty accessible if you live in Tarrant County for day tripping. Covid restrictions keep us out on our first attempt to visit the park. Our second trip we made reservations for a day pass. We went to hike aloo g rocky cliff side of the lake. The hike is longer than you’d think and less interesting then we’d expected.
The best features are near the rock climbing side. Really enjoyed that leg. The rest was just lakeside and not particularly memorable or interesting. Hate to say this wasn’t a great experience, but we have plans to return and do some camping in the spring. It is so close to home it is hard to not make time to give it a second chance.
Nice location close to town
We enjoyed our seven-day stay, cell data was horrible, but the hiking trails were great, could mix-and-match these trails for very long walks, average or short.
People are riding their bikes or horseback riding. There is a little beach just past the entrance , also a little convenience store in that same parking lot. Very close to town has a Walmart and everything you need.
- (12) View All
Awesome hiking!
Pretty lake, clean sites, and awesome rock formations
TEXAS IN NOVEMBER
Three day shake down run for jeep and some equipment. 89 degrees/ no wind /mostly sunny/plenty of deer/
- (7) View All
New to Texas camping!
The park is well maintained and clean. Lots of different areas to hike and explore. They do have sites available that haves shelter with screen door and picnic table inside a huge bonus to get out of the sun and bugs. I would say this is a pretty good campground for Texas :) I'm just used to Alaska and Oregon camping which is a bit different and more adventurous (in my opinion)
Car Camping & Lake Fun
My husband and I took our Bunkhouse tent trailer out for its first test run over Memorial Day weekend. We drove 4 hours to Lake Mineral Wells State Park. We arrived late at night and due to flooding, the main road into the park was closed but a back entrance had been opened. We easily found our site (RV with electric) and were pleased to find that it was quite wooded. There was one site very close to ours, but our neighbors were quiet folks so it wasn't a big deal.
In the morning, we went for a hike on one of the trails in the park. Because the trails are all lakeside and there had been significant rainfall and some flooding, parts of the trail had washed into the lake, making it difficult to continue. The trail we were on was rated at a high difficulty on the park map and it had several places where the trail was a little more difficult than most state parks. Overall, it was an enjoyable little trek.
The lake has a spillway that goes over the road. Near the spillway is a sandy beach without a lifeguard. The beach was pretty crowded but the lake depth is very gradual so there was plenty of space for everyone to play, regardless of age or swimming ability. We were able to walk out far enough to swim a little without worrying about getting splashed by the kids playing in the lake.
The park rents canoes, kayaks and paddleboats by the hour. The prices were fairly expensive so we opted out, but next time we will bring our kayaks for paddling. Fishing is allowed.
The daily use fees are more expensive for Lake Mineral Wells than for some other Texas State Parks, but if you have a State Park pass, this park is an excellent place to bring a family for camping.