Best Tent Camping near Surry, VA

Tent campers visiting Surry, Virginia will find several primitive camping options within driving distance. Sandy Bottom Nature Park offers 11 walk-in tent sites with sand-bottom platforms, fire rings, and picnic tables. Sites at Sandy Bottom require a short quarter-mile hike from the parking area and are spaced for privacy along a lakeside trail. Carter's Cove Campground and Wisteria Beach Hideaway provide additional tent camping opportunities in the surrounding region.

Most primitive tent sites in the area feature basic amenities with varying levels of development. Sandy Bottom Nature Park includes flush toilets near the parking area, though campers should note these facilities require a walk from the tent sites. Fire rings with cooking grates are standard at most locations, and trash receptacles are typically available. Wisteria Beach Hideaway offers more comfort features, including drinking water, showers, and firewood availability. Tent campers should verify seasonal availability, as some campgrounds operate year-round while others have limited seasons.

The region offers good shade coverage and water access at many tent sites. Sandy Bottom Nature Park provides an urban wilderness experience with lakeside trails and paddling opportunities, though highway noise is noticeable throughout the park. According to one visitor, "The sites were located about 1/4 mile from the parking lot down a trail. They were spaced nicely apart and had nice sand tent platforms with a picnic table and a fire ring with a grate." Wisteria Beach Hideaway delivers a more secluded experience with access to beaches surrounded by pine forests and wetlands. Tent campers seeking paddle-in primitive camping experiences can find more remote options at Merchants Millpond State Park in nearby North Carolina, where canoe-accessible tent sites offer greater seclusion among cypress trees and wetland environments.

Best Tent Sites Near Surry, Virginia (10)

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Tent Camping Reviews near Surry, VA

597 Reviews of 10 Surry Campgrounds


  • liz J.
    Aug. 21, 2023

    Sandy Bottom Nature Park

    A great place to hike and camp if you can't get out of the area

    The park is centrally located with easy highway access.  Plentiful parking, lots of trails to choose from.  The staff was top notch and super kind and helpful.  They were very insistent about the "no alcohol" rule.    

    Sites are first come, first served.  Must reserve in person.  Visitor's center is open 9-6.  

    The sites were located about 1/4 mile from the parking lot down a trail.  They were spaced nicely apart and had nice sand tent platforms with a picnic table and a fire ring with a grate.  Trash cans were very close by, which was super nice.  The bathrooms were flush toilets and running water faucets and located behind the parking lot, so a bit of a hike in the dark if you need to go.  Other than that, expect no amenities.  Bugs weren't terrible but were present.  Definitely bring bug spray.  

    The biggest negative was that no matter where you were in the park, there was significant noise from the highway.  Horns honking, sirens blaring, the general rush of cars going by.  There is no sound barrier between 64 and the park so every noise just filters right through the trees.  Not anyone's fault, but definitely a downside.  

    Overall when you consider the dirt cheap price of 10.60 per night, this campground delivers as advertised.

  • NThe Dyrt PRO User
    Jan. 1, 2022

    Sandy Bottom Nature Park

    Nature in the County

    Sites: 11 primitive tent sites 2 of which are group sites 

    4 tent cabins that sit right on the edge of the lake

     The individual campsites are FCFS and you must park and hike in. It is a short hike along the lake and placed a short distance from the trail so hikers will not be hiking through the sites. You have a sand bottom tent site, picnic table, fire ring/grill and trash. This is a beautiful 456 acre education and wildlife facility. Born from garbage dumps and it is great example of what can be achieved. This really is a great site.  There is an amazing nature center that overlooks Sandy Bottom Lake. Hiking, and biking trails, fishing, boating with boat rentals or bring your own, birding and wildlife viewing. 757-825-4657 

    LNT

    Travel safe

  • Chip G.
    Apr. 12, 2017

    Family Campground — Merchants Millpond State Park

    These February days are why we live in the south...

    The 12 trips in 12 months’ progress well. February’s outing was Merchants Mill Pond. What a great place. It probably helps that the bath house had just been redone with fresh paint. But that wasn’t the only thing. The park staff was friendly and the camp sites are nice and spaced well apart. Each site had a fire pit, tent site and picnic table. I am not sure that all the tent spaces were leveled, but if you pay attention when you set your tent up you should be fine.

    I happened to be a glorious weekend in February and the temperatures were good enough for a hike in shorts and tee shirts. The trails were well maintained and it was a day well spent on the Lassiter Trail. The park also rents kayaks and there are marked water trails as well. Next trip will include a boat ride and a search for alligators (from a safe distance).

    Good hikes, good campground and evenings by the campfire. Definitely on the places to return to list.

  • RL
    Nov. 17, 2020

    Pocahontas State Park Campground

    Lovely November Trip 🔥

    Camped on a Friday night, had site 106. It was a really nice site: set back a bit from the road, fairly wooded, not a long walk to the bathhouse water/electric hook-ups, and a long back-in driveway. Nice fire ring with grill (that had been cleaned), lantern/trash pole, picnic table. Pea gravel tent pad. Honor pay wood.

    After a neighboring camper left we noticed they were disinfecting the campsites very well. Picnic tables, electric/water areas, fire pit areas, poles, etc. were all getting sprayed down between campers.

    Walked around the trails on Saturday. The trail around Beaver Lake was a really nice 2.5 mile loop. Gorgeous in November. Like most weekends, a bit busy on a Saturday. Everything’s open right now, and masks are required in common areas, bath houses, etc.

  • Myron C.The Dyrt PRO User
    May. 30, 2019

    Family Campground — Merchants Millpond State Park

    Campground with a Different Ecosystem--Woods and Swamp

    Merchants Millpond is a great state park if you want to explore a different kind of ecosystem.  The heart of the park lies in its swamps filled with cypress trees and cypress stumps.  There are several camping areas of different kinds.  You can canoe in to one of their primitive campsites, which is on an island in the swamp.  There are other hike-in primitive sites, group camping sites, and there are also the family camping sites.   I stayed at the family camping site and decided to set up my hammock instead of a tent.  If you stay at Merchants Millpond, make sure you take and use insect repellent and lots of it.  I had the biggest problem with mosquitoes and ticks.  If you stay in a hammock, make sure it has mosquito netting.  The family camping sites have tent pads, lantern poles, and fire rings.  The bath house is centrally located within a short walking distance of all of the campsites.  The showers have hot water, but the bath house itself looks outdated.  The canoe-in site that I explored only has a pit toilet, but it did have fire rings and picnic tables.  You can hike to the island by way of a wooden bridge across the swamp, but it is mainly for those who want to canoe in.  If you can go off trail, you can see lots of wildlife.  I had the opportunity to do so since I was invited to participate in a search and rescue exercise.  I only saw one snake, which is unusual not to see more, but I also saw a deer and couple of turtles.  There is a bicycle trail, but the one I hiked on the most was the Lassiter Trail, which has a few wooden bridges and opportunities to experience the eastern woodlands and great views of the swampy millpond.  Fortunately, I did not run into any bears or alligators, which are common in this area.  The visitors center is large and modern, and there is a meeting facility.  The person that I talked to at the visitors center was pleasant and was able to answer my questions.  The staff is great to work with, and I know this because I volunteered to teach camping skills to 4H kids a couple of years ago at this state park.  Overall, it’s a great state park, but it lacks the amenities of modern RV parks.

  • RL
    Aug. 1, 2020

    Chippokes State Park Campground

    Beautiful Plantation

    Awesome things to see here! It’s been a working farm since 1619 with beautiful gardens and livestock. The mansion and outbuildings are pretty cool as well.

    Restrooms were not very clean. Each time I went to the ladies room, the door was propped wide open, and when I went to brush my teeth in the morning the counters were covered in moths and bugs and gnats. Yuck. The showers were ok.

    Ice is $3 and you can grab that from the camp host if it’s after 4pm which is when the store closes. It’s cash only, exactly change. Wood is $6 and there’s a metal box - pay on your honor.

    The beaches were very nice. You’re on the Cobham Bay vs. right on the river and in the dead of the summer, the water is sooo unpleasantly warm. You can wade out at the very least 100 yards and still be less than knee-deep, water still hot. The access to the little beaches are short but moderately steep, especially with lots of beach gear or strollers. It also seems to get washed out so watch your steps.

    The little visitor center near the water access has cold drinks, souvenirs, ice cream, etc. They obv. accept credit cards. You can bring your dog into this area. There’s also a little wildlife info center and restrooms in the same buildings. There are also areas for day use and a good sized parking lot near the water access.

    Straight across the river is Jamestown and Williamsburg, which is cool. I think I was told it’s about four miles across. That being said... those are your closest grocery stores and you have to take the Jamestown Ferry to get there. There is a Dollar General near the park, for odds and ends. Just make sure to stop in advance for what you need because you won’t find much in Surry.

    Stopped at the Surry Seafood Co. for lunch and it was ok. Food and service was mediocre, but there was a nice water view from the deck. Was looking forward to stopping for some shrimp to cook that night from Colonial Seafood market but after walking in, I walked right back out. It was so unclean and didn’t smell fresh at all.

    We took a beautiful drive around the plantation. The cabins look great and we’ll definitely try those out next time. There were corn fields and soybeans for miles. Such a great park due to its history.

    Campsites themselves were pretty nice; not too close together. Our site had the tent pad down away from the picnic table and fire ring which was kind of nice. It was really shady, too. Room for hammocks.

    Each site has a picnic table, fire pit, tent pad, lantern pole. Verizon service was great.

  • Janet R.The Dyrt PRO User
    May. 25, 2025

    Kings Creek

    Kings Creek Tent sites at Cheatham Annex

    There may be a bit of confusion about camping opportunities at Cheatham Annex Bass. It used to be that there was only one campground for the whole base, with a combo of RV sites and tent sites. The options have expanded and changed: a brand new RV park was built several miles away on the northside of the base, and it has its own brand new Rec Center and bath facilities etc. The Kings Creek Campground is on the south side where the old RV park used to be, but is now for tent camping only. There are still the remnant water and electric hookups available, and each site has plenty of grass for setting up tents, or you can set up on the cement pad. Each site has a picnic table, only some have fire rings. Sites 11 through 18 are in a loop around a nice kids playground, with trees surrounding the sites and glimmers of Kings Creek in the background. Sites 1-10 in the adjacent loop are right on the water where Kings Creek enters the York River, and the sites circle round a nice picnic area. Sites 6-7 are currently not being rented out as it has been discovered that the gravesite of a Revolutionary War soldier is located right there. Both tent loops have close access to a nice clean bathhouse, and there is good proximity to the base golf course and a really nice outdoor swimming pool. A great fishing pier nearby extends out into the York River. The MWR office rents kayaks and other equipment and has a coffee shop if you want hot breakfast

  • Sarah C.The Dyrt PRO User
    Jul. 16, 2017

    Family Campground — Merchants Millpond State Park

    Cool & Unique Paddling

    What a rare and beautiful eco-system the cypress swamp is! The state park offers several camping options: drive in, hike in and canoe in.

    Each drive in site has a picnic table, fire ring/grill and tent pad. There are showers, spigots and restrooms for campers staying here. There are three canoe-in sites, two of them have pit toilets and the third requires you to pack out all waste. If you want to enjoy the amenities of the drive-in sites but want to spend time canoeing the pond (which I highly recommend) then that's certainly an option, too.

    There aren't many eco-systems like this left so it's absolutely worth checking out.

  • Napunani
    Jun. 24, 2022

    Chickahominy Riverfront Park

    Needs Some Overdue TLC

    PROS 

    Perfect campground to explore the Historical Triangle 

    Campground along Virginia Capital Bike Trail, which was an excellent riding trail 

    Site#335 level side-to-side 

    Sandy gravel site 

    Moveable plastic wood picnic table 

    Metal fire pit with cooking grate 

    Shady site 

    Wood and ice for sale at Guest Services 

    Slight river view from Site#335 

    Toilet/shower building clean 

    Pool 

    CONS 

    Overused James City County Park…definitely needs some TLC applied 

    Check-in clerk very curt and extremely non-customer service oriented 

    Never saw a camp host site or the actual camp host 

    Weirdly laid out full hook up campground. Some sites are 20 ft long 

    Sites are extremely close to each other 

    Had to park tow vehicle next to trailer due to short length of site 335

    Tight roadway thru full hook up campground 

    Dirt roadways = dusty 

    Empty campsites were heavily littered

    No privacy from neighbor sites 

    Extremely low water pressure even when campground is not fully occupied 

    No gate or controlled access to campground so lots of gawking drive thrus 

    Lots of speed bumps throughout park 

    Site#335 fire ring filled with ash upon arrival 

    Toilet/shower building lit up like a Christmas tree all night long

    Street lights throughout campground 

    Road noise from VA5 

    No WiFi 

    1 bar Verizon


Guide to Surry

Tent campsites near Surry, Virginia provide access to coastal Virginia's unique wetland environments, pine forests, and freshwater lakes. Several primitive camping options exist within a 40-mile radius of Surry, though campers should note that most require advanced planning due to limited site availability. The region experiences humid summers with temperatures often exceeding 85°F between June and September, making spring and fall ideal camping seasons.

What to do

Paddling opportunities: At Merchants Millpond State Park, cypress trees create a distinctive paddling environment. "Tons of wildlife to see. Turtles, gators, snakes. Not a place I'd go in the summer because I'd imagine you'd get carried away by bugs but definitely a place to check out in spring or fall," notes Heather R.

Hiking trail networks: Explore multiple trail options that showcase coastal Virginia ecosystems. "There are miles of trails around the lake and through the woods you can follow. It is extremely dog friendly with a fenced in dog park as well," reports Brandon W. about regional trail systems.

Wildlife viewing: Observe diverse wetland species in their natural habitat. One visitor at Bennetts Creek Canoe In Campground mentioned, "The scenery is TOP KNOTCH! Absolutely beautiful in the lake which is not well marked due to limited visibility in the swampy environment."

What campers like

Natural swimming areas: Several beach access points offer freshwater swimming opportunities. A visitor at Wisteria Beach Hideaway shared, "Loved the location - the beaches were surrounded by pine, wetlands, and tall grasses - it felt remote and not overdeveloped!"

Fire rings with cooking features: Many sites provide specialized fire rings designed for camp cooking. "There was a swinging grill grate on the firepit, which was great for camp pizzas!" notes Kat H. about Wisteria Beach Hideaway's cooking amenities.

Moderate site spacing: Campsites maintain reasonable distance between neighbors. One camper observed, "Sites are level with some spacing" at nearby tent camping areas, while another noted sites "were spaced nicely apart" with sand platforms at primitive locations.

What you should know

Highway noise considerations: Some camping areas experience traffic noise despite natural settings. "Bring your 3rd party map/GPS. The maps they provide are almost useless because it outlines the terrain but because it's a swamp the terrain changes with the water level," advises Mark N. regarding Merchants Millpond State Park Backpack Campground.

Insect protection essentials: Bug screens or netting are highly recommended during warmer months. "Biting black flies almost made the beaches unbearable but we didn't have that problem at the actual site," explains one visitor about regional beaches in September.

Water navigation challenges: Paddling routes require careful navigation due to underwater hazards. "Lots of underwater obstructions so use caution. U DO NOT want to end up in that water," warns a Merchants Millpond visitor about swamp conditions.

Tips for camping with families

Rental equipment availability: Some parks offer boat rentals for family water activities. "There are kayaks and paddle boats you can rent by the hour," mentions a frequent visitor about local paddling options.

Educational facilities: Visit nature centers for family learning experiences. "[This is] a beautiful 456 acre education and wildlife facility. Born from garbage dumps and it is great example of what can be achieved," shares N I. about Sandy Bottom Nature Park.

Wildlife viewing opportunities: Schedule morning wildlife watching for best results with children. "We saw a bald eagle's nest, snakes, frogs, turtles, and lily pads everywhere," reports Becky E. about her family's experience paddling through cypress-lined waters.

Tips from RVers

Limited hookup access: Most primitive camping areas near Surry lack RV amenities. A visitor to Carter's Cove Campground noted, "More of a long term stay but there are a few spots for RVs. Laundry, trash, restrooms, picnic table, fire pit (day use only)."

Parking considerations: RV parking often requires separation from tent sites. "Must park and hike in. It is a short hike along the lake and placed a short distance from the trail so hikers will not be hiking through the sites," explains one camper about the walk-in camping layout.

Access road limitations: Some access roads present challenges for larger vehicles. Visitors should call ahead to verify road conditions, especially after rain, as some campgrounds have unpaved access roads that may become difficult for larger vehicles to navigate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is the most popular tent campsite near Surry, VA?

According to TheDyrt.com, the most popular tent campground near Surry, VA is Sandy Bottom Nature Park with a 4.8-star rating from 5 reviews.

What is the best site to find tent camping near Surry, VA?

TheDyrt.com has all 10 tent camping locations near Surry, VA, with real photos and reviews from campers.