RV sites at Cedar City RV Resort in Cedar City, UT
Southern Utah — Camping Guide

Full Hookup RV Parks Near Cedar City, UT

Updated June 2026 Cedar City, UT

Full hookups in southern Utah are scarcer than the scenery deserves. The state parks mostly run electric-only, the national park campgrounds are rustic by design, and gateway towns like Kanab and Springdale charge a premium for the sites that do have sewer. So the search for a full hookup RV park in this corner of Utah usually comes down to picking your base town first, then locking the site.

Cedar City makes a strong case. It sits on I-15 at 5,846 feet, an hour from Zion, 90 minutes from Bryce, and 30 minutes from Cedar Breaks. Cedar City RV Resort runs full hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp service, pull-throughs for big rigs, year-round, with nightly rates from $40. Sewer at your site means tanks drain when you want, the pool (the only one at an RV park in town) handles hot afternoons, and Main Street dinner is a walk away. Here’s what full hookups change about a southern Utah trip.

What Full Hookups Change at 5,846 Feet

The 50-amp option is the quiet hero here. Cedar City swings hard between seasons, 90-degree summer afternoons and winter nights in the 20s, and 50-amp service runs your AC or electric heat without tripping anything. Sewer at the site means no dump-station queue on checkout morning and no tank rationing on a 2-week stay. Water at the site keeps the fresh tank topped through dry southern Utah air. The resort backs that up with on-site propane and firewood sales, park-wide WiFi, and recently upgraded laundry. Sites come as pull-throughs and back-ins; mention your rig length when you book and the office will place you. If part of your group travels without a rig, cabins in 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom, and deluxe layouts sit on the same property, and tent sites round out the mix. Everything operates year-round, which is rare at this elevation.

Cedar City vs Kanab as a Full Hookup Base

Kanab sits on the far side of the parks, handy for the Grand Canyon’s North Rim, Lake Powell, and Zion’s east entrance. Cedar City anchors the I-15 side, which means easier interstate access, a real grocery-and-services town, and shorter drives to Cedar Breaks, Brian Head, and Bryce’s western approach. If your loop runs Vegas or Salt Lake to Zion and Bryce, Cedar City keeps you on the freeway corridor the whole way; Kanab makes more sense when the North Rim is the headliner. Rates help the comparison too: full hookup sites at Cedar City RV Resort start at $40/night, with monthly rates from $650 if the trip turns into a season. The pool, the only one at an RV park in Cedar City, settles most July tiebreakers. Either way, full hookup inventory runs tight in both towns through summer, so book the site before the itinerary hardens.

Booking and Arrival

Two arrival notes save headaches. First, ignore any GPS routing through Kanarraville: use I-15 Exit 57 coming from the south or Exit 62 from the north. Second, the resort entrance has a dip the State Highway Department controls, so take it slowly and at an angle, especially with a long rig or low clearance. The office (Mon-Sat 10AM-5PM, Sun 11AM-4PM) can confirm current availability at (435) 767-0318, and summer weekends around the Utah Shakespeare Festival fill early, so a full hookup site in July is a book-ahead item rather than a roll-up gamble. Winter stays work too: the park operates year-round, and Brian Head ski traffic keeps sites moving from November through March. If you need 50-amp for electric heat, say so when you book.

Full hookup RV sites with 30/50-amp service at Cedar City RV Resort in Cedar City, Utah

Cedar City RV Resort sits right on Main Street in Cedar City, close enough to walk to dinner and central enough to base out of for half of southern Utah’s national parks. For monthly guests, that location is the draw: full hookup RV sites with 30/50-amp service, the only RV-park swimming pool in town, an on-site dog park, propane and firewood sales, and walking-distance dining. Monthly RV rates start at $650, with cabin monthly rates starting under $700. The park operates year-round at 5,846 feet, so winter stays are workable for Brian Head ski regulars. GM Maria Chauser was named RJourney’s GM of the Year, and reviews from long-term residents repeatedly mention the team knowing them by name. Call (435) 767-0318 to confirm current monthly availability and the maximum stay window.

One day you're attending a spectacular Shakespearean play, and the next you're hiking through the national parks. — Maria Chauser, General Manager

Sites & Hookups

Full hookup RV sites include water, sewer, and electric with 30-amp and 50-amp service. Pull-through sites accommodate big rigs, so monthly guests can roll in and settle without backing into a tight spot. For a long-term stay, the 50-amp service matters when you run heat and AC across southern Utah’s swings, hot summer afternoons and cold winter nights at 5,846 feet. Cabins in 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom, and deluxe configurations handle guests without a rig, with cabin monthly rates starting under $700. Propane and firewood are sold on-site. WiFi covers the property, which the long-term work-camper crowd relies on. GPS warning for arrival: do NOT exit at Kanarraville. Use Exit 57 (from the south) or Exit 62 (from the north) off I-15. There is a dip at the resort entrance the State Highway Department controls, so drive slowly and enter at an angle.

What's On-Site

Cedar City RV Resort is the only RV park in town with a swimming pool, which earns its keep when summer afternoons push past 90F. Beyond the pool, the amenity list runs deep for a long stay: a fenced dog park, a playground, a covered pavilion, recently upgraded laundry, an on-site coffee cart and restaurant, park-wide WiFi, and on-site propane and firewood sales. Outdoor games (cornhole, horseshoes) round out the social side. Long-term residents and traveling workers describe a park that runs cleanly and welcomes them by name. The team, Mark on maintenance, Madelyn at the front desk, Angel in housekeeping, gets specific mention in reviews, and GM Maria Chauser was named RJourney’s GM of the Year.

Swimming Pool
Dog Park
Playground
WiFi
Laundry
Propane
Camp Store
Full Hookups
50-Amp Service
Pull-Through Sites
Big Rig Friendly

What Guests Say

4.2 stars across roughly 1,005 Google reviews. The themes that come up most: cleanliness, staff, and friendly service. Long-term residents and traveling workers talk about the team knowing them by name and a steady, well-run operation, exactly what matters when you are signing up for a month rather than a night. Guests passing through on a national-parks trip mention the central Main Street location and walking-distance dining, and the pool gets a separate mention in nearly every summer review, since it is the only one in town. Negative-theme clusters point to pet-friendly policy specifics, shaded sites, and bathhouse condition; none are deal-breakers in volume.

Other RV Options Near Cedar City, UT

<p>Full hookup inventory around Cedar City is thin, which is most of the argument for the resort. The state park below is a fine warm-season stay, but it runs electric-only. Call ahead to confirm availability.</p>

Quail Creek State Park

About 35 miles south near Hurricane, UT Electric hookup sites; no full hookups

A warm-water reservoir in red rock canyon country. The campground has electric hookup sites and basic tent spots, and water temps stay warm enough for swimming well into October. If you want lake recreation alongside your camping trip, Quail Creek delivers, but with no full hookups and no monthly residency setup, it is a short-stay option rather than a long-term base. Visit website.

Utah State Parks camping fees
Best for: Short warm-season lake stays over full hookups

Things to Do Near Cedar City, UT

On the Water

Quail Creek State Park, about 35 miles south near Hurricane, is the closest warm-water swimming and boating option, with a reservoir that holds summer temperatures well into October. Duck Creek and Navajo Lake along Highway 14 add alpine fishing and paddling within an hour. On a monthly stay, these make easy weekend trips between work stretches.

On Land

Bryce Canyon National Park is about 80 miles east (1.5 hours), a series of natural amphitheaters filled with thousands of red, orange, and white hoodoos; the Navajo Loop and Queen’s Garden trails make a 3-mile loop. Zion National Park is about 60 miles south with Angels Landing, the Narrows, and the Emerald Pools. Cedar Breaks National Monument is 30 minutes up the mountain, a 10,000-foot amphitheater and International Dark Sky Park. A monthly base lets you space these out across weekends rather than cramming them into one trip.

Day Trips

Brian Head Resort is about 30 minutes from Cedar City, Utah’s highest-elevation ski resort at 11,307 feet, with winter skiing and summer mountain biking. The Utah Shakespeare Festival runs on the SUU campus from late May through October, a Tony-winning regional theater five minutes from the resort. Cedar Canyon and Duck Creek along Highway 14 climb into the high country for cooler summer day trips.

Seasonal Guide for RV Travelers in Cedar City

Summer (June through August)

Peak season for the Shakespeare Festival and national-park traffic. Hot afternoons push past 90F, which is when the only pool in town earns its keep. Confirm whether monthly rates step up in this window when you book a summer stay.

90s
avg high

Fall (September through October)

The strongest shoulder window. Comfortable days, cool nights, thinner crowds, and the Shakespeare Festival runs into October. A good time to settle in for a month with easier availability and prime national-park weather.

60s-70s
avg high

Winter (November through March)

Brian Head ski season. The resort operates year-round at 5,846 feet, so monthly ski regulars can base here. Plan for cold nights: 50-amp service for electric heat, plus on-site propane and firewood. The quietest, most available window for a long stay.

40s-50s
avg high

Spring (April through May)

Warming days and reopening high-country roads. National-park crowds build toward the late-May Shakespeare Festival opening. A comfortable shoulder month for an extended stay before the summer heat and peak rates arrive.

60s-70s
avg high

Practical Tips for Full Hookup Stays Near Cedar City

Name your amp needs when booking:

Sites carry 30 and 50-amp service. If you run dual ACs or electric heat, say so when you call (435) 767-0318 and the office will place you on the right pedestal.

Use the right I-15 exit:

Do NOT exit at Kanarraville. Use Exit 57 from the south or Exit 62 from the north. There is a controlled dip at the resort entrance, so enter slowly and at an angle.

Plan for elevation swings:

At 5,846 feet, summer afternoons run hot and winter nights run cold. 50-amp service carries heat and AC; on-site propane and firewood keep your supply close for a long stay.

Confirm WiFi for remote work:

Park-wide WiFi covers the property and Cedar City has solid carrier coverage, but verify on-property reliability with the office if your monthly stay depends on a stable connection.

Walk to Main Street:

The resort sits on Main Street, so you can reach dining and errands on foot. That walkability is a real perk over a month of staying put.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which RV parks near Cedar City have full hookups?

Cedar City RV Resort runs full hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric, including pull-throughs for big rigs, and it operates year-round. The public-land alternatives mostly can’t match that: Quail Creek State Park runs electric-only sites, and the forest campgrounds up Highway 14 are largely no-hookup.

Does Cedar City RV Resort have 50-amp service?

Yes. Sites offer both 30 and 50-amp service. The 50-amp option matters here more than in milder climates, since 5,846 feet of elevation means real air conditioning load in summer and electric heat draw on winter nights. Mention your power needs when you book at (435) 767-0318.

How much do full hookup sites cost near Cedar City?

Nightly rates at Cedar City RV Resort start at $40, and monthly rates start at $650 if the stay stretches into a season. Summer is peak for the Utah Shakespeare Festival and national-park traffic, so confirm current rates and availability with the office before you build the itinerary around a number.

Can I get full hookups near Cedar City in winter?

The resort operates year-round, and winter regulars include Brian Head skiers basing at full hookup sites. Cold-weather details like water connections during hard freezes are worth a direct conversation, so call (435) 767-0318 and confirm what your rig needs for the dates you’re planning.

Is Kanab or Cedar City better for a full hookup RV base?

Kanab fits trips built around Zion’s east entrance, Lake Powell, and the Grand Canyon’s North Rim. Cedar City keeps you on I-15 with easier big-rig access and shorter runs to Cedar Breaks, Brian Head, and Bryce. If your route follows the interstate corridor, Cedar City is the simpler base with full hookups waiting.

Do the state parks near Cedar City have full hookup sites?

Quail Creek State Park, about 35 miles south near Hurricane, offers electric hookup sites with no sewer or full hookup options, which makes it a short-stay or day-trip park. If you want time at the warm-water reservoir, the practical play is keeping a full hookup base in Cedar City and driving down.

Reserve a Full Hookup Site in Cedar City

Cedar City RV Resort by RJourney runs full hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp service from $40/night, year-round at the I-15 gateway to Zion, Bryce, and Cedar Breaks. Pull-throughs handle big rigs, and Main Street dinner is a walk away.

See all site types, rates, and live availability on the Cedar City RV Resort page.

Book Your RV Site (435) 767-0318
From $40/night Cedar City RV Resort by RJourney

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