Life on the road runs on errands. Laundry piles up faster in an RV than anywhere else, propane drains in cold snaps and grill season alike, and the holding tanks fill on their own schedule. Around Clarksville, you can scatter those chores across town, hunting a laundromat with truck-and-trailer parking, a propane fill, and a dump station, or you can stage all of them from one property and spend the saved hours at the river instead.
Clarksville RV Resort, a mile off I-24 at Exit 1, bundles the full chore list: laundry that runs 24 hours with no cutoff, propane sales and RV supplies at the camp store, firewood for the fire ring, and a dump station that’s free for registered guests. This guide covers how each service works at the park, what to confirm before you arrive, and how to build a road-chore routine around Clarksville that stops eating your trip.
Laundry Without the Laundromat Hunt
The laundromat problem in an RV is rarely the machines; it’s everything around them. You need parking that fits a truck and trailer, hours that fit a travel day, and a neighborhood you’re happy to sit in for 2 hours. The on-site laundry at Clarksville RV Resort deletes all 3 problems. It runs 24 hours with no hard cutoff, so the wash happens at 6am before a departure or at 10pm after the lake day, and the walk home is measured in campsites rather than miles.
For guests staying a week or more, the move is a fixed laundry slot: same evening every week, machines started, then dinner at the pavilion or a walk while they run. Travelers passing through Clarksville who need laundry plus an overnight can solve both with one stop; nightly rates start at $34.60.
Propane, Supplies, and the Dump Station
The camp store consolidates the rest of the list. Propane sells on-site, which matters most from December through February when Clarksville lows run 28 to 35 and furnaces drink cylinders. Firewood and common RV supplies (fittings, fuses, the sewer parts that fail on Fridays) round out the shelves, with Clarksville’s full retail corridor a short drive away for the bigger runs.
Tanks are the easiest chore here. Full hookup sites carry sewer connections, so most guests never visit the dump station at all, and a free dump station covers registered guests on water-and-electric sites. Call the office at (931) 774-7901 to confirm propane hours and any service question before you route a day around it; that 2-minute call is the cheapest insurance on this list.
Explore More Nearby
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Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney
Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney sits at 1270 Tylertown Road, a mile off I-24 at Exit 1. The location is built for the long stay: a home base for Fort Campbell families, traveling workers in the Clarksville and Hopkinsville area, and anyone who wants monthly rates with full hookups instead of a hotel bill. Monthly rates start at $800 with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric included, which lands well below a 30-day hotel run. The site mix carries full hookups in pull-through and back-in configurations, with water-and-electric-only sites at a lower rate for shorter stays. A swimming pool, a fenced dog park, a playground, a pavilion, propane sales, a camp store, and 24-hour laundry round out the amenity stack that long-term guests use day to day.
Sites & Hookups
Every full-hookup site carries water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric in pull-through and back-in configurations. For monthly guests, the sewer connection is the part that matters most: you are not packing up to find a dump station every few days. Water-and-electric-only sites are available at a lower rate for travelers who plan shorter stays. The 50-amp service runs a Class A or fifth wheel with multiple AC units through a Tennessee summer without tripping. Pull-throughs at the front of the park handle big rigs without a backing maneuver, useful when you are settling in for a month rather than overnight. A dump station serves registered guests at no charge.
What's On-Site
For a monthly stay, the amenities are the difference between camping and living. The 24-hour laundry handles loads on your schedule with no hard cutoff. The fenced dog park gives dogs an off-leash run, which matters when the same dog is at the site for 30 days. The camp store carries propane, firewood, and RV supplies so the basics stay on-property between Walmart runs. The pool runs during warmer months. The pavilion handles cookouts and gatherings, and the park runs cornhole, seasonal movie nights, and themed bingo. Park-wide WiFi covers basic browsing free, with a streaming-tier upgrade for guests who want faster speeds.
What Guests Say
4.1 stars across 933 Google reviews. For monthly guests, the themes that matter most show up consistently: the I-24 convenience, the long pull-through sites, the pool, the dog park, the staff, and cabin cleanliness. Fort Campbell families on extended assignments return because the park is reliably close to base. The trade worth knowing is real: the I-24 proximity that makes the park easy to find also means highway noise reaches back-row sites closest to the interstate, and Fort Campbell helicopters pass overhead periodically. Front-row and interior sites stay quieter, which is worth requesting when you are booking for a month rather than a night.
Other RV Parks and Campgrounds Near Clarksville, TN
<p>Other area stops cover pieces of the road-chore list, though few bundle laundry, propane, and a dump station on one property. Verify services directly before you detour for them.</p>
Two Rivers Campground
A private campground near downtown Nashville for travelers whose assignment or commute centers on the city rather than Fort Campbell. Full hookups and pull-through sites, with proximity to Broadway and the Opry. A workable monthly base when the trip is Nashville-focused, though you trade the I-24 corridor convenience. Visit website.
Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area
A 170,000-acre peninsula managed by the U.S. Forest Service with developed campgrounds offering electric hookups and bathhouses. Stay limits and the lack of full sewer hookups make LBL a poor fit for true monthly RV living, but it is the strongest nature alternative for a shorter stretch. Visit website.
Settling In Around Clarksville
The Cumberland River runs through downtown Clarksville with the McGregor Park Riverwalk and boat ramps a short drive from the park. For bigger water, Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area sits about 45 minutes northwest between Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley, with fishing, kayaking, and swimming beaches that make easy weekend breaks during a long stay.
Dunbar Cave State Park is 10 minutes away with trails and the historic cave for a regular walking loop close to the park. Land Between the Lakes adds the Elk and Bison Prairie and the Homeplace 1850s Working Farm for longer day trips. For monthly guests, having a state park this close keeps a weekly hike on the calendar without a road trip.
Downtown Clarksville’s Riverwalk, the Customs House Museum, and Beachaven Vineyards are 10 to 15 minutes off-site, covering the slow-Sunday list for a long stay. Nashville is 45 minutes south on I-24 for Broadway, the Grand Ole Opry, and big-city errands. Fort Campbell sits just north on the Kentucky line, with the main gate a short drive from the park for families based on assignment.
Seasonal Guide for Camping in Clarksville
Summer (June through August)
Warm and humid Tennessee summers. The pool opens and the dog park sees early-morning and evening use to beat the heat. Run 50-amp service to keep multiple AC units going. Monthly guests settle in for the long days; book a front-row or interior site to stay clear of I-24 noise with the windows open.
Fall (September through November)
The best stretch for a long stay. Mild days, cool nights, and lower humidity make the park comfortable without heavy heating or cooling. Travel traffic thins after summer, so monthly guests get a quieter property and easier site selection.
Winter (December through February)
The strongest value window for monthly guests. Tennessee winters are mild compared with the north, though cold snaps happen, so skirting and heated-hose management pay off on a long stay. Workforce travelers and Fort Campbell families keep the park steady through the off-season.
Spring (March through May)
Green and active, with warming days and occasional spring storms. A good window to start a long stay before summer rates and travel traffic pick up. The dog park and pavilion come back into regular use as the weather turns.
Practical Tips: RV Services Near Clarksville, TN
The 24-hour laundry has no cutoff, so pick a fixed evening, start the machines, and take a walk while they run. Routine turns the worst RV chore into background noise.
Passing through on I-24 with a full hamper and an empty propane tank? One stop at Exit 1 handles laundry, propane, supplies, and the night's sleep together.
A dump station serves registered guests at no charge, and full hookup sites carry sewer right at the site, so you can skip the dump line entirely.
Propane sells on-site, but confirm current fill hours with the office at (931) 774-7901 before building a cold-snap plan around them.
The park is a mile off I-24 and back-row sites closest to the interstate pick up highway noise; Fort Campbell helicopters pass over periodically. Request a front-row or interior site when you book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there an RV park with laundry near Clarksville, TN?
Yes. Clarksville RV Resort runs on-site laundry 24 hours a day with no hard cutoff, a mile off I-24 at Exit 1. For RV travelers, that replaces the laundromat hunt entirely: no trailer parking problem, no closing time, and the walk home is a few campsites long.
Where can I do laundry with an RV in Clarksville?
Laundromats around Clarksville serve the town, but parking a truck and trailer at one is its own chore. Staying at Clarksville RV Resort puts 24-hour machines on the property, which is the practical answer when laundry day and travel day collide.
Where can I dump RV tanks near Clarksville?
Clarksville RV Resort’s dump station is free for registered guests, and full hookup sites carry sewer at the site, so most guests skip the dump line entirely. If you’re staying on a water-and-electric site, the station covers departure day.
Can I get propane and RV supplies at the park?
Yes. Propane sells on-site and the camp store stocks firewood and common RV parts and supplies. Winter demand runs high when lows hit 28 to 35, so call (931) 774-7901 to confirm fill hours before a cold front arrives.
Can travelers passing through use the services?
The laundry, dump station, and store are built around registered guests, and an overnight site starts at $34.60, which often costs less than solving laundry, propane, and parking separately around town. Call the office to confirm anything beyond a standard guest stay.
What other services are close by?
Clarksville’s retail corridor sits a short drive from Exit 1 for groceries and big-box runs, and downtown is about 12 minutes for restaurants and the riverwalk. For RV repairs, mobile techs serve the area; the office can point you in the right direction.
Stay Where the Chores Handle Themselves
Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney sits a mile off I-24 at Exit 1 with full hookup pull-through and back-in sites, 30/50-amp electric, a pool, a fenced dog park, 24-hour laundry, and a camp store. Nightly rates start at $34.60, monthly at $800, and the park stays open year-round, a short drive from Fort Campbell and downtown Clarksville.
See all site types, rates, and live availability on the Clarksville RV Resort page.
Book Your Site (931) 774-7901
