RV sites at Laramie RV Resort in Laramie, WY
Southeast Wyoming — Camping Guide

RV Storage Near Laramie, WY

Updated June 2026 Laramie, WY

Storing an RV in Laramie is a weather problem before it’s a price problem. The town sits at 7,165 feet, winter drops below zero for stretches, spring winds run 30 to 40 mph, and hail rides along with summer storms on the high plains. Where the rig sits between trips, indoors, under cover, or in an open lot, decides how much of that weather it absorbs and how much you pay to avoid it.

This guide covers how RV storage works around Laramie: what drives indoor and outdoor pricing, how to prep a rig for a Wyoming winter, and an option worth pricing against a storage contract. Laramie RV Resort operates year-round with monthly full-hookup sites at $575 in winter and $800 in summer, which changes the math for anyone who’d rather keep the rig plugged in and lived in than parked behind a fence until spring.

What RV Storage Prices Depend On Around Laramie

Storage quotes track 4 variables: the rig’s length, the level of protection, the contract term, and security. Indoor space commands the biggest premium, and around Laramie it earns it, since a roof is the only thing that fully takes hail, snow load, and high-altitude UV out of the equation. Covered canopy parking splits the difference, shielding the roof and seals while leaving sidewalls exposed. Open-lot storage costs the least and asks the most of you: a quality breathable cover, serious tie-down discipline against 30 to 40 mph spring winds, and a roof inspection before the snow stacks up.

Longer contracts usually price better per month than season-to-season hopping, and 24-hour access, cameras, and gated entry each nudge the rate. Get quotes for your actual length, since a 40-foot Class A and a teardrop live in different price tiers everywhere.

Prepping a Rig for High-Plains Storage

Whatever you pay for the spot, the prep decides what you find in spring. Drain and winterize the water system before the first hard freeze; below-zero stretches at this elevation find any line with water left in it. Pull the batteries or put them on a maintainer, since cold kills stored batteries quietly. Seal entry points against rodents, who treat a parked RV as winter housing, and leave nothing edible inside. Check roof seals and seams before snow load tests them for you.

For open-lot storage, add wind to the checklist: a fitted, breathable cover that can’t flog itself loose, antennas down, awnings secured and locked. High-altitude sun degrades rubber and decals faster than lowland storage, so tire covers pay for themselves over a Laramie summer. An hour of prep per season is cheap insurance at 7,165 feet.

The Monthly-Site Alternative

If the rig would only sit because you’re working or studying in town, run the other math. Laramie RV Resort operates year-round with monthly full-hookup rates at $575 in winter (October through May) and $800 in summer, and the monthly crowd is exactly who you’d expect at an I-80 college town: traveling nurses, contractors, and University of Wyoming and WyoTech students using a full-hookup site as a practical base. Every site carries water, sewer, and 20/30/50-amp electric, mail and package receiving works with proper addressing, the laundry runs 24/7, and each site allows 2 vehicles with a free overflow lot for guests beyond that.

The honest split: a rig that will genuinely sit untouched for months belongs in storage. A rig you’d live or weekend in does better occupied, plugged in, and winter-maintained, with you in it instead of a contract on it.

Explore More Nearby

More RV parks and campgrounds near you:

Full hookup RV sites with concrete pads at Laramie RV Resort by RJourney near the Laramie River in Wyoming

Laramie RV Resort sits at 1271 W. Baker St., right off I-80 at Exit 310 in southeastern Wyoming. Every RV site comes with full hookups: water, sewer, and 20/30/50-amp electric, so you connect everything at the pad. Pull-through sites at the front of the park have concrete pads and room for larger rigs; deluxe sites add patio furniture and fire pits. A free dump station is on-site for guests. Laramie runs at 7,165 feet, a college town anchored by the University of Wyoming, and the park is one of the few full-service RV stops along the I-80 corridor between Cheyenne and Rawlins. The guest mix is practical: blue-collar workers and contractors moving across country, UW and WyoTech students, nurses on assignment, and travelers crossing Wyoming on I-80. A Pilot truck stop sits next door for fuel without detouring through town, and the Laramie River Greenbelt trail starts within walking distance. Nightly rates start at $40, with monthly rates at $575 (winter) and $800 (summer).

Sites & Hookups

Every RV site at Laramie RV Resort comes with full hookups: water, sewer, and 20/30/50-amp electric. The 20/30/50-amp range covers everything from a small trailer to a big-rig Class A running two air conditioners, which matters at 7,165 feet where temperature swings are real. Pull-through sites at the front of the park tend to be the most spacious, with concrete pads that stay level and stable, and room for larger rigs. Deluxe sites add patio furniture and fire pits. Back-in sites are also in the mix.

A free dump station is on-site for guests, though with full hookups at the pad most guests will not need it during a stay; non-guests can use it for $10. Tent sites and rustic cabins round out the lodging for travelers without a rig. Each site allows two vehicles, with additional vehicles parked in the overflow lot at no charge for guests. A practical note from frequent visitors: if you need a heated water hose in cold weather, bring an extension cord, since the electrical outlets and water spigots are not always side by side and you may want about 20 feet between them.

What's On-Site

Beyond the full hookups, Laramie RV Resort offers a solid set of amenities for an I-80 corridor stop. The laundry facility is coin-operated and open 24/7, with multiple recently updated washers and dryers; bring quarters, as there is no change machine on site. Restrooms and showers are open 24 hours with code-protected access. A fitness center and game room give guests somewhere to go when the wind picks up. The dog park is fenced and off-leash, and there is a playground for kids, a convenience store, and propane sales on-site. Most sites include fire rings and picnic tables. Free WiFi covers the property, with speed and reliability that vary by location in the park. Mail and package receiving are supported with proper addressing, useful for long-term guests on full-hookup monthly sites. The park also runs seasonal events through the year, from holiday cookouts to a Summer Blowout and Fall Fest.

Full Hookups
50-Amp Service
Pull-Through Sites
Big Rig Friendly
Dump Station
Propane
Dog Park
Playground
Laundry
WiFi

What Guests Say

3.3 stars across 233 Google reviews. What works: location is what guests cite first, easy I-80 access, fuel and food next door, the Greenbelt trail across the street. The pull-through deluxe sites at the front of the park draw the strongest comments for size, level concrete pads, and hookup placement, which is the relevant signal for anyone booking a full-hookup site. The 24/7 laundry gets repeat positive mentions, clean bathrooms with 24-hour access do too, and the dog park earns its keep. What guests flag, to be straight about it: rear sites are not equal to the deluxe sites up front, so request a deluxe or pull-through at booking. Some guests note I-80 highway noise; others say it quiets down during posted quiet hours (10 PM to 8 AM). Office hours are limited and Sunday and Monday closures mean after-hours arrivals use the self-check-in process. WiFi works for basic browsing but streaming can be inconsistent.

Other RV Parks and Campgrounds Near Laramie, WY

<p>The public campgrounds around Laramie close the gap on scenery, never on storage or winter services. If the real question is where the rig lives for a season, here’s how the area’s parks compare.</p>

Curt Gowdy State Park

25 miles east of Laramie toward Cheyenne Some electric sites; no water or sewer hookups

Campsites across three trout-stocked reservoirs (Granite, Crystal, and North Crow) at the foot of the Laramie Range, with IMBA-recognized mountain biking, hiking, and kayaking. A handful of electric-only sites, no water or sewer at the site, and a dump station on-site, so it suits a self-contained rig rather than a full-hookup stay. Big rigs should check site dimensions before booking. Reserve through Wyoming State Parks. Visit website.

Wyoming State Parks day-use and camping fees
Best for: Reservoir scenery and trails over full hookups

Vedauwoo Campground (Medicine Bow National Forest)

20 miles east of Laramie via I-80 Exit 329 No hookups; vault toilets, no showers

Basic Forest Service campsites set among giant Sherman granite formations, world-renowned for crack climbing and bouldering. No hookups, no showers, and no dump station, so treat it as a self-contained dry-camping weekend rather than a full-hookup base. The setting and dark skies are the payoff. Visit website.

National forest campground fees
Best for: Climbers and tent campers who can dry camp entirely

Things to Do from Your Full-Hookup Base in Laramie

On the Water

With your rig set on full hookups, the Laramie area is quietly productive fishing country for day trips. The Laramie River runs through town with public access points, and the Greenbelt trail starts across the street from the resort. Lake Hattie, about 20 miles southwest, offers reservoir trout fishing. Up in the Snowy Range, alpine lakes like Mirror Lake and Silver Lake produce brook and rainbow trout from ice-out through September. A Wyoming fishing license is required and can be purchased online through the Wyoming Game and Fish Department or at sporting goods stores in town.

On Land

The Snowy Range Scenic Byway (Highway 130) begins about 30 minutes west of Laramie and climbs through Medicine Bow National Forest to above 10,800 feet, typically open late May through mid-October. A short trail from the Sugarloaf Recreation Area parking lot leads to Lake Marie, a turquoise alpine lake backed by Medicine Bow Peak (12,013 feet). Vedauwoo Recreation Area, 20 minutes east, is world-renowned for crack climbing and bouldering among Sherman granite, with family-friendly hikes for non-climbers.

Day Trips

Downtown Laramie runs along 2nd and 3rd Streets with local restaurants, breweries, coffee shops, and retail, a 10-minute drive from the resort. The Wyoming Territorial Prison State Historic Site, a restored 1870s federal prison that once held Butch Cassidy, is a 5-minute drive. The University of Wyoming campus is worth a visit too: the Geological Museum has a full Apatosaurus skeleton and the UW Art Museum holds a respected collection, both free to visit. Cheyenne is about 50 minutes east on I-80.

Seasonal Guide for Full-Hookup RV Travelers in Laramie

Summer (June through August)

Peak season and the easiest stretch for a full-hookup stay. Daytime highs in the low 70s to mid-80s with cool nights, so 50-amp service runs your climate control comfortably without strain. The park is busier, so book 2 to 4 weeks ahead for weekends, and request a front-of-park concrete pull-through for the best full-hookup setup.

70s-80s
avg high

Fall (September through October)

A strong shoulder season. Crowds thin, the park quiets, and aspens turn gold across the Snowy Range. Overnight lows drop into the 20s by late October, so a full-hookup site with 50-amp heat keeps things comfortable. Easier availability makes it simpler to land a front-of-park concrete pad.

50s-60s
avg high

Winter (November through March)

The park operates year-round, and full hookups matter most here. Temperatures regularly drop below zero, so a winter stay rewards a winterized rig with a heated water hose on the full-hookup water line. Monthly rates drop to $575/month October through May for workforce travelers and students. Skirting and heat management matter at 7,165 feet, and I-80 closures from blowing snow happen multiple times each season.

30s-40s
avg high

Spring (April through May)

Variable weather and the windiest stretch of the year, with sustained winds of 30 to 40 mph common. Secure your awning and any gear. The concrete pads stay solid through the spring thaw when gravel sites soften, one more reason to request a front-of-park pull-through. UW graduation in May fills local lodging, so book ahead if your stay overlaps.

50s-60s
avg high

Practical Tips for Full-Hookup RV Travelers in Laramie

Request a front-of-park pull-through:

The deluxe concrete pull-throughs at the front draw the strongest reviews for size, level pads, and hookup placement. For a full-hookup stay, that is the site to ask for at booking; rear sites are not equal.

Bring a 20-foot heated hose in cold weather:

A practical note from frequent guests: the outlet and water spigot are not always side by side, so bring an extension cord and plan for about 20 feet of reach to keep a heated water hose running in winter.

Winterize before the first hard freeze:

Laramie winters drop below zero. If the rig will sit, drain and winterize the water system, pull or maintain the batteries, seal against rodents, and check roof seams before the snow load arrives.

Respect the altitude and wind:

Laramie sits at 7,165 feet, and spring winds run 30 to 40 mph. Full hookups handle the climate swings, but secure your awning and skirt the rig for cold-weather stays.

Fuel up next door:

A Pilot truck stop sits next to the resort, so you can fill up without detouring through town before heading west into the mountains, where services thin out fast.

Plan for limited office hours:

Office hours are limited and the office is closed Sunday and Monday, so after-hours arrivals use the self-check-in process. Confirm your arrival window and check-in instructions ahead of time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Laramie RV Resort offer RV storage?

Laramie RV Resort is a year-round RV park rather than a storage yard; its sites are for occupied rigs, with monthly full-hookup rates at $575 in winter and $800 in summer. Guests get 2 vehicles per site plus a free overflow lot during a stay. For dedicated storage of an unoccupied rig, compare facilities in town, and call (719) 623-1677 with monthly-stay questions.

How much does RV storage cost near Laramie, WY?

Prices track 4 things: rig length, protection level (indoor, covered, or open lot), contract length, and security features. Indoor commands the biggest premium and matters most here, where hail, snow load, and 30 to 40 mph spring winds punish exposed rigs. Get quotes for your exact length and weigh them against a monthly site if you’d actually use the rig.

Is outdoor RV storage safe through a Wyoming winter?

It can be, with preparation. Winterize the water system fully, pull or maintain the batteries, seal against rodents, and check roof seams before snow load arrives. Add a fitted breathable cover secured against 30 to 40 mph winds, plus tire covers for the high-altitude sun. The rig’s prep matters more than the fence around it.

Should I store my RV or keep it on a monthly site?

If it will sit untouched for months, storage is the cheaper call. If you’re working a season or studying at UW or WyoTech, a monthly full-hookup site at Laramie RV Resort runs $575 in winter with water, sewer, 20/30/50-amp electric, 24/7 laundry, and mail receiving, and the rig stays plugged in, maintained, and lived in instead of parked.

What's the difference between indoor, covered, and open RV storage?

Indoor fully encloses the rig, taking hail, snow load, and UV out of play at the highest price. Covered canopy spots protect the roof and seals while leaving sides exposed, at a middle rate. Open lots cost least and lean on your prep: cover, tie-downs, and seasonal checks. At Laramie’s altitude and wind, each step up buys real protection.

Can I park an extra vehicle while staying at Laramie RV Resort?

Yes. Each site allows 2 vehicles, and additional vehicles park in the overflow lot at no charge for guests. That covers the common setup of a rig plus a tow car plus a work truck during a monthly stay. For anything oversized or unusual, call (719) 623-1677 before arrival and sort placement ahead of time.

Keep the Rig Working in Laramie

Laramie RV Resort by RJourney gives you full hookups at every site, including water, sewer, and 20/30/50-amp electric, with concrete-pad pull-throughs sized for big rigs and a dump station on-site. You are 5 minutes off I-80 at Exit 310, next to a Pilot truck stop and the Laramie River Greenbelt trail. Nightly rates start at $40, with monthly rates at $575/month in winter.

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

Check Availability at Laramie RV Resort (719) 623-1677
From $40/night Laramie RV Resort by RJourney

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