People are still hard at work late in the day in and around Clarksville TN downtown
Northern Middle Tennessee — RV Park Guide

Best RV Parks Near Clarksville, TN: Rates, Hookups & Reviews

Updated May 2026 Clarksville, TN

Clarksville is Tennessee’s 5th-largest city and home to Fort Campbell, one of the largest military installations in the country. It sits along Interstate 24, 45 minutes northwest of Nashville and just south of the Kentucky border. That places Clarksville on a natural overnight route for RV travelers moving between Nashville, Memphis, Louisville, and points north. The city has more going on than just highway convenience.

Downtown runs along the Cumberland River. There’s a growing brewery and restaurant scene, an active arts district, and a calendar of festivals that keeps weekends busy from spring through fall. Fort Campbell brings in a steady stream of military families, and the cost of living stays well below Nashville’s, so food, fuel, and entertainment prices tend to be easier on the wallet, too.

For RV travelers, Clarksville works on 3 fronts: a quick I-24 stopover, a multi-day base for visiting family at Fort Campbell, and an extended stay for traveling workers in the area. Here’s what you should know before booking.

Things to Do Near Clarksville RV Parks

Downtown and the Cumberland River

Clarksville’s downtown has gone through a real revitalization over the past decade. The Riverwalk is a paved trail running along the Cumberland River, connecting McGregor Park (home to the Customs House Museum) to Liberty Park and its marina. Downtown has a growing mix of locally owned restaurants, coffee shops, and breweries. Strawberry Alley has become the go-to block for evening dining and live music.

Fort Campbell and Military History

Fort Campbell straddles the Tennessee-Kentucky border and is home to the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault). The Don F. Pratt Memorial Museum on post is free and open to the public. It covers the history of the 101st from World War II through current operations, with aircraft, vehicles, and artifacts on display. Visitors need a valid ID to enter the installation.

Outdoor Recreation

  • Dunbar Cave State Park: Guided cave tours, lake fishing, and several miles of wooded hiking trails. The cave stays around 58 degrees year-round. About 15 minutes east of downtown.
  • Liberty Park: A 190-acre park with a marina, splash pad, playground, walking trails, and a disc golf course. It sits along the Cumberland and connects to the Riverwalk.
  • Rotary Park: A local favorite for mountain biking and trail running, with 8+ miles of single-track through wooded terrain.
  • Cross Creeks National Wildlife Refuge: 8,800+ acres of bottomland hardwoods, fields, and wetlands along the Cumberland River near Dover. A major wintering ground for waterfowl, with tens of thousands of ducks and geese arriving November through February. No camping on-site. About 30 minutes west.

Family Activities

  • Customs House Museum and Cultural Center: Tennessee’s 2nd-largest general museum, housed in a former post office and customs house. Rotating art exhibits, a model train room, and interactive children’s galleries.
  • Clarksville Speedway: Dirt-track racing on Saturday nights during spring and summer. Loud, fun, distinctly Southern.
  • Beachaven Vineyards and Winery: One of Tennessee’s oldest wineries, just south of Clarksville. Tastings, tours, and a summer concert series called Jazz on the Lawn.

Day Trips

  • Fort Donelson National Battlefield (35 minutes west, Dover, TN): Site of one of the first major Union victories in the Civil War. Visitor center, hiking trails along the old fort earthworks, and Cumberland River views.
  • Land Between the Lakes (45 minutes northwest): 170,000 acres of outdoor recreation between Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley. See the Other RV Parks section for camping options inside LBL.
  • Nashville (45 minutes south on I-24): Grand Ole Opry, Broadway honky-tonks, the Country Music Hall of Fame, the Parthenon at Centennial Park.

Seasonal Events

Clarksville keeps a full events calendar:

  • Riverfest (September): The city’s largest annual festival, held at McGregor Park along the Cumberland. Live music, food vendors, kids’ activities, and fireworks over the river.
  • Christmas on the Cumberland (November through January): 1+ million lights along the Riverwalk and McGregor Park. Free admission. One of the region’s largest holiday light displays.
  • Downtown Market (May through October): A weekly farmers market on the Public Square every Saturday morning, with local produce, baked goods, and crafts.
  • Old-Fashioned Fourth of July at Fort Donelson: Civil War reenactments, cannon firings, and period demonstrations at the national battlefield.
Collage of Clarksville, Tennessee
Collage of Clarksville, Tennessee
Aerial view of Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney showing pull-through sites and mature trees off Tylertown Road, a mile from I-24 Exit 1 in Clarksville, Tennessee
Aerial view of Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney showing pull-through sites and mature trees off Tylertown Road, a mile from I-24 Exit 1 in Clarksville, Tennessee

Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney sits at 1270 Tylertown Road, a mile off I-24 at Exit 1. The location works on three fronts at once: a one-night overnight for travelers running I-24 between Nashville and the Kentucky border, a home base for families visiting Fort Campbell, and an extended-stay option for traveling workers and contractors in the Clarksville / Hopkinsville area.

The site mix carries full hookups (water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric) in pull-through and back-in configurations. Water-and-electric-only sites are available at a lower rate for shorter stays. Pull-throughs handle big rigs without a backing maneuver after a long highway day. A swimming pool, a fenced dog park, a playground, a pavilion, propane sales, a camp store with RV supplies, and 24-hour laundry round out the amenity stack. Cabins are part of the inventory for guests traveling without an RV.

Madison Anderson runs the park. The guest mix that keeps coming back: I-24 corridor travelers, Fort Campbell visiting families, and monthly long-term guests. Reviews cluster on the I-24 convenience and the pull-through site length. The trade is real and worth surfacing on the LP: the same I-24 proximity that makes the park easy to find also means highway noise reaches the back-row sites closest to the interstate, and Fort Campbell helicopters pass overhead periodically. Front-row and interior sites stay quieter.

Sites & Hookups

Every full-hookup site carries water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric in pull-through and back-in configurations. Water-and-electric-only sites are available at a lower rate for travelers who can dump on departure. The 50-amp service matters if you run a Class A or fifth wheel with multiple AC units through a Tennessee summer.

Pull-throughs at the front of the park handle big rigs without a tight backing maneuver after a long I-24 day. A dump station serves registered guests at no charge and the public at $15. A freshwater fill station serves guests free and the public at $5.

What's On-Site

The pool runs during warmer months from 10 AM to 8 PM. The fenced dog park gives dogs an off-leash run inside a dedicated section. The 24-hour laundry handles late-night loads without a hard cutoff. The camp store carries propane, firewood, and RV supplies, which means the basics are covered without a run to town.

The pavilion handles group gatherings, family reunions, and weekend cookouts. Cornhole, outdoor games, seasonal movie nights, and themed bingo events round out the activity calendar. WiFi covers the property with basic browsing free; an upgraded streaming package is available for guests who want faster speeds.

Swimming Pool
WiFi
Laundry
Showers
Dog Park
Playground
Camp Store
Propane
Fire Pits
Picnic Tables
Cornhole
Clubhouse

What Guests Say

4.1 stars across 933 Google reviews.

What works: I-24 convenience is the most consistent compliment. Travelers running the corridor between Nashville and Kentucky use Exit 1 because the on-off is clean and the pull-throughs are long enough to skip a backing maneuver after a long day. Fort Campbell families return because the park is reliably close to base. The pool, the dog park, the staff, and the cabin cleanliness are the four amenity-side themes that show up most often in positive reviews.

What guests flag: I-24 proximity cuts both ways. Highway noise is audible on back-row sites closest to the interstate; front-row and interior sites stay quieter. Helicopters from Fort Campbell pass over the area periodically. Single-night pricing runs higher per-night than multi-night and monthly rates, so the value pitch lands strongest on stays of 2+ nights.

The rating drift to 4.1 from a long-running 4.2 is real and worth surfacing internally. Review velocity, response cadence, and any operational shifts (pool hours, office hours, staffing) in the last 60 days are the most likely drivers. Park-side: a clean response cadence on the most recent negative themes is the highest-leverage move before the rating slides further.

Other RV Parks and Campgrounds Near Clarksville, TN

<p>A few other camping options are worth a look depending on what you want out of the trip.</p>

Wells Creek RV Park (Erin, TN)

~35 minutes west of Clarksville.(931) 764-2445

About 35 minutes west of Clarksville in Erin, TN, Wells Creek RV Park is an 84-acre park with 200 large back-in sites, full hookups, fiber-optic WiFi, and a monthly rental focus. It opened to serve the workforce at the TVA Cumberland Combined-Cycle Power Plant 10 minutes from the park. Monthly rates start at $600 with utilities included. If you’re a traveling worker or contractor on a project in the western Cheatham / Houston / Stewart County area, Wells Creek is the closest dedicated monthly RV park. (931) 764-2445

Best for: Long-term workers, contractors, monthly stays.

Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area

~45 minutes northwest of Clarksville.

About 45 minutes northwest, Land Between the Lakes (LBL) is a 170,000-acre outdoor recreation area managed by the U.S. Forest Service. It sits on a peninsula between Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley. LBL has multiple developed campgrounds with hookups (Hillman Ferry, Piney, Energy Lake) and dispersed backcountry camping. The Elk & Bison Prairie, Homeplace 1850s Working Farm, and Golden Pond Planetarium are popular stops. If you want a more secluded, nature-focused camping experience, LBL is one of the best options within driving distance of Clarksville.

Best for: Rustic / lake camping, hiking, wildlife viewing, longer nature stays.

Two Rivers Campground (Nashville, TN)

~50 minutes south of Clarksville

About 50 minutes south of Clarksville in Nashville’s Music Valley, Two Rivers Campground is a long-running RV-only park 2 miles from Gaylord Opryland Resort and Opry Mills Outlet Mall. It runs free WiFi, bathhouses, live entertainment, and a fenced off-leash pet park called Yappy Hour. Tents aren’t permitted. If you’re using Clarksville’s I-24 access as a way to get into downtown Nashville without parking downtown, Two Rivers is the Music Valley alternative for an RV-focused stay.

Best for: Nashville Music Valley access, RV-only travelers, Grand Ole Opry trips.

Nashville KOA Resort

~50 minutes south of Clarksville

Also in Music Valley at 2626 Music Valley Drive, the Nashville KOA Resort runs back-in and pull-through RV sites, deluxe cabins with full kitchens, rustic camping cabins, and tent sites. It carries a year-round heated pool and hot tub, rental bicycles and golf carts, a shuttle to downtown Nashville, and nearly daily live music at the on-site Notes Café. KOA recently merged the Resort with the former Nashville RV Resort and Cabins, adding 200 RV sites and 16 deluxe cabins.

Best for: Full-amenity Music Valley stays, families, multi-day Nashville visits with kids.

Seasonal Guide for RV Camping Near Clarksville

Spring (March through May)

Temperatures climb from the 50s into the low 80s. Dogwood and redbud trees bloom across the region. Spring is one of the best windows for visiting: mild weather, lower campground occupancy than summer, and a full slate of outdoor events. The Downtown Market opens in May. Trails at Dunbar Cave, Rotary Park, and Liberty Park are all in prime condition.

70s
avg high

Summer (June through August)

Hot and humid. Daytime highs regularly reach the low to mid-90s, and humidity makes it feel hotter. AC is essential. The pool at Clarksville RV Resort gets heavy use. Riverfest weekend in September (technically early fall) is the area’s biggest draw. Summer also brings the dirt-track season at Clarksville Speedway and the Jazz on the Lawn concert series at Beachaven Winery.

90s
avg high

Fall (September through November)

Fall foliage peaks late October into early November. Temperatures settle into the 60s and 70s during the day, which makes hiking and outdoor activities comfortable. Clarksville’s fall festival schedule stays busy, and campground availability opens up after Labor Day.

70s
avg high

Winter (December through February)

Cold but not extreme. Daytime highs hover in the 40s and 50s, with occasional dips below freezing. Snow is rare but not unheard of. Christmas on the Cumberland runs through early January and draws visitors from across the region. Campground rates tend to be at their lowest, and availability is rarely an issue.

40s
avg high

Practical Tips for RV Parks Near Clarksville, TN

Interstate access:

Clarksville RV Resort sits a mile off I-24 at Exit 1. The park is easy to find and doesn't require navigating narrow back roads with a big rig.

Fuel and propane:

Propane is available at Clarksville RV Resort. Multiple fuel stations line the I-24 corridor near Exit 1 for diesel and gasoline.

Groceries and supplies:

Walmart, Kroger, and Publix are all within a 10 to 15-minute drive. The park's camp store carries basic RV supplies.

Cell service:

Carrier coverage along I-24 is generally strong in the Clarksville / Fort Campbell area. The park offers park-wide WiFi as a backup.

Military discounts:

If you're visiting Fort Campbell or have a military ID, ask about available discounts when booking.

Booking tip:

Calling the park's local number directly at (931) 774-7885 connects you to the on-site office. The call center handles reservations too, and the local team can answer specific questions about site assignments and current conditions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best RV parks near Clarksville, TN?

Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney is the most established RV park in the immediate Clarksville area, with full hookups, 30/50-amp service, a pool, and easy I-24 access. For a more nature-focused experience, Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area is about 45 minutes northwest and has multiple campgrounds with hookups on Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley. Wells Creek RV Park in Erin is the closest monthly-focused option for traveling workers, 35 minutes west.

How much do RV parks in Clarksville, TN cost per night?

Nightly rates at Clarksville-area RV parks start around $34.60 at Clarksville RV Resort and vary based on site type, season, and length of stay. Extended-stay and monthly rates offer better per-night value, with monthly rates starting at $800. Single-night rates during peak travel season will run higher than multi-night bookings.

Are there RV parks near Clarksville, TN with full hookups?

Yes. Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney offers full hookup sites with water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric service. Water-and-electric-only sites are also available at a lower rate. Wells Creek RV Park in Erin runs full hookups with 20/30/50-amp service. Land Between the Lakes campgrounds offer a mix of full hookup and electric-only sites.

Is Clarksville, TN a good overnight stop for RV travelers?

Clarksville is one of the most popular overnight stops on the I-24 corridor between Nashville and the Kentucky border. Clarksville RV Resort sits a mile off Exit 1, with pull-through sites that make same-day check-in and next-morning departures easy. The city also has enough restaurants and attractions to fill a longer stay.

How far is Clarksville RV Resort from Fort Campbell?

Clarksville RV Resort is roughly 15 to 20 minutes from the Fort Campbell main gate, depending on your destination on post. The park is a common choice for families visiting active-duty service members because it stays close to the base without sitting inside the city.

How far is Clarksville RV Resort from downtown Nashville?

Downtown Nashville is about 45 minutes south of Clarksville RV Resort via I-24. Several guests use Clarksville as a quieter, lower-cost RV base for day trips into Nashville, with the resort’s I-24 Exit 1 location keeping the commute simple.

Are RV parks near Clarksville, TN pet-friendly?

Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney allows up to 2 pets per site or cabin, with a $25 per-pet fee. The park has a fenced dog park where pets can run off-leash. Pets must be leashed in all other areas of the park. Service animals are accommodated at no charge.

What is there to do near RV parks in Clarksville, TN?

Clarksville offers the Customs House Museum, Dunbar Cave State Park, Liberty Park and the Riverwalk along the Cumberland River, Beachaven Winery, and a growing downtown dining scene. Fort Campbell’s Don F. Pratt Memorial Museum is free and open to the public. Day trips to Land Between the Lakes, Fort Donelson National Battlefield, and Nashville are popular options.

Ready to Book Your Clarksville RV Trip?

Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney puts you a mile off I-24 with full hookups, a pool, a fenced dog park, and easy access to everything Clarksville and Fort Campbell have to offer. Pull-through sites fit big rigs, cabins work for guests without a camper, and extended-stay rates make longer visits affordable.

Check Availability at Clarksville RV Resort (931) 774-7901
From $34.60+/night Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney

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