Long-term RV sites at Applewood RV Resort in Wheat Ridge, a year-round monthly base near Denver, Colorado
Denver Metro / Front Range — Camping Guide

Long-Term RV Parks Near Denver, CO

Updated June 2026 Denver, CO

Denver rent does the recruiting for monthly RV living. A 1-bedroom in the metro clears $1,600 before utilities and locks you into a 12-month lease. A full-hookup RV site with water, sewer, and trash runs about $1,300 a month and you keep the freedom to roll out whenever the contract ends or the next job calls. That math is why long-term RV parks near Denver stay full.

The people filling them are specific: traveling nurses on 13-week assignments at UCHealth and Denver Health, remote workers who want mountain access without mountain rent, construction crews on year-long Front Range builds, and snowbirds chasing Colorado’s roughly 300 days of sunshine. This guide is about the daily logistics of staying put for a month or more near Denver, mail, groceries, healthcare, the commute, and winter, starting with Applewood RV Resort in Wheat Ridge. Note that Applewood is in Wheat Ridge, just west of Denver proper, not in the city itself.

Daily Life as a Long-Term Resident at Applewood

Mail, Groceries, and Errands

Settling in for a month or more means solving the boring stuff first. Applewood accepts packages at the office breezeway, and for forwarded mail most residents set up a PO box at the Wheat Ridge post office or a UPS Store mailbox for a street address; Colorado does allow an RV-park address for license and registration, so confirm with the office. Groceries and errands are minutes away: King Soopers about 5 minutes, a Walmart Supercenter and Home Depot around 10, Costco about 15. A TA truck stop nearby covers fuel and propane. For a long stay, that density is the difference between convenient and a constant drive.

Healthcare and the Commute

Denver’s healthcare network is part of why nurses fill these sites. From Wheat Ridge you are within about 15 minutes of multiple urgent-care clinics and two major hospital systems, with UCHealth, Intermountain, and Denver Health across the metro and pharmacies at King Soopers, Walgreens, and CVS close by. The commute is the other draw: I-70 puts you downtown in 10 to 15 minutes outside rush hour, the RTD light rail sits about a mile away for a car-free ride in, and Denver International Airport is 30 to 45 minutes east for travel-nurse turnarounds.

Monthly Rates and No Maximum Stay

Monthly rates run $1,300 for electric-only, $1,425 for a full-hookup back-in, and $1,550 for a full-hookup pull-through, with extra vehicles at $50 a month and no maximum-stay limit, so you can stay one month or stack several without a 12-month lease. Budget separately for propane in winter, roughly $50 to $100 a month if you run the furnace regularly. Confirm current nightly rates directly with the office, since nightly pricing was not confirmed at last verification.

Explore More Nearby

More RV parks and campgrounds in Colorado:

Full-hookup monthly RV sites at Applewood RV Resort in Wheat Ridge, set up for extended Denver-metro stays

Applewood RV Resort by RJourney, at 11600 W 44th Ave in Wheat Ridge, is built for staying, not just passing through. It is an urban, no-frills, mostly gravel park about 15 minutes from downtown Denver and right off I-70, with the RTD light rail about a mile away so you can leave the truck at your site and ride into the city. The park has 76 sites, 65 full-hookup (38 pull-through and 27 back-in) and 11 electric-only, with 30- and 50-amp service. Monthly rates run $1,300 for electric-only, $1,425 for a full-hookup back-in, and $1,550 for a full-hookup pull-through, with extra vehicles at $50 a month and no maximum-stay limit. Sites are gravel and tight, so rigs run self-contained and big rigs should call ahead. As manager Melissa Soderberg puts it, it is a relaxing, centrally located base in the Denver metro with Prospect Park next door.

Applewood RV Resort is centrally located in the Denver metropolitan area, has reasonable rates, and is a relaxing place to stay with Prospect Park right next door to enjoy. — Melissa Soderberg, General Manager

Sites & Hookups

For a month-or-more stay, hookups are the part that shapes daily life. Applewood has 76 RV sites: 65 full-hookup (38 pull-through and 27 back-in) and 11 electric-only, with 30- and 50-amp service across 14 designated 50-amp sites. Full-hookup means water, sewer, and electric at the pad, so no dump-station runs while you live there, and 50-amp matters if you run two AC units in a July heat wave or electric heat through winter. Pads are gravel and sites are tight; rigs must be self-contained, with no tents and no car camping, though Class B vans are fine. Big rigs should call ahead, since the tight layout is the most common thing guests raise. A public dump station is on-site for the in-between weeks: $20 to dump (free for registered guests), $10 fresh-water fill, free tank-rinse, after-hours via cash dropbox.

What's On-Site

For long-term life the amenity list reads differently than it does for an overnight stop. Applewood keeps it practical: 24-hour coded coin laundry so you are not hunting a laundromat every week, a coded bathhouse with showers, a small fenced dog park for the daily walk, and package delivery at the office breezeway, which matters when you are ordering RV parts and groceries to a Wheat Ridge address. There is no pool and no swimming on-site. Prospect Park and Prospect Lake sit right next door for the evening dog loop and catch-to-keep fishing with a Colorado license. The on-site dump station handles the weeks between full-hookup turns. This is a convenience-first base for people who are living here, not vacationing, and the central location carries the value.

Laundry
Dump Station
Dog Park
Full Hookups
50 Amp
Pull Through

What Guests Say

Applewood is an urban, convenience-first park rather than a destination resort, and the long-term crowd here is living, not vacationing. What residents value is the location and the practical setup: full hookups, on-site laundry, package delivery, and a Wheat Ridge address about 15 minutes from downtown with light rail close by. Sites run tight and gravel, so come for the position and the no-max-stay flexibility and set expectations accordingly. If you run a big rig and plan to stay for months, call ahead to confirm a pull-through that fits before you commit.

Other Long-Term RV Options Near Denver, CO

Applewood is the convenience pick for monthly stays with metro access and no maximum stay, but the area’s state park campgrounds are worth knowing if you want a reservoir-and-trees setting between contracts. Note that state parks cap stays and are not true long-term solutions; availability and fees change, so confirm before you go.

Cherry Creek State Park (Aurora)

About 9 miles southeast of downtown Denver in Aurora Electric hookups; no full hookups

Cherry Creek wraps an 880-acre reservoir in suburban Aurora, with electric hookups, flush toilets, showers, and a dump station but no full hookups. State park stay limits make it a temporary base while you sort a monthly site, not a long-term home, and it draws crowds and some I-225 noise on summer weekends. Useful as a between-contracts landing if you want water and trees for a week or two. Visit website.

Roughly $28 to $41/night plus an $11 daily vehicle pass; stay limits apply
Best for: A short reservoir-side landing between contracts, not a monthly stay

Chatfield State Park (Littleton)

About 20 miles south of Denver in Littleton Electric hookups on many sites; no full hookups

Chatfield sits along the South Platte with a 1,500-acre reservoir, paved roads, flush toilets, showers, electric hookups, and a dump station, but no full hookups. Its stay limits and per-night fees make it a short-term option rather than a monthly arrangement, and reservations fill fast May through September. A strong choice for a week of water and quiet while you line up a long-term site closer to the city. Visit website.

Roughly $28 to $41/night plus a $10 daily vehicle pass; stay limits apply
Best for: A scenic short-term landing with reservoir access, not a monthly base

Off-Hours and Weekends from Your Long-Term Base

On the Water

When you live here, the after-work loop is Prospect Lake right next door, catch-to-keep fishing for guests with a Colorado license, though swimming and boating are not allowed. For a weekend with the boat or paddleboard, Chatfield’s 1,500-acre reservoir and Cherry Creek’s 880-acre reservoir are both within about 20 minutes and stay stocked for anglers across the metro. A Colorado fishing license is required for anyone 16 and older.

On Land

Long-term means you can knock out the trails on weekends instead of cramming them into a trip. Mount Falcon, North Table Mountain, and Lookout Mountain all sit within about 30 minutes of Wheat Ridge for after-work hikes, and the Clear Creek Trail runs through town and ties into a 60-plus-mile paved network you can ride straight toward downtown. Red Rocks is about 15 minutes out, and Rocky Mountain National Park is roughly 90 minutes north for a full day.

Day Trips

Residents treat the I-70 corridor as a standing weekend option: Loveland is about 60 miles west and Arapahoe Basin, Keystone, and Breckenridge are within 90 minutes, which makes paying monthly instead of nightly resort rates a real ski-season strategy. Downtown Denver is 15 minutes away by car or a light-rail ride for games, museums, and the 16th Street Mall, and Golden, 10 minutes off, has Coors Brewery tours and Clear Creek for a closer-in afternoon.

Seasonal Guide for Long-Term RV Living Near Denver

Spring (March through May)

Days climb from the 50s into the 70s, but nights dip below freezing into early April and snow is possible into May. For a long stay this is the easy season: keep insulated hose covers on a few weeks longer than you expect, and enjoy the gap before summer rates and crowds hit the area.

50s-70s
avg high

Summer (June through August)

Highs reach 90 to 95 in July with afternoon thunderstorms most days between 2 and 5 PM. A single AC unit on 30-amp handles most rigs, but two units want a 50-amp site, so book one if you run them. Evenings cool into the 60s, one of the real perks of monthly life here.

90s
avg high

Fall (September through November)

September is the best month on the Front Range: warm days in the 70s, cool nights in the 40s, golden aspens a short drive west. October brings the first hard freezes, so winterize early rather than waiting; by November you will want full hookups and the furnace running.

50s-70s
avg high

Winter (December through February)

Denver averages about 57 inches of snow but roughly 300 days of sunshine, so it melts fast and January days in the 40s are common. Long-term winter stays work with a properly insulated rig: heat tape on water lines, skirting, a dehumidifier for condensation, and budget for higher propane. Applewood’s year-round, no-max-stay setup makes it a solid winter base for skiers paying monthly instead of nightly.

40s
avg high

Practical Tips for Long-Term RV Living Near Denver

Sort your internet before you arrive:

Park WiFi handles email and browsing but not reliable video calls. For remote work, run a cellular hotspot with an external antenna or a Starlink dish as your primary connection; Verizon and T-Mobile both cover the Wheat Ridge area well.

Set up a mailing address in week one:

Applewood takes packages at the breezeway, but for forwarded mail get a PO box at the Wheat Ridge post office or a UPS Store mailbox early. Waiting creates headaches with prescriptions, banking, and anything needing address verification.

Winterize before the first freeze:

In Denver that can come as early as late September. Heat tape, insulated hose covers, skirting, and a dehumidifier are cheap insurance against a frozen-line repair that runs into the thousands.

Know your 30-amp ceiling:

A 30-amp connection gives you about 3,600 watts, enough for a space heater or one AC unit, not both at once. If you run two AC units or electric heat, book one of the 14 fifty-amp sites.

Budget propane separately:

Even with electric on your site, winter propane for the furnace can run $50 to $100 a month. Factor it in alongside the monthly rate so the total stays predictable.

Call ahead if you run a big rig:

Sites are gravel and tight, and big-rig fit is the most common thing guests raise. For a multi-month stay, confirm a pull-through that fits your length before you commit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do long-term RV parks near Denver cost per month?

Monthly rates across the Denver metro generally run about $1,100 to $1,800 depending on hookups, site size, and location. Applewood RV Resort in Wheat Ridge runs $1,300 a month for electric-only, $1,425 for a full-hookup back-in, and $1,550 for a full-hookup pull-through, with site, water, sewer, and trash included and extra vehicles at $50 a month. Budget separately for winter propane.

Is there a maximum stay at Applewood RV Resort?

No. Applewood has no maximum-stay limit and operates year-round, so you can stay a single month or stack several without a 12-month lease. That flexibility is why traveling nurses, remote workers, and snowbirds use it as a Denver-metro base.

Can I get mail and packages as a long-term guest at Applewood?

Packages are accepted at the office breezeway. For forwarded mail, most long-term residents set up a PO box at the Wheat Ridge post office or a UPS Store mailbox for a street address. Colorado allows an RV-park address for driver’s license and vehicle registration, so confirm the specifics with the Applewood office.

Is Applewood a good base for traveling nurses near Denver?

Yes. From Wheat Ridge you are within about 15 minutes of multiple urgent-care clinics and two major hospital systems, with UCHealth and Denver Health across the metro. The RTD light rail is about a mile away and Denver International Airport is 30 to 45 minutes east, which suits 13-week contract turnarounds. Monthly rates start at $1,300 with no maximum stay.

Can I live in an RV near Denver year-round through winter?

Yes. Applewood is open all 12 months with electric and full-hookup sites. Winter stays work with a properly insulated rig: heat tape on water lines, skirting, a dehumidifier for condensation, and a reliable furnace. Denver’s roughly 300 days of annual sunshine make cold-weather living more comfortable than the numbers suggest, though you should budget for higher propane.

Does Applewood have good internet for remote work?

Park WiFi is available but guests report inconsistent performance, so it is fine for browsing and email but not a reliable backbone for video calls. Remote workers should plan a cellular hotspot or Starlink as their primary connection; Verizon and T-Mobile both cover the Wheat Ridge area well.

Reserve a Long-Term Site at Applewood RV Resort

Applewood RV Resort by RJourney is a year-round, no-maximum-stay base in Wheat Ridge, about 15 minutes from downtown Denver and right off I-70, with full-hookup and electric sites, 24-hour laundry, a dump station, package delivery, and Prospect Park next door. Monthly rates run $1,300 to $1,550 with site, water, sewer, and trash included, and the light rail is about a mile away for a car-free commute. It is a practical home base for nurses, remote workers, and snowbirds. Sites are gravel and tight, so call ahead if you run a big rig.

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

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Applewood RV Resort by RJourney (Wheat Ridge)

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