RV sites at Lakeside RV Campground in Livingston, LA
Livingston Parish, Southeast Louisiana — Camping Guide

RV Dump Stations Near Livingston, LA

Updated June 2026 Livingston, LA

Every RVer eventually plays the dump station game: the app shows 5 pins, 2 are out of service, 1 closed last year, and the clerk at the 4th has no idea what you’re talking about. On a travel day along I-12 between Baton Rouge and the Northshore, you want a station that answers the phone and posts its hours, because full tanks don’t negotiate.

Near Livingston, the reliable answer is Lakeside RV Resort, about 1.5 miles off I-12 at Exit 22, which operates an on-site dump station and answers at (225) 900-7116. If you’re staying rather than passing through, the question mostly disappears: every RV site at the park has its own sewer connection, so tanks drain at your pad on your schedule, no line behind a motorhome on checkout morning. This guide covers the station details, what to confirm before routing to any dump point on this stretch of interstate, and the 10-minute routine that keeps the whole job clean.

Dump Station Options Near Livingston

Lakeside RV Resort's On-Site Dump Station

The park at 28370 S Frost Rd operates a dump station on the property, about 1.5 miles off I-12 at Exit 22, with full details on its dump station page. Call (225) 900-7116 for the current fee and access hours before you route in; the office runs Monday through Saturday, 8AM to 5PM, and the call center answers daily from 7AM to 9PM. A 2-minute call beats a U-turn with full tanks.

Sewer at Every Site If You're Staying

For overnight and longer guests, the dump station is mostly a backup. Every RV site at Lakeside carries a full sewer connection on a concrete pad, alongside water and 30/50-amp electric, so you dump when the tanks say so rather than when checkout does. Nightly rates start at $40, and past a couple of weeks the $540 monthly rate makes per-dump math irrelevant.

Passing Through on I-12

If Livingston is just a waypoint, travel centers along I-12 between Baton Rouge and Hammond commonly offer dump stations, usually for a fee. The catch is reliability: individual stations open, close, and break without updating the apps, so call before betting an afternoon on a pin. Whatever you find, carry your own rinse water and assume the threads on a public station’s spigot have seen things.

How to Dump Your Tanks Right

Wherever you dump, the routine is the same. Gloves on. Black tank first, then gray, so the soapy gray water rinses the hose on its way out. At a full hookup site, keep the black valve closed until the tank is at least two-thirds full; a valve left open lets liquid drain and solids stay, building the pyramid every RV forum warns about. Rinse the hose, cap both ends, and stow it in a dedicated bin that touches nothing else you own. In Louisiana heat, a tank treatment between dumps keeps the rig civil, and a quick spray of the bay floor in summer is never wasted. None of this is glamorous, and all of it takes 10 minutes once it’s habit.

Explore More Nearby

More RV parks and campgrounds near you:

Full hookup RV sites on concrete pads at dog-friendly Lakeside RV Resort in Livingston, Louisiana

Of the pet-friendly RV parks near Livingston, Lakeside is the one with a fenced dog park that includes its own grooming station and dog shower, so your dog can run off-leash and rinse off afterward. The resort sits at 28370 S Frost Rd, just off Exit 22 on Interstate 12, about 1.5 miles from the interstate. Dogs are welcome at every RV site at no fee, and pet-friendly cabins are available for travelers without a rig. Pets stay leashed anywhere outside the dog park, and the property gives them plenty of room to walk: a paved loop trail circles the lake, and the grounds stay open and green. The lake itself is the park’s centerpiece, though the beach and pool stay dog-free, so plan walks around the loop trail and the dog park.

Sites & Hookups

Every RV site has full hookups: water, sewer, and 30/50-amp electric, on paved concrete pads. Both pull-through and back-in sites are available, and the pads run large enough for big rigs. For dog owners, the back-in sites along the quieter edges of the property give pets a bit more buffer from foot traffic, and the concrete pads keep paws out of the mud after Louisiana rain. A dump station is on-site, and monthly rates are available for extended stays, with no maximum stay on RV sites.

What's On-Site

The fenced dog park is the amenity that matters most for pet owners, and it comes with a grooming station and a dog shower, so a muddy dog gets clean before going back in the rig. Beyond the dog park, the lake anchors the property: catch-and-keep fishing with no license required (bass, bream, catfish), paddle boats, kayak access, and a paved walking trail that loops the water and doubles as the main dog-walking route. A swimming pool, a covered playground, a basketball court, an arcade and game room, and a pavilion with fire pits round out the grounds. A 24-hour coin-operated laundry, an on-site store selling propane and firewood, and golf cart rentals ($5/day or $10/weekend) help with daily logistics. Free WiFi covers the property. The pool and sand beach stay dog-free, with one exception: an end-of-season tradition lets dogs swim in the pool on the final day of pool season.

Swimming Pool
Dog Park
Playground
Basketball Court
WiFi
Laundry
Propane
Dump Station
Camp Store
Fishing
Beach
Pull-Through Sites
Big Rig Friendly
Full Hookups
50-Amp Service

What Guests Say

Lakeside RV Resort holds a 4.6-star rating across 729 Google reviews. “Clean” is the single most-repeated word in guest feedback: reviewers call out well-kept facilities, spotless bathrooms, and fast trash pickup, which matters when you are traveling with a dog and care about a tidy site. Pet owners specifically mention the fenced dog park and the grooming station as reasons they chose the park and came back. Families highlight the fishing, the playground, and the pool, while extended-stay guests praise the peaceful lakeside setting and the room to walk a dog. Repeat visitors are common.

Other Camping Options Near Livingston, LA

<p>If your dump station search is really a where-to-stay search, these are the area’s other camping options. Note that sewer access thins out fast: Tickfaw State Park limits full hookups to premium sites.</p>

Gator RV Park

17235 Blackmud Rd, Livingston, LA Full hookups (electric, water, sewer)

A smaller, more basic park adjacent to the Gator Park Sports Complex. Sites include full electrical, water, and sewer hookups. It is a reasonable choice for travelers who want a simple place to park with a leashed dog for a night or two, without a dedicated dog park or resort amenities. Confirm current pet rules when you call. Visit website.

Call for current rates
Best for: A simple overnight hookup with leashed pets welcome

Tickfaw State Park

About 15 minutes southeast in Springfield, LA Water and electric; premium sites have full hookups; sewer limited overall

RV and tent camping along the Tickfaw River inside a 1,200-acre state park with four ecosystems connected by boardwalk trails. Leashed pets are welcome on the trails and at campsites, making it a good day or overnight option for owners who want to hike with their dogs and watch for alligators and wading birds. Not a full-hookup resort and no dog park. Reserve through Louisiana State Parks. Visit website.

Louisiana State Parks campsite fees
Best for: Leashed dogs on nature trails over resort amenities

Things to Do Near Livingston, LA

On the Water

On the resort grounds, the on-site lake gives you catch-and-keep fishing (no license required), paddle boats, and a paved loop trail that works as a shaded dog walk. Dogs stay leashed and out of the sand beach and pool, but the trail and dog park cover their exercise. Off-property, Lake Maurepas to the south connects to the Lake Pontchartrain system, with public boat launches for fishing and paddling; leashed dogs are generally welcome on the launches and in the boat.

On Land

Tickfaw State Park, about 15 minutes southeast, is the top pet-friendly outdoor attraction near Livingston. Leashed dogs are welcome on the park’s boardwalk trails, which wind through cypress-tupelo swamp, bottomland hardwood, and marsh over more than 1,200 acres. It makes an easy half-day trip from the resort and gives your dog a change of scenery. Bring water and watch for alligators near the boardwalks; keep pets leashed and close.

Day Trips

Baton Rouge, about 30 minutes west, has dog-friendly patios in its downtown food scene and several large parks for a leashed walk, plus 24-hour emergency veterinary clinics if you need one on a trip. Denham Springs, 15 minutes west, covers pet supplies and routine vet care. New Orleans is roughly 90 minutes east and has a strong dog-friendly cafe and patio culture, though summer heat and humidity make midday walks rough on dogs, so plan city visits for the cooler parts of the day.

Season by Season in Livingston

Fall (October through November)

The best window for traveling with a dog in Louisiana. Daytime highs drop into the 60s and 70s, humidity eases, and mosquitoes thin out, which makes the dog park and the lakeside walking loop comfortable all day. An excellent stretch for extended stays with pets.

60s-70s
avg high

Winter (December through February)

Mild for dogs. Highs usually sit in the 50s and 60s, with occasional cold fronts pushing overnight lows into the 30s, so pack a coat for short-haired breeds. Quieter parks and an open dog park make it a comfortable season for pet owners.

50s-60s
avg high

Spring (March through May)

Warm and green, with highs in the 70s and 80s. The dog park and lake loop are at their best before summer heat sets in. Mosquitoes return near the water, so a vet-recommended flea and tick preventive matters from spring on. Book weekends ahead.

70s-80s
avg high

Summer (June through September)

Hot and humid, with highs above 90 and heat indexes over 100. Walk dogs early and late, never on hot pavement midday, and watch for overheating. The end-of-season dog swim in the pool caps the summer. Keep fresh water available and limit a dog’s time outdoors during peak heat.

90s
avg high

Practical Tips for Dumping Tanks Near Livingston

Call before you route:

Apps go stale. A 2-minute call to (225) 900-7116, or to any travel center, confirms the station works, the fee, and the hours before you commit the rig.

Black first, then gray:

Always dump the black tank first and let the gray water rinse the hose behind it. It's the one rule that makes everything else easier.

Keep the valve closed at full hookup sites:

Leave the black valve shut until the tank is about two-thirds full. An open valve drains liquid and strands solids.

Gloves and a dedicated bin:

Disposable gloves for the job, and a sealed bin that holds the hose and nothing else. Cross-contamination is the failure mode.

Treat tanks in the heat:

Louisiana summers are hard on holding tanks. A treatment between dumps keeps odors down, especially on stays longer than a few days.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the nearest RV dump station near Livingston, LA?

Lakeside RV Resort by RJourney operates an on-site dump station at 28370 S Frost Rd, about 1.5 miles off I-12 at Exit 22. Call (225) 900-7116 for the current fee and access hours, and see the park’s dump station page for details before you route in.

How much does it cost to dump RV tanks near Livingston?

Fees vary by location and change often, which is why this guide doesn’t print numbers that go stale. Call Lakeside RV Resort at (225) 900-7116 for its current dump station fee, and phone any I-12 travel center before driving to it.

Can I use Lakeside RV Resort's dump station without camping there?

The park operates the dump station as an on-site service with its own information page, so it’s set up to be found by travelers. Call (225) 900-7116 to confirm access, the current fee, and timing for non-guests before you exit the interstate.

What are the dump station hours?

The park office runs Monday through Saturday, 8AM to 5PM, and closes Sunday, with a call center answering daily from 7AM to 9PM. Confirm station access times when you call, especially for an early start or a Sunday travel day.

Do the RV sites at Lakeside have their own sewer hookups?

Yes. Every RV site has a full sewer connection, plus water and 30/50-amp electric on a concrete pad. Staying guests dump at their own pad on their own schedule, which is the cleanest answer to the dump station question in the Livingston area.

What order do you dump RV tanks in?

Black tank first, then gray, so the gray water rinses the hose. Wear gloves, keep the black valve closed at full hookup sites until the tank is about two-thirds full, rinse and cap the hose, and stow it in its own bin. A tank treatment between dumps helps in Louisiana heat.

Handle Your Tanks at Lakeside RV Resort

Lakeside RV Resort by RJourney covers both versions of the problem: an on-site dump station about 1.5 miles off I-12 at Exit 22 for travelers passing through, and a full sewer connection at every RV site for guests who stay. Nightly rates start at $40, monthly from $540.

See site types and live availability on the Lakeside RV Resort page.

Book Your RV Site (225) 900-7116
From $40/night Lakeside RV Resort by RJourney

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