RV sites at Clarksville RV Resort in Clarksville, TN
Northern Middle Tennessee / I-24 Corridor / Fort Campbell — Camping Guide

RV Propane & Supplies Near Clarksville, TN

Updated June 2026 Clarksville, TN

Propane runs out at the worst times: mid-cold-snap, mid-grill, or the night before checkout. Around Clarksville, RV travelers have the usual 2 options: exchange cages at fuel stations and big-box stores along the commercial strips, or refill stations that top off your actual tank. The difference matters more in an RV than in a backyard, because most rigs run permanently mounted ASME tanks or 30 and 40 pound cylinders that exchange cages can’t serve at all, and a refill usually costs less per gallon than a swap anyway.

If you’re staying at a campground, the easiest answer is usually on-site. Clarksville RV Resort sells propane a mile off I-24 at Exit 1, with a camp store that also carries firewood and RV supplies, so the cold-weather errand list collapses into a walk across the park. Here’s how propane works for RV travelers around Clarksville, what to know about refill versus exchange, and how to plan usage through a Tennessee winter.

Propane at the Park: How It Works

Clarksville RV Resort sells propane on-site, which is the difference between a 5-minute walk and a tank-hunting loop through town. The camp store rounds out the supply run with firewood for the fire ring and RV basics (the fittings, fuses, and sewer parts that always fail on a Friday night). Call the office at (931) 774-7901 to confirm current hours and fill availability before you build a plan around it, especially in winter when demand spikes.

Winter is when the propane math gets serious here. Clarksville lows run 28 to 35 degrees from December through February, with colder snaps mixed in, and an RV furnace working through that weather drains cylinders fast. Long-term guests at the park typically pair skirting and a heated water hose with a steady refill rhythm. Having the fill source inside the park means a cold morning never turns into a cold week.

Refill vs Exchange for RV Travelers

Exchange cages are built for 20 pound grill cylinders. They’re fast, but you pay for a full fill and usually receive a partial one, and they do nothing for the 30 and 40 pound cylinders most travel trailers carry or the ASME tanks permanently mounted on motorhomes. Those need a staffed refill station, where an attendant fills your own tank by weight or meter and you pay for what actually goes in.

Two checks before any refill: the recertification date stamped on the cylinder collar (steel cylinders need recertification 12 years after manufacture, then on a recurring schedule) and the OPD valve that stations require on portable tanks. Stations can legally refuse out-of-date cylinders, and finding that out mid-errand wastes the trip. Top off before holiday weekends and ahead of forecast cold fronts, when lines form and supplies run thin everywhere.

Explore More Nearby

More RV parks and campgrounds near you:

Full hookup pull-through and back-in RV sites at Clarksville RV Resort in Clarksville, Tennessee

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.

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

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>If your route runs past Clarksville, these area stops also serve RV travelers, though propane and supply availability varies by property, so call before you count on a refill.</p>

Two Rivers Campground

Nashville, TN, about 50 minutes south near the Cumberland and Stones rivers Full hookups, pull-through and back-in

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.

Call or check site for current monthly rates
Best for: Long-stay travelers basing closer to downtown Nashville

Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area

About 45 minutes northwest of Clarksville between Kentucky Lake and Lake Barkley Developed campgrounds with electric hookups; backcountry sites available

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.

Varies by campground; stay limits apply
Best for: Shorter nature-focused stays rather than monthly living

Settling In Around Clarksville

On the Water

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.

On Land

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.

Day Trips

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.

85-90
avg high

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.

65-78
avg high

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.

45-52
avg high

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.

60-78
avg high

Practical Tips: RV Propane & Supplies Near Clarksville, TN

Refill before the cold front:

Clarksville winter lows run 28 to 35 with colder snaps. A furnace working through that weather drains cylinders fast, so top off ahead of forecast fronts instead of after them.

Check your recertification date:

Refill stations can refuse cylinders past their recertification date, stamped on the collar. Check it before you haul tanks across town.

Stock the basics at the camp store:

The on-site camp store carries propane, firewood, and RV supplies, so most basics are covered without a run into town.

Ask for a quieter row:

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.

Use the value windows:

The park runs year-round, and winter is the strongest value stretch. If your dates are flexible, the off-season lands the best per-night math.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I refill propane near Clarksville, TN?

Clarksville RV Resort sells propane on-site, a mile off I-24 at Exit 1, which covers guests without a trip into town. Exchange cages at fuel stations and big-box stores around Clarksville handle 20 pound grill cylinders, but RV-size tanks need a staffed refill point.

Does Clarksville RV Resort sell propane?

Yes. Propane sales run on-site, and the camp store carries firewood and RV supplies alongside it. Call the office at (931) 774-7901 to confirm current hours and fill availability, especially in winter when demand climbs.

Is refilling propane better than exchanging for an RV?

Usually. Refills put propane in your own tank by weight or meter, so you pay for what goes in, and they work for the 30 and 40 pound cylinders and mounted ASME tanks that exchange cages can’t handle. Exchanges only make sense for standard 20 pound grill bottles.

How much propane does an RV use in winter near Clarksville?

It depends on the rig and the thermostat, but with December through February lows of 28 to 35 degrees, a furnace running steadily can empty a 30 pound cylinder in a matter of days during cold snaps. Skirting and a heated water hose cut the burn rate noticeably.

Can motorhome ASME tanks be refilled at the park?

Permanently mounted ASME tanks have to be filled in place at a staffed propane point rather than swapped at a cage. Clarksville RV Resort sells propane on-site; call ahead to confirm your tank type can be filled before you arrive needing it.

What RV supplies can I get without leaving the campground?

The camp store at Clarksville RV Resort stocks propane, firewood, and common RV parts and supplies, which covers most mid-trip failures. For bigger shopping runs, Clarksville’s retail corridor is a short drive from the park’s I-24 Exit 1 location.

Stock Up, Then Stay a While

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
From $34.60/night Clarksville RV Resort by RJourney

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