Cheap and Free in Florida

Van Living Forum

Help Support Van Living Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

rvwandering

Administrator
Staff member
Administrator
Moderator
Joined
Feb 6, 2011
Messages
5,372
Reaction score
596
Location
Somewhere in the US or Canada
Florida is one of the hardest states to visit if you're planning on staying in parking lots or hoping to find cheap campgrounds. Public campgrounds in southern Florida are $40.00+ a night! We've stayed in Florida through the winter months three times over the last four years and have found some really good places to stay.

Walmarts which welcome RVers in many other states can not be counted on because most cities along the coast and in high tourist areas have banned overnight parking. Check Allstays - walmart to rule some out. Even if that doesn't eliminate a Walmart don't count on the lot not being signed " No Overnight Parking".  Rural Walmarts are often okay and we have stayed in them.

If you want to visit a specific city the best place to stay is at Cracker Barrel. Florida has over 50 Cracker Barrels. Most are located right off of an interstate and have long RV parking spaces in the rear of the restaurant. We usually only stay a night or two and are gone all day so that we don't wear out our welcome and ruin a good thing. The best way to locate one is by googling cracker barrel + the city name and then map.

Casinos are usually a good overnight stop. Most in Florida are in the cities and do not allow RVs but there are two where we've stayed. Miccosukee Resort & Gamingwest of Miami, has a large lot and signs for RV parking. We've stayed days in a row without a problem. The other casino is the Seminole Casino in  Immokalee  We've stayed at that one days in a row too.

If you want to stay in a campground the national forests are the cheapest.
Prices range from $3.00 a night at Apalachicola to $21.00 at OcalaEverglades National Park is $16.00 a night. 14 days is the maximum stay at any campground. If you are 62 or disabled camping is half price. Most dispersed camping is tent only accessed by boat, horse, OHV or hiking. We found this to be true at the Wildlife Management Areas too - no RVs allowed.

The least expensive rate that we've found for longer stays at a public campground is $321.00 a month with electricity and $267.50 without electricity at Pioneer Park, a Hardee County park.

Completely free campgrounds are rare in Florida but there are a fewhttp://freecampsites.net/#!3273&query=sitedetails. We just camped at DuPuis Management Area - shady with lots of room. We would stay there again. Blue Cypress Lake is on our list and we'll be staying there in a few days.
 
Hopkins Prairie (Ocala Nat. Forest), like all of the primitive campgrounds and dispersed tent sites in the Ocala NF, is free. It is the only one we have stayed at. I believe there are 4 or 5 freebie campgrounds in Ocala. I may be wrong.

Salt Springs, Juniper Springs, Alexander Springs and Clearwater Lake take reservations through ReserveUSA, in addition to a first-come, first-serve basis and cost up to $20 (that may be old info as we haven't been in FL in years and certainly do not plan on going back again. Besides if we went to FL, we would have to visit all our families... eek!)

This is bear country (among other things with teeth). Get the info needed from the USDA site (see link) to stay safe. http://www.fs.usda.gov/alerts/ocala/alerts-notices/?aid=4853

http://www.forestcamping.com/dow/southern/ocal.htm

http://www.fs.usda.gov/ocala
http://www.fs.usda.gov/activity/ocala/recreation/camping-cabins

Check out some of the other National Forests. I think all the primitives are free. All the ones I know of in all the National Forests we have been in have been free (FL, GA, SC, NC, TN). Do drive in in your towed first. Some of the primatives are difficult to get into if you are in a standard RV. CHECK THE CURRENT PRICES! I know FL has raised the price of their state forests to what I consider ridiculous prices.
 
in hollywood FL, overnight parking is allowed. but the metermaids are constantly checking cars to see if anyones staying inside (they go away at maybe 11pm, i just kept busy outside the car until then, plenty to do at the broadwalk). if someone has a good stealth car or van it could work. this parking is right at the beach, BTW.
i did it a few years ago, maybe it's not allowed anymore.
 
compassrose said:
Hopkins Prairie (Ocala Nat. Forest), like all of the primitive campgrounds and dispersed tent sites in the Ocala NF, is free. It is the only one we have stayed at. I believe there are 4 or 5 freebie campgrounds in Ocala. I may be wrong.

Unfortunately Hopkins Prairie is no longer free - Hopkins Prairie Campground. There's a $10.00 a night fee now. Ocala campgrounds have a fees ranging from $6.00 to $21.00. Some of them allow long stays up to 120 days which is a great money saver. You may be able to stay at the free dispersed sites in a van but they seem to be adamant that camping at dispersed sites means tenting. Florida forests have become much more restricted than they were in the past and definitely more restricted than forests in other states.
 
looking at last years logs.....I used 28.00 total in florida for overnite & dumping fee's the rest of the time it was all free stays for up to 2 weeks at a time and a month in Green cove springs....for 5 months of stays

florida has tons of legal boondocking and dry camping if you look for it
 
WMA...wildlife management area's

state water management area's

Dispersed camping ...state & National parks

private Trust land management

Every farm I ever asked at gave me a spot for free and better than half gave me power & water.

I have never been any where that did not have a place for at least overnite...

I rely alot on the fleamarkets and county fairgrounds/parks in the SE Areas.....St. augustine Fleamarket has a good monthly rate in there campground that I like to use while there....if your a marketer the campground is on the backside of the market with full hook-ups the rate includes your booth space also!!....and it a short walk to work in the morning!!
 
Thank you Bob! I don't know how I missed that blog post. The links that Marshall provided are great! I've been searching for information on campsites like these and mostly coming up with tenting only. You've given me a whole new bunch of places to check out. :)
 
tonyandkaren said:
Unfortunately Hopkins Prairie is no longer free - Hopkins Prairie Campground. There's a $10.00 a night fee now. Ocala campgrounds have a fees ranging from $6.00 to $21.00. Some of them allow long stays up to 120 days which is a great money saver. You may be able to stay at the free dispersed sites in a van but they seem to be adamant that camping at dispersed sites means tenting. Florida forests have become much more restricted than they were in the past and definitely more restricted than forests in other states.
Then they should get their websites right because I had just looked it up on a USDA website minutes before posting. Hopkins Prairie was listed as a primative campground. I do know that since we were last in FL (2007) that state parks increased their prices. Seems like they all have. But this is a very good example of the need to keep up with fee changes. Fees change very quickly and it seems they never go up just a dollar or two, they go up too high in one shot. I would stay in a family members driveway before I would pay to stay at Hopkins Prairie. I well remember how much the deer flies liked me.
 
I've been working nights for the past 5 months at a Neighborhood Walmart off Babcock in Melbourne and I know for sure they don't care about overnighters. If you only parked at night and left in the day you could park there forever and know one would notice or even care. Melbourne Beach is nice and never too crowded year round, I know this as I've lived here on and off for the last 28 years. It's 30 minutes south of Cocoa Beach, 20 north of Sebastian Inlet (which has an awesome camp ground) and 50 minutes east of Disney World.
 
As someone from Florida... The best place to sleep in your vehicle is in Jensen Beach / Palm City area along the beach line. There are a lot of parking lots that do not get patrolled / checked at night.

I actually lived in a tent out there for about 3 years and never one ran into an LEO.

The goal in Florida is to find a heavily forested area such as a lot of bushes / palm trees and park as close to it as possible. Also, the cops there look for lights / movement in vehicles as there are a lot of heroin addicts and crack heads there, so the less noise and light coming out the better.

Even had one cop who would go around at 6am telling everyone it was time to wake up using a megahorn. While Florida's stance on homelessness is there is no such thing there, it's not even remotely true. The cops know this and don't like busting people for it.

The hours you can sleep in your vehicle relatively easy are from 12am to 6am. You can also do it during the day so if you need a constant 8 hours of sleep... Florida is not for you but it is a beautiful state and I can't wait to go back.
 
There are a couple of $8 a night primitive sites near Salt Springs. Lake Eaton, Shanty Pond to name a few. about 5 or so total around Ocala..
 
tonyandkaren said:
Florida is one of the hardest states to visit if you're planning on staying in parking lots or hoping to find cheap campgrounds. Public campgrounds in southern Florida are $40.00+ a night! We've stayed in Florida through the winter months three times over the last four years and have found some really good places to stay.

What a great post and so very helpful. I've started a journal of ideas and yours are so far the best ideas! thank you!
 
10 miles north of St Augustine, overnight with a view of the Atlantic. 29.97435, -81.31864
 
skyl4rk said:
10 miles north of St Augustine, overnight with a view of the Atlantic.  29.97435, -81.31864

Correction (wrong coordinates): 30.02233, -81.32368
 
Top