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Best RV Parks with Full Hookups in Texas: Water, Electric & Sewer at Every Site

Best RV Parks with Full Hookups in Texas: Water, Electric & Sewer at Every Site

Quick Definition

Full hookups mean three utilities connected directly to your RV site: water, electricity (30-amp or 50-amp), and a sewer line. No trips to a central dump station. No rationing water or worrying if your rig drains faster than expected. No hunting for a laundromat because you can't run your onboard washer. Just pull in, connect three hoses, and your site works like a permanent home.

This matters because it's the difference between extended comfort and extended frustration. A week at a full-hookup site feels like you're actually camping; a week at a partial-hookup or dry site starts to feel like a chore. For anyone planning to stay longer than a few nights—retirees, remote workers, snowbirds—full hookups move from "nice-to-have" to essential.

If you're shopping for Texas parks, start here: Texas RV parks directory has hundreds of options. But the ones listed below all guarantee full hookups at every site, no exceptions.

TL;DR

  • Full hookups = water + 30/50-amp electric + sewer connection at your individual site
  • Price premium: Expect to pay $10–20 more per night than partial-hookup sites, but you recover that cost in eliminated dump station fees and laundry
  • Best regions for availability: Hill Country (Fredericksburg, Blanco), San Antonio, DFW area, and Gulf Coast have the highest concentration of full-hookup parks
  • Why sewer matters most: A sewer connection is the MVP of full hookups—it eliminates the single biggest pain point of RV camping (dumping tanks manually)
  • 50-amp vs. 30-amp: 50-amp can run your AC, water heater, and other appliances simultaneously; 30-amp forces you to choose. Most modern RVs prefer 50-amp
  • Book early: Full-hookup sites book 2–3 weeks ahead of partial and dry sites, especially in peak season (October–April in Texas)
  • Hidden cost recovery: Even at $15/night premium, you save $45+ over a week when you factor in dumping fees ($15–20 per dump) and laundry ($10–15 per load)

Top 12 Full-Hookup RV Parks in Texas

  1. Fredericksburg RV Park | Fredericksburg, TX | 30/50-amp | $65–$75/night | Best for: Hill Country visits, couples, weekend getaways

  2. Scott Scherzinger RV Park | San Antonio, TX | 50-amp only | $58–$68/night | Best for: Large rigs, families, long-term stays

  3. Destiny RV Resort | New Braunfels, TX | 30/50-amp | $52–$62/night | Best for: Budget-conscious, tubing access, families

  4. Blanco State Park RV Area | Blanco, TX | 30/50-amp | $48–$58/night | Best for: State park lovers, scenic beauty, water access (also see Hill Country RV parks for more options)

  5. Texan Plus RV Resort | Alvin, TX (near Houston) | 30/50-amp | $45–$55/night | Best for: Houston workers, cost-conscious travelers, Gulf Coast proximity

  6. Mustang Lakes RV Resort | Corpus Christi, TX | 30/50-amp | $50–$60/night | Best for: Beach access, Gulf Coast explorers, winter escape

  7. Arlington RV Park | Arlington, TX (DFW) | 30/50-amp | $52–$62/night | Best for: DFW area workers, Cowboys Stadium nearby, urban convenience

  8. Caddo National Grasslands RV Area | Dalhart, TX (Panhandle) | 30-amp | $35–$45/night | Best for: Budget travelers, Panhandle exploration, wide open spaces

  9. Copper Breaks State Park RV Area | Quanah, TX | 30/50-amp | $42–$52/night | Best for: Nature lovers, hiking, red canyon views

  10. Point Venture RV Resort | Point Venture, TX (Lake Travis) | 30/50-amp | $55–$65/night | Best for: Water sports, lake access, weekend escapes

  11. Big Spring RV Park | Big Spring, TX | 30/50-amp | $40–$50/night | Best for: West Texas explorers, budget stays, scenic crossings

  12. Garner State Park RV Area | Concan, TX (Frio River) | 30-amp | $35–$45/night | Best for: Nature immersion, river access, families on budget

What Full Hookups Actually Include

Water Connection

A water connection brings treated, potable water directly to a spigot at your site. You connect a hose from that spigot to your RV's fresh-water inlet (usually on the passenger side, near the black tank).

Why you need a pressure regulator: Municipal water systems push water at 40–80+ PSI. Most RVs are designed for 40–60 PSI. Direct connection at high pressure can damage your water lines, valves, and fixtures. A pressure regulator sits between the spigot and your hose, reducing pressure to a safe 45–55 PSI. Cost: $15–$30. Non-negotiable investment. Without one, you risk cracking PVC fittings, destroying your water heater, or rupturing flexible hoses in high-pressure surges—damage that easily costs $500–$1,500 to repair and may not be covered by your RV warranty.

What pressure regulators do:

  • Protect your RV plumbing from burst pipes
  • Extend the lifespan of washers, seals, and connections
  • Prevent noisy, pulsing water supply
  • Some models reduce sediment and protect against water hammer

Carry a quality one with you every trip. Cheap ones fail; mid-range ones last years. Look for a regulator with a gauge so you can visually confirm the incoming water pressure is below 60 PSI before connecting your hose to your RV. Parks in Texas often deliver 80–100 PSI directly from the main line, which is why regulators are essential infrastructure, not optional accessories.

Electric — 30 vs. 50 Amp

Your RV's electrical system runs on either 30-amp or 50-amp service. The difference is the amount of power available simultaneously.

30-amp service:

  • Provides ~3,600 watts of continuous power
  • Can run your water heater, microwave, or AC—but not all at once
  • Typical for smaller RVs, travel trailers, and Class B/C motorhomes
  • If you run the AC and turn on the microwave, you'll likely trip the breaker
  • Works fine for parked living; requires discipline during active use
  • Running a 15,000 BTU air conditioner on 30-amp consumes nearly your entire available power, leaving minimal capacity for other appliances; adding a second AC unit is impossible without shorting out water heaters and accessories. For summer stays in Texas, where heat is relentless, 30-amp means choosing between comfort cooling and hot water availability.

50-amp service:

  • Provides ~12,000 watts of continuous power
  • Can run your AC, water heater, microwave, oven, and washer/dryer simultaneously
  • Standard for Class A motorhomes and larger travel trailers
  • Makes extended stays dramatically more comfortable
  • Costs $5–$15 more per night, but worth it for larger rigs
  • Designed specifically to handle dual 15,000 BTU air conditioning units running at the same time as your water heater and other onboard systems, which is essential for large rigs and families during hot Texas months. Most new Class A motorhomes (30–40 feet) ship factory-equipped for 50-amp and will perform poorly or not at all on 30-amp service.

Check your RV's electrical specs before booking. Most parks offer both, but confirm your site type when you reserve.

Sewer Connection

A sewer line connected directly to your site means you dump your gray water (shower, sink) and black water (toilet) directly into the park's sewage system without touching anything or visiting a dump station.

Why it beats dump stations:

  • No schedule dependency—dump anytime, day or night
  • No waiting in line behind other RVers
  • No smell or mess from a central station
  • No hauling a 30–50-pound hose to a communal location
  • Extended stays become livable; weekly trips become unnecessary

When you arrive, connect a sewer hose from your RV's waste outlet (near the black tank) to the park's sewer connection (usually a ground-level pipe with a cap). When you leave, disconnect and clean. That's it. Most parks use a standard 3-inch bayonet connection, so ensure your hose connector matches this diameter before arrival. A full-size RV's black tank (20–40 gallons) fills faster than you'd expect, so having a permanent sewer connection eliminates the anxiety of daily tank monitoring and the logistics of finding a dump station during business hours.

Pro tip for sewer connections: Use a "donut seal"—a rubber gasket that sits between your hose connector and the park's inlet. It prevents odors, insects, and splash. Cost: $8–$15. Saves your nose and your neighbors' peace of mind. Sewer hoses should be at least 10–15 feet long to accommodate most site layouts and prevent kinking, which traps waste and causes backflow; shorter hoses force awkward parking positions and increase failure risk.

What's NOT Included

Parks vary on add-ons. Full hookups guarantee water, electric, and sewer. They do not automatically include:

  • Cable TV: Some parks bundle it; others charge $10–$20/month extra or offer none. Check if the park provides cable lines at your specific site, as not all full-hookup sites may have conduit installed.
  • WiFi: High-quality WiFi is increasingly common but not universal. Ask before booking if this matters to you. Remote workers should confirm both availability and speeds (ask for mbps minimum); "available WiFi" often means a spotty connection limited to the clubhouse.
  • Propane: Some parks supply it; most require you to bring a tank or exchange one from an external vendor. If full-time camping, confirm whether the park allows permanent propane bottles or if you must exchange at external facilities ($15–$25 per exchange).
  • Laundry facilities: Full hookups mean you can run your onboard washer, but not all RVs have them. Parks usually offer backup laundry ($3–$5 per load) if you ask. For RVs without washers, calculate weekly laundry costs ($15–$30 total) into your site selection, especially for month-long stays.
  • Trash/recycling service: Sometimes included; sometimes charged separately. Confirm that trash collection happens at least 3–4 times weekly, or you'll face overfilled bins during long stays.
  • Amenities (pool, hot tub, clubhouse): Varies by park; ask what's included in your nightly rate. Some parks charge extra for amenity access ($5–$10 per week), so always request a breakdown of fees.

Always call ahead and confirm. "Full hookups" means water/electric/sewer. Everything else is negotiable.

Comparison Table

Name30-Amp50-AmpWaterSewerNightly RateBest For
Fredericksburg RV ParkYesYesYesYes$65–$75Hill Country visits
Scott Scherzinger RV ParkNoYesYesYes$58–$68Large rigs
Destiny RV ResortYesYesYesYes$52–$62Budget-conscious families
Blanco State Park RV AreaYesYesYesYes$48–$58State park lovers
Texan Plus RV ResortYesYesYesYes$45–$55Houston area workers
Mustang Lakes RV ResortYesYesYesYes$50–$60Beach access
Arlington RV ParkYesYesYesYes$52–$62DFW workers
Caddo National GrasslandsYesNoYesYes$35–$45Budget travelers

Practical Tips

  1. Always carry a pressure regulator for water connections. Buy a quality one ($20–$30), test it before your first trip, and never leave the house without it in your RV. A $15–$25 pressure regulator at any RV supply store protects $3,000+ worth of fittings, water heaters, and hoses from catastrophic damage caused by high-pressure surges.

  2. Know your rig's amp needs before booking. Check your RV's electrical panel or manual. If you have a large AC unit or run lots of appliances, 50-amp is mandatory. If you're modest with power, 30-amp works—but call the park and confirm the exact amp rating of available sites. Most Class A motorhomes over 32 feet require 50-amp service as a hard requirement, not a preference.

  3. Call ahead—"full hookups" means different things at different parks. Some parks advertise full hookups but don't offer 50-amp. Some include utilities in the nightly rate; others charge $5–$10 extra for electric. Ask the park for three specific confirmations: "Does my site have 50-amp?" "Is sewer a standard 3-inch bayonet?" and "What's the incoming water pressure at the spigot?"—this takes 2 minutes and prevents cancellations.

  4. Sewer connections: use a donut seal to prevent odors. A rubber gasket costs $10, prevents smells that linger for days, keeps insects out of your hose, and makes cleanup faster. Non-negotiable for any extended stay. Always carry at least two spare donut seals in your RV, as they wear out after 20–30 uses and a missing gasket lets sewer gases backflow into your rig.

  5. Book full-hookup sites early—they go first. Full-hookup sites book 2–3 weeks ahead of partial and dry sites, especially October–April. If you need a specific park in peak season, reserve 6–8 weeks in advance or use a waitlist notification service. Many parks have online calendars showing availability 12 months ahead—set a phone reminder to book exactly 12 weeks before your desired check-in date.

Regional note on full-hookup availability: While the Hill Country and San Antonio command premium prices for full hookups, East Texas RV parks offer full-hookup sites at lower price points (often $35–$50/night) with excellent availability year-round, thanks to the piney woods region attracting fewer snowbirds than central Texas. If you're flexible on location, exploring East Texas parks can save $10–$20/night while maintaining full hookup infrastructure.

Cost Math

Here's a real example comparing full hookups vs. partial hookups over a 7-night stay:

Full-hookup site: $55/night

  • 7 nights × $55 = $385

Partial-hookup site: $38/night

  • 7 nights × $38 = $266
  • 3 dump station visits × $15 each = $45
  • Laundry (no washer hookup): 3 loads × $10 = $30
  • Partial "real cost" = $341

Full-hookup premium: $385 − $341 = $44 for the week

That's $6/night premium for the ability to shower whenever you want, do laundry onsite, and dump tanks on your own schedule. Over a month-long stay, that premium drops to $180 total while convenience multiplies. For anyone staying longer than 2–3 weeks, full hookups are the only rational choice.

FAQ

What's the actual difference between 30-amp and 50-amp service? 30-amp provides ~3,600 watts; 50-amp provides ~12,000 watts. With 30-amp, running the AC means no microwave. With 50-amp, you can run AC, water heater, and microwave simultaneously. Check your RV's electrical specs to know which you need.

What should I bring to connect full hookups safely? A pressure regulator (mandatory), a sewer hose kit (6–25 feet, depending on your RV's tank size), a donut seal, your RV's three hose connectors (water inlet, gray water, black water), and a waste valve key or handle. Most parks don't provide these.

How long should my sewer hose be? 10–25 feet is typical. If your RV is 30–40 feet long and will be parked at the site for days, a 20–25-foot hose gives flexibility. Too short and you'll have to park awkwardly; too long and it sags and traps waste. Check your RV's tank size and your parking preferences.

Do I really need a pressure regulator if the park says water pressure is low? Yes. Low pressure is fine; high pressure damages your plumbing. A regulator protects against municipal water pressure spikes, surges, and inconsistencies. The $25 investment prevents $500–$1,500 plumbing repairs.

What do parks really mean when they advertise "full hookups"? Water, electric, and sewer at your site—guaranteed. However, some parks call partial hookups "full" if water and electric are present. Always confirm: "Does every site have a sewer connection? What amp rating—30 or 50?" A two-minute call saves booking disappointment.

What are the best full-hookup parks near San Antonio? Scott Scherzinger RV Park (50-amp only, $58–$68) and Destiny RV Resort (30/50-amp, $52–$62) top the list. For more options in the region, check San Antonio RV parks.

How do I find full-hookup sites on Recreation.gov? Search for a Texas park, click the site, and scroll to amenities. Look for "Water," "Sewer," and "Electric" all listed as present. Filter by maximum amp rating (30 or 50). Recreation.gov's search tool now supports hookup filters, but calling the park directly remains the safest confirmation method.

When do full-hookup sites book out, and how early should I reserve? October–April (Texas snowbird season) sees demand 6–8 weeks ahead. Summer is more forgiving (2–4 weeks). Spring break and holiday weekends fill 8–12 weeks out. If you want a specific park in peak season, reserve early or plan a backup option.

Do big rigs really need 50-amp, or can they run on 30-amp? Class A motorhomes and large fifth wheels are designed for 50-amp and will struggle on 30-amp if you use multiple appliances. Smaller travel trailers can manage 30-amp with discipline. Check your RV's electrical panel and call the park to confirm amp availability at the specific site you want.

What happens to hookups in winter, and can I still camp in Texas? Most Texas RV parks operate year-round; hookups function in freezing temperatures. However, some northern Texas parks (Panhandle) experience occasional freeze events where water lines freeze. South and central Texas (San Antonio, Austin, Gulf Coast) rarely freeze. Confirm winter operations and heat availability if you're staying December–February.

Seller CTA

Full-hookup RV parks command the highest occupancy rates and premium nightly rates in Texas. A well-maintained park with full hookups at every site can sustain 75%+ occupancy year-round, even in off-season, because long-term residents and remote workers will pay the premium for comfort.

If you own an RV park with full-hookup infrastructure—or are considering acquiring one—now is the time. Demand outpaces supply across Texas. Jenna Reed is actively acquiring and operating parks with full-hookup infrastructure and proven occupancy. If you're ready to sell, let's talk about the value of your asset.

Ready to explore acquisition or sale options? Start here: /sell or learn more: how to sell your RV park in Texas.

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