New York Campground Fees, Hookups & Reservations
No fee data in the federal directory. We report the reservable-vs-first-come split by agency; nightly fees and hookup specifics live on each campground's Recreation.gov page. Federal coverage only.
New York has seven federal campgrounds, all of which operate on a reservations-based system through Recreation.gov. Unlike some states that maintain a mix of first-come, first-served and reservable sites, all New York federal campgrounds require advance booking. Campers should plan ahead and reserve their desired dates through Recreation.gov to secure a spot.
Fees and RV hookup availability vary significantly among these seven facilities and are not listed in the federal directory. Prospective campers must visit each individual campground's Recreation.gov page to confirm current pricing, the types of hookups available (such as water, electric, or sewer), and any other site-specific amenities or restrictions. This ensures accurate information for planning purposes.

Where fees and hookups actually live
The federal directory tracks who manages a campground, how many sites it has and whether it's reservable — but not nightly fees or RV hookups, which differ site to site. For those, open the campground's Recreation.gov page, where current fees, hookup types and the reservation window are listed.
| Managing agency | Reservable | First-come |
|---|---|---|
| National Park Service | 6 | 0 |
| U.S. Forest Service | 1 | 0 |
Common questions
Do New York federal campgrounds have RV hookups?
Some do and some don't — hookup availability isn't in the federal directory data, so check each campground's Recreation.gov page for water, electric and sewer details.
How much does it cost to camp?
Fees vary by facility and aren't part of the federal export, so we don't quote a price. Each Recreation.gov facility page shows its current nightly fee.
All New York federal campgrounds → · Compare agencies →
Reservable flags from the federal RIDB export, verified June 2026. How we compile this.