Mountain West RV CAMPING GUIDE

RV camping in
Idaho

Idaho gives road travelers access to high-country roads, national park gateways and wide-open public lands. Use this guide to choose a region, check the season and open current campground results.

STATE GUIDEIDIdaho
BEST WINDOWMay to October; winter varies
GOOD FIT FORNational Park Gateways And Mountain Campgrounds
ROAD NOTEMountain passes and higher sites may open late.
WHERE TO START

Three RV camping
regions to explore.

These are broad trip-planning regions, not a ranking. Open the live searches to compare current availability, hookups, rig limits and reservation rules.

01

Sawtooth Mountains

A strong starting point for RV travelers looking for scenery, day-trip options and a range of campground styles.

Search public campgrounds ↗
02

Coeur d’Alene and the Panhandle

A strong starting point for RV travelers looking for scenery, day-trip options and a range of campground styles.

Search public campgrounds ↗
03

Snake River Plain

A strong starting point for RV travelers looking for scenery, day-trip options and a range of campground styles.

Search public campgrounds ↗
FIND A SITE IN ID

Search live inventory,
then verify the details.

Availability and operating seasons change. Use current sources and confirm access directly with the campground before departure.

BEFORE YOU ROLL IN

Idaho
trip-planning notes.

01

Match the site to the whole rig

Check total connected length, road width, turn radius, height limits and whether slides fit inside the designated pad.

02

Confirm seasonal access

Mountain, coastal and northern campgrounds may have limited seasons, weather closures or utility shutoffs.

03

Read the hookup details

“Electric” can mean 20, 30 or 50 amp. “Full hookup” should be verified for the specific site, not only the park.

04

Keep a backup stop

Save one alternate campground or overnight option along the route in case weather, traffic or mechanical delays change arrival time.