国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

A couple toasts right outside of their tent in front of a campfire.
Yes, you can score an amazing campsite at the last minute this summer if you know where to look. (Photo: Getty/Patchareeporn Sakoolchai)

Where to Find a Last-Minute Campground This Summer

From campgrounds that only accept bookings two weeks out to websites with immediate inventory, we鈥檝e got solutions for late planners

Published: 
A couple toasts right outside of their tent in front of a campfire.
(Photo: Getty/Patchareeporn Sakoolchai)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

My favorite place to camp is a spot in California鈥檚 eastern Sierra Nevada, outside the town of Mammoth Lakes, called the Inn at Benton Hot Springs. The small hotel has a private campground with 12 sites out back, and each comes with its own mineral springs-fed hot tub. You can pitch a tent or park your van on a spacious plot with views of the mountains and then soak things in.

But like all dreamy and incredibly popular campgrounds, securing a site here requires a heavy dose of luck or major advance planning. If you can only make it on a weekend, you鈥檇 better book it a year out.

At Benton Hot Springs, 40 miles north of Bishop, California, the dozen campsites each have a private hot-springs-fed tub, a fire pit, and a picnic table. Views of the eastern Sierra also included.聽
At Benton Hot Springs, 40 miles north of Bishop, California, the dozen campsites each have a private hot-springs-fed tub, a fire pit, and a picnic table. Views of the eastern Sierra also included.聽聽(Photo: Courtesy Benton Hot Springs))

It wasn鈥檛 always this hard. Pre-COVID you could get a spot at Benton relatively easily鈥攖hey didn鈥檛 take online bookings, so you had to call the front desk and ask when they had a campsite available. But then word got out (I have myself to blame, in part, for that, because I鈥檝e written about it in travel stories), and during the pandemic, the inn introduced an online reservation system, which allows bookings up to a year in advance. So fully booked it now is.

These days, coveted campsites at state parks, national parks, and private campgrounds in popular destinations fill up six months to a year ahead of peak season (read: summer). According to the 2024 Camping Report by the , a campsite aggregator, it was four times harder to get a campsite in 2023 than it was in 2019, with nearly half of all campers reporting difficulty booking a site because campgrounds were sold out. All that data does not bode well for the coming months.

If you鈥檙e like me, maybe you鈥檙e thinking: Sure, travel in general requires advance planning, but camping? That鈥檚 something you should be able to do on the spur of the moment.

So I researched how to troubleshoot this, and, happily, found campgrounds that actually cater to last-minute bookings, as well as a new state law that has made the whole camping-reservation process more considerate. I also provide website recommendations that facilitate the complicated process of looking and booking, and best practices that will increase your chances of snagging a site you鈥檙e psyched about. All of which is to say: you will still have to put some thought into things. But I hope this helps.

Two Notable Campgrounds That Accommodate Last-Minute Bookings

Campfire Ranch, Colorado

A group of campers are seated around a fire at Campfire Ranch in Colorado.
The camping season at Campfire Ranch is open from May 17 to October 6, 2024. (Photo: Courtesy Trent Bona)

In Almont, Colorado, 20 miles south of Crested Butte, the private 16-site campground of (mentioned in this year鈥檚 国产吃瓜黑料 Travel Awards) only allows reservations two weeks in advance.

鈥淚 kept inviting friends on camping trips, and none of them would make a commitment to go with me if I made the reservation six months ahead of time,鈥 says Sam Degenhard, its founder and CEO. 鈥淚鈥檇 get a lot of wishy-washy answers, but then two weeks out, everyone wanted to go. That鈥檚 where the idea came from.鈥

When Campfire Ranch first opened in June 2020, Degenhard opted to implement a policy so campers couldn鈥檛 make a reservation until two weeks out. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have any problems filling campsites, and people loved it,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e heard from folks right away who were like, 鈥業 thought I鈥檇 never find a campsite.鈥 That 14-day booking policy became our norm and what a lot of our customers know us for.鈥 (Campfire Ranch does offer advanced booking six months out for groups reserving three or more campsites.)

The campground has staff on-site, rents gear, and offers amenities like free firewood, a hand with tent setup, Wi-Fi, and welcome beverages and Sunday-morning pancake breakfasts. 鈥淥ur whole mission is about helping people get into the outdoors, meet community, and learn the ropes of camping. We want to be a place where folks can plan at the last minute and be rewarded for that, not penalized,鈥 Degenhard says.

Cost: From $67

Yosemite National Park, California

Two girls, one lazing on a hammock, hang out at their campsite in Yosemite National Park.
Yosemite, the sixth most visited national park, has over 1,500 campsites and can host up to 9,600 campers a night. That said, most book up five months in advance, so knowing which take last-minute reservations is key. (Photo: Getty/Ezra Shaw)

Most campgrounds within Yosemite open for reservations five months out鈥攁nd can be gobbled up here seconds after they鈥檙e released. But , including Bridalveil Creek, Crane Flat, Tamarack Flat, and White Wolf, are released just two weeks in advance from July to mid-October. Bridalveil Creek campground has 110 sites about 45 minutes from Yosemite Valley and close to hiking trailheads along Glacier Point Road. At Crane Flat, you鈥檒l find 151 sites near giant sequoias, while 52-site Tamarack Flat and 74-site White Wolf are located along Tioga Road, with closer access to climbing and hiking in the Tuolumne Meadows area, which you can explore on this .

聽(Photo: Courtesy Gaia GPS)

Cost: $24 to $36

鈥淩esponsible Reservations鈥 in California Should Open Up More Sites

In January, California governor Gavin Newsom signed a law that aims to reduce the number of no-shows at campsites around the state. Called AB 618, the bill requires California State Parks to modify its , making it easier for campers to cancel a reservation and penalizing those who book sites and don鈥檛 show up.

The bill also means a lottery system will be set up for the state鈥檚 most coveted campgrounds, like Big Sur’s Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park. Those changes are in effect now.

Spectacular scenery at Julia Pfeiffer Burnes State Park鈥攁 turquoise cove of the Pacific, cliffs, and an 80-foot-high waterfall鈥攐n the Big Sur coast makes this an incredibly popular camping destination.
With spectacular scenery like this, it鈥檚 easy to see why Julia Pfeiffer Burnes State Park is an incredibly attractive destination for outdoors people. However, its position on the Big Sur coast means landslides can wash out access roads, and if it is open, there are only two campsites.聽(Photo: Courtesy Sierra Ducatt)

鈥淐alifornia鈥檚 public parks and beaches are treasures that should be enjoyed by all Californians, and our outdated reservation system has led to a situation where many campsites are left empty,鈥 said Assembly member Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, who introduced AB 618 to promote what she calls 鈥渞esponsible reservation practices.鈥

Websites That Make Last-Minute Hunting Easier

Many camping websites have added features that let you view campgrounds near you offering availability tonight, this weekend, or other dates in the near future. Here are a few I recommend.

On , you鈥檒l see tabs with information on immediate availability and future dates, a huge perk about this booking site. Hipcamp also keeps up with new camping areas, often rented out by private landowners. It added tens of thousands of new sites last year, nearly doubling the amount of available sites from the year prior.

, the booking platform for camping at all national parks, BLM lands, and U.S. Forest Service sites, also lists campgrounds with availability for the immediate weekend.

and allow you to set up text alerts for cancellations at select campgrounds for your preferred dates, so you can try to grab a spot immediately when one frees up.

Finally, , an RV- and campground-booking site, pulls real-time availability from over 100,000 campgrounds around the country and lets you book them instantly or set up reservation alerts.

Best Practices That Will Increase Your Odds

Sun strikes Guitar Lake and the surrounding Sierra, and two campers outside of their tents prepare for the day.
For true freedom from the camping crowds, dispersed sites, like these at Guitar Lake, California, are the way to go. (Photo: Courtesy Julia Renn)

Consider these tested tips:

  • Check out first-come, first-served properties, as well as free dispersed camping on public lands. (For the latter, can help you find your way on federal and state forest roads and trails, and point out markers en route so you don鈥檛 get lost.) Alas, even though these spots are still great options for spontaneous campers, they鈥檙e becoming increasingly more crowded these days, too. The Dyrt鈥檚 Camping Report found that first-come, first-served sites were twice as likely to be full in 2023 than they were in 2019. Not sure where to start? I wrote about the best dispersed campsite in every state, and you can find some real gems here, many of which are still relatively unknown.
  • Choose sites that are farther away from major population centers. In California, for example, anything near the Bay Area fills up immediately, but if you鈥檙e willing to drive farther north, places like Humboldt Redwood State Park or Lava Beds National Monument usually have better availability.
  • Look at campgrounds that are stretching their peak summer season and staying open into fall and even winter. More campgrounds are staying open later to accommodate the demand. For example, the four campgrounds within , in North Carolina, used to close for the season in September or October, but two of them now stay open until late November and the other two are open year-round.
  • Camp midweek or during the off-seasons. Both promise more space and cheaper rates.
  • Pivot to places with shorter booking windows. Most state park campgrounds across the country open reservations six months to a year in advance鈥攁nd the popular sites fill up early. But campgrounds at and have narrower booking windows, allowing reservations four months and three months out, respectively. That means you can still nab a campsite closer to your date of travel.

As for the very-hard-to-book campsites at Benton Hot Springs, I鈥檒l continue to try and reserve my favorite a whopping 12 months out. Because some camping trips are worth any amount of advance planning. Though I did get two tips from Benton manager Chris Greer that I plan to use: 鈥淭he best time to look for a cancellation is on a Wednesday, when most people cancel their weekend booking. And give us a call, we might just be able to help you out.鈥

The author seated in a camp chair with an open book next to her daughter at a California campsite
The author in her happy place: a campsite with her family (Photo: Courtesy Megan Michelson)

Contributing editor Megan Michelson spends about 40 nights a year camping鈥攊n a van, a tent, or a sleeping bag under the stars.

Lead Photo: Getty/Patchareeporn Sakoolchai

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online