Best Apps for Finding Free Campsites in 2026
Finding free camping used to mean buying a laminated atlas and asking a stranger at a trailhead. Now you have a dozen apps, a handful of websites, and a Facebook thread telling you to try a Walmart parking lot. This guide cuts through all of it: apps, websites, and no-app overnight options, so you can find your best options and confirm local rules before you park for the night.
Last updated: May 2026. App pricing and policies verified as of publication. Confirm current pricing directly with each app before purchasing.
Which Free Camping App Should You Use First?
Start with the app that matches your situation tonight.
| Use Case | Best First App | Backup App | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Finding a free overnight stop tonight | RVParky | Google Maps | Fastest for small-town overnight options and rest stops |
| Finding dispersed camping on public land | Campendium | The Dyrt | Best for reviews, site notes, and public-land context |
| Checking remote off-grid spots | iOverlander | Gaia GPS | Useful for remote pins, road notes, and user-submitted updates |
| Planning without cell service | AllStays | Gaia GPS | Best when offline access matters |
| Checking old free campsite listings | Freecampsites.net | iOverlander | Useful for research, but verify before driving |
Free vs. Freemium: What You’re Actually Paying For
Most free camping apps are freemium, not free. The distinction matters when you’re on a budget or low on cell data. Here’s what the cost structure looks like across the tools covered in this guide. Pricing verified as of May 2026: confirm directly with each app before purchasing, as tiers and annual rates change.
| App / Tool | Cost | Free Tier Limits | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| RVParky | Free | Full access, no paywall | Overnight stops, small-town finds |
| Campendium | Free / Pro (verify current pricing) | Basic listings; Pro opens filter access | Dispersed camping, user reviews |
| The Dyrt | Free / $59.99/yr Pro | Free sites locked behind Pro tier | BLM/USFS boundary mapping |
| iOverlander | Free (app + web) | App limits to one state; web version has no limits | Off-grid, international travel |
| Freecampsites.net | Free | Full access | Quick pre-trip research from desktop |
| KampTrail | Free | Full access | Verified federal campsites only |
| AllStays | $34.99/yr (subscription) | Limited free tier; full offline access requires subscription | No-signal situations, dump stations |
| Gaia GPS | $59/yr | Free tier limited; layer stacking requires paid | Topo mapping, road-open verification |
RVParky: The Community’s Most Recommended Free Camping App
RVParky is free, with no subscription and no paywall. It covers campgrounds, overnight parking spots, dump stations, and rest areas: all in one map. Among experienced RVers, it’s the most consistently recommended app for finding overnight stops, especially in small towns where other apps come up empty.
The app runs on user-submitted and verified location data. It’s particularly strong for the kind of stops that don’t show up in recreation databases: city parks with overnight parking, fairgrounds, and municipal lots. One useful workflow is to pull up RVParky first when approaching an unfamiliar town late in the day, check what’s within 10 miles, then confirm with a quick call before committing.
RVParky quick facts:
- Cost: Free, no subscription
- Platform: iOS and Android
- Website: rvparky.com
- Covers: Campgrounds, free overnight spots, dump stations, rest areas
- Best for: En-route overnight stops, small-town finds, non-campground options
- Limitation: User-generated data; verify availability before arriving
RVParky doesn’t have the BLM boundary overlays of The Dyrt or the topographic detail of Gaia GPS. It’s not built for planning a week of dispersed camping on public land. It’s built for tonight: and it delivers.
Campendium: Best for Dispersed Camping Reviews

Campendium built its reputation on user-generated reviews of free dispersed camping on Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and National Forest land. The free tier gives you access to the listings. The Pro tier (now part of the Roadpass Pro bundle) adds filtering by site type, hookups, price, and cell signal. Verify current Pro pricing at campendium.com, as tiers have changed since Campendium was acquired by Roadtrippers.
The platform’s strength is also its limitation: it’s only as current as the people contributing to it. Reviews go stale. A listing that showed a lakeside spot three years ago may not mention the lake dried up in 2019. Cross-check recent reviews before driving an hour off route.
Campendium works best as a research tool before a trip, not a last-minute solution on the road. Use it to identify candidate spots in an area, read recent reviews, then confirm on a topo map before committing. If you plan to camp on BLM land, make sure you understand the current BLM camping rules before you set up.
Campendium quick facts:
- Cost: Free basic / Pro via Roadpass Pro subscription (verify at campendium.com)
- Platform: iOS, Android, web
- Best for: Dispersed camping research, reading detailed user reviews
- Limitation: User-generated; older reviews may be inaccurate
- Pro enables: Filters by price, hookups, cell signal, site type
The Dyrt: Best for Public Land Boundary Mapping

The Dyrt’s free version is solid for browsing established campgrounds. The reason to pay for Pro ($59.99/year) is the map layers: toggle on BLM and USFS (U.S. Forest Service) boundary overlays and you can see exactly which land is open for dispersed camping before you pull off the road.
The practical value: you’re in Colorado, surrounded by “Private Property” signs, and you don’t know where the public land starts. Pull up The Dyrt Pro, flip on the USFS layer, and the boundary lines appear on the map. That’s not a convenience feature: it’s what keeps you from camping illegally on someone’s ranch.
Filter immediately for “Free” and “Pets Allowed” (if applicable) to avoid scrolling through 40 paid options. The data volume is the app’s main friction point; the filters are what make it usable in the field.
The Dyrt quick facts:
- Cost: Free basic / $59.99/yr Pro
- Platform: iOS, Android, web
- Best for: Confirming legal access to dispersed camping areas
- Key feature: BLM and USFS boundary map overlays (Pro only)
- Limitation: Filtering required; free-site search locked behind Pro
iOverlander: Best for Off-Grid and International Travel

iOverlander is free on both the app and the web: but there’s a meaningful difference between them. The mobile app has historically limited free users to one state at a time (verify current free-tier limits in the app, as this may change). The web version at ioverlander.com gives you the full world map with no restrictions and no subscription. If you’re planning routes from a laptop, use the website. Save the app for in-field lookups when you need mobile access.
The listings include established campgrounds, random pull-offs, rest areas, and anything else a contributor has documented: domestically and internationally. It’s the go-to for Canada and Mexico travel where U.S.-centric apps fall short.
Data freshness is the known issue. Listings aren’t always current. A “quiet rest area” on the map may now be a truck stop running engines all night. Treat iOverlander as a lead generator, not a guarantee: and read the most recent comments on any listing before committing.
iOverlander quick facts:
- Cost: Free (app + web)
- Platform: iOS, Android, web (ioverlander.com)
- Best for: Off-grid travel, international routes (Canada, Mexico)
- Key tip: Use the website for full world map; app limits to one state free
- Limitation: Listings are user-generated and not always current
iOverlander vs The Dyrt: Which Is Better for Free Camping?
This is one of the most common questions in RV forums, and the answer depends on what you’re trying to do.
iOverlander is the stronger choice for off-grid and international travel. Its world map coverage is unmatched, and the web version is completely free with no state restrictions. The Dyrt is the stronger choice for confirming legal access to dispersed camping areas in the U.S. Its BLM and USFS boundary overlays answer the question that iOverlander can’t: is this actually public land?
Where iOverlander wins: international coverage (Canada, Mexico, Central America), completely free web access, no subscription required for full functionality on desktop.
Where The Dyrt wins: public land boundary verification, structured campground reviews with photos, offline map downloads (Pro), and integration with campground booking.
If you only camp domestically on public land, The Dyrt Pro ($59.99/year) gives you more decision-critical information. If you travel internationally or want a zero-cost option, iOverlander’s web version is the better starting point. Many RVers use both: The Dyrt for boundary verification and iOverlander for obscure pull-offs and water sources that The Dyrt doesn’t list.
Freecampsites.net: The Web-Based Option Worth Bookmarking
Freecampsites.net is not an app: it’s a website, and that’s not a knock against it. For pre-trip research from a desktop or tablet, it’s one of the cleaner tools available. The site aggregates free and low-cost camping locations across the U.S. with user reviews, photos, and GPS coordinates. No account required to search. No paywall.
The data skews toward established dispersed spots on BLM, National Forest, and state land. It doesn’t cover the same range of urban overnight stops that RVParky does. Use both: Freecampsites.net for trip planning where you know you’ll be on public land, RVParky for en-route stops in unfamiliar towns.
Freecampsites.net quick facts:
- Cost: Free
- Platform: Web (freecampsites.net)
- Best for: Desktop trip planning, BLM and National Forest spots
- Limitation: Web-only; limited urban/overnight parking coverage
KampTrail: Verified Federal Data, No Subscription

Full disclosure: I built KampTrail. After 35 years of RVing across 47 states, I got tired of apps sending me to coordinates that landed in the middle of a lake or listed campsites that had been closed for two seasons. So I went to the primary source.
KampTrail pulls directly from the Recreation.gov RIDB API: the federal government’s own campsite database. Based on the RIDB API data pull used at publication (March 2026), the app indexed approximately 4,400 federal campsites and 2,700 water stations. These counts reflect what was in the federal database at that time and will change as the RIDB is updated.
What it doesn’t do: cover the full range of dispersed camping options, user-reviewed spots, or overnight parking in commercial locations. KampTrail is purpose-built for federal land accuracy. It’s the right tool when you need to know exactly what’s on BLM or National Forest land, not what someone thought was there in 2022.
KampTrail quick facts:
- Cost: Free
- Data source: Recreation.gov RIDB API (federal government)
- Best for: Verified federal campsite locations, water station mapping
- Includes: Cell tower overlays, water station locations
- Limitation: Federal sites only; no dispersed camping or commercial overnight coverage
AllStays Camp & RV: One-Time Purchase, Full Offline Access

AllStays moved to a subscription model in 2022 after being sold to new ownership. As of May 2026, pricing is $34.99/year (with monthly and quarterly options also available). Verify current pricing at allstays.com or in your app store. The app downloads the full database to your device, so it works offline: which matters when you’re 40 miles from cell service and need to find a dump station or a county park that doesn’t show up in Google. For a deeper look at everything AllStays covers, see our full AllStays Camp and RV review.
The interface is dated. The reviews aren’t as fresh as The Dyrt’s. But for offline reliability and breadth of location types: campgrounds, dump stations, truck stops, rest areas, Walmarts: nothing else in this list matches AllStays for sheer variety of stop types in a single app.
AllStays quick facts:
- Cost: $34.99/yr subscription (verify current pricing at allstays.com)
- Platform: iOS and Android
- Best for: No-signal situations, dump station finding, broad location types
- Key feature: Full offline access after download
- Limitation: Older interface; reviews less current than The Dyrt
Gaia GPS: For Serious Land Navigation

Gaia GPS ($59/year) is not a campsite finder. It’s a mapping engine. If you open it expecting a list of spots to sleep, you’ll be frustrated. If you understand what it actually does, it’s the most powerful tool in this lineup for finding legal, unmapped dispersed camping.
The layer-stacking workflow is what sets it apart. Stack the Public Land layer (which land is open) on top of the USFS Motor Vehicle Use Map, or MVUM (which roads are open to vehicles) on top of satellite imagery (what the terrain actually looks like). That combination answers the three questions that matter for dispersed camping: Is this public land? Can I drive there? Is there a flat clearing for my rig?
Download offline maps before you leave cell range. Once you’re in the mountains, the cloud doesn’t exist.
Gaia GPS quick facts:
- Cost: $59/year
- Platform: iOS, Android, web
- Best for: Experienced RVers finding unmapped dispersed spots, road-open verification
- Key feature: Topo, BLM, and USFS MVUM layer stacking
- Limitation: Steep learning curve; not a beginner tool
Best Free Camping App for BLM and National Forest Land
If your primary camping is on BLM or National Forest land, three tools cover different parts of the workflow.
For boundary verification, The Dyrt Pro ($59.99/year) is the most practical option. Its BLM and USFS boundary overlays show exactly where public land starts and private land ends. That’s the question that matters most when you’re pulling off a dirt road in the West.
For verified campsite data on federal land, KampTrail pulls directly from the Recreation.gov RIDB API. It won’t show you user-reviewed dispersed spots, but every listing it does show is sourced from the government’s own database.
For detailed terrain assessment and road-open verification, Gaia GPS ($59/year) is the power tool. Stack the MVUM layer on top of public land boundaries and satellite imagery, and you can evaluate a potential site without driving to it first.
Campendium fills the gap between these tools with user-submitted reviews of specific dispersed spots on public land. Use it to read firsthand accounts of access roads, site conditions, and cell signal before committing to a location. Before you head out to BLM land anywhere in the West, review the latest BLM dispersed camping rules to make sure your stay is compliant.
Best Free Camping App When You Have No Cell Signal
If you camp where cell service drops to zero, only two tools in this guide work reliably offline.
AllStays ($34.99/year) downloads its entire database to your device. Once cached, you have access to campgrounds, dump stations, truck stops, rest areas, and more with no connection required.
Gaia GPS ($59/year) lets you download full topographic and satellite map tiles for offline use. Pre-download the region you’re heading to before you leave cell range. Once you’re off-grid, you can still stack layers, check terrain, and navigate roads without any data connection.
The Dyrt Pro also offers offline map downloads, but its offline functionality is more limited than AllStays or Gaia GPS for deep backcountry use. For a broader look at navigation tools that work without cell service, see our guide to the best free RV GPS apps.
Is FreeRoam Still Useful in 2026?
No. FreeRoam is no longer available. The service shut down and the app was removed from app stores. If you see it recommended in an older article or forum post, that information is outdated.
FreeRoam was popular for its clean interface and integrated trip-planning tools, but the service ceased operations and the app is no longer available for download. Any bookmarked links to FreeRoam will return dead pages.
KampTrail was built in part to fill the gap FreeRoam left, using verified federal campsite data from the Recreation.gov RIDB API instead of user-submitted listings. For the user-submitted coverage that FreeRoam also provided, Campendium and iOverlander are the closest alternatives still operating.
Beyond Apps: Free Overnight Parking Options That Don’t Require a Download
The best free camping isn’t always on a map. Experienced RVers know a short list of reliable overnight options that don’t require an app subscription: just common sense and a phone call before you pull in. These are the options that show up in every RV community discussion about free overnight parking.
Cracker Barrel
Cracker Barrel has historically been one of the most commonly cited free overnight options among highway travelers, and many locations still accommodate self-contained RVs for a single night. That said, Cracker Barrel has not published a formal, company-wide overnight RV policy. Individual store managers make their own call, and local ordinances frequently override any informal accommodation. Call the specific location before you arrive. Don’t assume.
Love’s, Pilot, and Flying J Truck Stops
Truck stops are built for oversized vehicles, which makes them naturally suited for RVs. Love’s and Pilot/Flying J are widely reported by RVers to accept overnight parking, and their lots are sized for semis so slideouts are rarely a problem. Neither chain publishes a formal RV overnight policy, so actual availability varies by location and local ordinance. The practical upside is real: most locations have restrooms, showers, laundry, and a store. Not scenic, but functional and well-lit. Love’s has its own app with fuel discounts if you stop regularly.
Casinos
Many casinos: particularly tribal casinos: welcome RV overnight parking. Some charge a small fee; some offer free dry camping to draw foot traffic inside. A few have full hookup RV parks on-site. Call ahead: policies vary widely by property. Casino parking lots tend to be large, well-lit, and secure.
Fairgrounds
County and state fairgrounds often allow RV overnight parking during non-event periods, sometimes with electrical hookups, for a modest fee or free. Outside of fair season, these lots are empty and the management is often open to arrangements. Worth a call when you’re passing through rural areas.
Interstate Rest Areas
Rest areas are governed by federal highway policy, but overnight parking rules are set state by state. Some states explicitly allow it; others prohibit stays longer than a few hours. Check your route states in advance by searching for “[state name] rest area overnight parking rules” or checking your state’s Department of Transportation website directly. One practical note: rest area parking can be tight for large rigs with extended slideouts: factor that into your approach before you commit to pulling in at night.
Walmart
Some Walmart locations allow overnight RV parking, but availability depends on the individual store and local ordinances. Don’t assume: confirm with the store manager when you arrive. For a state-by-state breakdown of what to expect, see our Walmart overnight RV parking guide.
Harvest Hosts
Harvest Hosts is not free: as of May 2026, a Classic membership is $99/year: but it earns its place here because the per-night value can be significant for frequent travelers. Members park overnight at wineries, breweries, farms, and attractions across North America. There’s no formal purchase requirement, though buying something from the host is customary and expected. Verify current membership pricing at harvesthosts.com before joining; rates and tier structures change.
Decision Framework: Which Option Fits Your Situation
Not every camping situation calls for the same tool. Use this framework to match your situation to the right starting point.
| Your Situation | Start Here | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Need a spot tonight, unfamiliar town | RVParky | Best coverage of non-campground overnight options |
| Planning dispersed camping trip next week | Freecampsites.net + Campendium | Best combination for desktop research with user reviews |
| Need to confirm that land is legally open to camp | The Dyrt Pro | BLM and USFS boundary overlays answer this directly |
| Traveling internationally or to Canada/Mexico | iOverlander (web) | Only tool in this list with strong international coverage |
| No cell signal, need offline backup | AllStays + Gaia GPS (pre-downloaded) | Both work fully offline once maps are cached |
| Want verified federal sites only, no guessing | KampTrail or Recreation.gov | Government-sourced data; no user-submitted inaccuracies |
| Driving a highway corridor overnight | Cracker Barrel / Love’s / truck stops | Consistent availability; no app needed, just call ahead |
| Want overnight stops with character (farms, wineries) | Harvest Hosts | Unique hosts, membership-based, ~$99/yr |
| Finding unmapped dispersed spots off-grid | Gaia GPS | Topo + MVUM layers find spots other apps don’t list |
The Golden Rule of Free Camping
Free spots stay free only as long as the people using them treat them that way. That means packing out everything you packed in, keeping generator hours reasonable, and leaving the spot in better shape than you found it. The Leave No Trace principles aren’t just trail etiquette: they’re the reason these spots stay open.
The same applies to the non-campground options. Running a generator in a Cracker Barrel parking lot, popping slides out at a truck stop, or staying multiple nights somewhere that offered you one: these are the behaviors that get businesses to stop allowing RVs. Be a good guest, and the options stay open for everyone behind you.
Frequently Asked Questions