Big-Rig Friendly Campgrounds in Georgia (Scored 1–10)
- How to read the Big-Rig Score
- 9–10 Rolls right in
- 7–8.5 Comfortable
- 5–6.5 Workable, plan ahead
- 3–4.5 Tight
- 1–2.5 Not recommended
By Calvin Whitlock · Last updated June 11, 2026 · How we score
TL;DR: Georgia splits into two big-rig worlds — flat south/coastal corridors where length and maneuvering decide the score, and the North Georgia mountains where grade suddenly matters. These 11 campgrounds score highest on the Big-Rig Standard™ — a uniform 1–10 score built from eight data points. Albany RV Resort (9.5) leads with 120-foot cement pull-throughs; Eagles Roost in Lake Park (9.0) and Southern Retreat in Brunswick (9.0) are the best I-75 and I-95 overnights; Stone Mountain Park Campground (6.0) is the honest "workable with planning" pick — great location, tight wooded loops.
Every campground below is scored the same way, on the same eight data points, so a 9 here means the same thing as a 9 in Florida or Oregon. For what each data point means and how the score is calculated, see Big-Rig Friendly, Defined.
How to read the score: 9.0–10 = rolls right in · 7.0–8.5 = big-rig comfortable · 5.0–6.5 = workable with planning. Cells marked (inferred) are derived from terrain and road data, not published specs — confirm with the park and help us sharpen them via the correction link at the bottom.
The 11 highest-scoring big-rig campgrounds in Georgia
1. Albany RV Resort — Albany

The most generous big-rig footprint in the state: 120 ft pull-through sites on 20 × 40 ft level cement patios, with a stated 115 ft max RV length — that's a 45-foot Class A plus a toad with room left over, no unhitching. 93 full-hookup sites, 20/30/50-amp, flat southwest-Georgia terrain. If you want the easiest arrival in Georgia, this is it.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 115 ft (120 ft pull-throughs) |
| Turn radius / entry | Wide — 120 ft pull-throughs, level cement patios (inferred — generous) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Pull-through (120 ft) |
| Low-clearance warnings | None (inferred — open layout) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — Albany / US-19 / Liberty Expy corridor; propane on-site (verified Jun 2026 — park lists propane) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat southwest Georgia |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Cement patio · 20/30/50-amp full hookups |
1202 Liberty Expy E, Albany, GA 31705 · (229) 431-2229 (verified Jun 2026)
2. Eagles Roost RV Resort — Lake Park

The best I-75 overnight entering or leaving the state — I-75 Exit 5, five miles from the Florida line, with deluxe concrete pull-through sites and quick highway on/off. 130 sites, 30/50-amp full hookups, on-site propane. Drive in tired, fuel off the exit, sleep, roll out. Big oak shade is a plus; confirm your specific pull-through length when towing.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 45 ft+ (inferred — deluxe concrete pull-throughs) |
| Turn radius / entry | Easy in/out off I-75 Exit 5 (inferred — adequate) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Pull-through (deluxe) and patio sites |
| Low-clearance warnings | Mature oak canopy on some sites — check limbs over your roofline (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-75 Exit 5 truck-stop corridor; propane on-site (inferred — strong corridor) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat south Georgia |
| Overnight allowed | Yes — ideal one-night stop |
| Surface / power | Concrete pads · 30/50-amp full hookups |
5465 Mill Store Rd, Lake Park, GA 31636 · (229) 559-5192 (verified Jun 2026)
3. Southern Retreat RV Park — Brunswick

The best I-95 overnight on the Georgia coast. Full-hookup pull-through sites up to 90 ft long — drive in, drive out, no backing — with 30/50-amp, water, sewer, Wi-Fi, and cable at every site. Off I-95 near the Georgia/Florida coastal stretch. A no-drama coastal stop for the longest rigs.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | Up to 90 ft pad (rig + toad) |
| Turn radius / entry | Pull-through layout; easy in/out (inferred — generous) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Pull-through (up to 90 ft) |
| Low-clearance warnings | Check coastal-pine canopy on interior rows (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-95 / US-17 Brunswick corridor; propane on-site (inferred — strong corridor) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat coastal plain |
| Overnight allowed | Yes — ideal one-night stop |
| Surface / power | Full hookups · 30/50-amp, water + sewer |
7445 Blythe Island Hwy, Brunswick, GA 31523 · (912) 261-1025 (verified Jun 2026)
4. Coastal Georgia RV Resort — Brunswick

The most interstate-convenient coastal pick — I-95 Exit 29, concrete sites, 67 pull-throughs, 115 sites total. Stated 45 ft max, but the park is specific about which rows fit the biggest rigs: the 200 row handles 75-footers for swing room entering, and the 800 row (65–70 ft) gives the best swing room exiting. Ask for those by name when you book a 45-footer with a toad.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 45 ft (200 row fits 75 ft; 800 row 65–70 ft) |
| Turn radius / entry | Good swing room on 200/800 rows; tighter elsewhere (verified Jun 2026 — park's own row guidance) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | 67 pull-through + back-in |
| Low-clearance warnings | None (inferred — open coastal layout) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-95 Exit 29 Brunswick corridor (inferred — strong corridor) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat coastal plain |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Concrete · 20/30/50-amp full hookups |
287 S Port Pkwy, Brunswick, GA 31523 · (912) 264-3869 (verified Jun 2026)
5. CreekFire RV Resort — Savannah

A modern resort minutes off I-95 and close to historic Savannah, with cement-slab pull-through sites described as spacious for a 45-foot rig pulling a toad and 20/30/50-amp full hookups. Both pull-through and back-in available; surfaces are a mix of concrete and gravel, so request a concrete pull-through. Strong amenities make it a destination, not just an overnight.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 45 ft+ (cement pull-throughs sized for 45 ft + toad) |
| Turn radius / entry | Spacious pull-throughs; mixed concrete/gravel rows (verified Jun 2026 — reviews + park) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Both — request concrete pull-through |
| Low-clearance warnings | None (inferred — open modern layout) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-95 / Savannah Fort Argyle Rd corridor (inferred) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat coastal plain |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Concrete (some gravel) · 20/30/50-amp full hookups |
275 Fort Argyle Rd, Savannah, GA 31419 · (912) 897-2855 (verified Jun 2026)
6. Crossing Creeks RV Resort & Spa — Blairsville

A 100-acre luxury resort in the North Georgia mountains with large concrete pads accommodating rigs up to 45 feet, 20/30/50-amp full hookups, and creekside premium lots. It welcomes Class A, B, and C motorhomes and fifth wheels explicitly. The score holds at 8.0 rather than higher because the mountain approach carries real grade — beautiful destination, but plan your climb and brakes, especially towing.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | Up to 45 ft |
| Turn radius / entry | Large concrete pads on 100 acres (inferred — generous) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Both (inferred — confirm loop) |
| Low-clearance warnings | Mountain tree canopy — check limbs (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — Blairsville / US-19 / US-129 (inferred) |
| Grade on approach | Mountain grade — North Georgia. Plan the climb/descent; use low gear towing (inferred — conservative flag) |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Large concrete pads · 20/30/50-amp full hookups |
136 Mountain Creek Rd, Blairsville, GA 30512 · (706) 835-1111 (verified Jun 2026)
7. Twin Oaks RV Park — Elko

A clean, quiet I-75 mid-state stop between Macon and the Florida line, explicitly big-rig friendly with easy access for larger RVs and tow vehicles. Level, roomy full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and electric, plus on-site propane. Confirm pull-through and 50-amp on your specific site; specs vary by row.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 45 ft (inferred — "big-rig friendly," level roomy sites) |
| Turn radius / entry | Level, roomy sites; easy access for rig + toad (verified Jun 2026 — park language) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Both (inferred — confirm) |
| Low-clearance warnings | Shade trees on some rows — check limbs (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-75 Elko/Perry corridor; propane on-site (inferred — strong corridor) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat central Georgia |
| Overnight allowed | Yes — good one-night stop |
| Surface / power | Full hookups · confirm 50-amp on site (inferred) |
305 GA-26, Elko, GA 31025 · (478) 987-9361 (verified Jun 2026)
8. Tifton RV Park I-75 — Tifton

A reliable I-75 Exit 61 stop, formerly the Tifton KOA, with good-size grassy pull-through sites with concrete patios, full hookups (30/50/120-amp), and on-site propane, store, and RV parts. 55 pull-throughs out of 77 sites — easy in, easy out, halfway between Atlanta and Orlando. The grassy (vs. all-concrete) pads keep it at 8.0.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 45 ft (inferred — spacious pull-throughs) |
| Turn radius / entry | Easy in/out off I-75 Exit 61 (inferred — adequate) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | 55 pull-through (concrete patio) + back-in |
| Low-clearance warnings | None (inferred — open layout) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-75 Exit 61 Tifton corridor; propane on-site (inferred — strong corridor) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat south Georgia |
| Overnight allowed | Yes — ideal one-night stop |
| Surface / power | Grass pad + concrete patio · 30/50-amp full hookups |
4632 Union Rd, Tifton, GA 31794 · (229) 386-8441 (verified Jun 2026)
9. Talona Ridge RV Resort — East Ellijay

A mountain-view resort with genuinely long sites — 45 to 100 feet, 20–25 ft wide, paved — plus oversized concrete pads and full hookups, a heated pool, and hot tub. On length and pad, it's excellent; the score sits at 7.5 because it's in the North Georgia mountains (East Ellijay), so the approach carries grade and the resort mixes pull-through and back-in sites. Request a pull-through in the Falcon Ridge section.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | Up to 100 ft site length (45–100 ft, 20–25 ft wide) |
| Turn radius / entry | Paved sites; mix of pull-through and back-in (verified Jun 2026 — site spec) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Both — pull-throughs in Falcon Ridge |
| Low-clearance warnings | Mountain tree canopy — check limbs (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — Ellijay / GA-515 corridor (inferred) |
| Grade on approach | Mountain grade — North Georgia foothills. Plan the climb/descent (inferred — conservative flag) |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Oversized concrete / paved · 30/50-amp full hookups |
723 Highland Pkwy, East Ellijay, GA 30540 · (706) 636-2267 (verified Jun 2026)
10. Spacious Skies Savannah Oaks — Richmond Hill

A shaded Ogeechee-River park under 2 miles from I-95, minutes from Savannah, with pull-through and back-in full-hookup sites (30/50-amp). It earns the location and the 50-amp concrete sites — but it's an older property where reviewers report the non-concrete rows are gravel and uneven, and the Spanish-moss oak canopy is heavy. Ask specifically for a 50-amp concrete pull-through and watch your roofline.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | 40–45 ft (inferred — confirm pull-through length) |
| Turn radius / entry | Established park; some rows tight under oaks (verified Jun 2026 — guest reviews) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Both — request 50-amp concrete pull-through |
| Low-clearance warnings | Heavy Spanish-moss oak canopy — check limbs over 13'6" roofline (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — I-95 Richmond Hill corridor (inferred) |
| Grade on approach | None — flat coastal plain |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | 50-amp sites concrete; others gravel · 30/50-amp full hookups |
805 Fort Argyle Rd, Savannah, GA 31419 · (912) 748-4000 (verified Jun 2026)
11. Stone Mountain Park Campground — Stone Mountain

The honest one — and the best metro-Atlanta location on this list, inside Stone Mountain Park itself. It has 250 full/partial-hookup sites and bigger rigs do stay here, but the trade-offs are real: closely spaced sites, uneven/unlevel pads, and paved loop roads in poor repair (tree roots, potholes), all under heavy woods. Reviewers note some loops are far more big-rig friendly than others, and at least one paid-for 50-amp site delivered only 30-amp. You're here for the park and the city, not the maneuvering — call ahead, ask for a level paved big-rig loop, and confirm working 50-amp.
| Data point | Value |
|---|---|
| Max rig length | ~38–40 ft realistic on the roomier loops (inferred — confirm with park) |
| Turn radius / entry | Tight loops, root-heaved/pothole roads; some loops better than others (verified Jun 2026 — guest reviews) |
| Pull-through vs. back-in | Mostly back-in; loops vary |
| Low-clearance warnings | Heavily wooded — low limbs over many sites; check roofline (inferred — caution) |
| Fuel within 10 mi | Diesel + propane — US-78 / Atlanta metro (inferred — strong metro) |
| Grade on approach | Rolling; mostly mild — flat-to-gentle metro terrain (inferred) |
| Overnight allowed | Yes |
| Surface / power | Paved (poor repair) · 30/50-amp; confirm working 50-amp on site (verified Jun 2026 — review reports 50-amp failures) |
4003 Stonewall Jackson Dr, Stone Mountain, GA 30083 · (770) 498-5710 (verified Jun 2026)
How we scored these
Every campground is scored on the Big-Rig Standard™: a weighted 1–10 composite of length capacity (30%), site type & power (20%), maneuverability (20%), clearance & grade (15%), fuel & services within 10 mi (10%), and stay flexibility (5%).
Georgia is the first state on this directory where grade actually moves the score. The south and coastal corridors (Albany, the I-75 stops, the Brunswick and Savannah coast) are flat, so length and maneuvering decide the ranking exactly as they do in Florida. But the North Georgia mountain picks (Blairsville, East Ellijay) carry genuine grade on the approach — we hold those at 8.0/7.5 and flag the climb conservatively rather than reassure. Site dimensions, amp service, pad surface, pull-through counts, and hookups are sourced from park listings (June 2026). Fuel proximity, clearance, and grade are inferred from terrain and the surrounding road network and are marked (inferred) in each table. If you've stayed at one of these and the data's off, the Submit a correction link below feeds straight into the next update.
How this list was made: We screened Georgia RV parks for published big-rig specs (pad length, pull-through availability, 50-amp full hookups, concrete pads), scored each on the six-factor Big-Rig Standard™, and cross-checked maneuvering and road-condition notes against guest reviews on Campendium, RV LIFE, Good Sam, and Yelp. Research and drafting were AI-assisted and human-reviewed. We have not personally stayed at every park on this list — where a score rests on inference rather than a published spec or a guest report, the cell is marked (inferred), and safety-relevant fields (clearance, grade) are kept conservative. No park paid for placement or for its score.
Sources
- Park specifications: official listings for Albany RV Resort, Eagles Roost RV Resort, Southern Retreat RV Park, Coastal Georgia RV Resort, CreekFire RV Resort, Crossing Creeks RV Resort, Twin Oaks RV Park, Tifton RV Park I-75, Talona Ridge RV Resort, Spacious Skies Savannah Oaks, and Stone Mountain Park Campground (accessed June 2026).
- Maneuvering / road-condition / spacing notes: guest reviews on Campendium, RV LIFE Campground Reviews, Good Sam, and Yelp (accessed June 2026).
- Fuel proximity: I-75 / I-95 / US-highway corridor fuel networks and park-listed on-site propane (accessed June 2026).
Verification status (last verified June 11, 2026): Name, address, and phone confirmed via web for all 11 parks. On-site propane was directly verified from park listings for Albany, Eagles Roost, Southern Retreat, Twin Oaks, and Tifton; for the interstate-corridor parks, diesel + propane within 10 mi is high-confidence from I-75/I-95 fuel networks but not individually walked — those cells remain marked (inferred). Mountain grade for the North Georgia picks (Blairsville, East Ellijay) is flagged conservatively from terrain, not surveyed. Per-listing GPS coordinates and low-clearance/Street-View checks are pending and will be confirmed during the directory build.
Frequently asked questions
What is the most big-rig friendly campground in Georgia?
By the Big-Rig Standard™, Albany RV Resort (9.5) — its 120-foot cement pull-through sites, 20 × 40 ft level patios, 50-amp full hookups, and a stated 115-foot max rig length fit a 45-foot Class A plus a tow vehicle with room to spare, on flat southwest-Georgia terrain.
Which Georgia campground is best for a one-night interstate stop?
On I-75, Eagles Roost RV Resort in Lake Park (9.0) at Exit 5, or Twin Oaks (8.0) and Tifton RV Park I-75 (8.0) mid-state. On I-95, Southern Retreat in Brunswick (9.0) with 90-foot pull-throughs, or Coastal Georgia RV Resort (8.5) at Exit 29 — all pull-through, easy in and out, fuel off the exit.
Can a 45-foot motorhome camp in the North Georgia mountains?
Yes — Crossing Creeks in Blairsville (8.0) takes rigs up to 45 feet and Talona Ridge in East Ellijay (7.5) has paved sites 45–100 feet long. The catch is grade: the mountain approaches strain brakes and drivetrains, so plan the climb and descent, use low gear when towing, and confirm your exact site length.
Are there big-rig friendly campgrounds near Savannah and Atlanta?
Near Savannah, CreekFire RV Resort (8.5) has concrete pull-throughs sized for a 45-foot rig plus toad, and Spacious Skies Savannah Oaks (7.0) sits under 2 miles off I-95. Near Atlanta, Stone Mountain Park Campground (6.0) has the best location but tight, wooded, uneven loops — call ahead for a level paved big-rig loop and confirm working 50-amp.
Do Georgia state parks accommodate big rigs?
Some do better than others. A few Georgia state parks list 50-amp full-hookup sites, but most have tighter, tree-canopied, often unlevel loops, and Stone Mountain Park's campground (6.0 here) shows the typical trade-off — great setting, real maneuvering constraints. Always confirm the posted max rig length and ask which loop is the big-rig loop before booking with a 40 ft+ rig.
What size RV counts as a big rig in Georgia?
On this directory, a big rig is roughly a 40-foot-plus motorhome or fifth wheel, usually towing a vehicle, often needing 50-amp service. That's the rig every Georgia pick above is scored against. A 35-footer fits almost anywhere; the 45-foot Class A plus a toad is where pad length, pull-throughs, and swing room start to decide whether you roll in clean or have to work the site.
Which Georgia big-rig parks are pull-through versus back-in?
Lead with pull-throughs if you don't want to back a 40-footer: Albany RV Resort runs 120-foot pull-throughs, Southern Retreat up to 90 feet, and Eagles Roost and Tifton are pull-through-heavy. Coastal Georgia and CreekFire mix both, so request a pull-through by row when you book. Always confirm the specific site is pull-through — listings describe the park, not your exact pad.
How do I find big-rig sites in the North Georgia mountains?
Look at pad length and grade together, not just length. Crossing Creeks (Blairsville) takes rigs to 45 feet and Talona Ridge (East Ellijay) has sites 45 to 100 feet, but both sit on real mountain grade. Plan the climb and descent, drop to low gear when towing, check overhead limbs, and confirm your exact site length before you commit to the drive up.
What should I confirm with a Georgia park before booking a 45-foot rig?
Ask four things: the exact pad length for the specific site (not the park maximum), whether it's pull-through or back-in, working 50-amp at that pad, and overhead clearance from tree limbs. On older or wooded properties, also ask which loop is the big-rig loop. A listing maximum is the best case, not a guarantee for the site you're assigned.
Are these Georgia campgrounds good for a one-night overnight stop?
Yes — the I-75 and I-95 picks are built for it. Eagles Roost (I-75 Exit 5), Tifton (Exit 61), and Twin Oaks mid-state, plus Southern Retreat and Coastal Georgia on I-95, all sit close to the exit with pull-through sites and fuel nearby. Drive in tired, fuel off the exit, sleep, roll out without unhitching. Confirm late check-in if you arrive after hours.
Does the 3-3-3 rule help when driving a big rig to a Georgia campground?
Many full-timers use a 3-3-3 guideline — cap the day around 300 miles, arrive by 3 p.m., stay 3 nights — to cut fatigue and arrive in daylight. For Georgia it's especially worth it on the North Georgia mountain approaches (Blairsville, East Ellijay), where you want good light and fresh brakes for the grade. Treat it as a habit, not a rule, and adjust to your rig and route.
Compare across the directory: Big-Rig Friendly Restaurants in Georgia (with RV parking) · Big-Rig Friendly Stops Along I-75 (Michigan to Florida) · Big-Rig Friendly Stops Along I-95 (Maine to Miami) · What "Big-Rig Friendly" means
[ Submit a correction → ] Stayed at one of these? Tell us what the data got wrong and we'll update the score.
Found a stop we missed — or got wrong?
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