Complete Guide to Waco RV Parks: How to Choose

Waco has become one of Texas’s favorite road-trip stops — Magnolia Market, Baylor University, Cameron Park, the Waco Mammoth National Monument, Lake Waco, and a downtown that’s grown a real food scene. If you’re bringing the RV, you’ve got a handful of parks to choose from around the city, and they are not interchangeable. (Already booked? Our local’s guide to Waco covers the fun part.)
This guide won’t pretend to be neutral — we run an RV park here, and we’re proud of it. But the framework below is the honest one we’d give a friend, and it applies no matter where you end up staying.
1. Location: Close, But Not Too Close
The sweet spot for a Waco stay is minutes from downtown without being on top of the interstate. I-35 runs right through the city, and several parks sit close enough to it that road noise is a real factor at night. Map the park, check its distance to your must-see stops, then zoom in and look at what’s between the park and the highway.
2. Shade: The Texas Difference-Maker
From May through September, the single biggest comfort factor at a Texas campsite is tree cover. A site under mature canopy can run 10–15°F cooler than one on open gravel, which means your AC keeps up, your awning isn’t baking, and you can actually sit outside in the evening. Established trees take decades to grow — newer parks simply can’t manufacture them. Look at satellite view before you book: green canopy or bare rows?
3. Noise and How the Park Is Run
Reviews tell you more than amenity lists. Scan for the words “quiet,” “peaceful,” and “slept well” — and for who responds to problems. Parks where the owners live on site tend to be cleaner, calmer, and quicker to help, because the park isn’t an investment property to them. It’s their front yard.
We wrote a whole post on this: Why Quiet Matters: Finding Your Peaceful RV Park.
4. The Practical Checklist
- Hookups: Confirm 50-amp full hookups (electric, water, sewer) at the site itself, not just “available in the park.”
- Rig fit: If you’re over 35 feet, ask specifically about pull-through sites and turning room. “Big rig friendly” should come with specifics.
- Pads: Level concrete pads save you time and blocks every single day of your stay.
- WiFi: Ask whether it’s usable for streaming/working or just checking email — and whether it reaches your site.
- Propane: On-site filling (cylinders and motorhomes) saves a trip across town.
- Severe weather: This is Central Texas. A park with an on-site storm shelter is offering you something most can’t.
- Laundry and showers: Check recent reviews specifically for the word “clean.”
5. Call Before You Book
Five minutes on the phone tells you more than an hour of browsing. Ask about road noise, your rig length, and the weather plan. Pay attention to who answers: at some parks you’ll get a call center or voicemail. At family-run parks you’ll get an owner who can tell you which site has the best afternoon shade.
Where North Crest Fits
Since you’re on our blog, here’s our honest pitch: North Crest is the small, established, family-run option. The park has been here since 1935, Mark and Emily live on site and answer the phone 24/7, the sites are large wooded pull-throughs with level concrete pads and 50-amp full hookups, and there’s an underground storm shelter Mark built himself. Guests mostly mention three things in reviews: the trees, the quiet, and Emily’s welcome (often with Ranger, the park’s Sheepadoodle, alongside).
Whichever park you pick, Waco’s worth the stop. Ask Emily for her local recommendations — restaurants, live music, hiking — she keeps a running list for guests.
