Contents
- 1. Nashville KOA Resort
- 2. Elm Hill RV Resort
- 3. Two Rivers Campground
- 4. Nashville RV Resort & Cabins
- 5. Cedars of Lebanon State Park
- 6. Grand Ole RV Resort
- 7. Nashville I-24 Campground
- 8. Montgomery Bell State Park
- 9. Bledsoe Creek State Park
- 10. Anderson Road Campground
- 11. Seven Points Campground
- 12. Cedar Creek Campground
- 13. Cages Bend Campground
- 14. Poole Knobs Campground
- Map of Campgrounds near Nashville, TN
From RVing to tenting and glamping, Nashville’s campgrounds offer a variety of ways to spend the night outdoors. Some campgrounds, such as Grand Ole RV Resort in Goodlettsville, offer live music, so you’re never far from a stage. Three of our picks are clustered on Music Valley Drive. From that name, you might correctly surmise that the Grand Ole Opry is close enough to be almost within hearing range.
If you don’t need or want to be in the heartland of country music, you can camp without the noise of highway traffic. Best options for peace and quiet include state park campgrounds, private operators, and seasonal campgrounds operated by the US Army Corps of Engineers. These campgrounds are all within half an hour’s drive from Nashville. In quiet settings near lakes and rivers, it’s easy to find a campground that feels a million miles from Music City.
No matter what time of year you want to visit, choose your spot from our list of best campgrounds near Nashville.
1. Nashville KOA Resort
Nashville KOA Resort offers all the amenities. The deluxe pet site, for example, is the cat’s meow: It provides a 12- by 18-foot private dog run, a large patio with “deluxe” patio furniture, a gas grill, and a stone fire pit.
If you don’t need all the extras, no problem, because there’s something here for everybody. Full hookups without patios and back-in sites are available. All this, and Nashville KOA is within three miles of the Grand Ole Opry.
Tenters camp in a shaded area with a layer of soft mulch on the ground to accommodate a comfy sleep. During inclement weather, a shelter is provided for food preparation and storage. Every tent site has water, electricity, a picnic table, and a fire pit. If you don’t have a tent or RV, a rustic cabin is available for rent. Deluxe cabins with towels and linens fit the glamping bill.
Amenities include a playground, pond, and seasonal pool. Complementing the pool is a hot tub and sauna. Wi-Fi and cable TV are provided. For entertainment, there are outdoor games, an amphitheater, and the Notes Café. Snacks, propane, and firewood are all available on-site for sale. Bicycle rentals are also an option if you want another way to go sightseeing in Nashville.
Address: 2626 Music Valley Drive, Nashville, Tennessee
2. Elm Hill RV Resort
Treat yourself to a waterfront home-away-from-home on the island peninsula at Elm Hill RV Resort, a deluxe property on Percy Priest Lake. The concrete pads located on the elevated section fronting the lake have the choicest location of 131 full-service hookup sites. Choose from back-in and pull-through sites, all with brick firepits and picnic tables. Enjoy the seasonal outdoor pool, pavilion area, sandy beach, clean washrooms, and the best-unobstructed water view anywhere in the Nashville area.
If you’re camping during the summer, go for a refreshing dip. Check-in with the helpful staff about renting a kayak or paddleboard that you can launch from one of the docks. A marina with boats for rent is located next door.
Located 20 minutes from the musical hotspots of downtown Nashville, this campground features live music by the pool in warmer months. You don’t always have to go far to hear a tune in Music City. There’s a good chance the music will find its way to you.
Address: 3343 Bell Road, Nashville, Tennessee
3. Two Rivers Campground
As soon as you walk into the office of Two Rivers Campground, you know you’re in the hands of people who will look after you. The friendly concierge will make reservations for dinner shows, restaurants, tours of top Nashville attractions, and car rentals.
Your campsite is conveniently located less than three miles north of the Grand Ole Opry and 14 miles to downtown by car or shuttle. Cock of the Walk Restaurant, specializing in catfish, hushpuppies, and fried pickles, is right next door.
Campground amenities include Wi-Fi and cable, two bathhouses, and a seasonal swimming pool. The store is stocked with basic groceries, RV items, and souvenirs. There’s a rec room where you can play pool and video games. Children enjoy the playground, and there’s a dog park and walking area.
Address: 2616 Music Valley Drive, Nashville, Tennessee
4. Nashville RV Resort & Cabins
Nashville RV Resort & Cabins has a large seasonal pool flanked by a recreation center, mini-golf course, and bounce houses. The property also includes a playground, a pretend “mining” center where kids can dig for gems, and a dog park.
The campground accommodates motorhomes of all sizes, to a maximum length of 80 feet. With more than 230 pull-through spaces with 50-amp service, there is plenty of space. Tent sites–five with water and electricity and 10 without hookups–are clustered on a quiet row with a field view.
Campground amenities include restrooms with hot showers, Wi-Fi and cable, laundry, a general store, a propane fill facility, and a dump station. Deluxe cabins are available to rent. Nashville RV Resort & Cabins is conveniently located less than three miles from the Grand Ole Opry and 14 miles from downtown.
Address: 2572 Music Valley Drive, Nashville, Tennessee
5. Cedars of Lebanon State Park
Cedars of Lebanon State Park is 33 miles from Nashville and open all year. While exploring 10 miles of hiking trails, you’ll discover hidden springs buried deep below the ground. You can hear the water but not see it. Watch for sinkholes amid the limestone outcroppings. Don’t be surprised to see dramatic overhangs and deep caves.
Hikes vary in length and are easy to challenging. A dozen miles of trails await campers who wish to go horseback riding.
Staff assigns you to one of 117 campsites in three areas. Sites have 20-, 30-, and 50-amp service and water, supplemented by a dump station. Campers enjoy hot showers, flush toilets, and outdoor wash-up stations in three bathhouses. Every site has a picnic table and grill. Firewood and ice are available for sale. You can do laundry here and shop for essentials at the visitor center. Wi-Fi is also available.
If a tent or RV camping isn’t your thing, you also have the option to stay at one of the nine cabins at the park. Each of the fully furnished units has two bedrooms, one bathroom, and a kitchen.
Visitors can visit the nature center and butterfly garden, play disc golf, and cool off on the splash pad.
Address: 328 Cedar Forest Road, Lebanon, Tennessee
6. Grand Ole RV Resort
Grand Ole RV Resort is indeed a grand homey kind of place to camp if you’re RVing in the Nashville area. Take your cue from the names of its “streets,” including Welcome Lane and Relax Road. At this friendly family-run campground, only 18 miles north of Nashville, staff aim to please with their service pledge: “You will never be appreciated more anywhere else.” The campground has 130 full-service hookup sites on 13 shaded and landscaped acres.
The office combines with a general store. There are laundry facilities, propane for sale, and a children’s playground. Live music happens every night. During the off-season, a restaurant offers home-cooked breakfasts and dinners. Goodlettsville is located 20 minutes north of Nashville and is known for antiques, parks, and historic sites.
Address: 708 N. Main Street, Goodlettsville, Tennessee
7. Nashville I-24 Campground
Nashville I-24 Campground is 23 miles southeast of Music City and welcomes you with its friendly staff. The place has more than 100 sites for RVers and tenters, but be sure to reserve a spot during high season. RV campers have full-service hookups and pull-through sites with shade. Tent campers can request propane fire rings. Campers without an RV or tent can book a cabin. Amenities include a propane fill-up station, a dump station, and Wi-Fi.
During the summer, campers cool off in the large outdoor swimming pool. Shoot a few basketball hoops while the kids are next door in the playground. Coin-operated laundry and bathhouses with hot showers are available. A recreation room is on-site plus a convenience store for RV supplies, gifts, and souvenirs.
Like a few other campgrounds near Music City, Nashville I-24 Campground hosts occasional live music and events. Campers here are close to shopping and historic sites such as Stones River National Battlefield and Sam Davis Home and Plantation.
Address: 1130 Rocky Fork Road, Smyrna, Tennessee
8. Montgomery Bell State Park
Campers at Montgomery Bell State Park benefit from all the programs and tours that are offered. Embark on a guided hike, take a golf cart safari, or go on an all-day waterfall tour. There are also plenty of things to do on the water, including canoeing and kayaking.
Open year-round and located 40 minutes from Nashville, 3,850-acre Montgomery Bell State Park has 94 RV campsites and 22 sites for tenters. Full-service hookup sites are available. Motorhomes up to 60 feet in length can be accommodated.
Campground amenities include Wi-Fi, three bathhouses with hot showers, two dump stations, a laundromat, and seasonal store. Firewood and ice are available for sale. In addition to the campground, the park rents eight two-bedroom cabins near Lake Acorn.
Address: 1020 Jackson Hill Road, Burns, Tennessee
9. Bledsoe Creek State Park
Bledsoe Creek State Park is well worth the 36-mile drive from Nashville if you fancy a water site with all the fixings. Reserve or arrive early for the choicest locations on Old Hickory Lake. The 169-acre park is located 10 minutes east of Gallatin, north of the Cumberland River.
The campground has 58 paved sites that can accommodate large RVs (sites are 65 feet long and 25 feet wide). Services include 50, 30, and 20 amps of power, water hookups, a dump station, modern restrooms with flush toilets and hot showers, and a laundromat. Campers also have access to three primitive campsites that are for hammocks only, located behind the main campground.
Picnic tables, grills, and fire pits are provided at each site. Firewood and ice are available for sale. Park staff is friendly and happy to explain such mysteries as the large yellow-green balls you find on the ground (fruit of the osage orange tree).
With two put-in ramps, boating and fishing are favorite activities. Enjoy six miles of forested and waterfront hiking–including a one-mile paved trail accessible to people with disabilities. Children will have fun at the playground. Feel safe and secure camping here with gated security next to the visitor center.
While swimming is not available in the park, you can go for a dip at several nearby beaches.
Address: 400 Zieglers Fort Road, Gallatin, Tennessee
10. Anderson Road Campground
Anderson Road Campground is a well-established camping area on 14,200-surface-acre Percy Priest Lake with an unusual but welcome attraction: a sandy swimming beach. The 37 shady and spacious campsites beside the lake are managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Drinking water, a dump station, and a boat ramp are available. The day-use area located next to the campground augments the camping experience with picnic tables, grills, a shelter and playground.
The huge lake enables a number of recreation activities. Enjoy fishing, paddling, horseback riding, hiking, and wildlife observation. A one-mile paved fitness trail meanders through the cedar forest alongside the lake. Make a reservation to camp at this popular campground, typically open from May to September.
Address: 4010 Anderson Road, Nashville, Tennessee
11. Seven Points Campground
Seven Points Campground has an idyllic setting on Percy Priest Lake that invites campers to enjoy all kinds of water activities, including jet skiing, water skiing, tubing, rowing, canoeing, kayaking, sailing, and fishing. Best of all, during warmer months, there is a sandy beach where you can take a refreshing dip.
Discover around 60 sites at this lakeside campground, located only 10 miles from downtown Nashville. Reserve your haven of peace during the camping season that runs between April and October. Amenities include water and electric hookups, a dump station, restrooms with showers, laundry facilities, a large children’s playground, and boat launch ramp.
Address: 1810 Stewarts Ferry Pike, Hermitage, Tennessee
12. Cedar Creek Campground
Discover Cedar Creek Campground on Old Hickory Lake. Managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the 22,500-acre reservoir flows from the Cumberland River, and both bodies of water attract migratory birds. Open from April to October, the campground is around 24 miles northeast of Nashville.
After setting up your tent or RV on one of 60 sites with water and electric hookups, head for the sandy beach. Here you can enjoy a swim, walk, or relaxing time with a book. Boating, hiking, and fishing are popular activities. The day-use picnic shelter can be rented during the summer. Other amenities include restrooms with hot showers, laundry facilities, a dump station, and boat launch.
Address: 9264 Saundersville Road, Mt. Juliet, Tennessee
13. Cages Bend Campground
If you’re into nature observation or wildlife photography, or you’re a camper who wants a site by the water, Cages Bend is an excellent campground. Due to its location on the north shore of Old Hickory Lake, the lake attracts songbirds, shorebirds, and wildlife such as white-tailed deer. Located 25 miles northeast of Nashville, this setting feels like a world away from Music City.
Managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Cages Bend has 43 sites for RVs and tents, including many choice locations beside the lake. Water, electric hookups, and a dump station are available. Each site is equipped with a picnic table, food prep table, and BBQ grill.
Enjoy fishing from one of two docks. One is located beside the boat ramp; the other is in the campground. Other amenities include a picnic shelter, playground, laundry facility, and hot showers.
Address: 1125 Benders Ferry Road, Gallatin, Tennessee
14. Poole Knobs Campground
Poole Knobs Campground is an outdoor adventure playground. Located 34 miles southeast of Nashville on Percy Priest Lake, you can go fishing for large and small-mouth bass, catfish, and trout. There’s boating and paddling, wildlife viewing and photography, horseback riding, and picnicking.
Poole Knobs is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers campground with 87 campsites, open from early May to late September. RV pull-through sites and tent sites are available. Amenities include a shower house and restrooms with flush toilets and hot showers, laundry facilities, and a dump station. Advanced reservations are recommended at this popular Nashville campground.
Address: 493 Jones Mill Road, La Vergne, Tennessee