Washington
Cancellation alerts

Beaver Campground

We watch every site at Beaver Campground 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

78% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jul–Sep·25 sites
Set up an alert for Beaver Campground

Pick your dates, pick the sites you want, we do the watching.

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Beaver Campground

The hardest sites to book at this park, reserving 78% of weekend nights in peak season (Jul–Sep). Set up an alert and we'll email you on cancellations.

Site A

Best here
Ranked #1 of 25
Group Standard · Sleeps 50 · Electric

Site 016

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 017

Top pick
Ranked #3 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 014

Standout
Ranked #4 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 004

Standout
Ranked #5 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 011

Decent
Ranked #6 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 021

Decent
Ranked #7 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

Site 020

Decent
Ranked #8 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 12 · Waterfront

Site 007

Decent
Ranked #9 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 12 · Waterfront

Site 005

Decent
Ranked #10 of 25
STANDARD · Sleeps 6 · Waterfront

These sites rebook within minutes of being cancelled. Set an alert at Beaver Campground and we’ll email you the moment one opens up.

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About this park

Located in southwest Washington State, the Gifford Pinchot National Forest encompasses over 1.3 million acres, including the 110,000-acre Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument established by Congress in 1982. Beaver Campground is located in the Mount Adams Ranger District, in the easternmost portion of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest. This district spans 367,000 acres and includes the Mt Adams Wilderness, Indian Heaven Wilderness and Trapper Creek Wilderness. Mt Adams, a potentially active stratovolcano and the second-tallest mountain in Washington state, is a prominent landmark of the District. Elevations here range between 1,200 feet at the Wind River Work Center (12 miles north of Carson, WA) and 12,276 feet at the summit of Mt. Adams. A great diversity of habitats and geological features are represented here, from old growth to second growth forests and wetland areas to low and high elevation meadows and lakes, as well as glaciers.