Florida
Cancellation alerts

Blackwater River State Park

We watch every site at Blackwater River State Park 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

100% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak May–Jul·27 sites
Set up an alert for Blackwater River State Park

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

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Blackwater River State Park

Booked on virtually every weekend during peak season (May–Jul). They reserve months ahead and rebook within minutes when cancelled — set up an alert and we'll email you the moment one opens.

Site 010

Best here
Ranked #1 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 007

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 026

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 014

Standout
Ranked #4 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 006

Standout
Ranked #5 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 009

Standout
Ranked #5 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 025

Standout
Ranked #5 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 005

Standout
Ranked #8 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 020

Standout
Ranked #9 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 008

Standout
Ranked #10 of 27
RV · Sleeps 8 · Electric

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

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About this park

Blackwater River boasts an incredible array of activities for the outdoor enthusiast, many centered around the park's namesake waterway. Despite its name - Blackwater, or the original Oka-lusa (water black) in the Muscogee language - the Blackwater River is normally a transparent golden-brown when seen against the white sandbars. Most of the stream flows through undeveloped lands of the Blackwater State Forest and Blackwater River State Park, core areas of the largest contiguous longleaf pine/wiregrass ecosystem remaining in the world, described as being rarer than a tropical rainforest. Water seeping from this forest is as pure as it comes, merely tinted with tannins from leaves and roots of shoreline vegetation. Canoeing, kayaking, camping and picnicking are popular activities in the park along with strolling along forested nature trails.