AL
Cancellation alerts

CORINTH RECREATION AREA

We watch every site at CORINTH RECREATION AREA 24/7, then email you the moment a cancellation opens up.

65% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak May–Jul·61 sites
Set up an alert for CORINTH RECREATION AREA

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

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at CORINTH RECREATION AREA

The hardest sites to book at this park, reserving 65% of weekend nights in peak season (May–Jul). Set up an alert and we'll email you on cancellations.

Site 18

Best here
Ranked #1 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 15

Top pick
Ranked #2 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 16

Top pick
Ranked #3 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 17

Standout
Ranked #4 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 52

Standout
Ranked #5 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 35

Decent
Ranked #6 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 14

Decent
Ranked #7 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 51

Decent
Ranked #8 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 43

Decent
Ranked #9 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

Site 38

Decent
Ranked #10 of 61
STANDARD ELECTRIC · Sleeps 6 · Electric

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

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About this park

The 180,000+ acre Bankhead National Forest is in northwestern Alabama, and its prominent feature is the Sipsey Wilderness . Known as "The Land of a Thousand Waterfalls," the Sipsey is at the juncture of three separate geologic areas: the Appalachian Plateau, the Cumberland Plateau and the Coastal Plain. The vegetation from these three unique environments blend into a remarkable diversity of species, with overlapping ranges creating many unusual plant associations. The Sipsey is a 12,726 acre area of swift streams, waterfalls, sandstone cliffs, undisturbed gorges, majestic hardwood forests, wildflowers, birds, animals and is home to Alabama's largest tree, a tulip poplar with a 21-foot circumference at its base. Lewis-Smith Lake (or Smith Lake) is located in the counties of Cullman, Walker and Winston. The 300-foot high dam, completed in 1961 by Alabama Power Company, impounds the Sipsey Fork of the Black Warrior River to form the lake. Smith Lake has a surface area of 21,200 acres, 500 miles of shoreline, a watershed area of 944 square miles, a retention time of 435 days, and a maximum depth of 264 feet. What's Happening in Your Alabama National Forest Video