Washington
Cancellation alerts

Goodell Creek Campground

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

100% of weekends booked at top sites·Peak Jul–Sep·19 sites
Set up an alert for Goodell Creek Campground

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

Park favorites

The 10 most popular campsites at Goodell Creek Campground

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

Site 02

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 13

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 12

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 09

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 10

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 06

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 07

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Waterfront

Site 05

Top pick
Tied for most booked · 8 of 19 sites
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 03

Decent
Ranked #9 of 19
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Electric

Site 01

Decent
Ranked #10 of 19
STANDARD · Sleeps 8 · Electric

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

Set up an alert →

About this park

The campground has a shaded forested canopy with western redcedar, western hemlock, Douglas-fir, wild red huckleberries, and other native shrubs. Nearby is Newhalem Creek and the Skagit River. The river is the largest river that flows into the Puget Sound area and provides critical habitat for all species of Pacific salmon. The river drains cold, clean glacial meltwater from the mountains of British Columbia and northern Washington. Bald eagles return to its shores every winter.