rv park rates

Cheapest Monthly RV Park Rates in Arizona for Snowbirds (2026)

The cheapest verified monthly RV park rates in Arizona run about $275 to $450/month for a full-hookup or partial-hookup site as of 2026. Those floor rates sit in northwest Arizona around Golden Valley, Kingman, and Chloride. Inside the main snowbird corridors that most winter visitors target, Tucson and greater Phoenix, verified monthly rates start closer to $400 to $700/month.

Arizona is one of the three largest snowbird RV markets in North America, alongside Florida and South Texas. Below are the lowest verified monthly rates in the state right now, how Arizona ranks against the other snowbird corridors on cost, and what the lowest rate actually trades away.

Cheapest Monthly RV Park Rates in Arizona Right Now

The table shows the lowest verified monthly rates in the Arizona dataset, each sourced from the park's own rate page and verified as of June 2026. These are single-park rates, not regional averages.

ParkAreaMonthly (as of 2026)Nightly (as of 2026)
Adobe RV ParkGolden Valley$275/month$34/night
Canyon West RV ParkKingman$290/month$50/night
Chloride Western RV ParkChloride$300/month$25/night
Village RV ParkTucson$400/monthpartial hookup
Tradewinds RV ParkGolden Valley$410/month$45/night
Crazy Horse RV CampgroundsTucson$655/month$46/night
Tucson KOA ResortTucson$679/monthvaries by season

The pattern is clear. The absolute lowest monthly rates, near $275 to $410/month, cluster in the northwest corner of the state near Golden Valley and Kingman, well off the classic snowbird map. Within Tucson, the first real snowbird hub, verified monthly rates begin around $400/month at a basic site and climb to $655 to $679/month at a resort-tier park.

Rate aggregators show the same spread. Campendium lists monthly Arizona sites from the low $300s at no-frills parks up past $1,000/month at destination resorts in the Phoenix and Yuma winter belts.

Arizona Snowbird Corridors Ranked by Monthly Cost

Snowbirds usually choose between three winter corridors, and Arizona sits in the middle on price. Ranked by the monthly floor for a full-hookup site as of 2026:

Arizona wins on dry winter climate and proximity to the Colorado River and Quartzsite gathering, and its mid-tier pricing is why Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, and Yuma fill from November through March. National chains formalize the long-stay discount: KOA publishes separate extended monthly and seasonal rates aimed at snowbirds, distinct from nightly pricing, because winter long-stay guests are a different booking class.

What the Lowest Arizona Rate Actually Costs You

The $275 to $300/month rates are real, but they carry trade-offs worth naming before you book:

For the full nightly-to-monthly breakdown across park types and markets, see how much an RV park costs per month.

See Verified Monthly Rates by Arizona Park

Regional bands tell you the range. To plan an actual winter, you need real rates at specific parks with dates attached. See verified, dated monthly and nightly rates by park on the Arizona rate page, then call the parks on your shortlist to lock a seasonal contract. Prime Tucson and Phoenix sites for January and February fill early, so booking several months ahead secures both the lowest rate and the site you want.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the cheapest monthly RV park rate in Arizona? The lowest verified rate in the dataset is about $275/month at a full-hookup site in Golden Valley as of 2026. Rates near $290 to $410/month are available around Kingman and Chloride in northwest Arizona.

How much is a monthly snowbird site in Tucson or Phoenix? Verified Tucson monthly rates start around $400/month for a basic site and run $655 to $679/month at resort-tier parks as of 2026. Phoenix-area winter rates sit in a similar range and climb higher at destination resorts.

Is Arizona cheaper than Florida for snowbirds? Yes, on the floor. Arizona monthly rates start near $275/month and run $400 to $700/month in the snowbird belt, while Florida runs $450 to $2,500/month at peak. South Texas is the lowest corridor of the three.

Do Arizona parks charge electricity separately on monthly stays? Many do. On monthly and seasonal contracts, metered electricity is common and can add $30 to $120/month for winter climate control. Always confirm the metering policy before signing.

When should I book an Arizona snowbird site? Prime Tucson and Phoenix sites for January and February often fill by early fall. Booking several months ahead secures the lowest monthly rate and the better sites.