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New: Interactive Map for Every Park in the Directory
We built what we kept wishing existed while researching parks: an interactive map of every campground in the directory, color-coded by EV charging policy. All 1,393 parks across 58 states and provinces, visible at a glance. No more scrolling through lists wondering where the nearest EV-friendly campground actually is relative to your route.
Highlights This Month
- The full directory map shows every park we track. Green markers mean campsite charging is allowed, blue means dedicated stations are on site, red means no charging permitted. You can see the policy landscape of an entire region in seconds
- Tap any marker and you get a popup with the park name, city, policy, and a quick summary of what to expect. One more tap takes you to the full park detail page with FAQs, nearby DC fast chargers, and source links
- Every state and province page now has its own map, zoomed to show just that region's parks. Zoom out and you will see neighboring states too, which is exactly what you want when you are planning a route that crosses borders
- The homepage gets a map as well. First thing you see after the search bar is every park in the directory, laid out geographically. It answers the most basic question faster than anything else: "Are there EV-friendly campgrounds where I am going?"
- Quick filter links on the map page let you jump straight to campsite charging, stations available, or not-allowed parks in the list view. Useful when you already know what you are looking for and just want to narrow down the options fast
Trends & Insights
- →Building the map forced us to audit every park's coordinates. A handful were off by enough to land in the wrong county. Those are fixed now. If a marker looks wrong on the map, let us know
- →The visual clustering tells a story the lists never did. EV-friendly parks bunch up near population centers and interstate corridors. The gaps between clusters are where trip planning gets real. If you are driving from Denver to Moab, the map makes it obvious: charge up before you leave the Front Range
- →Color patterns vary by region in ways we did not expect. The Pacific Northwest is a sea of green and blue. The Southeast has more red than we would like. Canada's national parks are almost uniformly blue, thanks to Parks Canada's Tesla charger program. You can read about these patterns in our state pages, but seeing them on a map hits differently
- →This is a planning tool, not just a directory feature. Pull up the map, trace your route visually, and note the green and blue markers along the way. That ten-second scan could save you from arriving at a campground that will fine you for plugging in
Know of a park we should add?
Help us grow the directory by sharing RV parks with documented EV charging policies.
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