In Sugar City, Idaho—in Madison County on the Snake River Plain of eastern Idaho, minutes from Rexburg and positioned at the gateway to some of the most spectacular natural environments accessible by road in the continental United States—Sugar City RV Park offers 25 large pull-through sites with full hookups, grass areas, bathrooms, showers, laundry, a dog park, and picnic tables in a clean, straightforward park whose eastern Idaho position puts Yellowstone National Park's west entrance 90 minutes northeast, Grand Teton National Park 60 miles east, the St. Anthony Sand Dunes 30 miles north, and Mesa Falls 35 miles northeast within easy day-trip range of what is among the most scenically endowed campground locations in the Rocky Mountain West. The park is the basecamp. The destination is everything outside it. All 25 sites are large pull-throughs with full hookup service—electric, water, and sewer—with grass areas between the sites that give the property a softer character than the pure gravel pad parks that the agricultural Snake River Plain's other RV options provide. The sites accommodate up to six people, two pets, and two licensed vehicles per site, making them genuinely spacious for the family and extended-party stays that national park corridor campgrounds regularly host. Bathrooms, hot showers, coin laundry, a dog park, and picnic tables complete the essential daily infrastructure for guests who are at Sugar City to sleep, shower, and launch—not to spend their days in the campground. The full hookup standard and the clean, well-maintained facilities create the reliable overnight that a Yellowstone-circuit campground requires. Sugar City occupies Madison County on the Snake River Plain at 4,700 feet in the agricultural landscape of eastern Idaho's potato and grain country, in the community immediately east of Rexburg where BYU-Idaho's campus and the region's agricultural economy create the small-city character that the surrounding Teton, Yellowstone, and Snake River Plain landscapes make genuinely spectacular. The Snake River Plain's volcanic geology—the source of the lava flows, cinder cones, and rift zones that make the eastern Idaho landscape so visually distinctive from the Rocky Mountain terrain to the east and south—creates the geological context that the Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve, 100 miles west, documents most dramatically. Grand Teton National Park, 60 miles east via US-20 and US-26 through Driggs and Victor in the Teton Valley, provides the Cathedral Group's iconic skyline—the Grand Teton, Mount Owen, and Teewinot Mountain's vertical granite faces rising directly from the valley floor in the visual drama that makes the Tetons the most photographed mountains in North America. Yellowstone's West Entrance at West Yellowstone, Montana, accessible via US-20 through Island Park, provides the park's most direct access from eastern Idaho—the Grand Loop Road's geyser basins, the Canyon Village and the Yellowstone Falls, and the Lamar Valley's wolf and bison watching accessible from the west entrance in a day of driving and wildlife observation. Sugar City RV Park operates year-round in eastern Idaho's high-plains climate, with the primary Yellowstone-Teton season running from Memorial Day through September when the parks' full facility and road systems are open. The St. Anthony Sand Dunes—the largest accessible white quartz sand dunes in the western United States—provide year-round recreation for OHV enthusiasts and the off-season complement to the national park access that drives most Sugar City summer visitors. Reserve your pull-through site at Sugar City RV Park and let the eastern Idaho Snake River Plain's extraordinary position between Yellowstone, the Tetons, and the sand dunes make this straightforward, clean park the gateway campground your Rocky Mountain road trip deserves.
Campground rules and policies
Check-in Procedure
- Check-in time: 3:00 pm.
- Check out time: 11:00 am.
- While each park attempts to accommodate your exact spot request, the on-site manager has the ultimate decision for spot placement.Respectful Camping Guidelines
- Be considerate of others staying in the park.
- No loud music, open fires, fireworks, barking dogs, kids running into other RV sites or camping spaces, parking in someone else’s space, or annoying other campers.
- Please help us maintain a clean, quiet, and respectful park.Restroom & Laundry Policy
- Access to the laundry, bathrooms, and showers is for paying campground customers only.
- Please be respectful of others and leave the bathrooms and showers in a clean, orderly fashion after use.
- Washers and dryers are pay-for-use and are not included in the nightly rental rates.
- Instructions for use of the laundry can be found inside the building or by contacting the camp host.Trash Policy
- Bag and dispose of all trash in the dumpsters.
- Keep RV sites and the common area clean, trash and clutter-free.Pet Policy
- Dogs are welcome; however, dogs must be cleaned up after and they must be leashed at all times.
- No aggressive dog breeds are allowed.
- A clean-up fee will be charged if dog feces in left in your RV site or in the common area.
- Please be considerate of others and clean up after your dog.Lawn Maintenance Policy
- During the warmer months, the grass is mowed, watered, fertilized, and treated for weeds as needed.
- During your stay, you should expect to move your personal items off the grass while the grass area is mowed, watered, and, as needed, fertilized or treated for weeds.
- Be respectful of the lawn staff and make their job easier by moving your personal items off the grass and understanding that sprinkler overspray may occur on vehicles, RVs, and personal items.Vehicle Policy
- When entering or leaving the park, either by vehicle or on foot, please use the gravel and paved roads only.
- Do not drive on the grass or cut through the neighboring RV sites.
- Please be alert for children, pets, and other adults who may be on foot.Speed Limit
- The maximum speed limit is 5 mph.Campground Disclaimer
- The RV Park is not responsible for damage to you or your guests vehicles.
- RV or persons that may be incurred while entering, parking, hooking up, unhooking, driving in and around the park, departing or at any other time while you are at your RV site or in the common areas.
- Any electrical, water, sewer or any other component damaged as a result of your use of the park facilities are your responsibility.
- If you have questions about towing, backing up, unhitching, hooking up, detaching the water, sewer or power, or any other items related to your RV use or hookups, please seek competent advice prior to arriving.
In Sugar City, Idaho—in Madison County on the Snake River Plain of eastern Idaho, minutes from Rexburg and positioned at the gateway to some of the most spectacular natural environments accessible by road in the continental United States—Sugar City RV Park offers 25 large pull-through sites with full hookups, grass areas, bathrooms, showers, laundry, a dog park, and picnic tables in a clean, straightforward park whose eastern Idaho position puts Yellowstone National Park's west entrance 90 minutes northeast, Grand Teton National Park 60 miles east, the St. Anthony Sand Dunes 30 miles north, and Mesa Falls 35 miles northeast within easy day-trip range of what is among the most scenically endowed campground locations in the Rocky Mountain West. The park is the basecamp. The destination is everything outside it. All 25 sites are large pull-throughs with full hookup service—electric, water, and sewer—with grass areas between the sites that give the property a softer character than the pure gravel pad parks that the agricultural Snake River Plain's other RV options provide. The sites accommodate up to six people, two pets, and two licensed vehicles per site, making them genuinely spacious for the family and extended-party stays that national park corridor campgrounds regularly host. Bathrooms, hot showers, coin laundry, a dog park, and picnic tables complete the essential daily infrastructure for guests who are at Sugar City to sleep, shower, and launch—not to spend their days in the campground. The full hookup standard and the clean, well-maintained facilities create the reliable overnight that a Yellowstone-circuit campground requires. Sugar City occupies Madison County on the Snake River Plain at 4,700 feet in the agricultural landscape of eastern Idaho's potato and grain country, in the community immediately east of Rexburg where BYU-Idaho's campus and the region's agricultural economy create the small-city character that the surrounding Teton, Yellowstone, and Snake River Plain landscapes make genuinely spectacular. The Snake River Plain's volcanic geology—the source of the lava flows, cinder cones, and rift zones that make the eastern Idaho landscape so visually distinctive from the Rocky Mountain terrain to the east and south—creates the geological context that the Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve, 100 miles west, documents most dramatically. Grand Teton National Park, 60 miles east via US-20 and US-26 through Driggs and Victor in the Teton Valley, provides the Cathedral Group's iconic skyline—the Grand Teton, Mount Owen, and Teewinot Mountain's vertical granite faces rising directly from the valley floor in the visual drama that makes the Tetons the most photographed mountains in North America. Yellowstone's West Entrance at West Yellowstone, Montana, accessible via US-20 through Island Park, provides the park's most direct access from eastern Idaho—the Grand Loop Road's geyser basins, the Canyon Village and the Yellowstone Falls, and the Lamar Valley's wolf and bison watching accessible from the west entrance in a day of driving and wildlife observation. Sugar City RV Park operates year-round in eastern Idaho's high-plains climate, with the primary Yellowstone-Teton season running from Memorial Day through September when the parks' full facility and road systems are open. The St. Anthony Sand Dunes—the largest accessible white quartz sand dunes in the western United States—provide year-round recreation for OHV enthusiasts and the off-season complement to the national park access that drives most Sugar City summer visitors. Reserve your pull-through site at Sugar City RV Park and let the eastern Idaho Snake River Plain's extraordinary position between Yellowstone, the Tetons, and the sand dunes make this straightforward, clean park the gateway campground your Rocky Mountain road trip deserves.
Campground rules and policies
Check-in Procedure
- Check-in time: 3:00 pm.
- Check out time: 11:00 am.
- While each park attempts to accommodate your exact spot request, the on-site manager has the ultimate decision for spot placement.Respectful Camping Guidelines
- Be considerate of others staying in the park.
- No loud music, open fires, fireworks, barking dogs, kids running into other RV sites or camping spaces, parking in someone else’s space, or annoying other campers.
- Please help us maintain a clean, quiet, and respectful park.Restroom & Laundry Policy
- Access to the laundry, bathrooms, and showers is for paying campground customers only.
- Please be respectful of others and leave the bathrooms and showers in a clean, orderly fashion after use.
- Washers and dryers are pay-for-use and are not included in the nightly rental rates.
- Instructions for use of the laundry can be found inside the building or by contacting the camp host.Trash Policy
- Bag and dispose of all trash in the dumpsters.
- Keep RV sites and the common area clean, trash and clutter-free.Pet Policy
- Dogs are welcome; however, dogs must be cleaned up after and they must be leashed at all times.
- No aggressive dog breeds are allowed.
- A clean-up fee will be charged if dog feces in left in your RV site or in the common area.
- Please be considerate of others and clean up after your dog.Lawn Maintenance Policy
- During the warmer months, the grass is mowed, watered, fertilized, and treated for weeds as needed.
- During your stay, you should expect to move your personal items off the grass while the grass area is mowed, watered, and, as needed, fertilized or treated for weeds.
- Be respectful of the lawn staff and make their job easier by moving your personal items off the grass and understanding that sprinkler overspray may occur on vehicles, RVs, and personal items.Vehicle Policy
- When entering or leaving the park, either by vehicle or on foot, please use the gravel and paved roads only.
- Do not drive on the grass or cut through the neighboring RV sites.
- Please be alert for children, pets, and other adults who may be on foot.Speed Limit
- The maximum speed limit is 5 mph.Campground Disclaimer
- The RV Park is not responsible for damage to you or your guests vehicles.
- RV or persons that may be incurred while entering, parking, hooking up, unhooking, driving in and around the park, departing or at any other time while you are at your RV site or in the common areas.
- Any electrical, water, sewer or any other component damaged as a result of your use of the park facilities are your responsibility.
- If you have questions about towing, backing up, unhitching, hooking up, detaching the water, sewer or power, or any other items related to your RV use or hookups, please seek competent advice prior to arriving.