RV Parks & Campgrounds
Find RV parks, campgrounds, and glamping opportunities for sale near Hot Springs, Arkansas. High-cap-rate commercial investments.
Find RV parks, campgrounds, and glamping opportunities for sale near Hot Springs, Arkansas. High-cap-rate commercial investments.
Our picks for the most notable opportunities, areas, and properties in this market.
RV parks and campgrounds near Lake Catherine State Park. Built-in customer base from park overflow. Year-round demand from outdoor recreation tourists.
High-visibility locations on the main highway from Little Rock. Capture pass-through RV traffic heading to Lake Ouachita and the Ouachita Mountains.
RV parks near HSV gates serving snowbirds and visiting family. Seasonal demand from retirees who visit before buying permanent homes.
Waterfront RV sites with lake access. Premium nightly rates of $60–$100. Some include boat ramp, dock, and swimming area. Highest revenue per site.
Glamping is the fastest-growing segment. Permanent tent structures, yurts, or tiny cabins on mountain sites. Nightly rates of $100–$200 with lower development costs.
Growing corridor toward Jessieville and HSV. Room for new development. Capture traffic from both Hot Springs tourists and HSV visitors.
Near the Hot Springs National Park campground. NPS campground frequently fills — overflow demand drives business to nearby private parks.
Properties near the Ouachita River recreation area. River tubing, fishing, and swimming drive summer demand. Seasonal but intense revenue.
Large-capacity parks that host car rallies, motorcycle events, and festivals. Hot Springs' event calendar creates recurring group booking opportunities.
Raw land zoned or convertible for RV park development. 5–20 acre parcels with road access, utilities nearby, and favorable topography.
Essential tips for navigating this market in Hot Springs.
RV parks require specific zoning (typically commercial or planned development). Garland County and city of Hot Springs have different zoning codes. Verify zoning before purchasing land for development.
Water, sewer, and electrical hookups are the biggest development cost. Full-hookup sites (water/sewer/50-amp electric) command $40–$80/night. Plan $8,000–$15,000 per site for utility installation.
Hot Springs has 3-season demand (March–November) with a winter slowdown. Year-round parks near Oaklawn and downtown can maintain 50–60% winter occupancy. Budget accordingly.
Well-managed RV parks in tourism areas deliver 10–15% cap rates. Value-add opportunities (adding sites, upgrading utilities, adding amenities) can push returns even higher.
Owner-operated parks have the best margins. Third-party management costs 8–12% of gross revenue. Some franchise systems (KOA, Jellystone) offer brand recognition but require significant investment.
Full-hookup sites: $35–$80/night or $400–$800/month. Tent sites: $20–$40/night. Cabins/glamping: $100–$200/night. A 50-site park grossing $40/night averages $730K/year at 100% occupancy.
Excellent. RV ownership has surged since 2020. Cap rates of 10–15% are common in tourism areas. Hot Springs' 2M+ annual visitors provide consistent demand.
$8,000–$15,000 per full-hookup site for utility installation. A 50-site park on purchased land typically costs $600K–$1.2M total including land, infrastructure, and amenities.
Commercial zoning, health department permits (water/sewer), electrical permits, business license, and potentially environmental review. The process takes 3–6 months.
A 50-site park at $45/night average and 70% annual occupancy grosses approximately $575K/year. After expenses (40–50%), net income is $280K–$345K.
Yes. Glamping units (yurts, safari tents, tiny cabins) can be added to existing parks and command 2–3x the nightly rate of a standard RV site with lower infrastructure cost.
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