(Closed in summer). Located at 190 feet below sea level, Sunset has 270 sites with water, flush toilets, and dump station. NO Fires Allowed.
Reviews of Sunset Campground
22 people have reviewed this location
Ratings Summary
Cell Coverage
Verizon 4G/5G
Confirmed by 8 users | Last reported on March 31, 2024AT&T 4G/5G
Confirmed by 5 users | Last reported on March 10, 2024T-Mobile 4G/5G
Confirmed by 5 users | Last reported on April 16, 2024No frills, no fire rings, no picnic tables, no hookups, but, and this is the most important part, no reservations!
The Sunset campground (or, if you will, glorified parking lot) isn't nearly as nice as the Furnace Creek campground across the street (reservations only during peak season), or the Texas Spring campground up the hill (which primarily for tent campers but has a few spots for RVs), but it is always the easiest one to find a spot during the busy seasons in the park in Furnace Creek, and thus is quite appealing to the non-planners among us.
Death Valley National Park is one of my favorite places on the planet, and Furnace Creek makes an excellent base camp for seeing some of the most beautiful parts of the park (the badlands at Zabriskie Point, Twenty Mule Team Canyon, and Artists Drive; The salt flats at Badwater, the Mesquite Flat sand dunes near Stovepipe wells, and much more).
There are liberal generator hours (7AM to 9PM when we were there), and the campground as a result can be quite loud. There is also (usually) liberal sunshine so our solar panel did just fine for us. The road noise was tolerable and was a non-issue except for the handful of times a caravan of motorcycles drove by.
There is a dump station/water fill in the campground, and there are no other water spigots besides the one at the dump station. There are restrooms scattered throughout and they were all clean. Many sites are quite large and are effectively pull-thru. Showers can be purchased across the street in Furnace Creek (last we used them, $6 will get you access to the shower and pool for 24 hours).
In theory there is a 30 day annual stay limit but this does not appear to be enforced nor enforceable unless you stay more than 30 consecutive days. You pay by credit card at one of a handful of kiosks throughout the campground.
As of March 2016, AT&T offers much better service than Verizon. When it is moderately busy, the Verizon tower is easily overwhelmed, when it is super busy (as it was on the weekend during the super bloom earlier this year), the AT&T tower can be overwhelmed as well, though we only saw that happen once during about 6 weeks of staying in Death Valley. Note that if you have a pre-paid plan on AT&T it will not work here as it is a roaming tower (so you will need a monthly subscription plan on AT&T to use it, we found that out the hard way).
Pahrump, NV (which has two grocery stores and a Wal-Mart) is an hour away, so stock up beforehand. The little general store in Furnace Creek has some essentials but limited selection.
The food quality at the Furnace Creek restaurants varies considerably even within the same week for the same meal, but the staff are friendly, and you can easily walk to them (and the Visitor Center) from the campground.
The post office at Furnace Creek can accept FedEx and UPS deliveries (go inside and ask them for details).
When the campground is almost full, they will open the two overflow sections (a smaller "Overflow X" lot located right by the campground entrance, and a gigantic overflow area near the dump station). These areas are much less busy and noisy, but they will quickly shut them down once the main campground has availability. This is an annoying NPS policy, I would much prefer the overflow areas to be open all the time, rather than forcing everyone to be packed close together in the main campground.
We actually enjoyed this campground quite a bit when it wasn't busy (once in the Overflow X lot before they kicked us out, and then in the primary campground area when there were only a handful of people in mid January before the super bloom), and you can't beat the location.
Nightly Rate: $12.00
Days Stayed: 30
Site Number: -
We stayed in the overflow area which we ended up liking more than the main area. We chose one of the busier weeks of the 49er Encampment but it wasn't too bad in the overflow area. Our solar was cranking so we only ran our generator a few times to cool off after a couple of 95 degree days.
No internet on Verizon but extended network voice.
Nightly Rate: $12.00
Days Stayed: 4
Site Number: -
This is a great National Park Campground right in the middle of Furnace Creek in Death Valley. There are no hookups. But, good dump station on site. Good water source on site. No reservations. Very likely you don't need them. Even if full there is an overflow area just north of the campground. Generator hours 7am - 9pm. This is a large paved campground with RV sites painted in. Some site are pull throughs and some back in. Lots of room.
The beauty of this park is, well, the beauty. Lovely views right from your campsite either day or night. And you are right in the middle of the points of interest in Death Valley. There are lots of points of interest in this park and especially if you have a 4WD vehicle. There are lots of dirt tracks and 4WD trails.
The best time to go here is Oct - April. We went in March this year and it was the best weather we have ever had in visiting DV. We had sun, clouds, rain, clear night skies, and great temps. Some of the most noted sites were pretty crowded like Zabrisky Point. Once you got off the paved roads the crowds thin a lot. And once you get on the 4WD tracks there are no crowds.
Next door to this campground and up a little hill is the Furnace Creek Inn which is now called the Lodge at Death Valley. Why they renamed this very famous old hotel is beyond me. If you have the budget for a good meal do go here to eat. Beautiful old hotel with very good service and casual elegant surroundings. They also have a very nice spa. And rooms if you do not bring your RV starting at $495. The food is excellent +.
Our Verizon coverage was 3G and you can make and get phone calls. I had no luck getting any data. There is wifi in the campground from the Lodge and a daily charge for it. It works but is very slow.
Nightly Rate: $7.00
Days Stayed: 5
Site Number: 113
Cell Coverage Rating
Verizon 4G
Lets face it, it is what it is - a big gravel parking lot. But here's the deal - it's centrally located, inexpensive, and there's always room. We stayed here back in 2016 when the super bloom was occurring and even then, with the park overrun with tourists and campers, there was room. When the main lot gets full, the park opens overflow areas. It's really nice to know that there is still one National Park where you can pull in and find a place to camp without making a reservation nine months in advance.
Actually, Sunset is not a bad place to camp. The view isn't bad at all, there are restrooms with flush toilets, a dump station (with potable water), and utility sinks for tent campers. There are pretty generous generator hours, but actually most campers seem to do without which is nice. We always end up having interesting neighbors at Sunset and enjoy the people we meet here. It's a very democratic sort of campground - people camping in tents, vans, big 40' class A motorhomes, truck campers, trailers, even their cars. Everybody is welcome!
One thing to note: we always looked forward to going across the street to the Furnace Creek Ranch general store for a coffee and ice cream bar, but the ranch is undergoing renovation at the moment and the store has moved to much smaller, temporary and hard to find digs (near the golf course). Construction is supposed to be finished this summer, but don't get your hopes up. You can walk to the DV visitors center though and that's a plus.
Tip: fuel up before you come - gas is expensive in the park, especially at Furnace Creek.
Nightly Rate: $7.00
Days Stayed: 4
Site Number: -
Cell Coverage Rating
AT&T 4G
We had no reservation and it was just great. Dumping station with fresh water. Clean bathrooms
Nightly Rate: $15.00
Days Stayed: 1
Site Number: O
Sunset Campgound is centrally located, across from the Furnace Creek Ranch. It is a dusty parking lot, with sites marked by parking barriers and white paint. Reservations are not available, but I was here during the first week it was open for the season, and it was not 10% occupied. I camped in the last row at the bottom end, and had a good view. Payment is made by credit card at digital kiosks. My $7/night reflects a 50% discount with a senior pass. There is water and a dump station. If there is a line for the dump station, there is another one just outside the campground, across the street from the gas station.
I had 5 bars of Verizon 3G, and voice worked, by data was intermittent. I could occasionally get emails and the weather forecast. There was a slow 4G signal at Dantes Peak, and fast 4G in Beatty, just the other side of Rhyolite ghost town.
Do not buy gas at Furnace Creek - it's an absolute rip-off. Fill up at Stovepipe Wells, or if you're going to Rhyolite, fill up in Beatty. Prices were $5.52 at Furnace Creek, $4.71 at Stovepipe Wells, and $3.55 in Beatty. The Beatty price was typical for Nevada at that time.
Nightly Rate: $7.00
Days Stayed: 5
Site Number: M8
We stayed in early February so the weather was great at the site was pretty busy. We chose to stay here for access to fresh water and a dump station, but got so much more! You’re surrounded by mountains and sand dunes, the night sky is full of stars, the sunsets are gorgeous, the large lot is great for walking and meeting other campers, and there’s a hotel across the street with WiFi, groceries and a couple of restaurants.
I worked from my laptop in the hotel lobby for a few hours one day and purchased the 24-hour package for $10. We also ate at the breakfast buffet for $16/person and children under 5 were free. This was great because our fridge broke during our stay.
The generator hours are 7AM-9PM and we don’t have solar set up yet so this was great. Our 1-year-old made friends with lots of neighbors and everyone was very friendly.
Cell service was great the first day but not the second and we have no idea why. We have AT&T.
Nightly Rate: $14.00
Days Stayed: 2
Site Number: -
It’s basically a parking lot. Located across the street from the visitor center and gas station. Not too far from most of the major vista points. Took a little while to locate the dump station at the north end of the lot. Multiple dumpsters which are convenient. Good views of the mountains although you’re probably here to see other places within the park. Only got 3G signal with AT&T here but managed to do some Black Friday online shopping with it. Gets very windy at night hence the noise.
Nightly Rate: $14.00
Days Stayed: 2
Site Number: K6
It is just a parking lot and fires are not allowed. Staff was very friendly. Conveniently located to access the areas of the park. There is potable water in the camping area, restrooms too.
Nightly Rate: $14.00
Days Stayed: 2
Site Number: -
Cell Coverage Rating
Verizon 4G
We were happy we had solar but there are a lot of generators running from 8AM until 9PM. This is nothing but a gravel parking lot but it worked out fine. The sites are big enough for a large rig plus a car. Sunset gives you great access to all the sites in Death Valley. You are very centrally located. I was surprised how many tent campers showed up on Friday night. When I was a tent camper I never was comfortable setting up my tent on top of gravel, but many people did. During the week it was not crowded at all. Dump site inside Sunset is convenient and if you get a line there is one outside of Sunset for Furnace Creek.
At some point you will need to fill up with gas since Death Valley is the largest National Park in the lower 48 and some attractions are 1.5 hour drive away. Gas at Furnace Creek is outrageous, $4.94 per gallon. But if you are heading towards the Mesquite Sand Dunes fill up 8 miles past at Stovepipe Wells. Gas there was $4.14 per gallon. My $7 per night was with the senior access pass. Normally it is $14 per night.
I only used a rest room once and it seemed clean enough.
Nightly Rate: $7.00
Days Stayed: 4
Site Number: K10
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Sunset Campground
Hours
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Parking
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Pets Allowed
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Restrooms
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Wifi
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Wheelchair Accessible
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Credit Cards Accepted
- Affiliation
- National park
- Back In RV Sites Count
- 20
- Last Nightly Rate
- 7.0
- Longest Vehicle Length Reported
- 40.0
- Lowest Nightly Rate
- 7.0
- Season End
- April
- Season Start
- Oct
- Sites Count
- 270
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Paved Sites
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Fifty Amp
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Full Hookup
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Pull Through
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Tent Sites
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Dump Station
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Big Rigs
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Open Seasonally
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Age Restricted
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Back In RV Sites
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Boondock
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Cabin Sites
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Dispersed Sites
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Firewood
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Fulltime Residents
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Group Tent Sites
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Laundry
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Mobile Homes
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Permit Required
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Potable Water
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Propane
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Public Water
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Pull Through RV Sites
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Reservations
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Sewer Hookup
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Showers
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Sites
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Standard Tent Sites
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Vehicle Wash Permitted
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Water Hookup
Campground, Restrooms
Nearby Hotels
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