What this helps with
This is most useful when terms like full hookups, electric-only, standard campsite, primitive site, or walk-in access sound familiar but still leave you unsure what the trip would actually feel like once you arrive.
Use this tool to translate campground labels into a clearer starting point before you compare listings, park maps, or reservation pages.
This is most useful when terms like full hookups, electric-only, standard campsite, primitive site, or walk-in access sound familiar but still leave you unsure what the trip would actually feel like once you arrive.
This first version is built to translate confusing listing language into a more useful starting point. It does not score individual parks. It helps you understand which kinds of site descriptions are more likely to work before you start comparing campgrounds.
Good fit
The aim is not to tell you which park to book. It is to narrow down what kind of site language you should trust yourself to compare first. That makes it easier to screen out bad-fit listings before you spend time on the wrong campground pages.
Even when the tool gives you a strong direction, you still need to check RV length limits, bathhouse distance, exposure, and whether “pet-friendly” or “beach access” means what you think it means at the specific park you are considering.