As of publication, these states allow overnight parking (8 hours or more) at rest stops. For the most current information and closures, visit the state’s DOT website. NOTE: there are a number of states in this list that have no laws concerning how long you can park at rest areas. ...
Sleeping in your RV is not considered camping. There are some rest areas, however, in Oregon and Montana that provide access to a state park or national forest in which camping is permitted. In some turnpike service plazas in Ohio, overnight RV parking spaces are available for a nominal ...
This effectively permits “overnight parking”. However a handful of states have placed short time limits on parking at rest areas, as little as two to three hours. This could force most people from being able to get enough sleep. It’s still unheard of for law enforcement to force someone...
And that (yes your RV as a source of peregrinatory adventure, but also its power as an instrument for choosing a uniquely-fulfilling-and-totally-unlike-anyone-else’s life-path) is why ditching the brick-meets-mortar approach and taking that proverbial show on the road truly is the American...