Martha's Vineyard has exactly one campground — the Family Campground in Vineyard Haven. Complete guide to sites, prices, booking, glamping options, and the Cape Cod camp-and-ferry strategy.
Martha's Vineyard has exactly one campground on the entire island — the family-owned Martha's Vineyard Family Campground in Vineyard Haven. No glamping resorts, no state park sites, no beach camping. Just one place with 180 sites in an oak forest, a free bus stop at the gate, and a community campfire that draws strangers into conversation every night.
This scarcity makes camping on Martha's Vineyard a planning exercise. Peak-season sites sell out within days of the late-January reservation opening, and the cancellation policy is strict. But if you secure a spot, you'll pay $49–$150 per night on an island where hotel rooms regularly exceed $400.
Here's everything you need to know — verified for 2026.
Martha's Vineyard Family Campground: Your Only Option
The Feeney family has operated this campground since 1972, now in its third generation. Set within a mature oak forest along the main road between Vineyard Haven and Edgartown, it remains the most affordable way to sleep on Martha's Vineyard.
Location & Getting There
Address: 569 Edgartown Road, Vineyard Haven, MA 02568
Phone: (508) 693-3772
Website: campmv.com
Distance from Vineyard Haven ferry: 1.5 miles (5-minute drive or short bike ride)
VTA bus stop: Right at the campground entrance gates — buses every 30 minutes in summer, completely fare-free through at least May 2026 (negotiations ongoing for summer extension)
Pricing is dynamic — rates vary by site type, season, and demand through their NewBook booking engine. A one-time .00 booking fee applies to all reservations. Seasonal RV sites run ,900–,300 per season. Maximum stay is 2 weeks.
Site Types
The campground has approximately 180 sites across 10 wooded acres — roughly 100 tent sites, 27 cabins, 26 seasonal RV sites, and 20 daily/weekly RV sites.
Primitive Campsites — No hookups. Compact to large sizes. Some allow vehicles up to 25 feet; the smallest "No Vehicle" option is tent-only. Best value on the island.
Powered Campsites — 20/30 amp electric and water hookups. Vehicles from under 15 to 24 feet depending on tier.
RV Sites — Full hookups: water, sewer, and 30/50 amp electric. Standard fits up to 30 feet; large fits up to 38–40 feet by request. Back-in only — no pull-through sites available.
Rustic Cabins (One-Room) — Sleep 4 on a full bed and twin bunks. Includes mini fridge with freezer, propane grill, fire ring, picnic table. No running water or bathroom inside — bring your own bedding and dishes.
Rustic Cabins (Two-Room) — Sleep 6 on two full beds and single bunks. Same rustic setup with no plumbing.
The sites are wooded and shaded within a mature oak forest — aerial views show you can barely see the campsites through the tree canopy. Ground is hard-packed sand (bring a quality sleeping pad). The campground maintains a 5 mph speed limit on internal dirt roads.
Facilities
Facility
Available?
Notes
Restrooms
Yes
Indoor, open 24/7
Hot Showers
Yes
Free — indoor AND popular outdoor showers
Laundry
Yes
Coin-operated
Camp Store
Yes
Firewood, food, ice, coffee, accessories
Swimming Pool
No
Use island beaches instead
WiFi
Yes
Reviews say "great" to "okay for basics"
Fire Rings
Yes
Every site — campfires 6 AM to 11 PM
Playground
Yes
Plus volleyball, basketball, ball field
Recreation Hall
Yes
Ping pong, air hockey, video games, board games
Community Campfire
Yes
Nightly gathering tended by "Ambassador Bill"
Bike Rentals
Yes
Adult bikes available on site
Generators
No
Not permitted
Peak-season activities include live music, candy bar bingo, movie nights, tie dye, crafts, and root beer floats.
Pet Policy
Dogs are NOT permitted during peak season (July 1–August 31). During shoulder season, dogs are welcome on tent sites, RV sites, and pet-friendly cabins on E Road only. Maximum two dogs per site. Contact the campground directly to register dogs. Read our full pet-friendly Martha's Vineyard guide for more dog policies across the island.
Rules & Quiet Hours
The campground enforces 24-hour courtesy hours: all campers in tents by midnight, all site lights off by midnight, campfires 6 AM–11 PM. No late arrivals after 11 PM. Check-in is 3 PM or later. Maximum two sleeping tents and one vehicle per site. Primary guest must be 21 or older. Motorcycles may enter/exit only 8 AM–10 PM.
What Reviewers Say
TripAdvisor 4.0/5 (100 reviews, #2 specialty lodging in Vineyard Haven). RV LIFE 9.5/10. Hipcamp 100% recommend.
"The campground has to be the best value ever on Martha's Vineyard. We book in January of each year to go in July, and we have never had anything less than a stellar time."
Common praise: Immaculately clean facilities, friendly Feeney family staff, the outdoor hot showers, the community campfire with Ambassador Bill, and the VTA bus stop at the entrance.
Heads up: Skunks. Every reviewer mentions them. "Oh so many skunks" and "skunks use this campground as much as humans do." They're harmless if you don't startle them — but store food properly and don't leave scraps out.
How to Book: The January Rush
The campground uses the NewBook online platform at bookingsus.newbook.cloud/campmv. Reservations also available by phone (9 AM–3 PM) and email, though email does not guarantee a site. Payment in full is required at booking.
2026 Reservation Release Schedule
Date
Time
Who Can Book
Thursday, January 22
9:00 AM
Stays of 10+ nights
Sunday, January 25
9:00 AM
Stays of 5+ nights
Wednesday, January 28
9:00 AM
All stays (general release)
Peak-season July/August sites sell out within days to weeks of the January release. Be online with your account ready and dates finalized.
Critical tip: Book your Steamship Authority ferry reservation BEFORE booking the campground. Vehicle ferry reservations open in February and fill within hours for peak weekends. If you can't get a ferry, the campground will not refund you.
Cancellation Policy
All cancellations must be submitted in writing via email:
90+ days before arrival: Full refund minus 5% service charge
30–89 days: Full refund minus 10% service charge
Less than 30 days: Non-refundable
No refunds for weather, ferry cancellations, or early departure. The campground strongly recommends purchasing travel insurance.
Glamping on Martha's Vineyard: Almost Nonexistent
If you're imagining safari tents overlooking the ocean — that doesn't exist here. Martha's Vineyard has essentially one glamping-style option.
The Luxury Vineyard Yurt (Oak Bluffs)
Operated through Island Spirit Kayak, this is a permanent luxury yurt structure completed in 2020 — not a tent but a fully built yurt home. It features a round skylight, radiant concrete floors, full kitchen with Bosch appliances, master bedroom, loft sleeping area, private patio with fire pit, enclosed outdoor shower, and HVAC. Complimentary kayaking and paddleboarding included. Likely 00–00+ per night in season.
Website: islandspiritkayak.com/the-vineyard-yurt
Contact: (774) 563-0808
Booking: Airbnb listing #43737799
This is Martha's Vineyard's only verified yurt. It functions more as a unique luxury rental than traditional glamping.
What About Winnetu Resort?
Some travel articles incorrectly list Winnetu Oceanside Resort as offering yurts or glamping. This is wrong. Winnetu is a full-service luxury family resort in Edgartown with traditional hotel rooms, suites, and cottages starting at 38/night. No yurts, no tents, no glamping of any kind.
Major Glamping Brands
Under Canvas, Collective Retreats, and Glamping Hub have zero Martha's Vineyard listings. The nearest brand-name glamping is AutoCamp Cape Cod in Falmouth — Airstreams, luxury tents, and tiny houses from ~29/night, just minutes from the Woods Hole ferry.
Why Camping Is So Restricted on Martha's Vineyard
Understanding why one campground is your only option requires understanding the island.
Beach camping is banned across all six towns. Chilmark's rules explicitly threaten "loss of beach privileges, fines and arrest." Every town enforces this through bylaws.
Manuel F. Correllus State Forest (5,300+ acres) — no camping. The island's largest open space explicitly prohibits camping and fires. DCR actively enforces this, clearing unauthorized camps annually. The primary concerns are wildfire risk in the fire-prone coastal pine barrens and protection of globally rare sandplain habitat.
All conservation lands prohibit overnight stays. Felix Neck (Mass Audubon), Trustees of Reservations properties (Cape Poge, Wasque, Long Point, Menemsha Hills), MV Land Bank (4,200+ acres), and Sheriff's Meadow Foundation — all prohibit individual camping. The former Webb's Camping Area in Oak Bluffs closed in the late 1990s, the land became conservation property, and the Land Bank voted unanimously in December 2022 to permanently ban camping there.
Martha's Vineyard has no National Forest, no BLM land, and no federal public lands. The island is approximately 100 square miles where virtually every acre is privately owned, conserved, or developed. Sleeping in vehicles is also prohibited island-wide outside the campground.
The Cape Cod Strategy: Camp There, Ferry Here
For budget-minded visitors, the "camp on Cape Cod, day-trip to Martha's Vineyard" strategy is well-proven and practical. Use our Trip Cost Calculator to estimate your total budget.
Sippewissett Campground & Cabins — Closest to the Ferry
Just 4–5 miles from Woods Hole (10 minutes by car), this family-run campground offers ~100 sites with full or partial hookups, cabin rentals, and even tipi rentals. It sits on the Shining Sea Bikeway and provides a free daily shuttle to Woods Hole, beaches, and Falmouth.
Address: 836 Palmer Avenue, Falmouth, MA 02540
Phone: (508) 548-2542
Amenities: hot showers, laundry, camp store, playground, WiFi, fire pits
Shawme-Crowell State Forest (Sandwich, MA)
24 miles / 35 minutes from Woods Hole. 285 campsites plus 6 yurts on 700 wooded acres. No hookups. Rates: 7/night MA residents, 4/night non-residents. Yurts 5–40 depending on residency. Reservations via ReserveAmerica, opening 4 months before arrival. Season: Memorial Day through Labor Day (full), October–April weekends only.
Nickerson State Park (Brewster, MA)
40 miles / 1 hour from Woods Hole, but Cape Cod's premier campground. 418 campsites across 1,900 acres with 8 freshwater kettle ponds for swimming. Rates: 2/night MA residents, 5/night non-residents. Connected to the 26-mile Cape Cod Rail Trail. Extremely popular — book the day reservations open.
The Budget Math
Expense
Daily Cost (couple)
Cape Cod campsite
9–5
SSA ferry round-trip (2 walk-ons)
4
Woods Hole parking
5–3
Total
18–52/day
Compare that to 00+ for a modest MV hotel room. On the island, the fare-free VTA bus plus bike rentals (5–0/day) make car-free exploration easy.
What to Pack: MV-Specific Hazards
Ticks Are the #1 Camping Hazard
Martha's Vineyard is among the highest-risk areas for Lyme disease in the United States. The island has approximately 5,000 white-tailed deer, each hosting hundreds of ticks. MV Hospital reported a 38% increase in tick-borne disease tests from March to May 2024.
Three species are present: deer ticks (transmit Lyme, babesiosis, anaplasmosis — nymphs are poppy-seed-sized), lone star ticks (can trigger red meat allergy), and dog ticks. Peak nymph activity runs May through July — exactly when camping season opens. Read our complete tick safety guide for detailed prevention protocols.
Essential: Treat all clothing with permethrin before the trip. Apply DEET 20–30% to exposed skin. After outdoor activity: shower within 2 hours, run clothes through a dryer on HIGH for 15 minutes. A deer tick must be attached 24–48 hours to transmit Lyme — early removal prevents infection.
Greenhead Flies in Late July
These salt-marsh breeders attack with scissor-like jaws from roughly the last two weeks of July through the first week of August. They are largely immune to conventional insect repellent. Physical barriers are your best defense: wear light-colored clothing (they're attracted to dark colors), cover skin, and seek windy areas. Most active 10 AM to dusk.
MV Camping Packing Checklist
Permethrin-treated clothing and DEET/picaridin repellent
Tick removal tweezers (fine-tipped)
Quality sleeping pad — ground is "rock hard" packed sand
Wind-rated tent with robust stakes and extra guylines
Moisture-wicking layers for foggy mornings
Quick-dry towel and dry bags for electronics
SPF 30+ reef-safe sunscreen
Long-sleeved light-colored shirts for greenhead season
Bike lock (for rental bikes from the campground)
Reusable water bottles
Headlamp (for nighttime bathroom trips through the forest)
Cash — some island shops don't take cards
Leave behind: Bug zappers (prohibited — attract wildlife), generators (prohibited), firewood from the mainland (buy on island to prevent invasive species).
No bears. Martha's Vineyard has been bear-free for centuries. The main wildlife at the campground are skunks (extremely common, harmless if not startled) and raccoons. Store food properly and use the dumpsters.
Shoulder Season: The Smart Play
If you can be flexible on dates, September is the sweet spot: ocean water is at its warmest, crowds thin dramatically, prices drop, greenhead flies are gone, early fall foliage begins, and dogs are allowed at the campground. The trade-offs are cooler evening temperatures and some businesses operating limited hours.
May and June offer similar advantages with longer days and wildflower blooms, though ocean water is still cold. See our month-by-month visitor guide for detailed seasonal planning.
Mid-week arrivals are significantly easier to secure than weekend starts during any season.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I camp on the beach on Martha's Vineyard?
No. Beach camping is prohibited across all six towns with penalties including fines and arrest.
Can I camp in the State Forest?
No. Manuel F. Correllus State Forest explicitly prohibits camping and fires. DCR actively enforces this.
Can I sleep in my car on Martha's Vineyard?
No. Sleeping in vehicles is prohibited island-wide outside the campground.
How far in advance should I book?
For July/August: book during the January release window (January 22–28). Sites sell out within days to weeks. For shoulder season: 2–3 months ahead is usually sufficient.
Do I need a car at the campground?
No. The VTA bus (currently free) stops at the entrance. Combined with campground bike rentals, you can explore the entire island without a car. See our car-free guide.
Is Nantucket better for camping?
Nantucket has no public campgrounds at all. Martha's Vineyard's single campground actually gives it an edge for budget travelers. See our MV vs Nantucket comparison.
📅 Island Tip of the Day — Seasonal
Memorial Day weekend marks the official season start — busy but noticeably less intense than July/August. The week after is even quieter and everything's open.
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Disclaimer: The information in this article is provided for general guidance only and was accurate at the time of writing. Beach conditions, hours, prices, lifeguard schedules, ferry fares, and business operations change frequently and without notice. Ocean swimming carries inherent risks including rip currents, undertow, and cold water shock. Always verify current conditions with official local sources before your visit. MV Vacation assumes no responsibility for any loss, injury, or inconvenience resulting from the use of this information. Swim only where lifeguards are on duty, supervise children at all times near water, and follow all posted safety signs.
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Please note: Content on MV Vacation is compiled from publicly available sources and personal experience. Prices, hours, access rules, and business details change frequently — we do our best to keep information current but cannot guarantee it is accurate or complete at any given time. This site provides general travel guidance only, not professional advice. Always verify details directly with the business, official website, or local authorities, and use your own judgment and due diligence before acting on any information. See our full disclaimer for details.
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