Starting this August, Washington State Parks is setting a stricter limit on how long you can camp

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In mid-August, Washington is introducing new limits to how long you can camp at a state park.

Previously, each individual park was responsible for establishing its own limit on how many consecutive nights someone could spend camping within park boundaries between April and September. Parks weren't given much flexibility though — the limit had to be between ten and 14 nights. Between October and March, all parks limited campers' stays to 20 consecutive nights.

Now, the state parks department is simplifying the rules.

New rules for camping in state parks

Under the new rules, no one is allowed to camp in a given state park for more than ten nights in a given 30 day period. Campers are allowed to stay at different state parks for a combined total of more than ten nights over a 30 day stretch, according to the department's proposal.

Additionally, campers are limited to a total of 90 nights spent in all Washington state parks each year.



Will new Washington camping rules have an impact?

With the changes, the state parks department hopes to make limits more consistent across each of the state's parks and each month of the year, while promoting camping for recreational purposes and not residential ones, according to the proposal. The department estimates that the new limits will affect less than 1% of camping reservations.

The new rules were approved by the Washington State Parks Recreation Commission on July 18, and will go into effect on Aug. 19. Existing reservations that exceed 10 nights will still be honored.

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