You don't need to be a digital marketing expert to get your campground ranking on Google. You just need to understand a few fundamentals and apply them consistently. This guide covers what actually moves the needle for campground and RV park websites, without the jargon.
When someone searches 'campgrounds near [your area]' or 'RV parks in [your state],' they're ready to book. These are high-intent searches - the person has already decided they want to go camping and they're looking for where to go. If your park doesn't show up on that first page of results, you're invisible to those potential guests.
Paid advertising can put you there temporarily, but SEO puts you there permanently (or at least as long as you maintain it). And organic clicks convert better than paid clicks because people trust organic results more.
This is the single most impactful thing you can do for local SEO, and it's free. Your Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business) is what shows up in the map pack when someone searches for campgrounds in your area.
Make sure your profile is fully completed: business name (consistent with your website), full address, phone number, website URL, hours of operation, photos (lots of them - aim for 25+), and a description that naturally includes terms like 'campground,' 'RV park,' and your location.
Post updates regularly - weekly is ideal. Share photos of the park, announce seasonal openings, highlight amenities. Google rewards active profiles with better visibility.
Your website needs to clearly communicate what you are and where you are. Google's job is to match searchers with relevant results, so make it easy:
Blog content is how you rank for longer search queries that your website pages don't cover. Think about what your guests ask before they book: 'best campgrounds for fishing in [state],' 'RV parks with pull-through sites near [landmark],' 'what to do near [your area].'
Write blog posts that answer these questions. A post about 'Top 10 Things to Do Within 30 Minutes of [Your Park]' targets local attraction searches and positions your park as the place to stay. A post about 'Beginner's Guide to RV Camping in [Your State]' captures people who are new to RVing and might not know your park exists.
A citation is any online mention of your business name, address, and phone number (NAP). Consistent citations across the web help Google verify your business and improve your local ranking. Key places to list your campground: Google Business Profile, Yelp, TripAdvisor, The Dyrt, Hipcamp, your state tourism board, local chamber of commerce, campground associations (Good Sam, KOA, etc.), and any relevant directories.
The critical word is consistent. Your name, address, and phone number must be exactly the same everywhere. 'Pine Lake Campground' and 'Pine Lake Camp Ground' are different to Google.
Google reviews directly influence your local search ranking. More reviews, higher average rating, and recent review activity all help. We covered review strategy in detail in a separate post, but the short version: automate a post-stay review request via email or text, respond to every review (positive and negative), and aim for a steady stream rather than bursts.
A few technical factors that can make or break your SEO:
SEO isn't a one-time project. It's an ongoing practice that compounds over time. The parks that start now will have a significant advantage over competitors who wait.
Want a head start? Download our Campground SEO Checklist - a step-by-step guide to optimizing your park's online presence for Google.