
Top 30 Delaware Campgrounds Every Survival Prepper Should Know
As a seasoned survival prepper in Delaware, I’ve scouted the state for campsites that offer more than just a place to pitch a tent. Whether you’re preparing for an emergency bug-out or seeking a weekend retreat to hone your skills, these 30 campgrounds provide the perfect blend of seclusion, natural resources, and accessibility.
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1. Cape Henlopen State Park
Located in Lewes, this park offers over 150 campsites nestled among pine forests and dunes. With access to the beach and fishing piers, it’s ideal for coastal survival training.
2. Delaware Seashore State Park
Situated between Rehoboth and Bethany Beach, this park features campgrounds with ocean views, providing opportunities for saltwater fishing and marine survival practice. The Outbound+4Wikipedia+4VacationIdea+4
3. Killens Pond State Park
In Felton, this park offers 17 walk-in primitive campsites surrounded by hardwood forests. The 66-acre millpond is perfect for freshwater fishing and canoeing. The Tech Edvocate+3Delaware Today+3Outdoor With J+3
4. Lums Pond State Park
Near Bear, this park features the largest freshwater pond in Delaware. With 17 miles of hiking trails and opportunities for boating, it’s a great spot for practicing waterborne survival skills. Wikipedia+1Only In Your State+1
5. Trap Pond State Park
Located in Laurel, this park is home to the northernmost stand of bald cypress trees in the U.S. It offers canoeing, hiking, and primitive camping experiences. campinglife101.com+1Only In Your State+1
6. Redden State Forest
Spanning over 12,400 acres, this forest in Georgetown provides free primitive camping and 44 miles of trails for hiking and biking. The Outbound+1Outdoor With J+1
7. Blackbird State Forest
Located north of Smyrna, this 6,000-acre forest offers primitive camping and diverse trails for hiking and horseback riding. Wikipedia
8. Holts Landing State Park
Near Bethany Beach, this 205-acre park features a crabbing pier and boat ramp, making it ideal for practicing water-based survival techniques. Wikipedia
9. Gulls Way Campground
This family-friendly campground offers tent and RV sites, providing a balance between comfort and wilderness exposure.
10. Cape Henlopen State Park
Beyond its main campground, this park offers additional primitive sites for those seeking a more rugged experience.
11. Pine Tree Campground
Located in Lincoln, this campground offers a variety of sites, including some that are more secluded, suitable for prepping practice.
12. Tuckahoe Acres
Situated in Rehoboth Beach, this campground offers a mix of amenities and natural surroundings, perfect for weekend getaways. VacationIdea
13. Historic Blueberry Farm
This unique site offers a blend of history and nature, providing a different perspective on survival camping. The Tech Edvocate
14. Holly Lake Campsites
Located in Lincoln, this campground offers a variety of amenities and natural settings, suitable for both beginners and seasoned preppers.
15. Homestead Campground
Situated in Lincoln, this campground offers a mix of amenities and natural surroundings, ideal for prepping practice.
16. Lost Lands RV Park
Located in Delmar, this park offers RV sites and is close to natural areas for exploration. VacationIdea
17. Tall Pines Campground Resort
In Lewes, this resort offers a mix of amenities and natural settings, suitable for both relaxation and prepping practice.
18. Treasure Beach RV Park & Campground
Located in Selbyville, this park offers RV sites and is close to natural areas for exploration. VacationIdea
19. Deep Branch Family Campground
Situated in Lincoln, this campground offers a variety of amenities and natural settings, ideal for family outings and prepping practice.
20. Sun Outdoors Rehoboth Bay
Located in Ocean View, this campground offers a mix of amenities and natural surroundings, suitable for both relaxation and prepping practice.
21. G & R Recreation Campground
Situated in Dagsboro, this campground offers a variety of amenities and natural settings, ideal for family outings and prepping practice. VacationIdea
22. Pine Haven Campground
Located in Lincoln, this campground offers a mix of amenities and natural surroundings, suitable for famalies!
23. Brumbley Family Park
A smaller, lesser-known site in Greenwood, this quiet family campground is ideal for those seeking solitude, with good tree coverage and open space for skills training and shelter building.
24. Cozy Acres Campground
Tucked away in Delmar, this spot lives up to its name. While it offers some comforts, it’s remote enough to double as a great location for practicing self-sufficiency and off-grid living.
25. Lums Pond Equestrian Camping Area
Separate from the main campground, this equestrian area at Lums Pond is a hidden gem for preppers. Less crowded and more rustic, it’s excellent for testing gear or staging survival scenarios.
26. Killens Pond Primitive Area
Beyond the main camping loops, Killens Pond features primitive sites that are secluded and wooded. Great for solo training weekends or trying your hand at no-fire, no-tools shelter building.
27. Fort DuPont State Park (Scout Camping Area)
This historical site near Delaware City isn’t widely known for camping, but scouts and survivalist groups sometimes use it. Ideal for group training, especially in urban survival simulation.
28. Possum Hill Camping Area (Blackbird Forest)
An isolated and forested location, Possum Hill offers backcountry-style camping with minimal services. It’s perfect for those wanting to get as close to wilderness prep as Delaware allows.
29. Redden Lodge Area (Redden State Forest)
Adjacent to Redden Lodge, this zone allows for both organized group camping and more rugged tent setups in the surrounding forest. Wildlife sightings here are common—great for tracking and foraging.
30. Big Oak County Park (Kent County)
A lesser-known park in Smyrna, Big Oak has open fields and wooded areas that are ideal for stealth camping or group drills. The area’s remoteness makes it a valuable asset for preppers who need training space with minimal foot traffic.
Conclusion: Where Preparedness Meets the First State’s Wild Heart
When you live in Delaware and think like a prepper, you start seeing the land differently. You don’t just look for beauty—you look for utility. You assess every grove, field, and pond for its survival value. And the truth is, while Delaware might be one of the smaller states in the country, it’s packed with high-value locations for anyone serious about readiness, resilience, and rugged living.
These 30 campgrounds aren’t just vacation spots—they’re training grounds. Each one offers something different: Killens Pond is your water purification classroom. Redden State Forest is your stealth movement and shelter-craft zone. Cape Henlopen? That’s coastal survival at its finest. Whether you’re practicing bug-out drills, sharpening your foraging skills, or testing your bug-out bag over a long weekend, these spots give you controlled environments to fail, learn, and improve before the real test ever comes.
And let’s be honest—complacency is a prepper’s biggest enemy. If you’re just stocking food in a basement and calling it preparedness, you’re missing the point. Skills > gear. Practice > theory. That’s why getting into the wild—Delaware’s wild—is mission-critical.
These parks, forests, and family-run campgrounds let you train solo, run weekend missions with your MAG (Mutual Assistance Group), or introduce your family to off-grid living. Some are perfect for bow hunting and small-game tracking. Others are ideal for bushcraft, water navigation, or signaling practice. Heck, a few even push you close to the edge of urban zones, which gives you the chance to prep for worst-case scenarios like civil unrest or supply line collapse.
I’ve spent years hiking these trails, sleeping under tarps, digging catholes in the cold, and learning how Delaware’s changing seasons shape both challenge and opportunity. I’ve tested my fire-making skills in Blackbird Forest during a February freeze, and I’ve learned the hard way how swarming mosquitos in Trap Pond can destroy your morale faster than an empty canteen.
That’s the real takeaway here: Preparedness isn’t a destination—it’s a lifestyle.
The good news? Delaware is quietly one of the most prepper-friendly states on the East Coast if you know where to look. From beachside sand dunes to cypress swamps, from pine forests to rolling meadows—you’ve got terrain variety and tactical options all within driving distance. And with so many under-the-radar camping areas, you can find solitude without needing to go hundreds of miles out west.
So pack your gear, load up your med kits, run your checklists, and get out there. The time to train isn’t when things fall apart—it’s right now, when the grid’s still humming and the skies are still clear.
Because when the power goes out, when the food stops showing up at stores, or when you need to move your family fast—you’ll either be the one who trained, or the one who wished they had.
Delaware is more than enough to make you dangerous—in the best possible way.
Stay sharp. Stay quiet. Stay ready.
















