Find a campsite that still has availability on a holiday weekend. That is what The Dyrt Pro is for.
Start The Dyrt ProCancel anytime.
Recreation.gov and state park booking systems tell you what is available on land that already has a reservation infrastructure — national parks, state parks, and managed campgrounds. They do not show you the dispersed camping areas on national forest land, the primitive sites at the edge of a wilderness area, or the free county-operated campgrounds that have no online presence at all. The Dyrt's database includes over 45,000 campgrounds across the US, with a significant portion being sites that exist nowhere else in a searchable format — discovered and documented by campers who found them and reported back.
FreeCampsites.net is the most comprehensive free-sites database and is genuinely useful for dispersed and primitive camping — The Dyrt's free version overlaps significantly with it. The Dyrt Pro's main advantages over FreeCampsites.net are the app quality, the offline map functionality, and one feature that nothing else has: cell coverage previews. The Dyrt Pro tells you what your carrier's signal is expected to be at a specific campsite based on actual camper reports — which matters a great deal if you need signal at the site or if you are specifically looking for sites without it.

The Dyrt Pro is for the camper who wants to look beyond the obvious public booking systems — who wants to know about the dispersed sites in Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest, the primitive camping areas at the edge of Big South Fork in Tennessee, or the free sites in the Ocala National Forest that have no listed presence elsewhere. It is also the right tool for campers who specifically want to know about cell coverage before choosing a site — either to confirm they will have signal for emergencies, or to confirm they will not have it for the weekend.
In Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest in North Georgia, The Dyrt surfaces dispersed camping areas along the Toccoa River and the Cohutta Wilderness boundary that do not appear in Georgia state park booking systems. In Cherokee National Forest in Tennessee, the primitive sites accessible from the Ocoee River corridor and the Hiwassee River sections are documented in The Dyrt with real camper photos and signal reports. In Ocala National Forest in Florida, the dispersed camping zone in the forest interior is one of the most accessible free camping opportunities in the Southeast, and The Dyrt has the most thorough documentation of specific sites and access road conditions.
Skip The Dyrt Pro if your camping is exclusively at reservation-based campgrounds with standard hookups — Recreation.gov and state park sites handle that inventory better. The Dyrt's value is in the undocumented, dispersed, and free inventory that does not exist elsewhere. If you are booking a numbered site at a managed campground, The Dyrt Pro adds little.
Buy The Dyrt Pro if you are willing to camp outside the managed campground system and want the best tool for finding what is available in national forest, dispersed, and undeveloped areas. The offline maps and cell coverage previews alone separate it from FreeCampsites.net for anyone doing serious trip planning. Skip it if your camping is exclusively at reservation-based, hook-up-equipped campgrounds.
Cancel anytime.
Start The Dyrt Pro