Blue Hole Campground
Details- Booking
- Reserve through Florida State Parks up to 11 months ahead.
- Sites
- Shaded riverside RV and tent sites with utilities, plus cabin-style units.
- The practical base for an early cave tour and a Chipola paddle.

State Park · Florida
The only Florida state park with air-filled caves you can tour: ranger-led walks past stalactites and flowstone near Marianna, plus the Chipola River for paddling, more than eight miles of trails, and a shaded riverside campground.

Field briefing
Florida Caverns State Park rewards early starts and water math.
Before you go
The ranger-led cave walk is the headline, but the Chipola River paddling and more than eight miles of trails make it a full day or weekend. Plan a cave-tour reservation around the set schedule, expect the cave to stay cool while the surface is hot, and check trail status before you go, since some floodplain trails close periodically when the river threatens to flood.
The landmarks worth the trip. Tap any photo to enlarge.
Weather, crowds, and what the season changes about the trip.
Warm, green, and humid, with rising river levels that can affect floodplain trails.
Pack Light layers, bug protection, and a check on trail closures from flooding.
Hot and humid above ground, but the cave stays cool year-round.
Pack Water, insect repellent, and a light layer for the consistently cool cave.
Cooling and comfortable, one of the best stretches for hiking and paddling.
Pack Layers for cool mornings, sun protection, and footwear for damp riverbank trails.
Mild and quiet, with the most comfortable above-ground hiking and steady cave temperatures.
Pack Warm layer for the surface, a light layer for the cave, and rain protection.
Ranger-led cave tour
The reason to come: a roughly one-hour guided walk through air-filled caverns past stalactites, stalagmites, and flowstone, the only such cave tour in the Florida state park system. Tours run seven days a week and carry a separate per-person fee.
Chipola River paddling
The spring-fed Chipola winds through the park's forested floodplain, a calm and scenic canoe or kayak run that pairs naturally with the cave tour.
Floodplain and upland trails
More than eight miles of trails for hiking, cycling, and horseback riding thread the floodplain and hardwood hammocks. Some floodplain trails, including the River and Bumpnose trails, close periodically when flooding threatens.
Book the tour time first, then treat surface trails, overlooks, or visitor-center stops as the flexible pieces. For one day in Florida Caverns State Park, make Ranger-led cave tour the non-negotiable, add Chipola River paddling only if the first stop runs clean, and keep Floodplain and upland trails as the flexible finish.
Turn Florida Caverns's conditions into water, pack, and sleep-system decisions.

Build around exposure
Start with Florida Caverns State Park's sun, water, and route demands.
Plan your trip
4 quick tools, already seeded for Florida Caverns State Park. Tune water, pack weight, route time, and overnight warmth before the day gets locked in.
Start with the gear decisions this park changes: footing, weather, camping, and water.
Kit Authority
Florida Caverns State Park packing list
0 of 22 packed. Check items as you pack, then take this list to the store, trailhead, or campsite.
Pack planning
Use this as a constraint check while you are still shaping the trip. The active checklist becomes useful once your route, dates, and sleep plan are set.
Checklist mode
22 items, grouped for the trip you are actually taking.
The buying guides that match what Florida Caverns asks of your kit, with our current top picks across budget and use case.
Stay at the park's Blue Hole campground to bookend an early cave tour and a Chipola paddle, since the shaded riverside sites put you minutes from both. The campground takes RVs, tents, and a mix of cabin-style units. Marianna, about a five-minute drive south, has the nearest hotels, restaurants, and supplies, which makes it an easy fallback when the campground is full or the weather turns.
Camping reservations
Two reservations matter here: the campground and the ranger-led cave tour, which runs on a set schedule with limited spots. Book the campsite through the Florida reservation system and confirm the cave-tour schedule before you commit to dates.
Reviewed June 11, 2026
Booking window
Florida State Parks routes camping reservations through its official reservation system, bookable up to 11 months in advance. Cave tours are scheduled separately at the park.
Where to book or verify
Official Florida State Parks page with cave-tour schedule, trails, fees, and current notices.
Official Florida State Parks reservation path for campsites and cabins.
Check for federal campground, backcountry, tour, and permit inventory tied to this park.
Ranger-led cave tours run on a set daily schedule with a separate per-person fee. Confirm times before you arrive.
Campgrounds to know

Build the arrival around the reservation.
Entry windows, permit pickups, and drive time should be checked before the itinerary gets crowded.
Getting there
Car strategy
Florida Caverns sits about a five-minute drive north of Marianna in the Florida Panhandle, off Interstate 10 between Tallahassee and Pensacola.
Car strategy
A car is required, and arriving in the morning gives you the best shot at an open cave-tour time, since spots are limited and the schedule is fixed.
Pair this with lodging: choose the base that keeps the reservation or permit pickup from becoming the hardest part of the day.
Yes. Florida Caverns is the only Florida state park with air-filled caves open for ranger-led walking tours. The roughly one-hour tours run seven days a week on a set schedule and carry a separate per-person fee. Spots are limited, so arrive early to secure a tour time.
Park entry is $5 per vehicle for 2 to 8 occupants, $4 for single-occupant vehicles, and $2 for pedestrians and cyclists. The cave tour is a separate per-person fee on top of entry. Camping runs about $20 per night plus tax, a reservation fee, and a nightly utility fee for utility units.
Sometimes. The park sits on the Chipola River floodplain, and some trails such as the River and Bumpnose trails close periodically when flooding threatens. The cave tour and upland trails are usually unaffected, but it is worth checking current trail status before you go.