
Best For
Best for campers who want a quieter, less-trafficked corner of the Success Lake recreation area and don't need electric hookups. No detailed site data is available, so it suits flexible campers comfortable with some uncertainty in the booking process.
North Tule Campground is part of the Success Lake recreation area but has no site count, hookup data, or rating on record. It shares the lake's boating, fishing, and kayaking access, and the 14-day stay limit applies here as it does across the complex. Because reservation analytics aren't available for North Tule, campers should check availability directly and treat it as a secondary option if Tule's sites are full. If you need electric hookups or a confirmed large-rig site, book Tule instead.
Content from Success Lake park guide
Address
Porterville, California
Coordinates
36.0817, -118.8973






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October and November are the sweet spot at Success Lake: demand is medium, last-minute bookings run at 67% and 61.4% respectively, and foothills temperatures are far more comfortable than the hot summer months. May through July sees the highest reservation volume — May peaks at 754 reservations — and July is the only month where last-minute availability genuinely tightens to 45%. January and February are extremely open, with 79.6% and 73.0% last-minute rates, making them ideal for impromptu winter escapes when crowds are minimal.
Success Lake is a drive-in campground complex accessible from Porterville, roughly 8 miles to the west via Lake Success Road. There are no shuttle requirements or permit-based vehicle restrictions like those found at larger Sierra parks. The 80-foot vehicle limit at Tule makes it one of the most RV-accessible campgrounds in the Central Valley foothills, and road conditions are generally suitable year-round at this low elevation.
Success Lake is managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, not the National Park Service, so the America the Beautiful annual pass does not cover entrance or camping fees here. Tule Campground has both standard non-electric and electric hookup sites — confirm current nightly rates on Recreation.gov when booking, as Army Corps fees are set independently. There is no day-use entrance fee structure equivalent to a national park; fees are per-site, per-night.
The 14-day maximum stay limit applies across all three campgrounds. Porterville, 8 miles west, is the nearest town for fuel, groceries, and supplies — stock up before heading in, as there are no camp stores on site. Cell service and shade data are not on record for any of the campgrounds, so treat connectivity as unreliable and plan accordingly. Pets, campfires, and generator hours should be confirmed with the Army Corps of Engineers field office before your trip, as those policies are not published in the current dataset.

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