Skip to content
Hours
Open 24 Hours / 7 Days
Facilities
1 available
Coordinates
45.7991, -122.6806

Gee Creek Rest Area Southbound: Washington’s Final Stop with Limited RV Services

The Gee Creek Rest Area Southbound at mile marker 12 on I-5 is your last major rest stop before leaving Washington State, located 8.1 miles south of Woodland in Clark County. The facility handles the essentials – restrooms, picnic tables, and a volunteer coffee program. The rest area is open 24/7 and gets the job done for most travelers’ final Washington break before entering Oregon.

Gee Creek Rest Area Southbound Fast Facts

Feature Detail
Location Clark County, Washington
Highway Interstate 5 Southbound Only
Mile Marker MP 12
Status Open 24/7 – RV dump unavailable
Key Features Restrooms, coffee program, picnic areas
Parking Limits 8 hours regular, 11 hours commercial
GPS Coordinates 45.79914722, -122.6806075

What Works Here

You’ll find restrooms, picnic tables, and space to walk around before continuing into Oregon. Local volunteers serve free coffee and sometimes cookies during the day, which travelers consistently mention as a nice touch. Vending machines cover snacks and drinks around the clock, and there are pet areas for dog walks.

The facility does what most travelers need from their final Washington stop – a chance to regroup before the Oregon portion of their journey. It’s not fancy, but it covers the basics reliably.

What Doesn’t Work

Some travelers report feeling less comfortable here during overnight stops, though experiences vary widely. The facility has had issues with people overstaying parking limits, leading to increased enforcement.

Planning Your Stop

This gets steady traffic as Washington’s final southbound facility. Early morning and late evening tend to be quieter than midday. Since it’s your last free rest area before Oregon, many travelers stop here even if they don’t urgently need a break.

The 8-hour parking limit for cars (11 hours for trucks) is being more actively enforced than at some other rest areas due to ongoing compliance issues.

Traveler Tips

• Coffee timing depends on volunteer schedules, typically during daytime
• Consider stopping even if you don’t need to – next facilities are in Oregon
• Respect parking time limits – enforcement has increased recently
• Pet areas available but keep dogs leashed per state law

What Travelers Say

The volunteer coffee program gets consistent praise when it’s operating. Overall facility reviews are mixed – some find it adequate for a quick final stop, while others prefer to push through to Oregon facilities.

Most agree it serves the basic purpose of providing a final Washington break, though it’s not the quality experience some other I-5 rest areas offer.