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RV Parks In Fredericton, New Brunswick

45.9454° N, 66.6656° W

Quick Overview

<p>Fredericton sits right on the Saint John River as New Brunswick's capital, and we love it as a Maritime touring base because it splits the difference between the river valley to the west and the Bay of Fundy coast to the south. The Trans-Canada Highway 2 runs straight through town, so getting a rig in and out is painless, and you have a genuine choice between public provincial-park camping and private full-hookup RV resorts within minutes of downtown.</p><p>On the public side, <a href="https://www.parcsnbparks.ca/en/parks/10/mactaquac-provincial-park">Mactaquac Provincial Park</a> is the headline. It is a big riverside park just west of the city with a few hundred campsites, 30-amp electric and water hookups, full-service sites, a dump station, freshwater beaches, hiking trails, and a golf course. You reserve it through parcsnbparks.ca, and the season runs roughly mid-May through September. On the private side, Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park has been running along the riverbank since the 1970s and offers full-service 50-amp big-rig sites, free wifi, and an on-site water park that keeps the kids busy. West of town, Woolastook Park rounds out the options with wooded private sites. Between those three you can match almost any rig and budget.</p><p>What makes Fredericton work as a hub is everything you can reach in a day. The Historic Garrison District downtown is a National Historic Site with a summer Changing of the Guard, the riverfront walking trails and Bill Thorpe Walking Bridge are right there, and 37 km west on Highway 2 you hit Kings Landing, a living-history settlement of seventy-some restored river-valley buildings. The Mactaquac dam raises the river 37 metres and anchors the provincial park around it. Point the truck south on Route 7 and the Bay of Fundy, St. Andrews, and Fundy National Park are all roughly two hours each way, easy day trips if you base yourself here. Summers are warm and comfortable around 25 C, fall foliage along the river is worth timing for, and winters are cold and snowy, so plan your visit between mid-May and October.</p><p>A quick word on logistics, because Fredericton rewards a little planning. Because it is the provincial capital, the city has everything you need to provision: full supermarkets, propane refill and exchange, fuel, and RV service all sit near the Highway 2 exits on both the north and south sides of the river. We top off here before pushing up Route 8 toward Miramichi, where the services thin out fast. Both Mactaquac and Hartt Island have dump stations for registered campers, so you can manage your tanks around your home base without a separate stop. The summer weekends at both parks fill, so we treat a July or August trip as a reserve-ahead affair and keep first-come sites as a backup rather than a plan. Set up at one campground, leave the rig parked, and run the river valley, the dam, Kings Landing, and the Fundy coast as separate day loops in the tow vehicle. That hub-and-spoke approach is how we get the most out of a Fredericton base without breaking camp every night.</p>

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Traveling to Fredericton by RV

The Trans-Canada Highway 2 is your main artery and runs along the Saint John River right through Fredericton, with clearly signed exits for Mactaquac Provincial Park and Kings Landing to the west. Route 7 drops south to Saint John and the Bay of Fundy in about an hour and a quarter, Route 8 follows the river northeast toward Miramichi, and Route 105 is a slower scenic alternative on the north bank. We have not run into low-bridge or weight headaches on the Highway 2 corridor itself, but the older garrison-district streets downtown get tight, so we leave the rig at the campground and take the tow vehicle in. Fill propane and stock groceries in the city before heading up Route 8, where services thin out fast. Both Mactaquac and Hartt Island have dump stations for registered campers, so plan your tank schedule around your home base. See parcsnbparks.ca for current park access and fire-ban status.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Fredericton, New Brunswick, it's worth taking thirty minutes to check that the basics are in place — the four areas below are where unprepared RVers most often get stung.

Check your RV insurance coverage

A standard auto policy rarely covers a Class A, Class C, or travel trailer the way a dedicated RV insurance policy does. If you're financing a motorhome, lenders typically require comprehensive and collision; full-timers should additionally price in vacation liability and personal belongings coverage. Rates vary widely by state and travel pattern — compare quotes from multiple RV-focused carriers before each season.

Know your roadside assistance options

RV-specific roadside plans tow motorhomes and trailers that regular AAA coverage won't touch — flat beds, mobile mechanics, tire service for duallies, and even emergency lockouts at remote campgrounds. Good plans cover your spouse and trailer even if you're driving a separate vehicle, and some include trip interruption reimbursement if a breakdown costs you a reservation.

Decide about an extended warranty early

Original manufacturer warranties on new RVs typically run 12–24 months — shorter than most buyers realize. An extended service contract (essentially a mechanical breakdown policy) covers the appliances, slides, levelling systems, and drivetrain components that can run $3,000–$10,000 to replace. The time to price one is before the factory coverage expires, not after something breaks.

Set up a travel rewards card for fuel and fees

A no-annual-fee travel or gas rewards card pays for itself on a single month of RV travel. Expect to spend $400–$800 per week combined on fuel, campgrounds, and propane — 3–5% cash back on gas alone covers the next oil change. For bigger trips, a sign-up bonus can offset campground fees for the whole season.

RVingLife is supported by advertising. Third-party ads on this page may include insurance quotes, roadside plans, warranty coverage, or financial products relevant to the topics above. We don't endorse any specific provider — compare multiple offers before you commit. Privacy policy.

Dump Station Costs in Fredericton

<p>Provincial-park sites at Mactaquac run cheaper than the private resorts, with unserviced, two-service, and full-service tiers, so you can dial cost to how much hookup you actually need. Expect the public park rates to land in the low-to-mid range typical of New Brunswick provincial parks, with full-service sites carrying a premium over basic electric-and-water. Hartt Island, as a private full-hookup RV resort with 50-amp big-rig sites and a water park, sits at the higher end but bundles in amenities families use. Reserving early not only locks your spot but often locks the better-located riverside sites before they go. Shoulder-season camping in May, June, September, and early October is noticeably quieter and easier on the wallet than the July and August peak, and the fall foliage stretch is the best value-to-scenery trade we have found here.</p>

Free: 5 stations (71%)
Paid: 2 stations (29%)

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What RVers Are Saying About Fredericton

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Best Time to Visit Fredericton by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

-12 C - -4 C

Crowds: Medium

Cold and snowy, with February the snowiest month. Provincial-park campgrounds are closed; this is not an RV season here.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

2 C - 14 C

Crowds: Medium

River runoff and mud linger into May. Mactaquac opens mid-May, so late spring is when the first quiet, cheaper camping windows appear.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

13 C - 25 C

Crowds: Medium

Warm and comfortable, the peak season. July and August weekends at Mactaquac and Hartt Island fill, so reserve two to three months out.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

5 C - 16 C

Crowds: Medium

Foliage along the Saint John River valley peaks late September into mid-October. Crisp, quieter, and the best scenery-to-cost value of the year.

Explore the Fredericton Area

<p>Book ahead. Mactaquac and Hartt Island both fill on summer weekends, and booking two to three months out for July and August is the safest bet. Mactaquac reservations go through parcsnbparks.ca; smaller private spots sometimes hold first-come sites midweek, but do not count on it in peak season. Use Fredericton as a wheel hub rather than a single stop: river valley and Kings Landing are an easy run west on Highway 2, and the Bay of Fundy coast is a doable day trip south on Route 7. Time a fall visit for late September into mid-October when the foliage along the Saint John River peaks. Downtown is walkable and worth a stroll, but the garrison-district streets are tight for a big rig, so park at camp and drive the tow vehicle or walk the riverfront trails in. If you are chasing a fire night, check the parcsnbparks.ca fire-ban status first, since dry summers bring restrictions.</p>

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Fredericton

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Fredericton, NB?

The two anchors are Mactaquac Provincial Park and Hartt Island RV Resort. Mactaquac is the public provincial-park campground just west of the city on the Saint John River, with hundreds of sites, 30-amp electric and water hookups, full-service sites, a dump station, beaches, trails, and a golf course, reservable through parcsnbparks.ca. Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park is the private full-hookup option right in Fredericton, with 50-amp big-rig sites, free wifi, and an on-site water park. West of town, Woolastook Park adds wooded private sites. Between those three you can match almost any rig size and budget, and all three sit within easy reach of the Trans-Canada Highway 2.

Does Mactaquac Provincial Park have RV hookups?

Yes. Mactaquac Provincial Park offers RV sites with 30-amp electric service and water hookups, plus full-service sites for campers who want the comfort of full hookups during a stay. There is a dump station on site for registered campers, along with laundry, washrooms with showers, firewood for sale, playgrounds, and picnic areas. Pull-through sites are available for larger rigs. The park sits along the Saint John River valley west of Fredericton and covers a large area with freshwater beaches, hiking trails, and a golf course. You reserve through parcsnbparks.ca, and the camping season runs roughly mid-May through September, so it is a summer-only public option.

How do I make camping reservations in the Fredericton area?

For Mactaquac Provincial Park and other New Brunswick provincial parks, you reserve online through the official Parks NB site at parcsnbparks.ca. Booking opens for the season and the popular riverside sites go early, so we book two to three months ahead for July and August weekends. Private parks like Hartt Island RV Resort take their own reservations directly, and they fill on summer weekends too. Some smaller private spots hold first-come sites midweek, but in peak season you should not count on rolling in without a booking. If your dates are flexible, the shoulder seasons of late spring and early fall are far easier to reserve and noticeably quieter than the July and August peak.

Are there both public and private camping options in Fredericton?

Yes, and that is one of the nice things about basing here. The public option is Mactaquac Provincial Park, a public provincial-park campground run through parcsnbparks.ca with electric and water hookups, full-service sites, and a dump station along the Saint John River. The private options are Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park, a full-hookup 50-amp big-rig RV resort right in the city, and Woolastook Park with wooded private sites west of town. Public parks tend to run cheaper and lean scenic and natural, while the private resorts bundle in more amenities like the water park and full 50-amp service. Pick based on your rig size, your budget, and how much hookup you actually need.

What highways lead into Fredericton for RVers?

The Trans-Canada Highway 2 is the main route and runs right through Fredericton along the Saint John River, making it the easy spine whether you are coming from Quebec, the rest of the Maritimes, or the US border. Route 7 connects south to Saint John and the Bay of Fundy in about an hour and a quarter, Route 8 follows the river northeast toward Miramichi, and Route 105 is a slower scenic alternative on the north bank. The Highway 2 corridor is wide and modern with clearly signed exits for Mactaquac Provincial Park and Kings Landing to the west. We have not run into low-bridge or weight restrictions on Highway 2 itself, though the older downtown garrison streets get tight for big rigs.

When is the best time of year to RV in Fredericton?

Summer is the peak and for good reason: July and August bring warm, comfortable highs around 25 C with mild evenings, and that is when the provincial-park campgrounds are in full swing. The trade-off is crowds, so you reserve two to three months ahead for summer weekends. Our favorite window is fall, late September into mid-October, when the foliage along the Saint John River valley peaks and the campgrounds quiet down. Late spring works too once Mactaquac opens around mid-May, though river runoff and mud can linger early. Winters are cold and snowy with the provincial campgrounds closed, so the practical RV season here runs mid-May through October.

What is the weather like in Fredericton for camping?

Fredericton has a continental climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are warm and comfortable, with July and August highs near 25 C and pleasant, mild evenings, which is the heart of camping season. Spring runs cool and wet, with snow and river runoff lingering into May before the parks open. Fall is crisp with highs in the teens and gorgeous foliage along the river. Winters are cold and snowy, averaging around -9 C in January with February the snowiest month, and the provincial campgrounds are closed. Plan an RV trip here between mid-May and October, and pack layers even in summer since riverside evenings cool off quickly.

Are there full-hookup RV sites near Fredericton?

Yes. Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park in Fredericton offers full-service 50-amp big-rig sites along the Saint John River, the most generous hookups in the area for larger motorhomes and fifth wheels. Mactaquac Provincial Park also has full-service sites alongside its 30-amp electric and water sites, so you can choose your level of hookup there. If you need 50-amp service specifically, Hartt Island is your best bet, while Mactaquac maxes out at 30-amp electric. Both have dump stations for registered campers. We recommend deciding what your rig actually needs, since full-service sites carry a premium and you may be fine on a two-service electric-and-water site at the provincial park.

Can I use Fredericton as a base to visit the Bay of Fundy?

Absolutely, and that is one of the main reasons we like camping here. Fredericton sits midway between the Saint John River valley and the Bay of Fundy coast, so you can park the rig at Mactaquac or Hartt Island and run day trips in the tow vehicle. Take Route 7 south and you reach Saint John, St. Andrews, Fundy National Park, and the famous tides in roughly two hours each direction, making them all doable as out-and-back days. Hopewell Rocks is about two and a quarter hours. Basing in Fredericton means you skip the hassle of moving the rig every night while still seeing the Fundy coast, the river valley, and Kings Landing on separate days.

What attractions are near the Fredericton campgrounds?

Plenty within easy reach. Downtown, the Historic Garrison District is a National Historic Site with a summer Changing of the Guard, and the Saint John River waterfront with the Bill Thorpe Walking Bridge is right there. West on Highway 2 you hit the Mactaquac dam and provincial park, then Kings Landing Historical Settlement 37 km out, a living-history village of seventy-some restored river-valley buildings. The Beaverbrook Art Gallery and Odell Park are in town. South on Route 7 the Bay of Fundy coast opens up. Because Fredericton is the capital, it also has all the supermarkets, propane, fuel, and RV service you need to provision before heading deeper into the province.

Is there a dump station near Fredericton?

Yes. Both of the main campgrounds have dump stations for registered campers. Mactaquac Provincial Park has a dump station on site, as does Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park. There is no casual public dump option to rely on, so we plan our tank schedule around our home base. If you are camping at either spot, you can dump on the way in or out without a separate stop. Heading north on Route 8 toward Miramichi, services thin out, so empty and fill your tanks in the Fredericton area before you leave. Always dump only at designated stations and never at highway pull-offs or city lots.

Are there first-come-first-served RV sites near Fredericton?

Some, but do not bank on them in peak season. The reliable path is to reserve, especially for Mactaquac Provincial Park through parcsnbparks.ca and for Hartt Island RV Resort directly, since both fill on summer weekends. A handful of smaller private parks hold first-come sites midweek, which can work if you are flexible and traveling in the quieter shoulder seasons of late spring or early fall. In July and August, though, rolling in without a booking is a gamble, particularly on weekends. Our advice is to book the popular spots two to three months ahead and keep first-come as a backup plan rather than your main strategy during the busy months.

How tight are Fredericton's roads for a large RV?

The main highways are no problem. The Trans-Canada Highway 2 corridor is wide and modern with good signed exits, and Route 7 south to the Bay of Fundy handles big rigs fine. Where it gets tight is the older garrison-district streets in downtown Fredericton, which were not built for a 40-foot motorhome. We leave the rig at the campground and take the tow vehicle or walk the riverfront trails into the historic core. Getting to Mactaquac, Kings Landing, and the dam is straightforward off Highway 2. If you are towing, the river-valley routes are scenic and manageable, but plan to do downtown sightseeing on foot or in a smaller vehicle rather than threading the rig through.

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds near Fredericton, NB?

The two anchors are Mactaquac Provincial Park and Hartt Island RV Resort. Mactaquac is the public provincial-park campground just west of the city on the Saint John River, with hundreds of sites, 30-amp electric and water hookups, full-service sites, a dump station, beaches, trails, and a golf course, reservable through parcsnbparks.ca. Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park is the private full-hookup option right in Fredericton, with 50-amp big-rig sites, free wifi, and an on-site water park. West of town, Woolastook Park adds wooded private sites. Between those three you can match almost any rig size and budget, and all three sit within easy reach of the Trans-Canada Highway 2.

Does Mactaquac Provincial Park have RV hookups?

Yes. Mactaquac Provincial Park offers RV sites with 30-amp electric service and water hookups, plus full-service sites for campers who want the comfort of full hookups during a stay. There is a dump station on site for registered campers, along with laundry, washrooms with showers, firewood for sale, playgrounds, and picnic areas. Pull-through sites are available for larger rigs. The park sits along the Saint John River valley west of Fredericton and covers a large area with freshwater beaches, hiking trails, and a golf course. You reserve through parcsnbparks.ca, and the camping season runs roughly mid-May through September, so it is a summer-only public option.

How do I make camping reservations in the Fredericton area?

For Mactaquac Provincial Park and other New Brunswick provincial parks, you reserve online through the official Parks NB site at parcsnbparks.ca. Booking opens for the season and the popular riverside sites go early, so we book two to three months ahead for July and August weekends. Private parks like Hartt Island RV Resort take their own reservations directly, and they fill on summer weekends too. Some smaller private spots hold first-come sites midweek, but in peak season you should not count on rolling in without a booking. If your dates are flexible, the shoulder seasons of late spring and early fall are far easier to reserve and noticeably quieter than the July and August peak.

Are there both public and private camping options in Fredericton?

Yes, and that is one of the nice things about basing here. The public option is Mactaquac Provincial Park, a public provincial-park campground run through parcsnbparks.ca with electric and water hookups, full-service sites, and a dump station along the Saint John River. The private options are Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park, a full-hookup 50-amp big-rig RV resort right in the city, and Woolastook Park with wooded private sites west of town. Public parks tend to run cheaper and lean scenic and natural, while the private resorts bundle in more amenities like the water park and full 50-amp service. Pick based on your rig size, your budget, and how much hookup you actually need.

What highways lead into Fredericton for RVers?

The Trans-Canada Highway 2 is the main route and runs right through Fredericton along the Saint John River, making it the easy spine whether you are coming from Quebec, the rest of the Maritimes, or the US border. Route 7 connects south to Saint John and the Bay of Fundy in about an hour and a quarter, Route 8 follows the river northeast toward Miramichi, and Route 105 is a slower scenic alternative on the north bank. The Highway 2 corridor is wide and modern with clearly signed exits for Mactaquac Provincial Park and Kings Landing to the west. We have not run into low-bridge or weight restrictions on Highway 2 itself, though the older downtown garrison streets get tight for big rigs.

When is the best time of year to RV in Fredericton?

Summer is the peak and for good reason: July and August bring warm, comfortable highs around 25 C with mild evenings, and that is when the provincial-park campgrounds are in full swing. The trade-off is crowds, so you reserve two to three months ahead for summer weekends. Our favorite window is fall, late September into mid-October, when the foliage along the Saint John River valley peaks and the campgrounds quiet down. Late spring works too once Mactaquac opens around mid-May, though river runoff and mud can linger early. Winters are cold and snowy with the provincial campgrounds closed, so the practical RV season here runs mid-May through October.

What is the weather like in Fredericton for camping?

Fredericton has a continental climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are warm and comfortable, with July and August highs near 25 C and pleasant, mild evenings, which is the heart of camping season. Spring runs cool and wet, with snow and river runoff lingering into May before the parks open. Fall is crisp with highs in the teens and gorgeous foliage along the river. Winters are cold and snowy, averaging around -9 C in January with February the snowiest month, and the provincial campgrounds are closed. Plan an RV trip here between mid-May and October, and pack layers even in summer since riverside evenings cool off quickly.

Are there full-hookup RV sites near Fredericton?

Yes. Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park in Fredericton offers full-service 50-amp big-rig sites along the Saint John River, the most generous hookups in the area for larger motorhomes and fifth wheels. Mactaquac Provincial Park also has full-service sites alongside its 30-amp electric and water sites, so you can choose your level of hookup there. If you need 50-amp service specifically, Hartt Island is your best bet, while Mactaquac maxes out at 30-amp electric. Both have dump stations for registered campers. We recommend deciding what your rig actually needs, since full-service sites carry a premium and you may be fine on a two-service electric-and-water site at the provincial park.

Can I use Fredericton as a base to visit the Bay of Fundy?

Absolutely, and that is one of the main reasons we like camping here. Fredericton sits midway between the Saint John River valley and the Bay of Fundy coast, so you can park the rig at Mactaquac or Hartt Island and run day trips in the tow vehicle. Take Route 7 south and you reach Saint John, St. Andrews, Fundy National Park, and the famous tides in roughly two hours each direction, making them all doable as out-and-back days. Hopewell Rocks is about two and a quarter hours. Basing in Fredericton means you skip the hassle of moving the rig every night while still seeing the Fundy coast, the river valley, and Kings Landing on separate days.

What attractions are near the Fredericton campgrounds?

Plenty within easy reach. Downtown, the Historic Garrison District is a National Historic Site with a summer Changing of the Guard, and the Saint John River waterfront with the Bill Thorpe Walking Bridge is right there. West on Highway 2 you hit the Mactaquac dam and provincial park, then Kings Landing Historical Settlement 37 km out, a living-history village of seventy-some restored river-valley buildings. The Beaverbrook Art Gallery and Odell Park are in town. South on Route 7 the Bay of Fundy coast opens up. Because Fredericton is the capital, it also has all the supermarkets, propane, fuel, and RV service you need to provision before heading deeper into the province.

Is there a dump station near Fredericton?

Yes. Both of the main campgrounds have dump stations for registered campers. Mactaquac Provincial Park has a dump station on site, as does Hartt Island RV Resort & Water Park. There is no casual public dump option to rely on, so we plan our tank schedule around our home base. If you are camping at either spot, you can dump on the way in or out without a separate stop. Heading north on Route 8 toward Miramichi, services thin out, so empty and fill your tanks in the Fredericton area before you leave. Always dump only at designated stations and never at highway pull-offs or city lots.

Are there first-come-first-served RV sites near Fredericton?

Some, but do not bank on them in peak season. The reliable path is to reserve, especially for Mactaquac Provincial Park through parcsnbparks.ca and for Hartt Island RV Resort directly, since both fill on summer weekends. A handful of smaller private parks hold first-come sites midweek, which can work if you are flexible and traveling in the quieter shoulder seasons of late spring or early fall. In July and August, though, rolling in without a booking is a gamble, particularly on weekends. Our advice is to book the popular spots two to three months ahead and keep first-come as a backup plan rather than your main strategy during the busy months.

How tight are Fredericton's roads for a large RV?

The main highways are no problem. The Trans-Canada Highway 2 corridor is wide and modern with good signed exits, and Route 7 south to the Bay of Fundy handles big rigs fine. Where it gets tight is the older garrison-district streets in downtown Fredericton, which were not built for a 40-foot motorhome. We leave the rig at the campground and take the tow vehicle or walk the riverfront trails into the historic core. Getting to Mactaquac, Kings Landing, and the dam is straightforward off Highway 2. If you are towing, the river-valley routes are scenic and manageable, but plan to do downtown sightseeing on foot or in a smaller vehicle rather than threading the rig through.

Are there free dump stations in Fredericton?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Fredericton.