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RV Parks In Ontario

51.2538° N, 85.3232° W

Quick Overview

<p>Ontario is the heart of Canadian RV travel, and for good reason. You can paddle a misty lake in Algonquin in the morning, watch the sun drop behind Georgian Bay pines at night, and do it all within a few hours of Toronto. The province runs one of the deepest public camping systems in the country through <a href="https://www.ontarioparks.ca/reservations">Ontario Parks</a>, roughly 115 parks spread from the Great Lakes beaches to the granite-and-spruce north, plus Parks Canada sites like Bruce Peninsula. For RVers, that variety is the whole appeal, but it pays to understand how the system is built before you book.</p><p>Here is the honest landscape. Ontario provincial parks are mostly electric-only, typically 30-amp, with a central dump station rather than sewer at each site. They are gorgeous and affordable, but they were largely built for tents and smaller trailers, so sites can be short and treed. If you want full hookups, water, electric, and sewer at the pad, or a long pull-thru for a big rig, you want a private RV park, RV resort, or a KOA. The two systems complement each other: go public for the wilderness and the beach, go private when you want to stay hooked up for a week.</p><p>The marquee provincial parks are the ones every Ontario RVer knows. Algonquin, with its Highway 60 campgrounds at Mew Lake, Lake of Two Rivers, and Pog Lake, is the canoe-country classic. Pinery on Lake Huron has huge dunes and one of the best beaches in the province. Killbear delivers postcard Georgian Bay, and Sandbanks brings warm Lake Ontario swimming and big freshwater dunes. On the private side, Sturgeon Falls KOA is genuinely big-rig friendly with pull-thrus up to 110 feet and 50-amp service, while Rolling Hills RV Park puts full hookups within 30 minutes of downtown Ottawa. Bon Echo adds a dramatic painted cliff, and up on the Bruce Peninsula the Parks Canada campground at Cyprus Lake is the base for the famous Grotto. Between those poles you will find a park for any rig and any trip, and if you need to empty the tanks while you are out, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Ontario.</p><p>The catch is demand. Ontario Parks opens reservations five months ahead of your arrival date, and the popular summer weekends at Algonquin, Pinery, Killbear, and Sandbanks can vanish within minutes of that window opening. Our advice is simple: decide where you want to be, mark the booking date, and log in early. If your schedule is flexible, the shoulder seasons are the smart play, fewer bugs, lower rates, roomier sites, and in late September the Algonquin fall colour is worth the trip on its own. Below you will find the notable parks, what they cost, when to go, and how to actually land a site.</p>

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Getting Around Ontario by RV

Getting around Ontario by RV is straightforward in the populated south and a longer haul up north. Highway 401 is the spine, running Windsor to Toronto to the Quebec border, and it handles big rigs without drama. Highway 400 carries you north toward cottage country, Georgian Bay, and the gateway to Algonquin via Highway 60. For the north, Highway 11 and Highway 17, the TransCanada, are your routes to Thunder Bay and beyond.

The thing to plan for up north is distance between services. Stretches of Highway 11 and 17 run long and lonely, with sparse fuel and few big towns, so top up the tank and your water whenever you can rather than gambling on the next station. In the south, propane, groceries, and RV repair are easy to find around Barrie, London, Ottawa, and the GTA. Southern parks double as day-trip bases for Niagara Falls and Toronto, while central Ontario puts you within reach of Algonquin and the 30,000 islands of Georgian Bay. If you are flying in to rent a rig, Toronto and Ottawa are the practical hubs.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Ontario trip, 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.

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RV Parks Costs in Ontario

<p>Budgeting for Ontario is mostly about the public-versus-private split. Provincial park electric sites generally run about CA$45 to $55 a night, with non-electric sites a little cheaper, which makes them the best value in the province for the setting you get. Private RV parks and KOAs with full hookups usually land between CA$50 and $80 a night, and amenity-heavy resorts climb higher than that. Remember that Ontario Parks adds a non-refundable online reservation fee on top of the nightly camping fee, so factor that in.</p><p>If you are settling in for the season, seasonal sites where the rig stays put from May to October run roughly CA$3,000 to $5,000, which can pencil out well against weekend-by-weekend booking if you have a home base. The real money-savers are timing: midweek and shoulder-season nights cost less and are far easier to book, and the free option, Crown land camping for Canadian residents, costs nothing if you are fully self-sufficient and do not need hookups. Build your trip around those levers and Ontario stays affordable.</p>

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Best Time to Visit Ontario by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

-13C - -4C

Crowds: Low

Most provincial parks close for the season. A handful of private parks near the GTA and Niagara stay open for winter-ready rigs, but expect snow, frozen hookups, and limited services.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

2C - 12C

Crowds: Low

Parks reopen through May. Cool nights, mud, and black flies up north into June, but sites are wide open and reservations are easy. Great time for big rigs to grab the roomy sites that vanish in July.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

15C - 26C

Crowds: High

Peak season. Algonquin, Pinery, Killbear and Sandbanks book out months ahead for weekends. Reserve the day your 5-month window opens, and aim for midweek if you can. Warm, swimmable lakes everywhere.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

4C - 14C

Crowds: Medium

The best value and the best colour. Algonquin foliage peaks late September into early October along Highway 60. Most parks run to Thanksgiving in mid-October, then close. Cool, crisp, and far quieter.

Explore Ontario

<p>A few things we have learned camping Ontario. First, treat the reservation window like a race. For Algonquin, Pinery, Killbear, or Sandbanks in summer, be logged in to the <a href="https://reservations.ontarioparks.ca">Ontario Parks reservation site</a> the morning your five-month window opens, or you will be looking at midweek leftovers. Second, match the park to your hookup needs: provincial parks are electric-only with a dump station, so if you need sewer at the site, book a private park or KOA instead of being disappointed on arrival.</p><p>Third, plan around the bugs. Black flies and mosquitoes are fierce in late May and June, especially up north, so either pack serious bug protection or wait for high summer and fall. Fourth, fuel up before northern Highway 11 and 17 runs, because services thin out fast and a big rig drinks. Fifth, for Algonquin stick to the Highway 60 corridor campgrounds with your RV, the interior is paddle-in only. Finally, if your dates are flexible, go in September: the colour is unreal, the crowds are gone, and the rates drop. Midweek anywhere is the quiet, cheaper, roomier version of the same trip.</p>

Helpful Resources

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Ontario

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Ontario?

For the classic Ontario experience, provincial parks like Algonquin (Lake of Two Rivers, Mew Lake), Killbear on Georgian Bay, Pinery on Lake Huron, and Sandbanks on Lake Ontario are the standouts, though they fill fast. If you need full hookups and big-rig room, private parks shine: Sturgeon Falls KOA, Rolling Hills RV Park near Ottawa, and KOA Thunder Bay all handle larger rigs with 50-amp service. The honest answer is that the best park depends on whether you want wilderness and a beach, so go provincial, or full services and a pull-thru, so go private.

Do Ontario campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

It depends on who runs the park. Ontario provincial parks are mostly electric-only, typically 30-amp, with a central dump station rather than sewer at each site. If you want full hookups, water, electric, and sewer right at your pad, you want a private RV park, RV resort, or a KOA. Many of those offer 30 and 50-amp service. So plan around it: book a provincial park for the setting and use the dump station, or book private when you want to stay hooked up for a week without moving the rig.

How much does RV camping cost in Ontario?

Provincial park electric sites generally run about CA$45 to $55 per night, with non-electric sites a bit less. Private RV parks and KOAs with full hookups usually land between CA$50 and $80 a night, and amenity-heavy resorts can run higher. Ontario Parks also charges a non-refundable online reservation fee on top of the camping fee. Seasonal sites, where you leave the rig in place all summer, run roughly CA$3,000 to $5,000 for the May-to-October season. Shoulder-season and midweek rates are your best value if your schedule is flexible.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Ontario?

Ontario Parks lets you book up to five months ahead of your arrival date, and for the popular parks you should treat that opening morning as a hard deadline. Algonquin, Pinery, Killbear, and Sandbanks summer weekends can sell out within minutes of the window opening. Parks Canada sites like Bruce Peninsula use their own reservation service with a similar early-booking rush. Private parks are usually easier, but Ottawa and Niagara-area parks still fill on long weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season trips can often be booked just days out.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Ontario?

Late June through September is prime, with warm days, swimmable lakes, and every park open. Our honest favourite is September into early October: the bugs are gone, the crowds thin out, rates ease, and Algonquin fall colour is spectacular along Highway 60. Spring, May into June, is quiet and cheap but cool, muddy, and buggy up north. Winter camping is limited to a few private parks near the south. If you want the big roomy sites without a five-month booking battle, go in the shoulder seasons.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Ontario?

Yes, but choose your park. Many older provincial park campgrounds were built for tents and small trailers, so sites can be short, treed, and tight to back into. Some loops at parks like Killbear and the Algonquin Highway 60 campgrounds do take larger trailers. For a true big-rig experience with pull-thru sites and full hookups, private parks are the answer: Sturgeon Falls KOA offers pull-thrus up to 110 feet with 50-amp service, and other KOAs and resorts handle 40-foot-plus motorhomes comfortably. Always check the maximum site length when you book.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Ontario?

Crown land camping is free for Canadian residents and offers true backcountry boondocking, but it comes with no services, no hookups, and rough access, so you need to be fully self-sufficient. Non-residents need a permit for Crown land. Some northern provincial parks and unserviced sites operate first-come, first-served, and midweek shoulder-season availability is common. There is no legal overnight parking in highway rest areas or most retail lots in Ontario, so do not count on Walmart-style overnighting; plan to be in a licensed campground or on Crown land.

Which Ontario provincial parks are best for RVs?

For RV travellers, the parks with electrical sites and decent road access top the list. Algonquin, the Highway 60 campgrounds at Mew Lake, Lake of Two Rivers, and Pog Lake, is the bucket-list choice for paddling and moose. Pinery on Lake Huron has huge beaches and dunes. Killbear delivers classic Georgian Bay granite and pine. Sandbanks brings the biggest freshwater dunes and warm Lake Ontario swimming. Bon Echo adds a dramatic cliff and lake. All of these book out for summer, so set a reminder for the day your reservation window opens.

Do I need reservations for Algonquin Provincial Park?

For the drive-in, RV-accessible campgrounds along Highway 60 in summer, yes, absolutely. Mew Lake, Lake of Two Rivers, Pog Lake and Canisbay Lake sell out for weekends almost as soon as the five-month booking window opens. Reserve through the Ontario Parks reservation service online or by phone at 1-888-668-PARK. You will pay the camping fee plus a non-refundable reservation fee at the time of booking. Midweek and fall sites are easier. The backcountry interior is canoe-access only and not suitable for RVs, so stick to the Highway 60 corridor campgrounds.

Are Ontario campgrounds open in winter?

Mostly no. The large majority of Ontario provincial parks close their campgrounds for the season, usually wrapping up around Thanksgiving in mid-October and reopening in May. A small number of provincial parks offer limited winter camping, and a few private RV parks near the Greater Toronto Area, Niagara, and the south stay open year-round for winter-ready rigs. If you camp in winter, expect snow, the risk of frozen water hookups, and reduced services, so come prepared with a properly insulated and heated rig.

What is there to do near Ontario campgrounds?

Plenty, and the activities are half the reason to come. Algonquin is canoe country with hiking, moose-spotting, and the famous fall-colour drive. Georgian Bay and Bruce Peninsula National Park bring turquoise water, the Grotto, and cliff hikes along the Niagara Escarpment. The Great Lakes shorelines, Pinery, Sandbanks, and Wasaga, mean huge beaches and warm summer swimming. Southern parks put you within day-trip range of Niagara Falls and Toronto. Fishing, paddling, cycling, and wildlife viewing are everywhere. Pick your park around the activity you care most about and you will not run out of things to do.

Are pets allowed at Ontario campgrounds?

Generally yes. Ontario Parks allows pets on most campsites and trails as long as they are leashed, the leash limit is two metres, and you clean up after them. Some parks have designated pet-free beaches and pet-exercise areas, so check the specific park rules before you go. Private RV parks and KOAs are usually dog-friendly too, often with off-leash areas, but policies vary by park, so confirm when you book. Never leave a pet unattended at your site, and remember that summer heat in a closed rig is dangerous, so plan your outings around your dog.

Can I get full hookups near Toronto or Ottawa?

Yes. The provincial parks closest to the big cities are mostly electric-only, but private RV parks fill the full-hookup gap. Near Ottawa, Rolling Hills RV Park offers 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites about 30 minutes from downtown. Around the Greater Toronto Area and the Niagara tourist corridor, several private parks and resorts provide full hookups and big-rig pull-thrus, which makes them handy bases for day trips into the city or to Niagara Falls. Book ahead for summer and long weekends, since these convenient, full-service parks are the first to fill.

What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Ontario?

For the classic Ontario experience, provincial parks like Algonquin (Lake of Two Rivers, Mew Lake), Killbear on Georgian Bay, Pinery on Lake Huron, and Sandbanks on Lake Ontario are the standouts, though they fill fast. If you need full hookups and big-rig room, private parks shine: Sturgeon Falls KOA, Rolling Hills RV Park near Ottawa, and KOA Thunder Bay all handle larger rigs with 50-amp service. The honest answer is that the best park depends on whether you want wilderness and a beach, so go provincial, or full services and a pull-thru, so go private.

Do Ontario campgrounds have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

It depends on who runs the park. Ontario provincial parks are mostly electric-only, typically 30-amp, with a central dump station rather than sewer at each site. If you want full hookups, water, electric, and sewer right at your pad, you want a private RV park, RV resort, or a KOA. Many of those offer 30 and 50-amp service. So plan around it: book a provincial park for the setting and use the dump station, or book private when you want to stay hooked up for a week without moving the rig.

How much does RV camping cost in Ontario?

Provincial park electric sites generally run about CA$45 to $55 per night, with non-electric sites a bit less. Private RV parks and KOAs with full hookups usually land between CA$50 and $80 a night, and amenity-heavy resorts can run higher. Ontario Parks also charges a non-refundable online reservation fee on top of the camping fee. Seasonal sites, where you leave the rig in place all summer, run roughly CA$3,000 to $5,000 for the May-to-October season. Shoulder-season and midweek rates are your best value if your schedule is flexible.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Ontario?

Ontario Parks lets you book up to five months ahead of your arrival date, and for the popular parks you should treat that opening morning as a hard deadline. Algonquin, Pinery, Killbear, and Sandbanks summer weekends can sell out within minutes of the window opening. Parks Canada sites like Bruce Peninsula use their own reservation service with a similar early-booking rush. Private parks are usually easier, but Ottawa and Niagara-area parks still fill on long weekends. Midweek and shoulder-season trips can often be booked just days out.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Ontario?

Late June through September is prime, with warm days, swimmable lakes, and every park open. Our honest favourite is September into early October: the bugs are gone, the crowds thin out, rates ease, and Algonquin fall colour is spectacular along Highway 60. Spring, May into June, is quiet and cheap but cool, muddy, and buggy up north. Winter camping is limited to a few private parks near the south. If you want the big roomy sites without a five-month booking battle, go in the shoulder seasons.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Ontario?

Yes, but choose your park. Many older provincial park campgrounds were built for tents and small trailers, so sites can be short, treed, and tight to back into. Some loops at parks like Killbear and the Algonquin Highway 60 campgrounds do take larger trailers. For a true big-rig experience with pull-thru sites and full hookups, private parks are the answer: Sturgeon Falls KOA offers pull-thrus up to 110 feet with 50-amp service, and other KOAs and resorts handle 40-foot-plus motorhomes comfortably. Always check the maximum site length when you book.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Ontario?

Crown land camping is free for Canadian residents and offers true backcountry boondocking, but it comes with no services, no hookups, and rough access, so you need to be fully self-sufficient. Non-residents need a permit for Crown land. Some northern provincial parks and unserviced sites operate first-come, first-served, and midweek shoulder-season availability is common. There is no legal overnight parking in highway rest areas or most retail lots in Ontario, so do not count on Walmart-style overnighting; plan to be in a licensed campground or on Crown land.

Which Ontario provincial parks are best for RVs?

For RV travellers, the parks with electrical sites and decent road access top the list. Algonquin, the Highway 60 campgrounds at Mew Lake, Lake of Two Rivers, and Pog Lake, is the bucket-list choice for paddling and moose. Pinery on Lake Huron has huge beaches and dunes. Killbear delivers classic Georgian Bay granite and pine. Sandbanks brings the biggest freshwater dunes and warm Lake Ontario swimming. Bon Echo adds a dramatic cliff and lake. All of these book out for summer, so set a reminder for the day your reservation window opens.

Do I need reservations for Algonquin Provincial Park?

For the drive-in, RV-accessible campgrounds along Highway 60 in summer, yes, absolutely. Mew Lake, Lake of Two Rivers, Pog Lake and Canisbay Lake sell out for weekends almost as soon as the five-month booking window opens. Reserve through the Ontario Parks reservation service online or by phone at 1-888-668-PARK. You will pay the camping fee plus a non-refundable reservation fee at the time of booking. Midweek and fall sites are easier. The backcountry interior is canoe-access only and not suitable for RVs, so stick to the Highway 60 corridor campgrounds.

Are Ontario campgrounds open in winter?

Mostly no. The large majority of Ontario provincial parks close their campgrounds for the season, usually wrapping up around Thanksgiving in mid-October and reopening in May. A small number of provincial parks offer limited winter camping, and a few private RV parks near the Greater Toronto Area, Niagara, and the south stay open year-round for winter-ready rigs. If you camp in winter, expect snow, the risk of frozen water hookups, and reduced services, so come prepared with a properly insulated and heated rig.

What is there to do near Ontario campgrounds?

Plenty, and the activities are half the reason to come. Algonquin is canoe country with hiking, moose-spotting, and the famous fall-colour drive. Georgian Bay and Bruce Peninsula National Park bring turquoise water, the Grotto, and cliff hikes along the Niagara Escarpment. The Great Lakes shorelines, Pinery, Sandbanks, and Wasaga, mean huge beaches and warm summer swimming. Southern parks put you within day-trip range of Niagara Falls and Toronto. Fishing, paddling, cycling, and wildlife viewing are everywhere. Pick your park around the activity you care most about and you will not run out of things to do.

Are pets allowed at Ontario campgrounds?

Generally yes. Ontario Parks allows pets on most campsites and trails as long as they are leashed, the leash limit is two metres, and you clean up after them. Some parks have designated pet-free beaches and pet-exercise areas, so check the specific park rules before you go. Private RV parks and KOAs are usually dog-friendly too, often with off-leash areas, but policies vary by park, so confirm when you book. Never leave a pet unattended at your site, and remember that summer heat in a closed rig is dangerous, so plan your outings around your dog.

Can I get full hookups near Toronto or Ottawa?

Yes. The provincial parks closest to the big cities are mostly electric-only, but private RV parks fill the full-hookup gap. Near Ottawa, Rolling Hills RV Park offers 30 and 50-amp full-hookup sites about 30 minutes from downtown. Around the Greater Toronto Area and the Niagara tourist corridor, several private parks and resorts provide full hookups and big-rig pull-thrus, which makes them handy bases for day trips into the city or to Niagara Falls. Book ahead for summer and long weekends, since these convenient, full-service parks are the first to fill.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Ontario?

The highest-rated is Rene Brunelle Provincial Park with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.