RV Parks In Quebec City, Quebec
46.8299° N, 71.2540° W
Quick Overview
<p>Quebec City is the most European place you can drive an RV to in North America, a walled UNESCO old town of cobblestone streets and copper roofs perched above the St. Lawrence River. You will not be driving the rig into Old Quebec, the streets are narrow, steep, and centuries old, but that is fine, because the smart move here is to park at a campground on the edge of the metro and ride a shuttle into the historic core. Several parks run that shuttle, which makes this one of the easier big-city visits in the RV world.</p><p>For full hookups, the <strong>Quebec City KOA Holiday</strong> in St-Nicolas offers full-service sites with 50-amp power and a shuttle to Old Quebec, and <strong>Camping Transit</strong> in Levis adds full hookups, a heated pool, and its own shuttle across the river. <strong>Camping Valcartier</strong> pairs full hookups with a giant water park to the north, while <strong>Camping de la Joie</strong> sits just 15 minutes from downtown with mountain views. If you want public land instead, <strong><a href="https://www.sepaq.com">Parc national de la Jacques-Cartier</a></strong>, a public SEPAQ park in a deep glacial river valley north of the city, offers a wilder base with electric and unserviced sites reservable through the SEPAQ system.</p><p>The season is short and worth timing well. Summer, June through early October, is warm, green, and packed with festivals, and the fall foliage in late September can be the best part of the whole trip. Winter is long and bitterly cold, with snow and highs well below freezing, and the campgrounds close, so save Quebec City for the warm months. Once you are based, Old Quebec and the Chateau Frontenac, Montmorency Falls dropping higher than Niagara just east of town, and the farm island of Ile dOrleans with its wineries and scenic loop will keep you busy for days. It is a genuine bucket-list city for RV travelers.</p>
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Gear for Your Trip to Quebec City
All Dump Stations Near Quebec City
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RV Dump Station | 5.0 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Camping Plage Laurentides | 5.6 mi | 4.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Coop Camping Saint-esprit | 7.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping In Quebec City | 7.1 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Relais Camping de la Montagne | 8.9 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Quebec City Koa Holiday | 9.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Day 1 Koa Campsite | 9.3 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Transit | 9.6 mi | 4.5 | RV Park | Free |
| Camping Le 209 | 10.4 mi | 3.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Boisé De La Chaudière - Condo Camping | 11.2 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
RV Dump Station
5.0 miCamping Plage Laurentides
5.6 miCoop Camping Saint-esprit
7.0 miCamping In Quebec City
7.1 miRelais Camping de la Montagne
8.9 miQuebec City Koa Holiday
9.3 miDay 1 Koa Campsite
9.3 miCamping Transit
9.6 miCamping Le 209
10.4 miBoisé De La Chaudière - Condo Camping
11.2 miTraveling to Quebec City by RV
Autoroute 20 runs along the south shore of the St. Lawrence and Autoroute 40 along the north shore, with Autoroute 73 crossing the river on the Pierre-Laporte Bridge to tie them together. These are modern, easy highways for a big rig. The complication is the old city itself: do not attempt to drive an RV inside the walls of Vieux-Quebec, where the streets are narrow, steep, and clogged with pedestrians. Park at your campground and use its shuttle or city transit to get into the core.
Most of the full-hookup parks sit on the south shore around Levis and St-Nicolas, a short hop across the bridge from downtown, or to the north near Valcartier. There is no RV camping inside the historic city, so plan on a campground. Fuel, propane, and RV service are easy to find along Autoroute 20 in the suburbs. French is the working language here, so a few polite phrases go a long way, and remember fuel is sold in litres and priced in Canadian dollars.
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Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Quebec City, Quebec, 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 Quebec City
<p>Quebec City is a popular destination, so the private full-hookup parks near the city sit at mid to upper rates for the region, especially the ones with shuttles and pools during the busy summer festival season. Prices climb in July and August and ease in the shoulder weeks of June and September, so if your schedule is flexible, the early-fall foliage season offers better rates and thinner crowds along with the best scenery of the year.</p><p>To save money, the public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier charges standard provincial park rates that come in under the private city parks, trading hookups and shuttles for a forested river-valley setting. You give up the convenience but gain the scenery and a quieter night. Either way, remember prices are in Canadian dollars, which softens the cost for visitors paying in US currency. Factor in that you will spend on shuttle fares, parking, and meals in the old city, where the dining is excellent but not cheap, so budget for the experience as much as the campsite.</p>
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Quebec City
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Best Time to Visit Quebec City by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-17C - -7C
Crowds: Low
Bitterly cold and snowy; campgrounds closed, Carnaval in the city.
Spring
Mar - May
1C - 11C
Crowds: Low
Thaw and mud with late snow; parks open in May.
Summer
Jun - Aug
14C - 25C
Crowds: High
Warm, green, festival season; the prime RV months, book ahead.
Fall
Sep - Oct
4C - 13C
Crowds: Medium
Brilliant foliage late September into October; our favorite stretch.
Explore the Quebec City Area
<p>Pick a park with a shuttle. The single best decision for a Quebec City visit is basing at a campground that runs a shuttle into Old Quebec, like the KOA or Camping Transit, so you skip the parking nightmare entirely. If you would rather have nature, base at the public <a href="https://www.sepaq.com">Jacques-Cartier national park</a> to the north and drive in for day trips, but book those SEPAQ sites early because they fill in summer.</p><p>Time it for the warm season and book ahead. Summer is festival season, the city is busy, and the popular parks fill, so reserve well in advance for July and August. Our favorite stretch is early fall, when the foliage lights up Ile dOrleans and the Jacques-Cartier valley and the summer crowds thin out. Pack layers even in summer, since evenings by the river get cool, and bring a rain jacket for the changeable weather. Save a full day for Old Quebec on foot, another for Montmorency Falls and Ile dOrleans, and you will leave wanting to come back.</p>
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Quebec City
When is the best time to RV in Quebec City?
June through early October, with summer the peak and early fall our personal favorite. Summer brings warm days around 25 degrees, green countryside, and a packed festival calendar, though it is also the busiest and priciest stretch. Late September and October light up the foliage on Ile dOrleans and in the Jacques-Cartier valley, with thinner crowds and better rates. Spring is muddy and unpredictable with late snow, and the campgrounds do not open until May. Winter is long and bitterly cold with the parks closed, so unless you are visiting for Carnaval and staying in a hotel, save Quebec City for the warm months.
Can I drive my RV into Old Quebec?
No, and you should not try. Vieux-Quebec is a centuries-old walled city with narrow, steep, cobblestone streets packed with pedestrians, and it is no place for a big rig. The right approach is to park at a campground on the edge of the metro and take its shuttle or city transit into the historic core. Several parks, including the Quebec City KOA and Camping Transit, run shuttles specifically for this. You get to wander the old town, the Chateau Frontenac, and the ramparts on foot, which is the only way to really see them, without the stress of city driving or hunting for impossible parking.
Which Quebec City RV parks have shuttles to Old Quebec?
Several of the major private parks do, which is the key feature to look for. The Quebec City KOA Holiday in St-Nicolas runs a shuttle into Old Quebec, and Camping Transit in Levis offers a shuttle across the river along with full hookups and a heated pool. Camping Valcartier provides shuttle service too, though its is geared toward the on-site water park. Basing at a shuttle park is the single best decision for a Quebec City visit, because it solves the parking problem and lets you enjoy the old city on foot. Confirm the shuttle schedule when you book, since it can be seasonal.
Do Quebec City RV parks have full hookups?
The private ones do. The Quebec City KOA, Camping Transit, Camping Valcartier, Camping de la Joie, and Camping Domaine de la Chute all offer full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and electric, many with 50-amp service and resort amenities like pools. The public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier is different, offering electric or unserviced sites in a forested river valley rather than full hookups. So if you want to plug in fully and have a shuttle to the city, book one of the private south-shore or Valcartier parks; if you want nature and can dry-camp or run on electric, the national park to the north is the move.
Is there public-land camping near Quebec City?
Yes. Parc national de la Jacques-Cartier, a public park in the SEPAQ provincial system, sits in a dramatic glacial river valley about 40 minutes north of the city. It offers RV-accessible campsites, some with electric service, reservable through the SEPAQ system, and the setting is a real change from the city parks: steep forested walls, a clear river for paddling and fishing, and excellent hiking. It fills in summer, so book the day your window opens. Using it as a base means driving into the city for day trips rather than taking a shuttle, but you trade that convenience for genuine wilderness right at the edge of a world-class city.
What is the weather like for RVing in Quebec City?
Strongly seasonal. Summers are warm and pleasant, with highs around 25 degrees, green countryside, and long evenings, which is why June through September is the RV season. Fall comes early and brings brilliant foliage by late September, with cool, crisp days. Spring is short, muddy, and can still see snow into April, and the campgrounds open in May. Winter is the headline: long, snowy, and bitterly cold, with highs well below freezing and several feet of snow a year, which closes the campgrounds entirely. Pack layers even in summer, since river evenings turn cool, and bring rain gear for changeable days.
What highways serve Quebec City for RVs?
Autoroute 20 runs along the south shore of the St. Lawrence and Autoroute 40 along the north shore, with Autoroute 73 crossing the river on the Pierre-Laporte Bridge to connect them. These are modern, big-rig-friendly highways. The catch is the old city, where you absolutely should not take an RV into the narrow walled streets. Most full-hookup parks sit on the south shore around Levis and St-Nicolas, a quick bridge crossing from downtown. Coming from the US, allow time at the border, and remember Quebec runs in French, fuel is sold in litres, and prices are in Canadian dollars, so plan your fuel stops and payment accordingly.
Is Montmorency Falls worth visiting from a Quebec City RV park?
Absolutely, it is one of the highlights. Montmorency Falls drops about 83 metres, taller than Niagara, just east of the city, and the park around it has a cable car, a suspension bridge over the brink, stairs along the gorge, and zip lines. There is RV parking at the falls, so you can drive over for a half day. Pair it with a loop around Ile dOrleans, the farm island just beyond, where you will find wineries, cider houses, produce stands, and scenic river views. Together they make an easy and memorable day trip from any of the area campgrounds.
Do I need to speak French to RV in Quebec City?
It helps but it is not required. French is the working language of Quebec City, and locals appreciate a few polite phrases like bonjour and merci. In the tourism core, the campgrounds, and the major attractions, English is widely understood, and the shuttle parks are used to international visitors. Road signs are in French, so brush up on a few terms, and note that fuel is sold in litres and priced in Canadian dollars. Making a small effort with the language goes a long way and is part of what makes a Quebec visit feel like a genuine trip abroad without leaving the continent.
Are pets allowed at Quebec City RV parks?
Generally yes. Most private campgrounds around Quebec City welcome leashed pets, and the public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier allows dogs on leash on designated trails and in the campground, though some areas and beaches are off-limits to pets. Old Quebec is walkable and dog-friendly on the streets, but you will not bring a pet into museums or many shops. Confirm any breed or size limits when you book at the private parks. In summer, mind the heat during midday walks, and in the national park, keep dogs leashed and watch for wildlife on the trails along the river valley.
How much does it cost to RV around Quebec City?
The private full-hookup parks sit at mid to upper rates for the region, climbing in July and August during the festival season and easing in the June and September shoulders. The public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier is cheaper, at standard provincial rates, if you can do without hookups and a shuttle. Beyond the campsite, budget for shuttle fares, city parking if you drive in, and meals in the old town, where the dining is excellent but not cheap. Prices are in Canadian dollars, which helps US visitors. Early fall offers the best combination of lower rates, thin crowds, and peak foliage.
Is Quebec City a good first international RV trip?
It is one of the best. You get a genuinely foreign experience, a French-speaking walled city that feels like Europe, without the hassle of shipping a vehicle overseas, and the practical side is easy: modern highways, full-hookup parks with shuttles, and widely understood English in the tourism areas. The border crossing from the northeastern US is straightforward, and the drive up through Maine, Vermont, or New York is scenic. Base at a shuttle park, spend a couple of days on foot in Old Quebec, add Montmorency Falls and Ile dOrleans, and you have a memorable trip that feels far more exotic than the distance from home suggests.
When is the best time to RV in Quebec City?
June through early October, with summer the peak and early fall our personal favorite. Summer brings warm days around 25 degrees, green countryside, and a packed festival calendar, though it is also the busiest and priciest stretch. Late September and October light up the foliage on Ile dOrleans and in the Jacques-Cartier valley, with thinner crowds and better rates. Spring is muddy and unpredictable with late snow, and the campgrounds do not open until May. Winter is long and bitterly cold with the parks closed, so unless you are visiting for Carnaval and staying in a hotel, save Quebec City for the warm months.
Can I drive my RV into Old Quebec?
No, and you should not try. Vieux-Quebec is a centuries-old walled city with narrow, steep, cobblestone streets packed with pedestrians, and it is no place for a big rig. The right approach is to park at a campground on the edge of the metro and take its shuttle or city transit into the historic core. Several parks, including the Quebec City KOA and Camping Transit, run shuttles specifically for this. You get to wander the old town, the Chateau Frontenac, and the ramparts on foot, which is the only way to really see them, without the stress of city driving or hunting for impossible parking.
Which Quebec City RV parks have shuttles to Old Quebec?
Several of the major private parks do, which is the key feature to look for. The Quebec City KOA Holiday in St-Nicolas runs a shuttle into Old Quebec, and Camping Transit in Levis offers a shuttle across the river along with full hookups and a heated pool. Camping Valcartier provides shuttle service too, though its is geared toward the on-site water park. Basing at a shuttle park is the single best decision for a Quebec City visit, because it solves the parking problem and lets you enjoy the old city on foot. Confirm the shuttle schedule when you book, since it can be seasonal.
Do Quebec City RV parks have full hookups?
The private ones do. The Quebec City KOA, Camping Transit, Camping Valcartier, Camping de la Joie, and Camping Domaine de la Chute all offer full-hookup sites with water, sewer, and electric, many with 50-amp service and resort amenities like pools. The public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier is different, offering electric or unserviced sites in a forested river valley rather than full hookups. So if you want to plug in fully and have a shuttle to the city, book one of the private south-shore or Valcartier parks; if you want nature and can dry-camp or run on electric, the national park to the north is the move.
Is there public-land camping near Quebec City?
Yes. Parc national de la Jacques-Cartier, a public park in the SEPAQ provincial system, sits in a dramatic glacial river valley about 40 minutes north of the city. It offers RV-accessible campsites, some with electric service, reservable through the SEPAQ system, and the setting is a real change from the city parks: steep forested walls, a clear river for paddling and fishing, and excellent hiking. It fills in summer, so book the day your window opens. Using it as a base means driving into the city for day trips rather than taking a shuttle, but you trade that convenience for genuine wilderness right at the edge of a world-class city.
What is the weather like for RVing in Quebec City?
Strongly seasonal. Summers are warm and pleasant, with highs around 25 degrees, green countryside, and long evenings, which is why June through September is the RV season. Fall comes early and brings brilliant foliage by late September, with cool, crisp days. Spring is short, muddy, and can still see snow into April, and the campgrounds open in May. Winter is the headline: long, snowy, and bitterly cold, with highs well below freezing and several feet of snow a year, which closes the campgrounds entirely. Pack layers even in summer, since river evenings turn cool, and bring rain gear for changeable days.
What highways serve Quebec City for RVs?
Autoroute 20 runs along the south shore of the St. Lawrence and Autoroute 40 along the north shore, with Autoroute 73 crossing the river on the Pierre-Laporte Bridge to connect them. These are modern, big-rig-friendly highways. The catch is the old city, where you absolutely should not take an RV into the narrow walled streets. Most full-hookup parks sit on the south shore around Levis and St-Nicolas, a quick bridge crossing from downtown. Coming from the US, allow time at the border, and remember Quebec runs in French, fuel is sold in litres, and prices are in Canadian dollars, so plan your fuel stops and payment accordingly.
Is Montmorency Falls worth visiting from a Quebec City RV park?
Absolutely, it is one of the highlights. Montmorency Falls drops about 83 metres, taller than Niagara, just east of the city, and the park around it has a cable car, a suspension bridge over the brink, stairs along the gorge, and zip lines. There is RV parking at the falls, so you can drive over for a half day. Pair it with a loop around Ile dOrleans, the farm island just beyond, where you will find wineries, cider houses, produce stands, and scenic river views. Together they make an easy and memorable day trip from any of the area campgrounds.
Do I need to speak French to RV in Quebec City?
It helps but it is not required. French is the working language of Quebec City, and locals appreciate a few polite phrases like bonjour and merci. In the tourism core, the campgrounds, and the major attractions, English is widely understood, and the shuttle parks are used to international visitors. Road signs are in French, so brush up on a few terms, and note that fuel is sold in litres and priced in Canadian dollars. Making a small effort with the language goes a long way and is part of what makes a Quebec visit feel like a genuine trip abroad without leaving the continent.
Are pets allowed at Quebec City RV parks?
Generally yes. Most private campgrounds around Quebec City welcome leashed pets, and the public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier allows dogs on leash on designated trails and in the campground, though some areas and beaches are off-limits to pets. Old Quebec is walkable and dog-friendly on the streets, but you will not bring a pet into museums or many shops. Confirm any breed or size limits when you book at the private parks. In summer, mind the heat during midday walks, and in the national park, keep dogs leashed and watch for wildlife on the trails along the river valley.
How much does it cost to RV around Quebec City?
The private full-hookup parks sit at mid to upper rates for the region, climbing in July and August during the festival season and easing in the June and September shoulders. The public SEPAQ park at Jacques-Cartier is cheaper, at standard provincial rates, if you can do without hookups and a shuttle. Beyond the campsite, budget for shuttle fares, city parking if you drive in, and meals in the old town, where the dining is excellent but not cheap. Prices are in Canadian dollars, which helps US visitors. Early fall offers the best combination of lower rates, thin crowds, and peak foliage.
Is Quebec City a good first international RV trip?
It is one of the best. You get a genuinely foreign experience, a French-speaking walled city that feels like Europe, without the hassle of shipping a vehicle overseas, and the practical side is easy: modern highways, full-hookup parks with shuttles, and widely understood English in the tourism areas. The border crossing from the northeastern US is straightforward, and the drive up through Maine, Vermont, or New York is scenic. Base at a shuttle park, spend a couple of days on foot in Old Quebec, add Montmorency Falls and Ile dOrleans, and you have a memorable trip that feels far more exotic than the distance from home suggests.
Are there free dump stations in Quebec City?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Quebec City.
All Dump Stations Near Quebec City (47)
RV ParkCamping Plage Laurentides
RV Park with Dump StationsRV Dump Station
RV ParkCoop Camping Saint-esprit
RV ParkQuebec City Koa Holiday
RV ParkDay 1 Koa Campsite
RV ParkCamping In Quebec City
RV ParkBoisé De La Chaudière - Condo Camping
RV Park with Dump Stations




