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RV Dump Stations In Quebec -- Find Sani-Dumps Online

52.9399° N, 73.5491° W

Quick Overview

Quebec is one of the best provinces in Canada for RV travel, and the dump station network here reflects that. We track several dump stations across Quebec, with some of them free to use. The free-to-paid ratio is exceptional: the vast majority of Quebec's sani-dumps are operated by municipalities, camping networks, and public works yards that don't charge a fee, so a full-province loop rarely requires you to pay for RV waste disposal at all.

The dump station landscape here is a mix of three kinds of facilities. First, the municipal stations, which are typically near public works yards, town halls, or community recreation centres and are almost always free. Second, the SEPAQ-operated sanitary dump stations inside Quebec's provincial parks, which are free if you're camping and day-rate if you're not. Third, private campgrounds and the handful of Terego network members (farms and businesses that host overnight RVs legally), which vary in whether dumping is included or extra. Roulottes A.S. Levesque, CanaDream, and Horizon Lussier run the biggest service networks if you need repairs while you're out dumping.

Quebec's highway system makes RV travel reasonably simple once you get the lay of the land. Autoroute 20 is the Trans-Canada through the southern corridor and handles the Montreal-Quebec City-Riviere-du-Loup axis. Autoroute 40 runs along the north shore of the St Lawrence. Autoroute 30 is a toll bypass around Montreal that saves a lot of stress for anyone hauling a travel trailer or driving a Class A rig; pay the toll and avoid the city. Route 132 is the slower but more scenic option along the south shore, threading through historic villages and farming country.

A few things to prepare for before you hit the road. Winter tires are mandatory by law on all vehicles, including RVs, from December 1 through March 15; this catches out-of-province travellers every year. French is the primary language outside Montreal and the Eastern Townships, so a few basic phrases for fuel, campgrounds, and dump stations go a long way in rural areas. And cell coverage drops significantly once you head into the Gaspe Peninsula or up the North Shore past Tadoussac, so download offline maps before you commit. The listings below cover each of the sanitary dump stations across the province with access notes and recommendations.

Browse RV Dump Stations by City (374)

Acton Vale

Aguanish

Alma

Amos

Amqui

Ange-Gardien

Ayer's Cliff

Baie-James

Baie-Sainte-Catherine

Baie-Saint-Paul

Baie-Trinité

Bassin

Beaucanton

Beaumont

Bécancour

Berry

Biencourt

Boisbriand

Bonaventure

Boucherville

Bromont

Cabano

Cantley

Cap-Chat-Est

Causapscal

Chambly

Chambord

Champlain

Château-Richer

Chesterville

Chibougamau

Chute-Saint-Philippe

Clermont

Cookshire-Eaton

Coteau-du-Lac

Cowansville

Danville

Dégelis

Deschaillons-sur-Saint-Laurent

Dolbeau-Mistassini

Donnacona

Drummondville

Duhamel

Duhamel-Ouest

Duparquet

East Angus

Eastman

Essipit

Farnham

Fatima

Ferland-et-Boilleau

Ferme-Neuve

Fossambault-sur-le-Lac

Franklin

Frelighsburg

Gascons

Gaspé

Gatineau

Gracefield

Granby

Grande-Entrée

Grande-Vallée

Ham-Sud

Harrington

Havelock

Havre-aux-Maisons

Havre-Saint-Pierre

Hébertville

Hemmingford

Inverness

Ivry-sur-le-Lac

Joly

Kiamika

Kingsey Falls

Kinnear's Mills

La Baie

Labelle

Lac-à-la-Tortue

Lac-aux-Sables

Lac-Brome

Lac-des-Plages

Lac-Humqui

Lachute

Lac-Mégantic

Lacolle

La Conception

Lac Simon

La Doré

La Macaza

La Malbaie

Lambton

L'Ancienne-Lorette

L'Ange-Gardien

Lanoraie

L'Anse-Saint-Jean

La Prairie

Laterrière

Latulipe-et-Gaboury

La Tuque

Laval

L'Avenir

Le Bic

Les Bergeronnes

Les Coteaux

Les Méchins

L'Étang-du-Nord

Levis

Lévis

L'Île-d'Anticosti

L'Île-Perrot

L'Isle-aux-Coudres

L'Islet

L'Isle-Verte

Longue-Pointe-de-Mingan

Lotbinière

Louiseville

Lyster

Malartic

Mansfield-et-Pontefract

Mansonville

Maria

Marieville

Massueville

Matane

Matchi-Manitou

Melocheville

Mercier

Messines

Métis-sur-Mer

Mirabel

Mont-Brun

Montcerf-Lytton

Montebello

Mont-Joli

Mont-Laurier

Montmagny

Montpellier

Mont-Saint-Hilaire

Mont-Saint-Michel

Mont-Tremblant

Morin-Heights

Murdochville

Natashquan

Neuville

New Richmond

Nominingue

Notre-Dame-de-Pontmain

Notre-Dame-des-Bois

Notre-Dame-des-Neiges

Notre-Dame-des-Prairies

Notre-Dame-du-Lac

Notre-Dame-du-Laus

Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel

Orford

Otter Lake

Pabos

Packington

Palmarolle

Percé

Péribonka

Petit-Saguenay

Piopolis

Plaisance

Plessisville

Pohénégamook

Pointe-aux-Outardes

Pointe-des-Cascades

Pont-Rouge

Port-Cartier

Portneuf

Princeville

Québec

Quebec City

Racine

Radisson

Ragueneau

Rawdon

Repentigny

Richelieu

Rigaud

Rimouski

Rivière-à-Pierre

Rivière-au-Tonnerre

Rivière-aux-Outardes

Rivière-Bleue

Rivière-du-Loup

Rivière-Kipawa

Roberval

Roquemaure

Rougemont

Rouyn-Noranda

Roxton Pond

Sacré-Coeur-Saguenay

Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs

Saint-Aimé-du-Lac-des-Îles

Saint-Alexandre-de-Kamouraska

Saint-Alexis-des-Monts

Saint-Alphonse-de-Granby

Saint-Ambroise

Saint-André-de-Kamouraska

Saint-Anicet

Saint-Antoine-Abbé

Saint-Antonin

Saint-Apollinaire

Saint-Armand

Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures

Saint-Ã_x0089_tienne-de-Lauzon

Saint-Barthélemy

Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle

Saint-Boniface

Saint-Bruno-du-Lac-Saint-Jean

Saint-Célestin

Saint-Charles-de-Drummond

Saint-Charles-sur-Richelieu

Saint-Claude

Saint-Clément

Saint-Côme

Saint-Côme–Linière

Saint-Cyprien-De-Napierville

Saint-Damase-de-Matapédia

Saint-Damien

Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm

Sainte-Agathe-de-Lotbinière

Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts

Sainte-Anne-des-Monts

Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines

Sainte-Apolline-de-Patton

Sainte-Brigitte-de-Laval

Sainte-Catherine-de-Hatley

Sainte-Cécile-de-Masham

Sainte-Cécile-de-Milton

Sainte-Croix

Saint-Édouard-de-Maskinongé

Sainte-Émélie-de-l'Énergie

Sainte-Flavie

Sainte-Geneviève-de-Batiscan

Sainte-Julienne

Sainte-Justine-de-Newton

Saint-Élie-de-Caxton

Sainte-Luce

Sainte-Madeleine

Sainte-Marcelline-de-Kildare

Sainte-Marie-de-Blandford

Sainte-Mélanie

Sainte-Monique-du-Lac-Saint-Jean

Sainte-Rose-du-Nord

Sainte-Sabine

Sainte-Sabine-Station

Sainte-Sophie

Sainte-Thècle

Saint-Étienne-de-Bolton

Saint-Étienne-de-Lauzon

Saint-Étienne-des-Grès

Saint-Eustache

Sainte-Victoire-de-Sorel

Saint-Fabien

Saint-Faustin-Lac-Carré

Saint-Félicien

Saint-Félix-de-Kingsey

Saint-Félix-de-Valois

Saint-Ferdinand

Saint-François-du-Lac

Saint-Fulgence

Saint-Gabriel-de-Brandon

Saint-Gabriel-de-Valcartier

Saint-Gédéon

Saint-Henri-de-Taillon

Saint-Honoré-de-Chicoutimi

Saint-Hubert

Saint-Hyacinthe

Saint-Ignace-de-Stanbridge

Saint-Isidore-de-Clifton

Saint-Jacques-de-Leeds

Saint-Jacques-le-Mineur

Saint-Jean-Baptiste

Saint-Jean-de-Dieu

Saint-Jean-des-Piles

Saint-Jean-Port-Joli

Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu

Saint-Jérôme

Saint-Joachim-de-Shefford

Saint-Joseph-de-Beauce

Saint-Joseph-de-Coleraine

Saint-Juste-du-Lac

Saint-Lambert-de-Lauzon

Saint-Léonard-d'Aston

Saint-Liboire

Saint-Lin-Laurentides

Saint-Lin–Laurentides

Saint-Louis-du-Ha! Ha!

Saint-Luc-de-Bellechasse

Saint-Majorique

Saint-Majorique-de-Grantham

Saint-Marc-sur-Richelieu

Saint-Mathieu-De-Beloeil

Saint-Mathieu-de-Rioux

Saint-Mathieu-du-Parc

Saint-Michel-de-Bellechasse

Saint-Michel-des-Saints

Saint-Michel-du-Squatec

Saint-Modeste

Saint-Narcisse

Saint-Narcisse-de-Rimouski

Saint-Nazaire-du-Lac-Saint-Jean

Saint-Omer

Saint-Ours

Saint-Pascal

Saint-Paul

Saint-Paul-de-l'Île-aux-Noix

Saint-Paulin

Saint-Philémon

Saint-Philibert

Saint-Philippe

Saint-Philippe-de-La Prairie

Saint-Pie

Saint-Pierre-Baptiste

Saint-Pierre-de-Lamy

Saint-Polycarpe

Saint-Prime

Saint-Raphaël

Saint-Raymond

Saint-Roch-de-Mékinac

Saint-Roch-de-Richelieu

Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies

Saint-Romuald

Saint-Rosaire

Saint-Sauveur

Saint-Siméon

Saint-Tite

Saint-Ubalde

Saint-Urbain

Saint-Zotique

Salaberry-de-Valleyfield

Sayabec

Scott

Senneterre

Sept-Iles

Sept-Îles

Shawinigan

Shawville

Shefford

Sherbrooke

Sorel-Tracy

Stanstead

Stoneham-et-Tewkesbury

Stratford

Sutton

Tadoussac

Taillon

Taschereau

Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac

Terrebonne

Thetford Mines

Trois-Pistoles

Trois-Rives

Trois-Rivières

Ulverton

Upton

Val-Alain

Val-Barrette

Val-Brillant

Val-des-Bois

Val-des-Sources

Val-d'Or

Vallée-Jonction

Varennes

Vaudreuil-Dorion

Venise-en-Québec

Victoriaville

Waterloo

Waterville

Wentworth-Nord

Wickham

Wotton

Getting Around Quebec by RV

Quebec's major RV arteries are the autoroute system and the scenic Route 132. Autoroute 20 is the Trans-Canada through the south and carries you from the Ontario border through Montreal, past Quebec City, and out to Riviere-du-Loup before swinging into New Brunswick territory. Autoroute 40 is the north-shore alternative between Montreal and Quebec City, useful if the south is congested. Autoroute 30 is the Montreal bypass toll road that every RVer should know about; it adds a few dollars but saves hours of stop-and-start city driving with a rig. Autoroute 15 heads north into the Laurentians, and Autoroute 85 feeds the Riviere-du-Loup to Edmundston corridor.

The speed limit on autoroutes is 100 km/h, and rural roads in the Laurentians and Charlevoix can be steep and winding. Montreal restricts RV street parking to 48 hours on any single stretch, and most Quebec municipalities prohibit overnight parking on public streets entirely; use a campground or a Terego host instead. From the south, you'll most likely cross at I-87 (from New York) or I-91 (from Vermont) if you're inbound from the US.

RV Dump Stations Costs in Quebec

Of the several dump stations we track in Quebec, some (a portion%) are free while only a portion% charge a fee. That's one of the most generous free-to-paid ratios of any major Canadian province, mostly because Quebec municipalities run public dump stations as a service rather than a revenue stream. Paid stations, when you do encounter them, typically charge between $5 and $15 CAD, and most are inside private campgrounds where the dump is included if you're staying overnight. SEPAQ provincial park dump stations are free for registered campers and day-rate (a few dollars) for day visitors. The Terego network of farms and legal overnight host businesses sometimes includes a dump in their overnight fee, but policies vary by host; check each listing before you count on it.

Free: 540 stations (94%)
Paid: 36 stations (6%)

Contact station for pricing details.

Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About Quebec

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Best Time to Visit Quebec by RV

❄️

Winter

Dec - Feb

-10 to 25°F

Crowds: Low

Deep Quebec winter. Most campgrounds closed. Winter tire law in effect December 1 through March 15 for all vehicles including RVs.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

30-60°F

Crowds: Low

Thaw and mud season. Many rural dump stations and campgrounds don't open until mid-May after the final frost and road repair work.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

60-80°F

Crowds: High

Peak Quebec RV season. Book Gaspe and Mont-Tremblant campgrounds in advance. Long daylight hours and mild weather throughout the province.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Nov

35-65°F

Crowds: Medium

Spectacular fall foliage in late September and early October in the Laurentians and Eastern Townships. Book leaf-peeping campgrounds weeks ahead.

Explore Quebec

The Autoroute 30 toll bypass around Montreal is a genuine stress-saver for anyone travelling with a trailer or Class A rig. Pay the few dollars and skip the downtown congestion entirely. If you have the time, Route 132 along the south shore of the St Lawrence is one of the most rewarding slow drives in Canada, passing historic farms, stone churches, and seaside villages that feel pulled out of another century; the trade-off is speed and one-lane sections. Winter tire law catches out-of-province travellers every year, so plan to swap or arrive with them installed if you're here between December 1 and March 15. French is the default language outside Montreal and the Eastern Townships. Learn the basics for gas stations (diesel is "diesel", regular is "ordinaire", full is "plein") and campgrounds ("camping sauvage" is dry camping). Cell coverage thins out fast heading into Gaspe or the North Shore; download offline maps before you leave your last cell-covered town. For propane refills, Horizon Lussier has multiple locations across the province with full RV service, and Superior Propane handles delivery in more remote areas. For repairs, Roulottes A.S. Levesque runs eight locations and CanaDream has service centres near Montreal.

Helpful Resources

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Dump Stations in Quebec

Where can I dump my RV tanks in Quebec?

Quebec has hundreds of dump stations in our directory spread across the province, with heavy concentration in the Montreal, Quebec City, and Eastern Townships corridors. Most are municipal or provincial park facilities. Along Autoroute 20 you'll find a station roughly every 100 kilometres, and the gaps are filled by private campgrounds and Terego network hosts in the rural areas.

Are there free dump stations across Quebec?

Yes, the vast majority. Most dump stations we list in Quebec are free to use, which is roughly 94 percent of the network. Most free stations are operated by municipalities and public works yards as a service to travellers, and they require no permit or registration. The paid ones are mostly inside private campgrounds or SEPAQ park day-use situations.

How much does it cost to use a paid dump station in Quebec?

When you do pay, the typical Quebec dump station fee is between 5 and 15 Canadian dollars. Private campgrounds usually include dumping free with an overnight stay. SEPAQ provincial parks charge a modest day-use fee if you're dumping without camping, typically a few dollars. Given how many free options exist, most travellers rarely pay at all during a Quebec loop.

Do I need to speak French to use dump stations in Quebec?

Not strictly, but a few basic phrases help in rural areas where English is less common. Most municipal dump stations are self-serve and well-signed with universal RV symbols, so you can usually find and use them without language. If the station is operated by a camping host, basic French like "bonjour" and "la station de vidange" is appreciated and often returned with English help.

What's the Terego network and does it include dump stations?

Terego is a Quebec-based network of farms, vineyards, and small businesses that legally host self-contained RVs overnight in exchange for a membership fee and usually a purchase from the host. Some Terego hosts include dump station access as part of the stay, but not all; check each listing carefully before you arrive. It's an affordable way to stay rural and support local producers.

Are winter tires really required on my RV in Quebec?

Yes. Quebec law requires winter tires on all vehicles, including motorhomes and travel trailers, from December 1 through March 15. This is strictly enforced and applies to out-of-province travellers as well. If you're planning a late-fall or early-spring trip into Quebec, either swap to winter tires or avoid the window entirely. Fines for non-compliance can be substantial.

What is the highest-rated dump station in Quebec?

The highest-rated is Saint-Zotique Dumping Station with a rating of 5.0/5 stars.