RV Parks In Fort Macleod, Alberta
49.7167° N, 113.4186° W
Quick Overview
Fort Macleod is one of those southern Alberta towns we keep coming back to, partly because of where it sits and partly because of what's around it. The town parks right at the junction of Highway 2 and Highway 3, the Crowsnest Highway, on the banks of the Oldman River, which makes it a natural overnight or multi-night base whether you're heading west into the Crowsnest Pass, south toward Waterton Lakes, or just rolling through on the prairie. For RVers, the location does most of the work: you're 18 km from Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that's genuinely worth a full half-day, and within easy reach of several provincial-park campgrounds. The town has been a crossroads since the North West Mounted Police set up here in the 1870s, and that history is still the spine of a visit.
What we like about basing here is how little you have to move the rig. You can settle into a serviced site, then run day trips west into the Crowsnest Pass, south to Waterton Lakes, or east to Lethbridge without breaking camp. The Oldman River valley gives you river-valley parks and walks right in town, and the prairie around it is wide-open chinook country, beautiful in summer and worth respecting when the wind kicks up.
For camping, you've got a real mix here. The private RV park in town, Daisy May Campground & RV Park, gives you full-service hookups with 30 and 50 amp electric, water hookup, and sewer at the full-service sites, plus a pool and a store; it's the easy full-hookup option right off the highway. For public provincial-park and municipal campgrounds, the closest serviced option is Park Lake Provincial Park, about 17 km northwest of Lethbridge, which has electrical sites, a dump station, and shaded loops under mature trees. Between the private RV park and the provincial-park sites, you can pick full hookups in town or a quieter lakeside electrical site a short drive east.
The town itself is small but has more going on than you'd expect. The Fort Museum of the North West Mounted Police tells the story of the early Mounties and the First Nations history of the area, and in July and August it runs a youth Musical Ride. The Main Street Provincial Historic Area and the restored Empress Theatre give you a walkable downtown for an evening. It all adds up to a town that's easy to underestimate from the highway and easy to recommend once you've stayed a night or two.
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Gear for Your Trip to Fort Macleod
All Dump Stations Near Fort Macleod
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daisy May Campground | 0.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| River's Edge RV Park & Campground | 1.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Macleod Lions Club Campground | 2.8 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Country Oasis RV Park Campground | 7.5 mi | 3.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Centennial Park Campground | 22.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Park Lake Campground | 23.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Castleview Campground | 23.7 mi | 3.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lethbridge Koa | 24.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sleepy Hollow Campground | 27.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pincher Creek Veteran's Memorial Campground | 28.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Daisy May Campground
0.5 miRiver's Edge RV Park & Campground
1.2 miFort Macleod Lions Club Campground
2.8 miCountry Oasis RV Park Campground
7.5 miCentennial Park Campground
22.3 miPark Lake Campground
23.4 miCastleview Campground
23.7 miLethbridge Koa
24.4 miSleepy Hollow Campground
27.8 miPincher Creek Veteran's Memorial Campground
28.1 miTraveling to Fort Macleod by RV
Getting here is simple. Fort Macleod is built around the Highway 2 and Highway 3 junction, so you can arrive from Calgary in the north, the Montana border in the south, the Crowsnest Pass in the west, or Lethbridge in the east, all on good paved divided or two-lane highway. There are no low-clearance bridges or weight restrictions on the main approaches for standard rigs. To reach Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, take Highway 785 west for 18 km; it's a paved, well-signed run. The one thing we always flag here is wind. This is open prairie and chinook country, so strong crosswinds are common on Highway 2 and Highway 3. If you're towing a tall trailer or fifth wheel, check the Alberta wind and road advisories before a windy day, and be ready to slow down or wait it out. Fuel, diesel, and propane are easy to find along the Highway 3 corridor in town, with full Alberta services and big-box shopping 50 km east in Lethbridge.
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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 Fort Macleod, Alberta, 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 Fort Macleod
Camping costs around Fort Macleod stay reasonable by Alberta standards. Provincial-park sites like those at Park Lake run on the standard Alberta Parks fee structure, with unserviced sites cheapest and electrical (powered) sites costing a few dollars more per night, plus a reservation fee when you book through reserve.albertaparks.ca. The private RV park in town sits higher for full-service hookup sites with 30/50 amp electric, water, and sewer, which is normal for a serviced campground with a pool and amenities. Day-use at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump carries a modest admission, and the Fort Museum charges its own entry. Propane, fuel, and groceries price in line with rural southern Alberta, a bit cheaper than Calgary. Booking shoulder-season nights in spring or fall is the easy way to save on serviced sites.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Fort Macleod by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-9C - -2C
Crowds: Medium
Cold and snowy with strong winds, broken up by chinooks that can lift temperatures above freezing in hours. Most campgrounds are closed; this is not a serviced-camping season here.
Spring
Mar - May
1C - 14C
Crowds: Medium
Provincial-park campgrounds and the in-town RV park open through April. Wind is still strong and nights stay cool, but it's a quiet, good-value time to visit the Buffalo Jump and downtown.
Summer
Jun - Aug
10C - 26C
Crowds: High
Warm, dry days and the busiest season. Book provincial-park and private sites early for July and August weekends, and expect occasional hot, windy afternoons on the prairie.
Fall
Sep - Oct
2C - 15C
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days, thinning crowds, and easier reservations. A strong window for touring the Crowsnest Pass and Waterton before campgrounds close at the end of October.
Explore the Fort Macleod Area
A few things we've learned passing through. Give the Buffalo Jump a real chunk of time, not a quick stop; the interpretive centre is built right into the sandstone cliff and the trails and exhibits reward a slow visit, especially first thing in the morning before tour buses arrive. In July and August, time an evening around the Musical Ride at the Fort Museum if it's running. Book your provincial-park site early; summer weekends at Park Lake fill up, and the reserve.albertaparks.ca window opens well ahead, so grab a serviced site as soon as you know your dates. If you want full hookups close to the highway, the private RV park in town is the simple call. Watch the wind: park your rig nose-into the prevailing chinook when you can, retract awnings before you leave the site, and don't plan a high-profile haul on a red-flag wind day. Finally, leave a buffer for the Crowsnest Pass drive west; it's a scenic, slower mountain highway and worth doing in daylight.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Fort Macleod
Where can I camp with an RV in Fort Macleod, Alberta?
You've got two main directions. In town, Daisy May Campground & RV Park is the private RV park option, with full-service hookups including 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer at the serviced sites, plus a pool and store. For public provincial-park and municipal campgrounds, the closest serviced choice is Park Lake Provincial Park about 17 km northwest of Lethbridge, which has electrical sites, shaded loops, and a dump station. Between the private RV park right off the highway junction and the provincial-park sites a short drive east, you can pick full hookups in town or a quieter lakeside electrical site, depending on what you want.
Do the campgrounds near Fort Macleod have full hookups and 30/50 amp service?
Yes, at least at the private RV park. Daisy May Campground & RV Park in Fort Macleod offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50 amp electric, plus water hookup and sewer hookup at its full-service sites, which is the easiest full-service option close to the Highway 2 and Highway 3 junction. The nearby provincial-park campgrounds work differently: Park Lake Provincial Park offers electrical (powered) sites rather than full sewer hookups, along with water collection points and a dump station for emptying tanks. So if you need a true full-hookup site with 50 amp, plan on the in-town private RV park; if powered sites and a sani-dump suit you, the provincial park is a good value.
How do I reserve a campsite near Fort Macleod?
For the provincial parks, book online through reserve.albertaparks.ca, the official Alberta Parks reservation system. Reservations there typically open a set number of days ahead of your arrival date, so put your dates in early for summer weekends, which fill fast at popular spots like Park Lake. Some provincial-park loops also keep first-come, first-served sites, but you shouldn't count on one in July or August. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, takes its own reservations directly, which we'd recommend for peak season. The simple rule here: reserve provincial-park sites through reserve.albertaparks.ca well ahead, and call the private RV park directly to lock in a full-hookup site.
What's the closest provincial park campground to Fort Macleod?
Park Lake Provincial Park is the closest serviced provincial-park campground, sitting about 17 km northwest of Lethbridge, which is an easy drive east of Fort Macleod on Highway 3. It has more than 70 reservable sites shaded by mature trees, with electrical (powered) sites in the South and North campgrounds, water collection points, a playground, and a dump station at the South campground. It's a popular lake-and-beach spot in summer, so book early through reserve.albertaparks.ca. Heading west and south you'll also find provincial and national parkland in the Crowsnest Pass and toward Waterton Lakes, but for a quick, reservable serviced base near Fort Macleod, Park Lake is the practical pick.
How far is Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump from Fort Macleod?
It's about 18 km west of Fort Macleod, an easy drive out Highway 785 on good pavement. Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that preserves and interprets over 6,000 years of Plains Buffalo culture, where Indigenous peoples drove bison off the cliff for thousands of years. The interpretive centre is built right into the sandstone cliff, with exhibits on Blackfoot lifestyle, ecology, and technology, plus interpretive trails and hands-on programs. We'd set aside a half-day rather than a quick stop, and go early before tour buses arrive. There's a modest admission. It's the standout reason a lot of RVers base in Fort Macleod in the first place.
What highways run through Fort Macleod and are they RV-friendly?
Fort Macleod sits at the junction of Highway 2 and Highway 3, the Crowsnest Highway. Highway 2 runs north toward Calgary and south to the Montana border, while Highway 3 runs west into the Crowsnest Pass and BC, or east to Lethbridge and Medicine Hat. All of these are wide, paved, divided or two-lane routes with no low-clearance bridges or weight restrictions for standard rigs, so they're RV-friendly in normal conditions. Highway 785 to the Buffalo Jump is also good pavement. The real caution is wind: this is open prairie chinook country, and strong crosswinds are common, so high-profile trailers should check Alberta road and wind advisories before a windy day.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Fort Macleod?
Summer, roughly late June through August, is the prime window, with warm dry days, average highs near 26C in July, and everything open including the Buffalo Jump, the Fort Museum's Musical Ride, and full campground service. The trade-off is crowds and the need to book sites early. Late spring and early fall are quieter and better value: campgrounds are still open from around April into late October, the weather is cooler but pleasant, and reservations are easier. We like September for touring the Crowsnest Pass and Waterton with thinner traffic. Winter is for pass-through only here; serviced camping shuts down and the prairie wind and cold make it a poor RV season despite the chinooks.
Is there a dump station near Fort Macleod for my RV tanks?
Yes. Park Lake Provincial Park has a sani-dump station at its South campground, which is the handiest public option a short drive east toward Lethbridge, and it's available alongside the campground's electrical sites and water points. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, also serves full-service sites where you can empty tanks at your site or use its facilities. So whether you're staying at the provincial park or the in-town RV park, you have a place to dump. If you're just passing through, plan your stop around one of these serviced campgrounds rather than expecting a dump at a highway pullout, since this stretch doesn't have casual roadside facilities.
What's the weather like for RVing in Fort Macleod?
Fort Macleod has a prairie climate with warm summers and cold, windy winters. July, the warmest month, averages highs around 26C, with comfortable camping weather from late spring into early fall. January lows average around -8 to -9C, and snow and wind define winter, though chinooks can briefly spike temperatures well above freezing. The constant here is wind: it's strong year round on this open prairie, and chinook gusts can be powerful, so secure your awning and park into the wind. For RVers, plan serviced camping between roughly April and late October, with summer the warmest and busiest stretch and the shoulder seasons cooler but quieter.
Are there first-come, first-served campsites near Fort Macleod?
Some provincial-park loops in the region hold a portion of first-come, first-served sites, so it's possible to roll in and find an open spot midweek or in shoulder season. That said, we wouldn't rely on it for summer weekends, when popular spots like Park Lake Provincial Park fill up and most sites go through reserve.albertaparks.ca. The safer plan is to reserve a provincial-park site online ahead of time, or call the private RV park in town directly. If you do want to try first-come, arrive early in the day, have a backup in mind, and check the Alberta Parks listing for which campgrounds and loops currently offer non-reservable sites, since that mix changes.
What is there to do in Fort Macleod besides camping?
Plenty for a small town. The headline is Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, the UNESCO World Heritage Site 18 km west, but the town itself holds you for a day too. The Fort Museum of the North West Mounted Police and First Nations Interpretive Centre tells the story of the early Mounties and the area's Indigenous and settler history, and runs a youth Musical Ride in July and August. The Main Street Provincial Historic Area gives you a walkable, restored early-1900s downtown with shops and cafes, and the historic Empress Theatre is worth an evening. The Oldman River valley adds river-valley parks and walks. Add a day trip into the Crowsnest Pass or south to Waterton and you've got a full multi-night stay.
Can I use Fort Macleod as a base for the Crowsnest Pass and Waterton?
Absolutely, that's one of its strengths. Fort Macleod sits right where Highway 2 and Highway 3 meet, so you can park the rig at the in-town RV park or at Park Lake Provincial Park and run day trips in several directions. Head west on Highway 3, the Crowsnest Highway, and you climb into the scenic Crowsnest Pass with its mining history and mountain landscapes. Head south and you can reach Waterton Lakes National Park for a day in the mountains. Both are doable as day trips, leaving you a serviced site to return to each night instead of moving camp. We'd drive the Crowsnest Pass in daylight, since it's a slower mountain highway, and leave a buffer in the schedule.
Do I need reservations for summer camping near Fort Macleod?
For summer weekends, yes, you really should reserve. July and August are the busy season, and serviced provincial-park sites at places like Park Lake Provincial Park book up through reserve.albertaparks.ca, so put your dates in as soon as the reservation window opens. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, also fills its full-hookup sites in peak season, so call ahead. Midweek and shoulder-season stays in spring and fall are more relaxed, and you may find first-come sites then, but it's still smart to check availability before you arrive. The short version: reserve provincial-park sites online and call the private RV park directly for any summer stay, and you'll avoid scrambling for a spot.
Where can I camp with an RV in Fort Macleod, Alberta?
You've got two main directions. In town, Daisy May Campground & RV Park is the private RV park option, with full-service hookups including 30 and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer at the serviced sites, plus a pool and store. For public provincial-park and municipal campgrounds, the closest serviced choice is Park Lake Provincial Park about 17 km northwest of Lethbridge, which has electrical sites, shaded loops, and a dump station. Between the private RV park right off the highway junction and the provincial-park sites a short drive east, you can pick full hookups in town or a quieter lakeside electrical site, depending on what you want.
Do the campgrounds near Fort Macleod have full hookups and 30/50 amp service?
Yes, at least at the private RV park. Daisy May Campground & RV Park in Fort Macleod offers full-hookup sites with 30 and 50 amp electric, plus water hookup and sewer hookup at its full-service sites, which is the easiest full-service option close to the Highway 2 and Highway 3 junction. The nearby provincial-park campgrounds work differently: Park Lake Provincial Park offers electrical (powered) sites rather than full sewer hookups, along with water collection points and a dump station for emptying tanks. So if you need a true full-hookup site with 50 amp, plan on the in-town private RV park; if powered sites and a sani-dump suit you, the provincial park is a good value.
How do I reserve a campsite near Fort Macleod?
For the provincial parks, book online through reserve.albertaparks.ca, the official Alberta Parks reservation system. Reservations there typically open a set number of days ahead of your arrival date, so put your dates in early for summer weekends, which fill fast at popular spots like Park Lake. Some provincial-park loops also keep first-come, first-served sites, but you shouldn't count on one in July or August. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, takes its own reservations directly, which we'd recommend for peak season. The simple rule here: reserve provincial-park sites through reserve.albertaparks.ca well ahead, and call the private RV park directly to lock in a full-hookup site.
What's the closest provincial park campground to Fort Macleod?
Park Lake Provincial Park is the closest serviced provincial-park campground, sitting about 17 km northwest of Lethbridge, which is an easy drive east of Fort Macleod on Highway 3. It has more than 70 reservable sites shaded by mature trees, with electrical (powered) sites in the South and North campgrounds, water collection points, a playground, and a dump station at the South campground. It's a popular lake-and-beach spot in summer, so book early through reserve.albertaparks.ca. Heading west and south you'll also find provincial and national parkland in the Crowsnest Pass and toward Waterton Lakes, but for a quick, reservable serviced base near Fort Macleod, Park Lake is the practical pick.
How far is Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump from Fort Macleod?
It's about 18 km west of Fort Macleod, an easy drive out Highway 785 on good pavement. Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that preserves and interprets over 6,000 years of Plains Buffalo culture, where Indigenous peoples drove bison off the cliff for thousands of years. The interpretive centre is built right into the sandstone cliff, with exhibits on Blackfoot lifestyle, ecology, and technology, plus interpretive trails and hands-on programs. We'd set aside a half-day rather than a quick stop, and go early before tour buses arrive. There's a modest admission. It's the standout reason a lot of RVers base in Fort Macleod in the first place.
What highways run through Fort Macleod and are they RV-friendly?
Fort Macleod sits at the junction of Highway 2 and Highway 3, the Crowsnest Highway. Highway 2 runs north toward Calgary and south to the Montana border, while Highway 3 runs west into the Crowsnest Pass and BC, or east to Lethbridge and Medicine Hat. All of these are wide, paved, divided or two-lane routes with no low-clearance bridges or weight restrictions for standard rigs, so they're RV-friendly in normal conditions. Highway 785 to the Buffalo Jump is also good pavement. The real caution is wind: this is open prairie chinook country, and strong crosswinds are common, so high-profile trailers should check Alberta road and wind advisories before a windy day.
When is the best time to bring an RV to Fort Macleod?
Summer, roughly late June through August, is the prime window, with warm dry days, average highs near 26C in July, and everything open including the Buffalo Jump, the Fort Museum's Musical Ride, and full campground service. The trade-off is crowds and the need to book sites early. Late spring and early fall are quieter and better value: campgrounds are still open from around April into late October, the weather is cooler but pleasant, and reservations are easier. We like September for touring the Crowsnest Pass and Waterton with thinner traffic. Winter is for pass-through only here; serviced camping shuts down and the prairie wind and cold make it a poor RV season despite the chinooks.
Is there a dump station near Fort Macleod for my RV tanks?
Yes. Park Lake Provincial Park has a sani-dump station at its South campground, which is the handiest public option a short drive east toward Lethbridge, and it's available alongside the campground's electrical sites and water points. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, also serves full-service sites where you can empty tanks at your site or use its facilities. So whether you're staying at the provincial park or the in-town RV park, you have a place to dump. If you're just passing through, plan your stop around one of these serviced campgrounds rather than expecting a dump at a highway pullout, since this stretch doesn't have casual roadside facilities.
What's the weather like for RVing in Fort Macleod?
Fort Macleod has a prairie climate with warm summers and cold, windy winters. July, the warmest month, averages highs around 26C, with comfortable camping weather from late spring into early fall. January lows average around -8 to -9C, and snow and wind define winter, though chinooks can briefly spike temperatures well above freezing. The constant here is wind: it's strong year round on this open prairie, and chinook gusts can be powerful, so secure your awning and park into the wind. For RVers, plan serviced camping between roughly April and late October, with summer the warmest and busiest stretch and the shoulder seasons cooler but quieter.
Are there first-come, first-served campsites near Fort Macleod?
Some provincial-park loops in the region hold a portion of first-come, first-served sites, so it's possible to roll in and find an open spot midweek or in shoulder season. That said, we wouldn't rely on it for summer weekends, when popular spots like Park Lake Provincial Park fill up and most sites go through reserve.albertaparks.ca. The safer plan is to reserve a provincial-park site online ahead of time, or call the private RV park in town directly. If you do want to try first-come, arrive early in the day, have a backup in mind, and check the Alberta Parks listing for which campgrounds and loops currently offer non-reservable sites, since that mix changes.
What is there to do in Fort Macleod besides camping?
Plenty for a small town. The headline is Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, the UNESCO World Heritage Site 18 km west, but the town itself holds you for a day too. The Fort Museum of the North West Mounted Police and First Nations Interpretive Centre tells the story of the early Mounties and the area's Indigenous and settler history, and runs a youth Musical Ride in July and August. The Main Street Provincial Historic Area gives you a walkable, restored early-1900s downtown with shops and cafes, and the historic Empress Theatre is worth an evening. The Oldman River valley adds river-valley parks and walks. Add a day trip into the Crowsnest Pass or south to Waterton and you've got a full multi-night stay.
Can I use Fort Macleod as a base for the Crowsnest Pass and Waterton?
Absolutely, that's one of its strengths. Fort Macleod sits right where Highway 2 and Highway 3 meet, so you can park the rig at the in-town RV park or at Park Lake Provincial Park and run day trips in several directions. Head west on Highway 3, the Crowsnest Highway, and you climb into the scenic Crowsnest Pass with its mining history and mountain landscapes. Head south and you can reach Waterton Lakes National Park for a day in the mountains. Both are doable as day trips, leaving you a serviced site to return to each night instead of moving camp. We'd drive the Crowsnest Pass in daylight, since it's a slower mountain highway, and leave a buffer in the schedule.
Do I need reservations for summer camping near Fort Macleod?
For summer weekends, yes, you really should reserve. July and August are the busy season, and serviced provincial-park sites at places like Park Lake Provincial Park book up through reserve.albertaparks.ca, so put your dates in as soon as the reservation window opens. The private RV park in town, Daisy May, also fills its full-hookup sites in peak season, so call ahead. Midweek and shoulder-season stays in spring and fall are more relaxed, and you may find first-come sites then, but it's still smart to check availability before you arrive. The short version: reserve provincial-park sites online and call the private RV park directly for any summer stay, and you'll avoid scrambling for a spot.
Are there free dump stations in Fort Macleod?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Fort Macleod.
All Dump Stations Near Fort Macleod (28)
RV ParkDaisy May Campground
RV ParkRiver's Edge RV Park & Campground
RV ParkFort Macleod Lions Club Campground
RV ParkCountry Oasis RV Park Campground
RV ParkCentennial Park Campground
RV ParkStavely Elks Clear Lake Park
RV ParkWally's Beach Campground
RV Park




