RV Dump Stations In Alberta
53.9333° N, 116.5765° W
Quick Overview
Alberta is one of the great RV destinations in Canada, and for tank management it is well served: provincial and national park campgrounds almost all have sani-dumps, usually included with the camping fee. The big mountain-park campgrounds, Tunnel Mountain in Banff and Whistlers in Jasper, have dump stations alongside showers and laundry, and popular provincial parks like Wabamun Lake and Writing-on-Stone offer the same. Many small-town gas stations and Co-op gas bars add public dump access and water fills, so touring between parks rarely leaves you stuck with full tanks.
The road network is straightforward. The Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) runs east-west through Calgary and Banff, Highway 2 links Calgary and Edmonton, and the Icefields Parkway (Highway 93) connects Lake Louise to Jasper through some of the finest mountain scenery anywhere. That parkway has no cell service for most of its length, so download offline maps, carry emergency supplies, and fuel up first, since mountain-park gas is limited and expensive. Snow tires or chains are required on Highway 93 from November through March.
Free camping is a real strength here. Crown-land random camping is permitted in 19 Public Land Use Zones across about 11,200 square kilometres, with a Public Land Camping Pass and a 14-day limit. The foothills and the north offer good boondocking via forestry trunk roads, mapped on iOverlander and FreeRoam. There are no dump facilities out there, though, so empty tanks at a park or commercial sani-dump before and after. In the cities, bylaws have tightened: Calgary caps front-driveway RV parking at 36 hours and Edmonton bans winter street parking. See Alberta Parks for campground and dump details.
Timing matters. Summer, June to September, is prime, with most campgrounds open May through October and July the warmest but busiest. Book Banff and Jasper sites months ahead, since the parks draw millions. September delivers fall colour and golden larch with thinner crowds. Winters are long and cold, often hitting -40°C with campgrounds closed, so RV travel is a summer affair. Carry bear spray in the Rockies, watch for wildlife at dawn and dusk, and check 511.alberta.ca before mountain routes, and Alberta rewards you with world-class peaks, badlands, and prairie.
Top Rated RV Dump Stations in Alberta
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Browse RV Dump Stations by City (243)
Acheson
Acme
Airdrie
Alberta
Alberta Beach
Alder Flats
Alix
Andrew
Arrowwood
Ashmont
Athabasca
Balzac
Banff
Barrhead
Bashaw
Bassano
Battle Lake
Beaverlodge
Beiseker
Bellevue
Bentley
Berwyn
Black Diamond
Blackfalds
Blairmore
Blue Ridge
Bonnyville
Bowden
Bow Island
Boyle
Boyne Lake
Bragg Creek
Breton
Brooks
Brownfield
Bruce
Bruderheim
Busby
Cadogan
Calais
Calgary
Calling Lake
Calmar
Camrose
Canmore
Canyon Creek
Carbon
Cardston
Carmangay
Caroline
Carseland
Carstairs
Carvel
Castor
Champion
Chauvin
Claresholm
Coalhurst
Cochrane
Cold Lake
Consort
Coronation
Cremona
Crossfield
Crowsnest Pass
Czar
Delia
Devon
Didsbury
Dixonville
Drayton Valley
Drumheller
Dunvegan
Eaglesham
Eckville
Edgerton
Edmonton
Edson
Elk Point
Elkwater
Empress
Enchant
Enilda
Entwistle
Evansburg
Fairview
Falher
Falun
Faust
Fawcett
Ferintosh
Flatbush
Foremost
Forestburg
Fort Assiniboine
Fort Macleod
Fort McMurray
Fort Saskatchewan
Fort Vermilion
Gibbons
Glendon
Glenwood
Grande Cache
Grande Prairie
Granum
Grassy Lake
Grimshaw
Hanna
Hardisty
Hay Lakes
High Level
High Prairie
High River
Hill Spring
Hinton
Hotchkiss
Hythe
Innisfail
Innisfree
Irma
Iron River
Irricana
Jasper
Joussard
Kananaskis Village
Kikino
Killam
Kingman
Kinuso
Kitscoty
Lac La Biche
Lacombe
La Crete
Lake Louise
Lamont
Legal
Lennan
Lethbridge
Linden
Lloydminster
Lone Pine
Longview
Lundbreck
Magrath
Ma-Me-O Beach
Manning
Mannville
Marwayne
Mayerthorpe
Medicine Hat
Michichi
Milk River
Millet
Morinville
Morningside
Morrin
Mossleigh
Myrnam
Nampa
Nanton
Nevis
New Norway
New Sarepta
Nobleford
Nojack
Nordegg
North Cooking Lake
Okotoks
Olds
Onoway
Oyen
Peace River
Peers
Pigeon Lake
Pincher Creek
Pine Lake
Ponoka
Redcliff
Red Deer
Red Deer County
Redwater
Rimbey
Robb
Rochon Sands
Rockyford
Rocky Mountain House
Rolling Hills
Rosebud
Rycroft
Ryley
Saint Paul
Sandy Beach
Sangudo
Seba Beach
Sedgewick
Sexsmith
Sherwood Park
Slave Lake
Smoky Lake
Spedden
Spirit River
Spring Lake
Spruce Grove
St. Albert
Standard
Stavely
Stettler
Stirling
Stony Plain
St. Paul
Strathmore
Sundre
Swan Hills
Sylvan Lake
Tangent
Thorhild
Three Hills
Tofield
Torrington
Trochu
Turner Valley
Two Hills
Valleyview
Vauxhall
Vegreville
Vermilion
Veteran
Viking
Vilna
Vulcan
Wabamun
Wainwright
Walsh
Waskatenau
Waterton Park
Westerose
Westlock
Wetaskiwin
Whitecourt
Wimborne
Winfield
Worsley
Youngstown
Getting Around Alberta by RV
The Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) carries you east-west through Calgary and into Banff, while Highway 2 is the fast four-lane corridor between Calgary and Edmonton, and the Yellowhead (Highway 16) heads west toward Jasper. The scenic crown is the Icefields Parkway, Highway 93, linking Lake Louise and Jasper over 230 spectacular kilometres. There are no specific RV size limits on the major highways, but mountain passes demand caution with a large rig, and snow tires or chains are mandatory on Highway 93 from November 1 to March 31.
Fuel up before entering Banff or Jasper, where prices climb sharply, and before the Icefields Parkway, which has no cell service and limited services for most of its length. Spring thaw brings weight restrictions on secondary highways from March into May, so check 511.alberta.ca before back-road travel. Watch for wildlife on the roads at dawn and dusk, drive in low gear on long mountain descents, and carry emergency supplies on remote stretches. Chinook winds in the south can ice roads quickly as melted snow refreezes, so stay alert in winter and shoulder seasons.
Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials
Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Alberta 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.
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.
RV Dump Stations Costs in Alberta
Alberta scales to your budget. Provincial-park campsites with power run roughly CAD 30 to 50 a night, with dump access usually included, while national-park sites in Banff and Jasper cost more and also require a Parks Canada entry pass, available daily or as an annual Discovery Pass that pays off fast over a Rockies trip. Crown-land camping with a Public Land Camping Pass is the cheapest route, effectively free beyond the pass, for those willing to boondock without hookups.
Budget for higher fuel and grocery prices inside the mountain parks, where Banff and Jasper charge a premium, so stock up in Calgary, Edmonton, or another larger centre first. Propane refills are inexpensive at the many suppliers and gas bars. Day-use dumping at provincial parks sometimes carries a small fee for non-campers, but it is minor. The best value comes from mixing crown-land boondocking with occasional park stays for dumping, water, and a shower, while buying the Discovery Pass up front to cover national-park entry.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Alberta by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-15°C - -6°C
Crowds: Low
Long, cold winters, with extreme cold reaching -40°C and most campgrounds and their dump stations closed. Edmonton runs colder than Calgary, while chinook winds can warm southern Alberta by 20°C in hours, then leave icy roads as melt refreezes. Not a practical RV-dumping season.
Spring
Mar - May
0°C - 12°C
Crowds: Low
Thaw runs March to May with variable weather and possible late snow into May. Mountain passes may still hold winter conditions, and spring weight restrictions hit secondary highways. Most provincial-park dump stations reopen as campgrounds start their May season.
Summer
Jun - Aug
9°C - 24°C
Crowds: High
Warm days and cool nights, July the warmest, with long daylight and afternoon mountain thunderstorms. Peak season for Banff and Jasper, so dump-equipped campgrounds book months ahead. Wildfire smoke is possible in July and August; check 511.alberta.ca.
Fall
Sep - Oct
-2°C - 12°C
Crowds: Medium
Beautiful September colour and golden larch in the Rockies late in the month, with early mountain snow possible by October. Crowds thin and dump stations stay open into the fall before most campgrounds close around mid-October. A fine, quieter time to tour.
Explore Alberta
Fill your fuel tank before entering Banff or Jasper, where gas runs significantly higher, and again before the Icefields Parkway, which has no cell service for most of its length. Book mountain-park campgrounds months ahead for July and August through the Parks Canada site, and check back for cancellations if you missed the window, since last-minute spots do open up.
Carry bear spray within easy reach in the Rockies, not buried in a compartment, and store food securely at camp. Mountain weather flips fast, so pack layers even in midsummer. The Larch Valley near Moraine Lake is stunning in late September, but the parking fills by 6am, so arrive early or take the shuttle where one runs.
Use the crown-land Public Land Use Zones for free camping with a Public Land Camping Pass, but empty tanks at a park or commercial sani-dump first, since there are no facilities out there. Watch for chinook-driven icy roads in the south during winter and shoulder seasons, and always check 511.alberta.ca for conditions before tackling the high mountain passes.
Helpful Resources
Alberta Resources
Frequently Asked Questions About RV Dump Stations in Alberta
Where can I dump RV tanks in Alberta?
Most dumping in Alberta happens at provincial and national park campgrounds, where a sani-dump is typically included with your camping fee, though some charge a small fee for day-use dumping. The big mountain-park campgrounds like Tunnel Mountain in Banff and Whistlers in Jasper have on-site dump stations, as do popular provincial parks such as Wabamun Lake and Writing-on-Stone. Many gas stations and Co-op gas bars in smaller towns also offer dump access and potable-water fills. Apps like iOverlander map verified public dump points across the province, which helps when you are touring between parks rather than staying in one.
Can I boondock or camp free in Alberta?
Yes, Alberta is one of the better Canadian provinces for free camping. Crown-land random camping is permitted in 19 Public Land Use Zones covering about 11,200 square kilometres, with a Public Land Camping Pass required and a 14-day stay limit. The foothills and northern Alberta offer good boondocking, and forestry trunk roads open up remote areas, with apps like iOverlander and FreeRoam showing verified spots. Grazing-lease land needs leaseholder permission. Remember there are no dump facilities out on crown land, so plan to empty tanks at a park or commercial sani-dump before and after a boondocking stretch.
What are the overnight RV parking rules in Alberta cities?
Municipal bylaws vary and have tightened recently. Calgary updated its rules in April 2025 to limit front-driveway RV parking to 36 hours, and Edmonton bans street RV parking from November 1 to March 31. There is no provincial law against sleeping in a vehicle, but local bylaws apply, and Walmart overnight policies differ by location, so always ask the store manager. For touring RVers the simplest approach is to use provincial-park campgrounds or commercial RV parks for overnights in and around the cities, then rely on the parks for dumping and water rather than trying to street-park a large rig.
How do I drive the Icefields Parkway safely?
The Icefields Parkway, Highway 93 between Lake Louise and Jasper, is one of the most scenic drives in the world, but it demands preparation. There is no cell service for most of its 230 kilometres, so download offline maps and carry emergency supplies, food, and water. Fuel is limited and expensive along the route, so fill up before you start. Snow tires or chains are required on Highway 93 from November 1 to March 31. Watch for wildlife and sudden mountain weather, drive in low gear on the long descents, and allow far more time than the distance suggests to enjoy the glaciers and waterfalls.
When is the best time for RV travel in Alberta?
Summer, June through September, is the prime season for camping and mountain access, with most campgrounds open May through October. July offers the warmest, longest days, but it is also the busiest in Banff and Jasper, where you should book dump-equipped sites months ahead. September brings fall colour, golden larch in the Rockies, and thinner crowds, making it many travellers favourite window before the cold sets in. Winter RV travel is impractical for most, with extreme cold, closed campgrounds, and snow-tire requirements on mountain highways. Aim for the June-to-September stretch and you will find Alberta at its best.
Where can I get propane and RV service in Alberta?
Propane is easy to find. Established suppliers include Mutual Propane in Edmonton, which has refilled and recertified cylinders since 1954, New West Propane in Calgary for 30-pound RV tanks, and Superior Propane across multiple locations, plus Canadian Tire and Co-op gas bars in most towns. For repairs, ArrKann Trailer and RV operates several Alberta locations, with Bucars RV Centre near Calgary at Balzac, Travelers RV Repair in the Calgary area, and General RV Centre in Edmonton. Sort any major service in the cities before heading into the mountain parks, where options are scarce and prices climb.
Do I need a pass for the national and provincial parks?
Yes. The national parks, Banff, Jasper, and Waterton Lakes, require a Parks Canada entry pass, available as a daily fee or an annual Discovery Pass that pays off quickly if you visit several parks or stay a while. For crown-land camping you need a Public Land Camping Pass. Provincial parks generally fold dump-station access into the camping fee, though some charge non-campers a small fee to use the sani-dump. Buy the Discovery Pass ahead online if you are touring the Rockies, since it covers entry across the national-park system and saves the hassle of paying daily at busy gates.
What wildlife and safety precautions should I take?
The Rockies are bear country, so bear spray is essential and should be carried where you can reach it, not buried in a storage compartment. Store food securely and use the bear-proof lockers at campgrounds. Watch for wildlife on the roads, especially at dawn and dusk, where collisions with elk, deer, and bears are a real hazard. Mountain weather changes fast, so pack layers even in summer. Chinook winds in the south can ice roads as snow melts and refreezes. Check 511.alberta.ca for road conditions before mountain travel, and carry emergency supplies on remote stretches like the Icefields Parkway.
How busy are Banff and Jasper campgrounds?
Very busy. Banff draws over four million visitors a year, and its campgrounds, along with those in Jasper, fill for July and August months in advance. The largest, Tunnel Mountain in Banff and Whistlers in Jasper, have dump stations, showers, and laundry, but you must book well ahead through the Parks Canada reservation site. Cancellations sometimes open up last-minute spots, so it is worth checking repeatedly if you missed the initial booking window. If the in-park sites are full, provincial parks and commercial RV parks nearby offer alternatives, and you can day-trip into the national parks rather than camping inside them.
What are the must-see destinations in Alberta?
Banff National Park, Canada first, is the headline, with Lake Louise, Moraine Lake, and the Banff Gondola, 130 kilometres west of Calgary. Jasper, the largest Rockies park, offers Maligne Lake, the Columbia Icefield, and Dark Sky stargazing. The Icefields Parkway links the two through glaciers and waterfalls. Beyond the mountains, the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller is a world-class dinosaur museum in the badlands, and Waterton Lakes in the south is where the prairies meet the peaks. Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park adds a striking hoodoo landscape with an on-site dump station for southern-Alberta travellers.
Where do I find fuel, water, and groceries?
Diesel is widely available, with cardlock stations throughout rural Alberta and Flying J and Husky truck stops along Highway 2, the Calgary-Edmonton corridor. Fill up before entering Banff or Jasper, where fuel prices are significantly higher. Potable water is available at provincial and national park campgrounds, and many small-town gas stations have water fill stations. Full-service supermarkets sit in Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, Lethbridge, and Medicine Hat, while smaller towns rely on Co-op or independent grocers. Mountain-park towns like Banff and Jasper have limited, pricier groceries, so stock up in a larger centre before you head into the Rockies.
Are there spring road restrictions for RVs?
Yes. Spring thaw brings weight restrictions on secondary highways and rural municipal roads, typically from March into May, designed to protect roads softened by melting frost. These rarely affect standard RVs on the major highways but can limit access on back roads to some campgrounds and crown-land areas. Snow tires or chains are also required on Highway 93 North and South from November 1 to March 31. Always check 511.alberta.ca for current road conditions and restrictions before travelling, especially in spring and on mountain routes, since conditions can change quickly and closures do happen on the high passes.
Where can I dump RV tanks in Alberta?
Most dumping in Alberta happens at provincial and national park campgrounds, where a sani-dump is typically included with your camping fee, though some charge a small fee for day-use dumping. The big mountain-park campgrounds like Tunnel Mountain in Banff and Whistlers in Jasper have on-site dump stations, as do popular provincial parks such as Wabamun Lake and Writing-on-Stone. Many gas stations and Co-op gas bars in smaller towns also offer dump access and potable-water fills. Apps like iOverlander map verified public dump points across the province, which helps when you are touring between parks rather than staying in one.
Can I boondock or camp free in Alberta?
Yes, Alberta is one of the better Canadian provinces for free camping. Crown-land random camping is permitted in 19 Public Land Use Zones covering about 11,200 square kilometres, with a Public Land Camping Pass required and a 14-day stay limit. The foothills and northern Alberta offer good boondocking, and forestry trunk roads open up remote areas, with apps like iOverlander and FreeRoam showing verified spots. Grazing-lease land needs leaseholder permission. Remember there are no dump facilities out on crown land, so plan to empty tanks at a park or commercial sani-dump before and after a boondocking stretch.
What are the overnight RV parking rules in Alberta cities?
Municipal bylaws vary and have tightened recently. Calgary updated its rules in April 2025 to limit front-driveway RV parking to 36 hours, and Edmonton bans street RV parking from November 1 to March 31. There is no provincial law against sleeping in a vehicle, but local bylaws apply, and Walmart overnight policies differ by location, so always ask the store manager. For touring RVers the simplest approach is to use provincial-park campgrounds or commercial RV parks for overnights in and around the cities, then rely on the parks for dumping and water rather than trying to street-park a large rig.
How do I drive the Icefields Parkway safely?
The Icefields Parkway, Highway 93 between Lake Louise and Jasper, is one of the most scenic drives in the world, but it demands preparation. There is no cell service for most of its 230 kilometres, so download offline maps and carry emergency supplies, food, and water. Fuel is limited and expensive along the route, so fill up before you start. Snow tires or chains are required on Highway 93 from November 1 to March 31. Watch for wildlife and sudden mountain weather, drive in low gear on the long descents, and allow far more time than the distance suggests to enjoy the glaciers and waterfalls.
When is the best time for RV travel in Alberta?
Summer, June through September, is the prime season for camping and mountain access, with most campgrounds open May through October. July offers the warmest, longest days, but it is also the busiest in Banff and Jasper, where you should book dump-equipped sites months ahead. September brings fall colour, golden larch in the Rockies, and thinner crowds, making it many travellers favourite window before the cold sets in. Winter RV travel is impractical for most, with extreme cold, closed campgrounds, and snow-tire requirements on mountain highways. Aim for the June-to-September stretch and you will find Alberta at its best.
Where can I get propane and RV service in Alberta?
Propane is easy to find. Established suppliers include Mutual Propane in Edmonton, which has refilled and recertified cylinders since 1954, New West Propane in Calgary for 30-pound RV tanks, and Superior Propane across multiple locations, plus Canadian Tire and Co-op gas bars in most towns. For repairs, ArrKann Trailer and RV operates several Alberta locations, with Bucars RV Centre near Calgary at Balzac, Travelers RV Repair in the Calgary area, and General RV Centre in Edmonton. Sort any major service in the cities before heading into the mountain parks, where options are scarce and prices climb.
Do I need a pass for the national and provincial parks?
Yes. The national parks, Banff, Jasper, and Waterton Lakes, require a Parks Canada entry pass, available as a daily fee or an annual Discovery Pass that pays off quickly if you visit several parks or stay a while. For crown-land camping you need a Public Land Camping Pass. Provincial parks generally fold dump-station access into the camping fee, though some charge non-campers a small fee to use the sani-dump. Buy the Discovery Pass ahead online if you are touring the Rockies, since it covers entry across the national-park system and saves the hassle of paying daily at busy gates.
What wildlife and safety precautions should I take?
The Rockies are bear country, so bear spray is essential and should be carried where you can reach it, not buried in a storage compartment. Store food securely and use the bear-proof lockers at campgrounds. Watch for wildlife on the roads, especially at dawn and dusk, where collisions with elk, deer, and bears are a real hazard. Mountain weather changes fast, so pack layers even in summer. Chinook winds in the south can ice roads as snow melts and refreezes. Check 511.alberta.ca for road conditions before mountain travel, and carry emergency supplies on remote stretches like the Icefields Parkway.
How busy are Banff and Jasper campgrounds?
Very busy. Banff draws over four million visitors a year, and its campgrounds, along with those in Jasper, fill for July and August months in advance. The largest, Tunnel Mountain in Banff and Whistlers in Jasper, have dump stations, showers, and laundry, but you must book well ahead through the Parks Canada reservation site. Cancellations sometimes open up last-minute spots, so it is worth checking repeatedly if you missed the initial booking window. If the in-park sites are full, provincial parks and commercial RV parks nearby offer alternatives, and you can day-trip into the national parks rather than camping inside them.
What are the must-see destinations in Alberta?
Banff National Park, Canada first, is the headline, with Lake Louise, Moraine Lake, and the Banff Gondola, 130 kilometres west of Calgary. Jasper, the largest Rockies park, offers Maligne Lake, the Columbia Icefield, and Dark Sky stargazing. The Icefields Parkway links the two through glaciers and waterfalls. Beyond the mountains, the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller is a world-class dinosaur museum in the badlands, and Waterton Lakes in the south is where the prairies meet the peaks. Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park adds a striking hoodoo landscape with an on-site dump station for southern-Alberta travellers.
Where do I find fuel, water, and groceries?
Diesel is widely available, with cardlock stations throughout rural Alberta and Flying J and Husky truck stops along Highway 2, the Calgary-Edmonton corridor. Fill up before entering Banff or Jasper, where fuel prices are significantly higher. Potable water is available at provincial and national park campgrounds, and many small-town gas stations have water fill stations. Full-service supermarkets sit in Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer, Lethbridge, and Medicine Hat, while smaller towns rely on Co-op or independent grocers. Mountain-park towns like Banff and Jasper have limited, pricier groceries, so stock up in a larger centre before you head into the Rockies.
Are there spring road restrictions for RVs?
Yes. Spring thaw brings weight restrictions on secondary highways and rural municipal roads, typically from March into May, designed to protect roads softened by melting frost. These rarely affect standard RVs on the major highways but can limit access on back roads to some campgrounds and crown-land areas. Snow tires or chains are also required on Highway 93 North and South from November 1 to March 31. Always check 511.alberta.ca for current road conditions and restrictions before travelling, especially in spring and on mountain routes, since conditions can change quickly and closures do happen on the high passes.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Alberta?
The highest-rated is Condy Meadows Golf Course Campground with a rating of 5.0/5 stars.
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