RV Parks In Vegreville, Alberta
53.5001° N, 112.0518° W
Quick Overview
Vegreville is a proudly Ukrainian prairie town east of Edmonton, sitting right on the Yellowhead Highway about an hour from the city. It is famous for one thing above all: the World is Largest Pysanka, a giant aluminum Ukrainian Easter egg that spins in the wind at Pysanka Park. For RVers, that same park is home to the town's campground, and the real prize is just down the highway, Elk Island National Park, one of the best places in Canada to camp among free-roaming bison.
The camping here leans public, with a clear split in character. In town, the Vegreville Municipal Campground at Pysanka Park has about 87 sites, including 30-amp powered stalls and non-powered sites with water hookups, pull-throughs for big rigs, a sani-station, potable water, and hot showers. Powered sites run $30 a night and non-powered $25, and there is a stocked trout pond and playground on site. It is an easy, affordable base within walking distance of town.
About 45 minutes west, Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground is the park's only RV-capable campground, with an RV loop of 23 unserviced sites, a dump station, potable water, and free hot showers. You camp beside Astotin Lake among bison, elk, and moose in a designated Dark Sky Preserve. It is a genuinely special place to stay, so its small RV loop books up fast for summer. Nearby private golf-course parks like Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort add more serviced options.
Vegreville camping is a warm-season affair. The season runs roughly mid-May through September, with Elk Island camping to Thanksgiving weather permitting, and July and August the peak. Reserve serviced sites ahead for summer weekends, especially the Elk Island RV loop, and pack bug spray for the lakeside mosquitoes. Below we cover routes, costs, seasons, and what to do here, from the giant pysanka and the town is Ukrainian festival to bison, paddling, and dark-sky stargazing at Elk Island. Need to empty your tanks? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Vegreville.
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Gear for Your Trip to Vegreville
All Dump Stations Near Vegreville
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kinsmen Community Park Campground | 0.8 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Elks / Kinsmen Park | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Redrock Farm Mundare Ab Canada | 8.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Drahomanow Recreation Area | 10.2 mi | 5.0 | RV Park | Varies |
| MRC Campground-Mundare | 13.6 mi | 2.5 | RV Park | Free |
| Geleta Park | 18.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Public RV Dump Station | 19.7 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Tofield Campground | 26.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Lac Sante | 29.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tranquility Bay RV Park Cooperative | 29.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Kinsmen Community Park Campground
0.8 miElks / Kinsmen Park
0.9 miRedrock Farm Mundare Ab Canada
8.8 miDrahomanow Recreation Area
10.2 miMRC Campground-Mundare
13.6 miGeleta Park
18.9 miPublic RV Dump Station
19.7 miTofield Campground
26.8 miLac Sante
29.5 miTranquility Bay RV Park Cooperative
29.6 miTraveling to Vegreville by RV
Getting to Vegreville with an RV is an easy paved drive on the Yellowhead. Highway 16, a four-lane divided highway, runs east from Edmonton about an hour to Vegreville with flat, straightforward prairie driving and no mountain grades, so any rig handles it. Highway 16A leads into town and to the municipal campground at Pysanka Park on the east end, which has pull-through sites for full-size RVs. To reach Elk Island National Park, head west on Highway 16 about 45 minutes. Fuel, diesel, propane, and full-size groceries are all available in town, with basic RV service locally and fuller repair shops toward Edmonton.
Vegreville makes a practical base for a trip built around Elk Island and Ukrainian heritage. From a serviced site at the municipal campground or Elk Island itself, you can day-trip into the national park to see bison, hike, paddle Astotin Lake, and stay for the dark-sky stargazing, then explore the town's pysanka, festival, and heritage sites. For servicing the rig, the municipal campground has a sani-station and Elk Island has a dump station. Because the Elk Island RV loop is small and fills fast, basing in Vegreville is a smart backup that still keeps the park within an easy 45-minute drive, letting you enjoy the wildlife and dark skies without stress.
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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 Vegreville, 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 Vegreville
Camping around Vegreville is affordable and clearly priced. The Vegreville Municipal Campground is the value pick, charging $30 a night for a 30-amp powered stall and $25 for a non-powered site, a good deal for an in-town park with showers, a sani-station, a stocked trout pond, and a playground. The non-powered sites are the cheapest developed option in the area.
Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground charges a Parks Canada camping fee plus a park entry fee, so once both are added it lands in the mid range for the region, in exchange for its unbeatable bison-and-lake setting and Dark Sky Preserve. The nearby private golf-course parks, Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort, sit in a similar mid range for their serviced sites. There is little developed free camping in this settled prairie region. Budget-wise, the municipal non-powered sites save the most money, the powered municipal stalls add hookups for a small step up, and Elk Island is worth the extra fees when you want to wake up in bison country. Book peak summer weekends ahead, especially at Elk Island.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Vegreville by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-16°C - -6°C
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy, with campgrounds closed and water shut off. Winter is for day trips to Elk Island to see bison and dark skies rather than RV camping. Plan an off-season visit as a day trip.
Spring
Mar - May
-3°C - 13°C
Crowds: Low
A slow, muddy thaw with cool nights. The municipal campground opens in spring and Elk Island opens mid-May, so target later spring once the ground dries for a reliable serviced site.
Summer
Jun - Aug
11°C - 23°C
Crowds: High
Warm prairie days, cool nights, and long daylight, the busy season. The Elk Island RV loop and the Vegreville municipal campground fill for July and August weekends, so reserve serviced sites ahead and pack bug spray for the lakeside mosquitoes.
Fall
Sep - Oct
-1°C - 10°C
Crowds: Medium
Crisp days and golden prairie color into October. Elk Island camps to Thanksgiving weather permitting, a lovely quieter time; the municipal campground winds down as nights turn cold, so confirm dates.
Explore the Vegreville Area
A few pointers for RVing the Vegreville area. First, book ahead for summer, and especially for Elk Island: its Astotin Lake RV loop is small and the only RV-capable campground in a popular national park, so reserve well ahead through Parks Canada for July and August weekends. The Vegreville Municipal Campground also fills on summer weekends and around the town is Ukrainian festival, so call 780-632-6800 or book online a few weeks out. Second, pick your setting: for an easy walkable base by the giant pysanka, stay in town; for bison and dark skies, camp at Elk Island.
Third, plan around the season, coming mid-May through September, since the campgrounds close or shut water off for the cold prairie winter, though Elk Island stays open for day use. Fourth, pack for prairie weather with layers for cool nights, awning tie-downs for afternoon thunderstorms, and strong bug spray for the mosquitoes near Astotin Lake. Fifth, use the town for fuel, propane, and groceries before heading to the park. Finally, save a clear night for stargazing at Elk Island; the Dark Sky Preserve is one of the best reasons to camp here.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Vegreville
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Vegreville, Alberta?
Vegreville sits east of Edmonton on the Yellowhead in Ukrainian-heritage prairie country, and the camping pairs an easy in-town municipal campground with a national park nearby. The Vegreville Municipal Campground at Pysanka Park, right beside the World is Largest Pysanka, has about 87 sites with 30-amp power, water hookups, pull-throughs, a sani-station, and hot showers. About 45 minutes west, Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground offers an RV loop among free-roaming bison beside a lake in a Dark Sky Preserve. Nearby private golf-course parks like Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort round out the options with serviced sites.
Do Vegreville campgrounds have full hookups with water, power, and sewer?
Full sewer hookups are limited, so match the park to your needs. The Vegreville Municipal Campground offers 30-amp powered sites and non-powered sites with water hookups, plus a sani-station and potable water rather than sewer at every site, so you use the sani-station to dump. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake RV loop is unserviced, with a dump station and potable water in the campground rather than site hookups. The nearby private golf-course campgrounds, Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort, offer serviced sites, so confirm their exact hookup levels when booking. For power and water plus a sani-station, the municipal campground is your most convenient serviced option close to town.
How much does RV camping cost in the Vegreville area?
It is affordable and clearly priced. The Vegreville Municipal Campground charges $30 a night for a 30-amp powered stall and $25 a night for a non-powered site, a good value for an in-town park with showers, a sani-station, and a playground. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground charges a Parks Canada camping fee plus a park entry fee, landing in the mid range once both are added, in exchange for a bison-and-lake setting. The private golf-course parks sit in a similar mid range for their serviced sites. Budget campers should look at the municipal non-powered sites, while the powered municipal stalls and Elk Island offer more for a modest step up in price.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Vegreville?
For summer weekends, book ahead, especially for Elk Island. The Astotin Lake Campground is the only RV-capable campground in a popular national park close to Edmonton, so its limited RV loop fills fast for July and August weekends; reserve well ahead through Parks Canada. The Vegreville Municipal Campground also fills on summer weekends and around the town is Ukrainian festival, so call 780-632-6800 or book online a few weeks out for peak dates. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often available closer to your dates. If your trip depends on an Elk Island bison-country site in high summer, early booking is essential; the municipal campground gives you more flexibility.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Vegreville?
Mid-May through September is the camping window, with July and August the warm peak. Summer brings warm prairie days in the low 20s Celsius, cool nights, and long daylight, ideal for Astotin Lake and town festivals, though mosquitoes are active near the water and afternoon thunderstorms pass through. September and early October offer crisp air and golden color, with Elk Island camping to Thanksgiving weather permitting, a lovely quieter time. Spring is muddy with a slow thaw, and most sites open by mid-May. Winter is cold and snowy with campgrounds closed. For the best weather and open services, aim for late June through August, or come in September for fewer crowds.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp near Vegreville?
Yes, at the right spots. The Vegreville Municipal Campground has pull-through sites that suit full-size RVs, making it the easiest big-rig base, with flat, straightforward access off Highway 16A. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake RV loop can take larger rigs on its unserviced sites, but space is more limited and you should confirm site length when reserving through Parks Canada. The nearby private golf-course parks vary by site, so check length too. Getting around is easy on the four-lane Yellowhead and flat prairie roads with no mountain grades. For a large coach, the municipal campground pull-throughs are the most comfortable choice, with Elk Island a scenic option if you book early.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Vegreville?
Options are limited. This is settled, farmed east-central Alberta prairie next to a national park, without much developed free or dispersed camping, and RV street camping is not allowed in the Town of Vegreville. The municipal campground, Elk Island, and the private golf-course parks are the practical choices, and reservations are recommended at all of them for summer, though some may have first-come availability midweek and in the shoulder season. If budget is the priority, the municipal non-powered sites at $25 a night are the most affordable developed option. For most RVers, the answer is to book a municipal site or an Elk Island RV-loop site rather than count on free camping.
What is there to do while camping near Vegreville?
Ukrainian heritage and bison country headline it. Right in town at Pysanka Park you will find the World is Largest Pysanka, a giant Ukrainian Easter egg, along with a stocked trout pond, a playground, and the town's summer Ukrainian festival. About 45 minutes west, Elk Island National Park is the big draw, a fenced sanctuary for free-roaming bison, elk, and moose, with Astotin Lake for paddling and beach time, hiking trails, and a Dark Sky Preserve that makes for excellent stargazing on clear nights. Between the town's culture and festivals and the wildlife, lake, and dark skies of Elk Island, an RV trip here easily fills several rewarding days.
Can I camp at Elk Island National Park near Vegreville?
Yes, at the Astotin Lake Campground, the park's only RV-capable campground. It sits about 45 minutes west of Vegreville and has an RV loop of 23 unserviced sites, along with a dump station, potable water, and free hot showers in the main loop. The setting is the draw: you camp beside Astotin Lake among free-roaming bison in a designated Dark Sky Preserve, with hiking trails, a beach, and superb stargazing. The campground operates roughly mid-May to Thanksgiving, weather permitting, and reservations are recommended through Parks Canada at 1-877-RESERVE or online, since the limited RV loop fills fast in summer. A Parks Canada entry fee applies in addition to the camping fee.
What is the Vegreville Municipal Campground like?
It is a friendly, well-equipped in-town park. Located at Pysanka Park on Highway 16A at the east end of town, right beside the World is Largest Pysanka, it has about 87 sites, including 30-amp powered stalls and non-powered sites with water hookups, plus pull-throughs for full-size RVs. Amenities include a sani-station and potable water, hot showers and clean washrooms, picnic tables, gazebos, a cookhouse, firewood, a stocked trout pond for kids and seniors, an accessible playground, and even paddle-boat and bike programs. Powered sites run $30 a night and non-powered $25, booked by phone at 780-632-6800 or online. For an easy, affordable base within walking distance of town, it is an excellent choice.
Are the campgrounds near Vegreville open year round?
No, they are seasonal. This is cold east-central Alberta prairie, so the Vegreville Municipal Campground operates through the warm months, roughly May to September, and Elk Island is Astotin Lake Campground runs mid-May to Thanksgiving, weather permitting, both with water shut off and gates closed in winter. The most comfortable and reliable camping runs from late June through August, with September a pleasant, quieter shoulder. If you visit in the off-season, Elk Island itself stays open for day use, so you can still see bison and dark skies, but plan it as a day trip rather than an overnight. Confirm exact opening and closing dates before you travel.
How do I get to Vegreville with an RV?
It is an easy paved drive on the Yellowhead. Highway 16, a four-lane divided highway, runs east from Edmonton about an hour to Vegreville and handles any rig with flat, straightforward prairie driving and no mountain grades. Highway 16A leads into town and to the municipal campground at Pysanka Park on the east end. To reach Elk Island National Park, head west on Highway 16 about 45 minutes. Fuel, diesel, propane, and full-size groceries are all available in town, with basic RV service locally and fuller shops toward Edmonton. Vegreville is a simple, low-stress destination to reach, whether you are basing here or passing through on a cross-prairie route.
Is Vegreville a good base for visiting Elk Island National Park?
It is a solid one, especially if the park is RV loop is full. Elk Island is only about 45 minutes west of Vegreville on Highway 16, so from a full-service-ish site at the Vegreville Municipal Campground you can day-trip into the park to see bison, hike, paddle Astotin Lake, and stay for the dark-sky stargazing, then return to a serviced town site with showers and a sani-station. Because Elk Island is own Astotin Lake RV loop is small and books up fast, staying in Vegreville is a practical backup that still puts you within easy reach. For a trip built around Elk Island wildlife and dark skies, Vegreville makes a comfortable and affordable base.
What should I know about prairie weather when camping here?
Pack for warm days, cool nights, storms, and bugs. Vegreville has an east-central prairie climate: warm summer days in the low 20s Celsius with cool evenings and long daylight, so bring layers even in July. Afternoon thunderstorms sweep across the open prairie in summer, so secure your awning, and mosquitoes are active near Astotin Lake and the trout pond, so bring repellent. Spring is muddy with a slow thaw, and fall cools quickly with crisp, golden days into October. Winters are cold and snowy with campgrounds closed and water shut off. Target July and August for the warmest camping, keep a jacket handy for the nights, and watch the forecast for prairie storms.
What are the best RV parks and campgrounds in Vegreville, Alberta?
Vegreville sits east of Edmonton on the Yellowhead in Ukrainian-heritage prairie country, and the camping pairs an easy in-town municipal campground with a national park nearby. The Vegreville Municipal Campground at Pysanka Park, right beside the World is Largest Pysanka, has about 87 sites with 30-amp power, water hookups, pull-throughs, a sani-station, and hot showers. About 45 minutes west, Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground offers an RV loop among free-roaming bison beside a lake in a Dark Sky Preserve. Nearby private golf-course parks like Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort round out the options with serviced sites.
Do Vegreville campgrounds have full hookups with water, power, and sewer?
Full sewer hookups are limited, so match the park to your needs. The Vegreville Municipal Campground offers 30-amp powered sites and non-powered sites with water hookups, plus a sani-station and potable water rather than sewer at every site, so you use the sani-station to dump. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake RV loop is unserviced, with a dump station and potable water in the campground rather than site hookups. The nearby private golf-course campgrounds, Tofield Golf Course & Campground and Coal Creek Golf Resort, offer serviced sites, so confirm their exact hookup levels when booking. For power and water plus a sani-station, the municipal campground is your most convenient serviced option close to town.
How much does RV camping cost in the Vegreville area?
It is affordable and clearly priced. The Vegreville Municipal Campground charges $30 a night for a 30-amp powered stall and $25 a night for a non-powered site, a good value for an in-town park with showers, a sani-station, and a playground. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake Campground charges a Parks Canada camping fee plus a park entry fee, landing in the mid range once both are added, in exchange for a bison-and-lake setting. The private golf-course parks sit in a similar mid range for their serviced sites. Budget campers should look at the municipal non-powered sites, while the powered municipal stalls and Elk Island offer more for a modest step up in price.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Vegreville?
For summer weekends, book ahead, especially for Elk Island. The Astotin Lake Campground is the only RV-capable campground in a popular national park close to Edmonton, so its limited RV loop fills fast for July and August weekends; reserve well ahead through Parks Canada. The Vegreville Municipal Campground also fills on summer weekends and around the town is Ukrainian festival, so call 780-632-6800 or book online a few weeks out for peak dates. Midweek and shoulder-season stays are much easier and often available closer to your dates. If your trip depends on an Elk Island bison-country site in high summer, early booking is essential; the municipal campground gives you more flexibility.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Vegreville?
Mid-May through September is the camping window, with July and August the warm peak. Summer brings warm prairie days in the low 20s Celsius, cool nights, and long daylight, ideal for Astotin Lake and town festivals, though mosquitoes are active near the water and afternoon thunderstorms pass through. September and early October offer crisp air and golden color, with Elk Island camping to Thanksgiving weather permitting, a lovely quieter time. Spring is muddy with a slow thaw, and most sites open by mid-May. Winter is cold and snowy with campgrounds closed. For the best weather and open services, aim for late June through August, or come in September for fewer crowds.
Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft) camp near Vegreville?
Yes, at the right spots. The Vegreville Municipal Campground has pull-through sites that suit full-size RVs, making it the easiest big-rig base, with flat, straightforward access off Highway 16A. Elk Island National Park is Astotin Lake RV loop can take larger rigs on its unserviced sites, but space is more limited and you should confirm site length when reserving through Parks Canada. The nearby private golf-course parks vary by site, so check length too. Getting around is easy on the four-lane Yellowhead and flat prairie roads with no mountain grades. For a large coach, the municipal campground pull-throughs are the most comfortable choice, with Elk Island a scenic option if you book early.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Vegreville?
Options are limited. This is settled, farmed east-central Alberta prairie next to a national park, without much developed free or dispersed camping, and RV street camping is not allowed in the Town of Vegreville. The municipal campground, Elk Island, and the private golf-course parks are the practical choices, and reservations are recommended at all of them for summer, though some may have first-come availability midweek and in the shoulder season. If budget is the priority, the municipal non-powered sites at $25 a night are the most affordable developed option. For most RVers, the answer is to book a municipal site or an Elk Island RV-loop site rather than count on free camping.
What is there to do while camping near Vegreville?
Ukrainian heritage and bison country headline it. Right in town at Pysanka Park you will find the World is Largest Pysanka, a giant Ukrainian Easter egg, along with a stocked trout pond, a playground, and the town's summer Ukrainian festival. About 45 minutes west, Elk Island National Park is the big draw, a fenced sanctuary for free-roaming bison, elk, and moose, with Astotin Lake for paddling and beach time, hiking trails, and a Dark Sky Preserve that makes for excellent stargazing on clear nights. Between the town's culture and festivals and the wildlife, lake, and dark skies of Elk Island, an RV trip here easily fills several rewarding days.
Can I camp at Elk Island National Park near Vegreville?
Yes, at the Astotin Lake Campground, the park's only RV-capable campground. It sits about 45 minutes west of Vegreville and has an RV loop of 23 unserviced sites, along with a dump station, potable water, and free hot showers in the main loop. The setting is the draw: you camp beside Astotin Lake among free-roaming bison in a designated Dark Sky Preserve, with hiking trails, a beach, and superb stargazing. The campground operates roughly mid-May to Thanksgiving, weather permitting, and reservations are recommended through Parks Canada at 1-877-RESERVE or online, since the limited RV loop fills fast in summer. A Parks Canada entry fee applies in addition to the camping fee.
What is the Vegreville Municipal Campground like?
It is a friendly, well-equipped in-town park. Located at Pysanka Park on Highway 16A at the east end of town, right beside the World is Largest Pysanka, it has about 87 sites, including 30-amp powered stalls and non-powered sites with water hookups, plus pull-throughs for full-size RVs. Amenities include a sani-station and potable water, hot showers and clean washrooms, picnic tables, gazebos, a cookhouse, firewood, a stocked trout pond for kids and seniors, an accessible playground, and even paddle-boat and bike programs. Powered sites run $30 a night and non-powered $25, booked by phone at 780-632-6800 or online. For an easy, affordable base within walking distance of town, it is an excellent choice.
Are the campgrounds near Vegreville open year round?
No, they are seasonal. This is cold east-central Alberta prairie, so the Vegreville Municipal Campground operates through the warm months, roughly May to September, and Elk Island is Astotin Lake Campground runs mid-May to Thanksgiving, weather permitting, both with water shut off and gates closed in winter. The most comfortable and reliable camping runs from late June through August, with September a pleasant, quieter shoulder. If you visit in the off-season, Elk Island itself stays open for day use, so you can still see bison and dark skies, but plan it as a day trip rather than an overnight. Confirm exact opening and closing dates before you travel.
How do I get to Vegreville with an RV?
It is an easy paved drive on the Yellowhead. Highway 16, a four-lane divided highway, runs east from Edmonton about an hour to Vegreville and handles any rig with flat, straightforward prairie driving and no mountain grades. Highway 16A leads into town and to the municipal campground at Pysanka Park on the east end. To reach Elk Island National Park, head west on Highway 16 about 45 minutes. Fuel, diesel, propane, and full-size groceries are all available in town, with basic RV service locally and fuller shops toward Edmonton. Vegreville is a simple, low-stress destination to reach, whether you are basing here or passing through on a cross-prairie route.
Is Vegreville a good base for visiting Elk Island National Park?
It is a solid one, especially if the park is RV loop is full. Elk Island is only about 45 minutes west of Vegreville on Highway 16, so from a full-service-ish site at the Vegreville Municipal Campground you can day-trip into the park to see bison, hike, paddle Astotin Lake, and stay for the dark-sky stargazing, then return to a serviced town site with showers and a sani-station. Because Elk Island is own Astotin Lake RV loop is small and books up fast, staying in Vegreville is a practical backup that still puts you within easy reach. For a trip built around Elk Island wildlife and dark skies, Vegreville makes a comfortable and affordable base.
What should I know about prairie weather when camping here?
Pack for warm days, cool nights, storms, and bugs. Vegreville has an east-central prairie climate: warm summer days in the low 20s Celsius with cool evenings and long daylight, so bring layers even in July. Afternoon thunderstorms sweep across the open prairie in summer, so secure your awning, and mosquitoes are active near Astotin Lake and the trout pond, so bring repellent. Spring is muddy with a slow thaw, and fall cools quickly with crisp, golden days into October. Winters are cold and snowy with campgrounds closed and water shut off. Target July and August for the warmest camping, keep a jacket handy for the nights, and watch the forecast for prairie storms.
Are there free dump stations in Vegreville?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Vegreville.








