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RV Parks In Whitecourt, Alberta

54.1501° N, 115.6855° W

Quick Overview

Whitecourt sits in west-central Alberta where the Athabasca, McLeod and Sakwatamau rivers meet, right on Highway 43 toward Grande Prairie and the Alaska Highway. For RVers it is a genuinely useful stop: a forestry town with real services, easy highway access, and a mix of camping that covers both a travel-day overnight and a few days at a lake. It also happens to be the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta, so the season here runs longer than you might expect.

The camping splits cleanly into public and private. On the public side, the standout is Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park on McLeod Lake, a roughly 182-site public provincial park with a beach, boat launch, fishing, showers, laundry and a central dump station. About 41 of its sites carry 30-amp power, with pull-through and unserviced loops alongside. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground sits in town with full hookups available on a wooded lot. On the private side you get full-service parks built for convenience: Eagle River Tourism RV Park behind the casino runs 107 sites with full hookups and 24 pull-throughs, and Sagitawah RV Park offers large full-service pull-throughs one minute off Highway 43 inside town limits.

For hookups and big rigs, the private parks are the safe bet. Eagle River and Sagitawah both hand you full hookups, 30/50-amp power and pull-through pads that swallow a 40-foot fifth-wheel. Carson-Pegasus is more of a nature stay: it has power and pull-through sites, but many lakeside spots are shorter and tree-lined, so ask for a longer site when you book. Reservations matter most at the provincial park, which runs on the Alberta Parks online system with a 90-day rolling window; the private parks and the Lions site you book directly by phone or website. Highway 43 through town is a paved, wide RV-and-truck corridor with no notable low-clearance or weight headaches on the main routes, so getting your rig in and out is straightforward.

3 ★Avg Rating
406Reviews

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Traveling to Whitecourt by RV

Whitecourt is built around Highway 43, the main east-west corridor that carries RVers northwest toward Grande Prairie and on to the Alaska Highway. The in-town private parks, Sagitawah and Eagle River, both sit right off Hwy 43, so you barely leave the highway to set up for the night. Highway 32 is the north-south route and the turn you take toward Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park (north on Hwy 32, then east on a paved access road) and toward Swan Hills.

The roads here are big-rig friendly. Hwy 43 is paved with wide shoulders and steady truck traffic, and the Carson-Pegasus access road is paved and manageable if you take the final lake stretch slowly. Edmonton is your nearest major hub, about 180 km or two hours southeast, and the place to handle RV repairs, parts and big-box resupply. Grande Prairie is roughly 280 km northwest along Hwy 43 if you are continuing north, so Whitecourt is a logical fuel-and-groceries stop before services thin out.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Whitecourt, 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 Whitecourt

Camping rates in Whitecourt are reasonable by Alberta standards and run in Canadian dollars. At Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park, expect roughly CAD 30 to 40 per night depending on whether you take an unserviced or 30-amp powered site, plus a small online reservation fee through the Alberta Parks system. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground falls in a similar CAD 30 to 45 band depending on service level.

Private full-service parks cost a bit more for the convenience and full hookups. Eagle River Tourism RV Park runs around CAD 45 to 55 per night for a full-service pull-through, and Sagitawah RV Park lands near CAD 40 to 50 for its full-service sites just off Hwy 43. Always confirm current rates and any long-weekend pricing when you book, since seasonal adjustments are common. With visitor ratings around 3.0 across 406 reviews, the local parks generally deliver solid value for the price.

Free: 7 stations (88%)
Paid: 1 station (13%)

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What RVers Are Saying About Whitecourt

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Best Time to Visit Whitecourt by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

-14C - -7C

Crowds: Low

Deep cold continental winters, but Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta and draws sledders. Eagle River Tourism RV Park stays open year-round; plan for heated, well-insulated rigs and protected water lines.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

-3C - 10C

Crowds: Low

April and early May are shoulder season with snowmelt, muddy trails and chilly nights. The Lions Campground opens April 15 and provincial sites come online mid-May. Expect sub-zero overnight lows early in the season.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

10C - 21C

Crowds: High

May through September is peak. Carson-Pegasus fills on weekends and holidays, so reserve the morning the 90-day window opens. Prime time for lake fishing, river tubing and full-service town parks.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

0C - 12C

Crowds: Medium

September into early October is quieter with crisp nights and fall colour along the rivers. The Lions Campground closes around October 15 and the provincial park winds down; year-round Eagle River stays open.

Explore the Whitecourt Area

Top up fuel and groceries in Whitecourt before you push northwest toward Grande Prairie, where stops get farther apart. The town has everything right off Highway 43, so it is an easy resupply.

Match the park to your plan. If you want the lake, book Carson-Pegasus the morning its 90-day reservation window opens, because summer weekends and holidays go fast. If you just need a clean overnight on a travel day, Sagitawah or Eagle River off Hwy 43 get you in and out quicker with full hookups. Eagle River is the year-round option, which makes it the pick for shoulder-season and winter snowmobile trips when the provincial park and Lions Campground are closed.

Plan for the cold. Fall nights here drop below freezing early, often by mid-September, so winterize your water lines and carry a heated hose if you camp late. Save Edmonton, about two hours southeast, for any major repairs or parts you cannot find locally.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Whitecourt

What RV parks and campgrounds are near Whitecourt, Alberta?

Whitecourt gives you a solid mix of public and private camping. On the public side, Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park is the standout, a roughly 182-site public provincial park on McLeod Lake run by Alberta Parks with a beach, boat launch, fishing and a dump station. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground sits in town on a wooded lot with full hookups available. On the private side, Eagle River Tourism RV Park behind the casino runs 107 full-hookup sites, and Sagitawah RV Park offers large full-service pull-throughs one minute off Highway 43 inside town limits. Between these four you can find everything from a quiet lakeside nature stay to a quick full-service overnight on a travel day.

Which Whitecourt RV parks have full hookups for big rigs?

For full hookups and big rigs, the private parks are your best bet. Eagle River Tourism RV Park has 107 sites with full hookups, 30/50-amp power and 24 pull-throughs on graveled pads that handle 40-foot fifth-wheels and motorhomes. Sagitawah RV Park offers large full-service pull-through sites just one minute off Highway 43 within town limits, also built for bigger rigs. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park has power and pull-through loops, but only about 41 of its sites carry 30-amp service and many lakeside spots are shorter and tree-lined, so request a longer site when you reserve. If full hookups and easy maneuvering are the priority, start with Eagle River or Sagitawah.

How do I make camping reservations near Whitecourt?

It depends on the type of park. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park books through the Alberta Parks online reservation system at shop.albertaparks.ca, which runs on a 90-day rolling window that resets each morning at 9 a.m. Mountain Time. For summer weekends and holidays, watch that window the day it opens because popular lakeside sites go fast. The private parks and the Lions Campground are booked directly: call or visit the website for Eagle River Tourism RV Park and Sagitawah RV Park, and phone the Whitecourt Lions Campground. The provincial park also keeps some first-come-first-served sites, and the in-town private parks often have transient availability a few days out for one-night travel stops.

Is there public provincial-park camping near Whitecourt?

Yes. The main public option is Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park, a public provincial park managed by Alberta Parks about 20 to 25 km northwest of town via Highway 43 and Highway 32. It sits on McLeod Lake with roughly 182 sites, about 41 of them with 30-amp power, plus a beach, boat launch, stocked fishing, showers, laundry and a central dump station. It is the area's anchor for nature-focused camping. The other public-style option is the non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground in town, operated by the Whitecourt Lions Club, which offers full hookups on some sites in a wooded setting close to town amenities from April 15 to October 15.

Are there private RV parks in Whitecourt?

Yes, Whitecourt has two strong private RV parks aimed at travelers who want full service. Eagle River Tourism RV Park, owned by the Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation, sits behind Eagle River Casino about 8 km northwest of town with 107 full-hookup sites, 24 pull-throughs, free wifi, secure gates, flush washrooms and coin laundry, and it stays open year-round. Sagitawah RV Park is right inside town limits one minute off Highway 43, with more than 75 power/water/sewer sites and large pull-throughs, clean showers and quick highway access. Both are easy in-and-out choices for a travel day and a step up in convenience from the nature-focused provincial park.

When is the best time to camp in Whitecourt?

Summer, roughly May through September, is the peak and the best window for most RVers. That is when the weather is mild, the lake and rivers are open for fishing and tubing, and all the parks are running. It is also the busiest stretch, so Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park fills on weekends and holidays and you should reserve as soon as the 90-day window opens. September into early October is a quieter, scenic shoulder season with crisp nights and fall colour. Winter is cold but real here: Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta and Eagle River Tourism RV Park stays open year-round for snowmobile trips, so plan for deep cold and a well-insulated rig if you visit then.

What is the weather and climate like for RV camping in Whitecourt?

Whitecourt has a cold continental climate with a short, mild summer and a long, cold winter. Summer highs sit around 21C with overnight lows near 10C, comfortable for camping from late May into September. Spring and fall are chilly, with overnight lows dipping to freezing and below, so winterize water lines if you camp before mid-May or past mid-September. Winters are genuinely cold, with December and January highs around minus 7C and lows near minus 14C, plus heavy snow that fuels the local snowmobiling. The area also sees significant annual snowfall, which is part of why the town markets itself as a winter sports destination. Pack layers and plan for big day-to-night temperature swings any time outside high summer.

How do big rigs get to Whitecourt and its campgrounds?

Getting a big rig into Whitecourt is straightforward. Highway 43 is the main east-west corridor through town, a paved, well-traveled truck-and-RV route with wide shoulders and no notable low-clearance or weight restrictions on the main routes. The in-town private parks, Sagitawah and Eagle River, sit right off Hwy 43, so you barely leave the highway. To reach Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park you head north on Highway 32 and then east on a paved access road; both are big-rig manageable, though you should take the final lakeside stretch slowly. Edmonton, about 180 km southeast, is the nearest major hub for repairs and parts, and Grande Prairie is roughly 280 km northwest if you are continuing toward the Alaska Highway.

What is there to do around Whitecourt while camping?

There is more here than a quick fuel stop. Fishing is a big draw, with walleye, pike, whitefish and rainbow trout in McLeod Lake, the McLeod River and the Athabasca River, and Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park has a boat launch. Tubing the McLeod River is a popular, relaxed summer float. Festival Park in town is a family favourite with a stocked fishing pond, a splash park, a river-slide tubing attraction, trails and winter skating. There are also hundreds of kilometres of trails for hiking and mountain biking, plus cross-country ski trails at the golf course in winter. And Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta, with an extensive groomed trail network maintained by the local Trailblazers club, so winter visitors have plenty to do too.

Can I camp in Whitecourt in winter?

Yes, but choose your park carefully and prepare for serious cold. Most options, including Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park and the Whitecourt Lions Campground, close for the season; the Lions site runs roughly April 15 to October 15. The year-round choice is Eagle River Tourism RV Park, which stays open through winter and works well for snowmobile trips since Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta. If you camp in winter, expect highs around minus 7C and lows near minus 14C with heavy snow, so you need a four-season or well-insulated rig, protected and heated water lines, and a plan for propane and battery in deep cold. It is rewarding for winter sports, but it is not casual fair-weather camping.

How far is Whitecourt from Edmonton and Grande Prairie?

Whitecourt sits roughly midway on the corridor between the two. Edmonton is about 180 km, or around two hours, to the southeast along Highway 43, and it is your nearest major hub for RV repairs, parts and big-box resupply. Grande Prairie is about 280 km to the northwest, also along Hwy 43, and is the next big stop if you are heading north toward the Alaska Highway. Because of this position, Whitecourt is a practical fuel, grocery and overnight stop before services thin out farther north. Many RVers traveling the route plan a night here to top up and rest, then push on toward Grande Prairie or branch off toward other parts of west-central Alberta.

Are reservations required, or can I get a first-come site near Whitecourt?

Reservations are strongly recommended for summer but not always required. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park keeps some first-come-first-served sites, but its reservable sites book through the Alberta Parks online system on a 90-day rolling window and the popular lakeside spots fill quickly on weekends and holidays, so booking ahead is the safer play. The in-town private parks, Sagitawah and Eagle River, plus the Lions Campground are booked directly and often have transient availability a few days out, which makes them handy for one-night travel stops. The general rule: if you want a specific lakeside site on a summer long weekend, reserve early; if you just need a clean serviced overnight off Highway 43, you can usually find space closer to your arrival date.

What does it cost to camp in Whitecourt?

Costs are reasonable by Alberta standards and quoted in Canadian dollars. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park runs roughly CAD 30 to 40 per night depending on whether you take an unserviced or 30-amp powered site, plus a small online reservation fee. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground sits in a similar CAD 30 to 45 range depending on service. The private full-service parks cost a bit more for the convenience: Eagle River Tourism RV Park runs around CAD 45 to 55 for a full-service pull-through, and Sagitawah RV Park lands near CAD 40 to 50 for its full-service sites. Always confirm current rates and any long-weekend pricing when you book, since seasonal adjustments and holiday premiums are common across the area.

What RV parks and campgrounds are near Whitecourt, Alberta?

Whitecourt gives you a solid mix of public and private camping. On the public side, Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park is the standout, a roughly 182-site public provincial park on McLeod Lake run by Alberta Parks with a beach, boat launch, fishing and a dump station. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground sits in town on a wooded lot with full hookups available. On the private side, Eagle River Tourism RV Park behind the casino runs 107 full-hookup sites, and Sagitawah RV Park offers large full-service pull-throughs one minute off Highway 43 inside town limits. Between these four you can find everything from a quiet lakeside nature stay to a quick full-service overnight on a travel day.

Which Whitecourt RV parks have full hookups for big rigs?

For full hookups and big rigs, the private parks are your best bet. Eagle River Tourism RV Park has 107 sites with full hookups, 30/50-amp power and 24 pull-throughs on graveled pads that handle 40-foot fifth-wheels and motorhomes. Sagitawah RV Park offers large full-service pull-through sites just one minute off Highway 43 within town limits, also built for bigger rigs. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park has power and pull-through loops, but only about 41 of its sites carry 30-amp service and many lakeside spots are shorter and tree-lined, so request a longer site when you reserve. If full hookups and easy maneuvering are the priority, start with Eagle River or Sagitawah.

How do I make camping reservations near Whitecourt?

It depends on the type of park. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park books through the Alberta Parks online reservation system at shop.albertaparks.ca, which runs on a 90-day rolling window that resets each morning at 9 a.m. Mountain Time. For summer weekends and holidays, watch that window the day it opens because popular lakeside sites go fast. The private parks and the Lions Campground are booked directly: call or visit the website for Eagle River Tourism RV Park and Sagitawah RV Park, and phone the Whitecourt Lions Campground. The provincial park also keeps some first-come-first-served sites, and the in-town private parks often have transient availability a few days out for one-night travel stops.

Is there public provincial-park camping near Whitecourt?

Yes. The main public option is Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park, a public provincial park managed by Alberta Parks about 20 to 25 km northwest of town via Highway 43 and Highway 32. It sits on McLeod Lake with roughly 182 sites, about 41 of them with 30-amp power, plus a beach, boat launch, stocked fishing, showers, laundry and a central dump station. It is the area's anchor for nature-focused camping. The other public-style option is the non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground in town, operated by the Whitecourt Lions Club, which offers full hookups on some sites in a wooded setting close to town amenities from April 15 to October 15.

Are there private RV parks in Whitecourt?

Yes, Whitecourt has two strong private RV parks aimed at travelers who want full service. Eagle River Tourism RV Park, owned by the Alexis Nakota Sioux Nation, sits behind Eagle River Casino about 8 km northwest of town with 107 full-hookup sites, 24 pull-throughs, free wifi, secure gates, flush washrooms and coin laundry, and it stays open year-round. Sagitawah RV Park is right inside town limits one minute off Highway 43, with more than 75 power/water/sewer sites and large pull-throughs, clean showers and quick highway access. Both are easy in-and-out choices for a travel day and a step up in convenience from the nature-focused provincial park.

When is the best time to camp in Whitecourt?

Summer, roughly May through September, is the peak and the best window for most RVers. That is when the weather is mild, the lake and rivers are open for fishing and tubing, and all the parks are running. It is also the busiest stretch, so Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park fills on weekends and holidays and you should reserve as soon as the 90-day window opens. September into early October is a quieter, scenic shoulder season with crisp nights and fall colour. Winter is cold but real here: Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta and Eagle River Tourism RV Park stays open year-round for snowmobile trips, so plan for deep cold and a well-insulated rig if you visit then.

What is the weather and climate like for RV camping in Whitecourt?

Whitecourt has a cold continental climate with a short, mild summer and a long, cold winter. Summer highs sit around 21C with overnight lows near 10C, comfortable for camping from late May into September. Spring and fall are chilly, with overnight lows dipping to freezing and below, so winterize water lines if you camp before mid-May or past mid-September. Winters are genuinely cold, with December and January highs around minus 7C and lows near minus 14C, plus heavy snow that fuels the local snowmobiling. The area also sees significant annual snowfall, which is part of why the town markets itself as a winter sports destination. Pack layers and plan for big day-to-night temperature swings any time outside high summer.

How do big rigs get to Whitecourt and its campgrounds?

Getting a big rig into Whitecourt is straightforward. Highway 43 is the main east-west corridor through town, a paved, well-traveled truck-and-RV route with wide shoulders and no notable low-clearance or weight restrictions on the main routes. The in-town private parks, Sagitawah and Eagle River, sit right off Hwy 43, so you barely leave the highway. To reach Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park you head north on Highway 32 and then east on a paved access road; both are big-rig manageable, though you should take the final lakeside stretch slowly. Edmonton, about 180 km southeast, is the nearest major hub for repairs and parts, and Grande Prairie is roughly 280 km northwest if you are continuing toward the Alaska Highway.

What is there to do around Whitecourt while camping?

There is more here than a quick fuel stop. Fishing is a big draw, with walleye, pike, whitefish and rainbow trout in McLeod Lake, the McLeod River and the Athabasca River, and Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park has a boat launch. Tubing the McLeod River is a popular, relaxed summer float. Festival Park in town is a family favourite with a stocked fishing pond, a splash park, a river-slide tubing attraction, trails and winter skating. There are also hundreds of kilometres of trails for hiking and mountain biking, plus cross-country ski trails at the golf course in winter. And Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta, with an extensive groomed trail network maintained by the local Trailblazers club, so winter visitors have plenty to do too.

Can I camp in Whitecourt in winter?

Yes, but choose your park carefully and prepare for serious cold. Most options, including Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park and the Whitecourt Lions Campground, close for the season; the Lions site runs roughly April 15 to October 15. The year-round choice is Eagle River Tourism RV Park, which stays open through winter and works well for snowmobile trips since Whitecourt is the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta. If you camp in winter, expect highs around minus 7C and lows near minus 14C with heavy snow, so you need a four-season or well-insulated rig, protected and heated water lines, and a plan for propane and battery in deep cold. It is rewarding for winter sports, but it is not casual fair-weather camping.

How far is Whitecourt from Edmonton and Grande Prairie?

Whitecourt sits roughly midway on the corridor between the two. Edmonton is about 180 km, or around two hours, to the southeast along Highway 43, and it is your nearest major hub for RV repairs, parts and big-box resupply. Grande Prairie is about 280 km to the northwest, also along Hwy 43, and is the next big stop if you are heading north toward the Alaska Highway. Because of this position, Whitecourt is a practical fuel, grocery and overnight stop before services thin out farther north. Many RVers traveling the route plan a night here to top up and rest, then push on toward Grande Prairie or branch off toward other parts of west-central Alberta.

Are reservations required, or can I get a first-come site near Whitecourt?

Reservations are strongly recommended for summer but not always required. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park keeps some first-come-first-served sites, but its reservable sites book through the Alberta Parks online system on a 90-day rolling window and the popular lakeside spots fill quickly on weekends and holidays, so booking ahead is the safer play. The in-town private parks, Sagitawah and Eagle River, plus the Lions Campground are booked directly and often have transient availability a few days out, which makes them handy for one-night travel stops. The general rule: if you want a specific lakeside site on a summer long weekend, reserve early; if you just need a clean serviced overnight off Highway 43, you can usually find space closer to your arrival date.

What does it cost to camp in Whitecourt?

Costs are reasonable by Alberta standards and quoted in Canadian dollars. Carson-Pegasus Provincial Park runs roughly CAD 30 to 40 per night depending on whether you take an unserviced or 30-amp powered site, plus a small online reservation fee. The non-profit Whitecourt Lions Campground sits in a similar CAD 30 to 45 range depending on service. The private full-service parks cost a bit more for the convenience: Eagle River Tourism RV Park runs around CAD 45 to 55 for a full-service pull-through, and Sagitawah RV Park lands near CAD 40 to 50 for its full-service sites. Always confirm current rates and any long-weekend pricing when you book, since seasonal adjustments and holiday premiums are common across the area.

Are there free dump stations in Whitecourt?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Whitecourt.