RV Parks In Burnaby, British Columbia
49.2664° N, 122.9526° W
Quick Overview
Burnaby is the smart place to base an RV if Vancouver is your real destination. It sits right in the middle of the metro area, minutes from downtown but without the impossible parking, and it is home to one of the best urban RV parks in the country. For most of us, the play is simple: park the rig in Burnaby, hop the SkyTrain, and explore Vancouver without ever fighting a city parking garage in a 35-foot motorhome.
The anchor here is Burnaby Cariboo RV Park, a year-round, 241-site park tucked along the Brunette River just off the Trans-Canada Highway. It has been running since 1986 and is consistently rated among the top RV parks in North America, with full hookups, 30 and 50 amp power, an indoor heated pool, hot tub, and fitness centre. It is a private resort-style park, which is what Burnaby offers, the city itself is private-park territory rather than public campground country. For public, provincial-style camping you head out of town: Golden Ears Provincial Park near Maple Ridge, about 45 minutes east, has hundreds of forested sites by the lake (no hookups, reserve through BC Parks), and Fort Camping at Brae Island Regional Park in nearby Fort Langley gives you a riverside Metro Vancouver park with full-hookup options.
Hookups and big-rig access are easy at Burnaby Cariboo, with pull-throughs and full services for 40-foot rigs, so this is a comfortable place to settle in for several nights. Reservations are the one thing to plan: this park fills fast for summer weekends and stays busy because of its location, so book weeks or even months ahead from June through August. The trade-off for the city price is unbeatable convenience. SkyTrain stations are close, Metrotown and Deer Lake are minutes away, and day trips to Whistler, the North Shore mountains, and the Fraser Valley wineries all start from your door. As an RV base for exploring Greater Vancouver, Burnaby is hard to beat.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Burnaby
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Gear for Your Trip to Burnaby
All Dump Stations Near Burnaby
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bcrv | 2.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Anmore Camp & RV Park | 5.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Discover Camping | 7.9 mi | 1.2 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Dogwood Campgrounds & RV Park | 8.0 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Vancouver | 9.0 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Capilano River RV Park | 9.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Central Estates | 9.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Tynehead RV Camp | 9.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mcdonald Creek Park | 11.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Girl Guides Of Canada - Woodward's Landing Campground | 12.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Bcrv
2.2 miAnmore Camp & RV Park
5.8 miDiscover Camping
7.9 miDogwood Campgrounds & RV Park
8.0 miCamping Vancouver
9.0 miCapilano River RV Park
9.0 miCentral Estates
9.5 miTynehead RV Camp
9.8 miMcdonald Creek Park
11.2 miGirl Guides Of Canada - Woodward's Landing Campground
12.1 miTraveling to Burnaby by RV
Burnaby Cariboo RV Park sits just off the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) near the Cariboo and Gaglardi interchange, which makes getting in and out with a big rig straightforward, the main thing is to time your arrival outside the morning and late-afternoon rush, when Highway 1 through Burnaby clogs badly. The Lougheed Highway (Highway 7) is a useful alternate for reaching the eastern suburbs and the Fraser Valley.
Once parked, the whole point is to leave the RV behind. SkyTrain gets you to downtown Vancouver, Stanley Park, and Granville Island in well under an hour without any city parking headaches, and it is genuinely the best way to see the city. For fly-and-rent travelers, Vancouver International Airport (YVR) is about 30 to 40 minutes away depending on traffic. From this central base, day drives reach Whistler in about two hours, the North Shore in under thirty minutes, and Fort Langley or the Fraser Valley wine country in under an hour, so you can range widely while keeping one reliable, full-hookup home site.
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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 Burnaby, British Columbia, 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 Burnaby
Burnaby is the premium end of the Greater Vancouver camping market, and you pay for location and amenities. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park sits in the higher nightly band for a full-hookup site, reflecting its central position, year-round operation, and resort features like the indoor pool and fitness centre. For visiting Vancouver, though, it can still pencil out cheaper than a downtown hotel, especially for families, and it saves you costly city parking.
Public options trade amenities for price: Golden Ears Provincial Park charges a moderate provincial nightly rate with no hookups, and Fort Camping at Fort Langley lands in between. Add a reservation fee for BC Parks bookings. To control costs, book midweek where you can, lean on SkyTrain instead of paid city parking, and consider a few nights at a provincial park to offset the city-park premium without giving up your Vancouver basecamp.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Burnaby by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
36F - 45F
Crowds: Low
Wet and mild; Burnaby Cariboo stays open year-round while most provincial parks are closed.
Spring
Mar - May
43F - 58F
Crowds: Medium
Green and damp; provincial parks reopen and summer reservations fill fast.
Summer
Jun - Aug
57F - 73F
Crowds: High
Warm, dry, and the busiest season for Vancouver visits; Burnaby Cariboo books up weeks ahead, reserve early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
45F - 57F
Crowds: Medium
Mild and quieter into October before the rains; provincial campgrounds start closing.
Explore the Burnaby Area
Treat Burnaby as a park-and-ride basecamp. The single best move is to set up at Burnaby Cariboo, then take SkyTrain into Vancouver instead of driving, because downtown parking is expensive, tight, and miserable in anything larger than a sedan. A transit day pass costs a fraction of one parking session.
Book early. Burnaby Cariboo is popular precisely because it is the convenient urban option, so any summer weekend can sell out weeks in advance, reserve as soon as your dates firm up. Plan your arrivals and departures for mid-morning or mid-day to dodge Highway 1 rush hour. Use the central location to your advantage: do Vancouver and Stanley Park one day, the North Shore mountains or Capilano another, and save a day for a Fraser Valley loop through Fort Langley, where you can also see Fort Camping and the historic site. If you want a forest-and-lake night to balance the city, reserve ahead at Golden Ears Provincial Park and make it an overnight rather than a day trip.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Burnaby
What are the best RV parks in Burnaby, BC?
The standout is Burnaby Cariboo RV Park, a year-round, 241-site private park along the Brunette River just off Highway 1. It is consistently rated among the top RV parks in North America, with full hookups, an indoor heated pool, hot tub, and fitness centre, plus SkyTrain access to downtown Vancouver. It is really the premier RV option within Burnaby itself. For more of a nature setting, look just outside the city to Golden Ears Provincial Park near Maple Ridge or Fort Camping at Brae Island Regional Park in Fort Langley. But if you want to base inside the metro area with full services, Burnaby Cariboo is the clear first choice.
Do Burnaby RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park offers full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and 30 and 50 amp power at its sites, along with pull-throughs that handle big rigs. That makes it an easy place to settle in for several nights while you explore Vancouver. The nearby public options differ: Golden Ears Provincial Park does not have hookups, offering flush toilets, showers, and a dump station instead, while Fort Camping at Fort Langley does have full-hookup sites. So within Burnaby you can count on full hookups at Burnaby Cariboo, and if you venture to the provincial parks for a nature night, plan to camp without hookups and use the dump station on the way out.
How much does RV camping cost in Burnaby?
Burnaby is the premium end of the Greater Vancouver market. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park sits in the higher nightly band for a full-hookup site, reflecting its central location, year-round operation, and resort amenities. For a Vancouver visit, though, it often still beats a downtown hotel, especially for families, and it spares you expensive city parking. Public alternatives are cheaper: Golden Ears Provincial Park charges a moderate provincial rate with no hookups, and Fort Camping lands in between, both adding a reservation fee. To save, book midweek, use SkyTrain rather than paid downtown parking, and mix in a provincial-park night or two to offset the city-park premium.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Burnaby?
For Burnaby Cariboo RV Park, book early, weeks to months ahead for summer weekends, because it is the convenient urban option and fills quickly from June through August. Holiday weekends go fastest. If your plans are firm, reserve as soon as you can. For the nearby provincial parks, BC Parks opens a reservation window months in advance through camping.bcparks.ca, and popular summer dates at Golden Ears disappear early too. Outside peak summer, you have more flexibility and can sometimes book closer to your dates. The general rule for the Vancouver area is simple: the more central and full-service the park, the earlier you need to lock it in.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Burnaby?
Summer, roughly late June through August, is the prime window: warm, dry weather and the full slate of Vancouver attractions, though it is also when Burnaby Cariboo books up, so reserve ahead. Early fall is a sweet spot, with mild days into October, smaller crowds, and easier reservations before the rains settle in. Spring is green and pleasant but damp, and provincial campgrounds are just reopening. Winter is wet and mild rather than frozen, and Burnaby Cariboo stays open year-round, so off-season city visits are very doable if you do not mind rain. For the best mix of weather and amenities, aim for summer or early fall.
Can big rigs camp in Burnaby?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park is built to handle big rigs, with pull-through and back-in sites, full hookups, and the room a 40-foot motorhome or long fifth-wheel needs. Access is easy from Highway 1, just time your arrival outside rush hour, when the Trans-Canada through Burnaby gets congested. The nearby provincial parks are a mixed bag for big rigs: Golden Ears has some larger sites but many older, shorter ones, so check site lengths when you book, while Fort Camping at Fort Langley accommodates larger RVs with full hookups. For a stress-free big-rig stay inside the metro area with full services, Burnaby Cariboo is the dependable choice.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Burnaby?
Not really within the city, Burnaby is private-park territory and Greater Vancouver has little free or first-come camping close in. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park is reservation-based. To find first-come or free sites you generally head farther out: some BC Parks provincial campgrounds hold first-come spots, and there is dispersed Crown-land and forest-service camping in the mountains beyond the suburbs, though those are a drive away and lack services. If you want inexpensive, nature-based camping near the city, your best bet is reserving a provincial park like Golden Ears rather than counting on a free urban spot, which essentially does not exist in the metro core.
Can I visit downtown Vancouver from an RV park in Burnaby?
Yes, and it is the main reason to base here. From Burnaby Cariboo RV Park you can reach SkyTrain and be in downtown Vancouver, near Stanley Park, the seawall, Gastown, and Granville Island, in well under an hour, all without driving or parking the RV. That is a huge advantage, because downtown parking is costly and impractical for anything larger than a car. Leave the rig hooked up at the park, buy a transit day pass, and explore the city on foot and by train. You can do Vancouver one day, the North Shore another, and never move your motorhome, which is exactly what makes Burnaby such a practical Vancouver basecamp.
Is Burnaby Cariboo RV Park open in winter?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park operates year-round, which sets it apart from the seasonal provincial campgrounds around Greater Vancouver that close for winter. Vancouver winters are wet and mild rather than frozen, so off-season RV stays are realistic, and the park keeps its full hookups and indoor amenities like the heated pool and hot tub running. That makes Burnaby a viable winter base for visiting the city, catching events, or staging a trip to Whistler for skiing. Just expect rain and shorter days, pack for damp weather, and book ahead around holidays, when even the off-season sees demand. Most nearby public parks, by contrast, are closed until spring.
What is there to do near Burnaby for RVers?
Plenty, and the central location is the draw. Within Burnaby, climb Burnaby Mountain by SFU for big city and inlet views, paddle or stroll at Deer Lake, visit the Burnaby Village Museum, and shop at Metrotown. The bigger draws are a short hop away: downtown Vancouver and Stanley Park by SkyTrain, the North Shore mountains and Capilano Suspension Bridge across the inlet, and Steveston and Richmond to the south. Day trips reach Whistler in about two hours, the Fraser Valley wineries and Fort Langley in under an hour, and the US border in about 45 minutes. Few RV bases put this much within easy reach without moving the rig.
How do I get to Burnaby Cariboo RV Park with a large RV?
The park sits just off the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) near the Cariboo and Gaglardi interchange, so the approach is highway-friendly for large rigs, no tight mountain roads to reach it. The key is timing: Highway 1 through Burnaby backs up heavily during weekday morning and late-afternoon rush hours, so aim to arrive mid-morning or midday for an easier merge and turn-in. Follow the park signage from the interchange and avoid relying solely on a car GPS, which can route you onto smaller streets. Once you are in, the park is laid out for big rigs with pull-throughs, so maneuvering on site is comfortable even for 40-foot motorhomes.
Are there public or provincial campgrounds in Burnaby itself?
Not within the city limits, Burnaby is served by private RV parks rather than public campgrounds, so for provincial or regional camping you travel just outside town. The closest options are Golden Ears Provincial Park near Maple Ridge, roughly 45 minutes east, with forested lakeside sites and no hookups, and Fort Camping at Brae Island Regional Park in Fort Langley, a Metro Vancouver regional park with full-hookup sites along the Fraser River. Both reserve in advance and fill in summer. So if you specifically want a public, nature-style campground, plan to base partly outside Burnaby, while using Burnaby Cariboo for the full-service, in-city portion of your trip.
What is the weather like for camping in Burnaby?
Greater Vancouver has a mild, coastal climate, so camping is comfortable much of the year. Summers are warm and pleasantly dry, with highs in the low 70s, ideal for city exploring and the busiest season. Fall stays mild into October before the rains arrive, and it is a lovely, quieter time to visit. Winters are wet and mild rather than snowy at sea level, with highs in the mid 40s, so a year-round park like Burnaby Cariboo remains usable if you do not mind rain. Spring is green, damp, and gradually warming. Pack rain gear in any season but summer, and you will find Burnaby very camp-friendly.
What are the best RV parks in Burnaby, BC?
The standout is Burnaby Cariboo RV Park, a year-round, 241-site private park along the Brunette River just off Highway 1. It is consistently rated among the top RV parks in North America, with full hookups, an indoor heated pool, hot tub, and fitness centre, plus SkyTrain access to downtown Vancouver. It is really the premier RV option within Burnaby itself. For more of a nature setting, look just outside the city to Golden Ears Provincial Park near Maple Ridge or Fort Camping at Brae Island Regional Park in Fort Langley. But if you want to base inside the metro area with full services, Burnaby Cariboo is the clear first choice.
Do Burnaby RV parks have full hookups?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park offers full hookups, meaning water, sewer, and 30 and 50 amp power at its sites, along with pull-throughs that handle big rigs. That makes it an easy place to settle in for several nights while you explore Vancouver. The nearby public options differ: Golden Ears Provincial Park does not have hookups, offering flush toilets, showers, and a dump station instead, while Fort Camping at Fort Langley does have full-hookup sites. So within Burnaby you can count on full hookups at Burnaby Cariboo, and if you venture to the provincial parks for a nature night, plan to camp without hookups and use the dump station on the way out.
How much does RV camping cost in Burnaby?
Burnaby is the premium end of the Greater Vancouver market. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park sits in the higher nightly band for a full-hookup site, reflecting its central location, year-round operation, and resort amenities. For a Vancouver visit, though, it often still beats a downtown hotel, especially for families, and it spares you expensive city parking. Public alternatives are cheaper: Golden Ears Provincial Park charges a moderate provincial rate with no hookups, and Fort Camping lands in between, both adding a reservation fee. To save, book midweek, use SkyTrain rather than paid downtown parking, and mix in a provincial-park night or two to offset the city-park premium.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Burnaby?
For Burnaby Cariboo RV Park, book early, weeks to months ahead for summer weekends, because it is the convenient urban option and fills quickly from June through August. Holiday weekends go fastest. If your plans are firm, reserve as soon as you can. For the nearby provincial parks, BC Parks opens a reservation window months in advance through camping.bcparks.ca, and popular summer dates at Golden Ears disappear early too. Outside peak summer, you have more flexibility and can sometimes book closer to your dates. The general rule for the Vancouver area is simple: the more central and full-service the park, the earlier you need to lock it in.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Burnaby?
Summer, roughly late June through August, is the prime window: warm, dry weather and the full slate of Vancouver attractions, though it is also when Burnaby Cariboo books up, so reserve ahead. Early fall is a sweet spot, with mild days into October, smaller crowds, and easier reservations before the rains settle in. Spring is green and pleasant but damp, and provincial campgrounds are just reopening. Winter is wet and mild rather than frozen, and Burnaby Cariboo stays open year-round, so off-season city visits are very doable if you do not mind rain. For the best mix of weather and amenities, aim for summer or early fall.
Can big rigs camp in Burnaby?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park is built to handle big rigs, with pull-through and back-in sites, full hookups, and the room a 40-foot motorhome or long fifth-wheel needs. Access is easy from Highway 1, just time your arrival outside rush hour, when the Trans-Canada through Burnaby gets congested. The nearby provincial parks are a mixed bag for big rigs: Golden Ears has some larger sites but many older, shorter ones, so check site lengths when you book, while Fort Camping at Fort Langley accommodates larger RVs with full hookups. For a stress-free big-rig stay inside the metro area with full services, Burnaby Cariboo is the dependable choice.
Are there free or first-come camping options near Burnaby?
Not really within the city, Burnaby is private-park territory and Greater Vancouver has little free or first-come camping close in. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park is reservation-based. To find first-come or free sites you generally head farther out: some BC Parks provincial campgrounds hold first-come spots, and there is dispersed Crown-land and forest-service camping in the mountains beyond the suburbs, though those are a drive away and lack services. If you want inexpensive, nature-based camping near the city, your best bet is reserving a provincial park like Golden Ears rather than counting on a free urban spot, which essentially does not exist in the metro core.
Can I visit downtown Vancouver from an RV park in Burnaby?
Yes, and it is the main reason to base here. From Burnaby Cariboo RV Park you can reach SkyTrain and be in downtown Vancouver, near Stanley Park, the seawall, Gastown, and Granville Island, in well under an hour, all without driving or parking the RV. That is a huge advantage, because downtown parking is costly and impractical for anything larger than a car. Leave the rig hooked up at the park, buy a transit day pass, and explore the city on foot and by train. You can do Vancouver one day, the North Shore another, and never move your motorhome, which is exactly what makes Burnaby such a practical Vancouver basecamp.
Is Burnaby Cariboo RV Park open in winter?
Yes. Burnaby Cariboo RV Park operates year-round, which sets it apart from the seasonal provincial campgrounds around Greater Vancouver that close for winter. Vancouver winters are wet and mild rather than frozen, so off-season RV stays are realistic, and the park keeps its full hookups and indoor amenities like the heated pool and hot tub running. That makes Burnaby a viable winter base for visiting the city, catching events, or staging a trip to Whistler for skiing. Just expect rain and shorter days, pack for damp weather, and book ahead around holidays, when even the off-season sees demand. Most nearby public parks, by contrast, are closed until spring.
What is there to do near Burnaby for RVers?
Plenty, and the central location is the draw. Within Burnaby, climb Burnaby Mountain by SFU for big city and inlet views, paddle or stroll at Deer Lake, visit the Burnaby Village Museum, and shop at Metrotown. The bigger draws are a short hop away: downtown Vancouver and Stanley Park by SkyTrain, the North Shore mountains and Capilano Suspension Bridge across the inlet, and Steveston and Richmond to the south. Day trips reach Whistler in about two hours, the Fraser Valley wineries and Fort Langley in under an hour, and the US border in about 45 minutes. Few RV bases put this much within easy reach without moving the rig.
How do I get to Burnaby Cariboo RV Park with a large RV?
The park sits just off the Trans-Canada Highway (Highway 1) near the Cariboo and Gaglardi interchange, so the approach is highway-friendly for large rigs, no tight mountain roads to reach it. The key is timing: Highway 1 through Burnaby backs up heavily during weekday morning and late-afternoon rush hours, so aim to arrive mid-morning or midday for an easier merge and turn-in. Follow the park signage from the interchange and avoid relying solely on a car GPS, which can route you onto smaller streets. Once you are in, the park is laid out for big rigs with pull-throughs, so maneuvering on site is comfortable even for 40-foot motorhomes.
Are there public or provincial campgrounds in Burnaby itself?
Not within the city limits, Burnaby is served by private RV parks rather than public campgrounds, so for provincial or regional camping you travel just outside town. The closest options are Golden Ears Provincial Park near Maple Ridge, roughly 45 minutes east, with forested lakeside sites and no hookups, and Fort Camping at Brae Island Regional Park in Fort Langley, a Metro Vancouver regional park with full-hookup sites along the Fraser River. Both reserve in advance and fill in summer. So if you specifically want a public, nature-style campground, plan to base partly outside Burnaby, while using Burnaby Cariboo for the full-service, in-city portion of your trip.
What is the weather like for camping in Burnaby?
Greater Vancouver has a mild, coastal climate, so camping is comfortable much of the year. Summers are warm and pleasantly dry, with highs in the low 70s, ideal for city exploring and the busiest season. Fall stays mild into October before the rains arrive, and it is a lovely, quieter time to visit. Winters are wet and mild rather than snowy at sea level, with highs in the mid 40s, so a year-round park like Burnaby Cariboo remains usable if you do not mind rain. Spring is green, damp, and gradually warming. Pack rain gear in any season but summer, and you will find Burnaby very camp-friendly.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Burnaby?
The highest-rated station is Tynehead RV Campground with a rating of 3.2/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Burnaby?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Burnaby.
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