RV Parks In Kimberley, British Columbia
49.6707° N, 115.9776° W
Quick Overview
Kimberley sits high in the East Kootenays, a Rocky Mountain resort town with a Bavarian-themed Platzl downtown, a ski hill, and some of the best mountain biking in BC. It makes a great RV base between the Kootenays and the Rockies, and once you sort out where to plug in, it is an easy place to settle for a few days. Around here, camping splits cleanly into two lanes, so it helps to know what each one gives you.
The public option means BC Parks provincial parks scattered through the Cranbrook valley: Wasa Lake Provincial Park about 35 km north, plus Moyie Lake, Norbury Lake, Premier Lake, and Jim Smith Lake. These are scenic and cheap, but they are unserviced. There are no individual hookups, so you run on your batteries and fresh tank and use the shared sani-dump (Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake both have one). Wasa Lake runs 104 sites, with most reservable and the rest first-come, first-served, plus hot showers and flush toilets.
For power and sewer you go private. Kimberley Riverside Campground sits on the St. Mary River about 8 km south of town with full hookups and 15/30/50 amp service, pull-through and back-in sites, big-rig room, and a free pool. Down the valley near Cranbrook, the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey is the other full-hookup pick, with long 30/50 amp pull-throughs, cable, and WiFi on the river at the St. Eugene Resort. Both private parks earn around 4.3 stars across 236 reviews, so you are not gambling on a turnoff in the dark.
Getting a big rig in is straightforward. Highway 95A links Kimberley to Cranbrook, and Highways 95 and 93 carry you north and south through the valley. All are paved two-lane roads with mountain grades but no posted RV restrictions, so 40-footers are fine at a relaxed pace. Reserve provincial sites through BC Parks and book the private parks directly, well ahead for July and August.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Kimberley
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All Dump Stations Near Kimberley
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kimberley Riverside Campground | 2.7 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Cranbrook / St. Eugene Koa Journey | 11.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Gp | 11.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Regency Park RV Resort | 14.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Rocky Pine RV Park | 14.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Fort Steele Campground | 15.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Free |
| Fort Steele Resort & RV Park | 16.1 mi | 4.0 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Disney Brook RV Park | 37.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Will-o-bend Golf & RV Park | 37.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hartley Lake Recreation Site | 41.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Kimberley Riverside Campground
2.7 miCranbrook / St. Eugene Koa Journey
11.5 miGp
11.9 miRegency Park RV Resort
14.2 miRocky Pine RV Park
14.2 miFort Steele Campground
15.8 miFort Steele Resort & RV Park
16.1 miDisney Brook RV Park
37.1 miWill-o-bend Golf & RV Park
37.4 miHartley Lake Recreation Site
41.5 miTraveling to Kimberley by RV
Kimberley is about 28 km northwest of Cranbrook on Highway 95A, which ties into the main Highway 95 and Highway 93 corridor running north toward Invermere and south through Cranbrook to the Crowsnest (Highway 3). Every one of these is paved, two-lane, and free of posted weight or length limits on the main stretches. You will climb and descend real mountain grades, so gear down and take the pull-outs, but there is nothing here a long fifth-wheel or a 40-foot motorhome cannot handle at a steady pace.
Cranbrook is your service hub. It is the place to fill propane, top off fuel, stock the pantry, and find an RV shop if something rattles loose, since in-town options in Kimberley itself are limited. The Canadian Rockies International Airport (YXC) at Cranbrook makes a fly-and-rent trip workable too. If you are coming from Alberta over the Rockies, expect a long mountain drive in, so plan fuel stops and arrive with daylight to spare.
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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 Kimberley, 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 Kimberley
Camping costs here track the public-private split. BC Parks provincial parks like Wasa Lake, Moyie Lake, and Norbury Lake run about CAD $30 per party per night for unserviced sites, the cheapest way to sleep in the valley if you can live without hookups. Private full-hookup parks cost more for the power and sewer: Kimberley Riverside Campground lands in the roughly CAD $40 to $60 range, and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey tends to run higher, around CAD $55 to $90 depending on whether you take a standard or a deluxe riverfront site.
Two ways to save: the KOA discounts shoulder-season stays (around 20 percent off in early spring for multi-night bookings), and provincial first-come sites cost the same but skip reservation fees. Budget for a separate BC Parks reservation fee on top of the nightly rate when you book online.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Kimberley
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Best Time to Visit Kimberley by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-10 - -2
Crowds: Low
Cold and snowy in the mountains. Most campgrounds are closed and provincial-park services are off, so this is not a serviced-RV-camping season. Ski traffic does fill lodging near Kimberley Alpine Resort, but plan on a winterized private site or a hotel rather than a hookup.
Spring
Mar - May
0 - 12
Crowds: Low
A short shoulder season. Private parks open around mid-April and the KOA offers spring discounts, while BC Parks services start around mid-May. Expect cool nights, possible mud on higher trails, and quiet campgrounds, a good time for a budget visit if you pack warm.
Summer
Jun - Aug
9 - 24
Crowds: High
Late June through August is the main season, with comfortable warm days, full park services, and the busiest weekends. Reserve full-hookup private sites and reservable provincial sites well ahead, especially for July and August. Wasa Lake is warm enough to swim by mid-July.
Fall
Sep - Oct
1 - 14
Crowds: Medium
September brings cool nights, thinning crowds, and good biking weather. Private parks stay open to mid-October, while BC Parks full services wind down around September 30, after which you can still use some parks without water or showers.
Explore the Kimberley Area
A few things make the difference here. First, treat Cranbrook as your resupply stop: fill propane and groceries there before heading up to Kimberley or out to the provincial parks, because the small-town selection thins out fast. Second, remember the provincial parks are unserviced, so top off fresh water and empty tanks at a sani-dump before you settle in. Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake both have a sani-dump on site, which saves a separate trip.
If you want power and sewer, book Kimberley Riverside Campground or the St. Eugene KOA early for summer weekends, because the full-hookup sites go first. Wasa Lake is worth the drive in July and August; it warms up enough to actually swim in, which is rare for a mountain lake. And if you can travel in the shoulder season, late April through May or September trims both the price and the crowds, just pack for genuinely cold mountain nights and the odd muddy approach at higher elevations.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Kimberley
What is the difference between public and private RV camping near Kimberley?
It comes down to hookups and price. The public option means BC Parks provincial parks around the Cranbrook valley, like Wasa Lake, Moyie Lake, and Norbury Lake. These cost about CAD $30 a night and sit on scenic lakes, but they are unserviced, so there are no individual electric, water, or sewer hookups at your site. You run on your batteries and fresh tank and use a shared sani-dump. The private option means parks like Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, which charge more but give you full hookups with 30 and 50 amp power, water, and sewer right at the pad. If you need to run air conditioning or want sewer at the site, go private; if you want cheap and scenic and can dry camp, the public provincial parks are excellent value.
Which RV parks near Kimberley have full hookups?
The two reliable full-hookup choices are private. Kimberley Riverside Campground sits on the St. Mary River about 8 km south of town and offers full hookups with 15, 30, and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer across roughly 130 sites, including pull-through and back-in options. The Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, down the valley near Cranbrook at the St. Eugene Resort, has 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites, cable TV, and free WiFi, including long riverfront pull-throughs. The BC Parks provincial parks in the area, such as Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake, do not have individual hookups; they are unserviced sites with shared water taps and a sani-dump station instead. So if full hookups are a must, plan around the two private parks and book ahead in summer.
Can big rigs and 40-foot motorhomes get into Kimberley?
Yes. The main routes are all paved two-lane highways with no posted RV length or weight restrictions on the through corridors. Highway 95A links Kimberley to Cranbrook, and Highways 95 and 93 run north and south through the valley, with Highway 3 carrying east-west traffic through Cranbrook. There are real mountain grades, so gear down on descents and use the pull-outs to let faster traffic by, but a 40-foot motorhome or a long fifth-wheel handles these roads fine at a relaxed pace. For sites, the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey has long pull-throughs built for big rigs, and Kimberley Riverside takes large rigs too. At provincial parks, stall length varies, so confirm the site can fit your length before you commit a long trailer.
How do I reserve a campsite in the provincial parks near Kimberley?
BC Parks provincial parks like Wasa Lake, Moyie Lake, and Norbury Lake take reservations through the BC Parks Discover Camping system at camping.bcparks.ca. You pick your park, dates, and a specific site, and pay a reservation fee on top of the nightly rate. Reservations open on a rolling window ahead of your arrival date, so the practical advice is to book as soon as your dates become available, especially for July and August weekends when the popular lakefront sites go quickly. Not every site is reservable; at Wasa Lake, for example, a portion of the 104 sites stays first-come, first-served. For the private parks, Kimberley Riverside and the KOA, you reserve directly with the park rather than through BC Parks, online or by phone.
Are there first-come, first-served campsites in the area?
Yes, several provincial parks hold first-come, first-served sites alongside their reservable ones. Wasa Lake keeps a share of its 104 sites available without a reservation, and Moyie Lake and Norbury Lake also offer first-come sites. The catch is that in peak summer these fill early, so your best odds are arriving on a weekday or early in the day rather than rolling in Friday evening. If you are flexible and traveling mid-week, first-come camping is a good way to skip the reservation fee and still get a lakeside spot. For full-hookup camping, though, do not rely on walk-ins in summer; the private parks like Kimberley Riverside and the St. Eugene KOA fill their serviced sites and you should reserve ahead.
When is camping season around Kimberley?
The serviced camping season runs roughly mid-April through mid-October, with the heart of it from late June through August. Private parks open earliest: Kimberley Riverside Campground runs about April 15 to October 15, and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey runs about April 1 to October 14. BC Parks provincial parks like Wasa Lake offer full services from about May 16 to September 30, after which the gates may close to vehicles but you can sometimes still walk in without water or showers. Winter is not a serviced-RV-camping season here; it is cold and snowy, and most campgrounds close, though the ski resort keeps the town busy. For the best mix of weather and availability, target July and August, or trade some warmth for quiet in the shoulder months.
What is the weather like for camping in Kimberley?
Kimberley has a cold-winter mountain climate. Summers are comfortable and partly cloudy, with July daytime highs around 24 degrees Celsius and cool nights that can dip near 9 degrees, so pack layers even in peak season. Spring and fall are short and changeable, with daytime highs in the low teens and nights near or below freezing, plus the chance of mud on higher trails. Winters are freezing and snowy, with December averages well below zero, which is great for the ski hill but closes most campgrounds. The valley gets moderate precipitation, with June often the wettest month and August the driest. The takeaway for campers is simple: come prepared for warm days and genuinely cold nights, and treat the summer window as your reliable serviced-camping stretch.
Is there a sani-dump or dump station near Kimberley?
Yes. Among the provincial parks, Wasa Lake Provincial Park and Moyie Lake Provincial Park both have a sani-dump station on site, which is useful since those parks are otherwise unserviced and you will be carrying your waste in your tanks. The private full-hookup parks, Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, have sewer at the sites themselves, so you can empty without a separate dump trip. The smart move when you are dry camping at a provincial park is to top off fresh water and empty your tanks before you settle in, then plan a dump on the way out. Cranbrook, as the regional service hub, is also a good place to handle propane, fuel, and any additional services on your way through the valley.
What is there to do in Kimberley with an RV parked?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Mountain bikers head to the purpose-built Bootleg Mountain network just south of town, which put Kimberley on BC's biking map. Hikers have Kimberley Nature Park, one of the largest municipal parks in BC at over 840 hectares, with more than 50 km of trails, old-growth cedar, and viewpoints. The Kimberley Alpine Resort runs lifts and alpine trails in summer and skiing in winter. Downtown, the car-free Bavarian-themed Platzl is an easy rest-day stroll with shops, patios, and the Happy Hans cuckoo clock. For water, St. Mary Lake and Wasa Lake offer swimming and paddling, and there is golf in town. It is an easy place to leave the rig parked and explore on foot or by bike for several days.
How far is Kimberley from Cranbrook and the airport?
Kimberley is about 28 km northwest of Cranbrook on Highway 95A, roughly a 30-minute drive. Cranbrook is the practical service hub for the area, where you will find fuel, propane, groceries, and RV service that Kimberley itself does not fully cover. The Canadian Rockies International Airport (YXC) is at Cranbrook, which makes a fly-in-and-rent trip workable if you are picking up a rig regionally. The Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey sits between the two, on the St. Mary River at the St. Eugene Resort, so it is a convenient base if you want full hookups and easy access to both town and the airport. Plan your resupply stops in Cranbrook on the way in or out rather than expecting to find everything up in Kimberley.
Which provincial park is best for RV camping near Kimberley?
Wasa Lake Provincial Park is the standout for most RVers. It sits about 35 km north of Kimberley on Highway 95, has 104 campsites with a mix of reservable and first-come spots, and offers hot showers, flush toilets, and a sani-dump station. The lake is one of the warmer ones in the region, warm enough to swim by mid-July, and there is a paved bike path and sandy beaches. Moyie Lake Provincial Park, south of Cranbrook, is the strong backup, with a large campground, a beach, and its own sani-dump. Norbury Lake is quieter and better suited to smaller rigs and tents than to long trailers. None of these have individual hookups, so they suit RVers comfortable dry camping; if you need power and sewer, the private parks are the answer.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
It depends on when you travel and what you need. In peak summer, roughly July and August, you should reserve. Full-hookup private sites at Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey fill on weekends, and the reservable provincial sites at Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake go quickly too. Book private parks directly and provincial parks through the BC Parks Discover Camping system at camping.bcparks.ca as soon as your dates open. If you are flexible and traveling mid-week or in the shoulder season, you have a real shot at first-come provincial sites without a reservation; arrive early in the day for the best choice. The honest answer is that showing up unplanned works in spring and fall but is risky on a summer weekend.
Is Kimberley a good base for exploring the Kootenays and Rockies?
Yes, it is a strong base. Kimberley sits in the East Kootenays as a gateway between the Kootenay region and the Rocky Mountains, with Highway 95A connecting to the main north-south Highway 95 and 93 corridor and Highway 3 running east-west through Cranbrook. From a campsite here you can day-trip to valley lakes, ride or hike right in town, and use the highways to push north toward Invermere and the Columbia Valley or south and east into the broader Rockies. The town itself gives you a walkable Bavarian-themed core, a ski-and-bike resort, and a large nature park, so there is enough to fill rest days without driving. Combine that with several provincial parks and two full-hookup private parks within easy reach, and Kimberley earns a multi-night stay rather than a quick overnight.
What is the difference between public and private RV camping near Kimberley?
It comes down to hookups and price. The public option means BC Parks provincial parks around the Cranbrook valley, like Wasa Lake, Moyie Lake, and Norbury Lake. These cost about CAD $30 a night and sit on scenic lakes, but they are unserviced, so there are no individual electric, water, or sewer hookups at your site. You run on your batteries and fresh tank and use a shared sani-dump. The private option means parks like Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, which charge more but give you full hookups with 30 and 50 amp power, water, and sewer right at the pad. If you need to run air conditioning or want sewer at the site, go private; if you want cheap and scenic and can dry camp, the public provincial parks are excellent value.
Which RV parks near Kimberley have full hookups?
The two reliable full-hookup choices are private. Kimberley Riverside Campground sits on the St. Mary River about 8 km south of town and offers full hookups with 15, 30, and 50 amp electric, water, and sewer across roughly 130 sites, including pull-through and back-in options. The Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, down the valley near Cranbrook at the St. Eugene Resort, has 30 and 50 amp full-hookup sites, cable TV, and free WiFi, including long riverfront pull-throughs. The BC Parks provincial parks in the area, such as Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake, do not have individual hookups; they are unserviced sites with shared water taps and a sani-dump station instead. So if full hookups are a must, plan around the two private parks and book ahead in summer.
Can big rigs and 40-foot motorhomes get into Kimberley?
Yes. The main routes are all paved two-lane highways with no posted RV length or weight restrictions on the through corridors. Highway 95A links Kimberley to Cranbrook, and Highways 95 and 93 run north and south through the valley, with Highway 3 carrying east-west traffic through Cranbrook. There are real mountain grades, so gear down on descents and use the pull-outs to let faster traffic by, but a 40-foot motorhome or a long fifth-wheel handles these roads fine at a relaxed pace. For sites, the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey has long pull-throughs built for big rigs, and Kimberley Riverside takes large rigs too. At provincial parks, stall length varies, so confirm the site can fit your length before you commit a long trailer.
How do I reserve a campsite in the provincial parks near Kimberley?
BC Parks provincial parks like Wasa Lake, Moyie Lake, and Norbury Lake take reservations through the BC Parks Discover Camping system at camping.bcparks.ca. You pick your park, dates, and a specific site, and pay a reservation fee on top of the nightly rate. Reservations open on a rolling window ahead of your arrival date, so the practical advice is to book as soon as your dates become available, especially for July and August weekends when the popular lakefront sites go quickly. Not every site is reservable; at Wasa Lake, for example, a portion of the 104 sites stays first-come, first-served. For the private parks, Kimberley Riverside and the KOA, you reserve directly with the park rather than through BC Parks, online or by phone.
Are there first-come, first-served campsites in the area?
Yes, several provincial parks hold first-come, first-served sites alongside their reservable ones. Wasa Lake keeps a share of its 104 sites available without a reservation, and Moyie Lake and Norbury Lake also offer first-come sites. The catch is that in peak summer these fill early, so your best odds are arriving on a weekday or early in the day rather than rolling in Friday evening. If you are flexible and traveling mid-week, first-come camping is a good way to skip the reservation fee and still get a lakeside spot. For full-hookup camping, though, do not rely on walk-ins in summer; the private parks like Kimberley Riverside and the St. Eugene KOA fill their serviced sites and you should reserve ahead.
When is camping season around Kimberley?
The serviced camping season runs roughly mid-April through mid-October, with the heart of it from late June through August. Private parks open earliest: Kimberley Riverside Campground runs about April 15 to October 15, and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey runs about April 1 to October 14. BC Parks provincial parks like Wasa Lake offer full services from about May 16 to September 30, after which the gates may close to vehicles but you can sometimes still walk in without water or showers. Winter is not a serviced-RV-camping season here; it is cold and snowy, and most campgrounds close, though the ski resort keeps the town busy. For the best mix of weather and availability, target July and August, or trade some warmth for quiet in the shoulder months.
What is the weather like for camping in Kimberley?
Kimberley has a cold-winter mountain climate. Summers are comfortable and partly cloudy, with July daytime highs around 24 degrees Celsius and cool nights that can dip near 9 degrees, so pack layers even in peak season. Spring and fall are short and changeable, with daytime highs in the low teens and nights near or below freezing, plus the chance of mud on higher trails. Winters are freezing and snowy, with December averages well below zero, which is great for the ski hill but closes most campgrounds. The valley gets moderate precipitation, with June often the wettest month and August the driest. The takeaway for campers is simple: come prepared for warm days and genuinely cold nights, and treat the summer window as your reliable serviced-camping stretch.
Is there a sani-dump or dump station near Kimberley?
Yes. Among the provincial parks, Wasa Lake Provincial Park and Moyie Lake Provincial Park both have a sani-dump station on site, which is useful since those parks are otherwise unserviced and you will be carrying your waste in your tanks. The private full-hookup parks, Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey, have sewer at the sites themselves, so you can empty without a separate dump trip. The smart move when you are dry camping at a provincial park is to top off fresh water and empty your tanks before you settle in, then plan a dump on the way out. Cranbrook, as the regional service hub, is also a good place to handle propane, fuel, and any additional services on your way through the valley.
What is there to do in Kimberley with an RV parked?
Plenty for a multi-day stay. Mountain bikers head to the purpose-built Bootleg Mountain network just south of town, which put Kimberley on BC's biking map. Hikers have Kimberley Nature Park, one of the largest municipal parks in BC at over 840 hectares, with more than 50 km of trails, old-growth cedar, and viewpoints. The Kimberley Alpine Resort runs lifts and alpine trails in summer and skiing in winter. Downtown, the car-free Bavarian-themed Platzl is an easy rest-day stroll with shops, patios, and the Happy Hans cuckoo clock. For water, St. Mary Lake and Wasa Lake offer swimming and paddling, and there is golf in town. It is an easy place to leave the rig parked and explore on foot or by bike for several days.
How far is Kimberley from Cranbrook and the airport?
Kimberley is about 28 km northwest of Cranbrook on Highway 95A, roughly a 30-minute drive. Cranbrook is the practical service hub for the area, where you will find fuel, propane, groceries, and RV service that Kimberley itself does not fully cover. The Canadian Rockies International Airport (YXC) is at Cranbrook, which makes a fly-in-and-rent trip workable if you are picking up a rig regionally. The Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey sits between the two, on the St. Mary River at the St. Eugene Resort, so it is a convenient base if you want full hookups and easy access to both town and the airport. Plan your resupply stops in Cranbrook on the way in or out rather than expecting to find everything up in Kimberley.
Which provincial park is best for RV camping near Kimberley?
Wasa Lake Provincial Park is the standout for most RVers. It sits about 35 km north of Kimberley on Highway 95, has 104 campsites with a mix of reservable and first-come spots, and offers hot showers, flush toilets, and a sani-dump station. The lake is one of the warmer ones in the region, warm enough to swim by mid-July, and there is a paved bike path and sandy beaches. Moyie Lake Provincial Park, south of Cranbrook, is the strong backup, with a large campground, a beach, and its own sani-dump. Norbury Lake is quieter and better suited to smaller rigs and tents than to long trailers. None of these have individual hookups, so they suit RVers comfortable dry camping; if you need power and sewer, the private parks are the answer.
Do I need reservations or can I just show up?
It depends on when you travel and what you need. In peak summer, roughly July and August, you should reserve. Full-hookup private sites at Kimberley Riverside Campground and the Cranbrook/St. Eugene KOA Journey fill on weekends, and the reservable provincial sites at Wasa Lake and Moyie Lake go quickly too. Book private parks directly and provincial parks through the BC Parks Discover Camping system at camping.bcparks.ca as soon as your dates open. If you are flexible and traveling mid-week or in the shoulder season, you have a real shot at first-come provincial sites without a reservation; arrive early in the day for the best choice. The honest answer is that showing up unplanned works in spring and fall but is risky on a summer weekend.
Is Kimberley a good base for exploring the Kootenays and Rockies?
Yes, it is a strong base. Kimberley sits in the East Kootenays as a gateway between the Kootenay region and the Rocky Mountains, with Highway 95A connecting to the main north-south Highway 95 and 93 corridor and Highway 3 running east-west through Cranbrook. From a campsite here you can day-trip to valley lakes, ride or hike right in town, and use the highways to push north toward Invermere and the Columbia Valley or south and east into the broader Rockies. The town itself gives you a walkable Bavarian-themed core, a ski-and-bike resort, and a large nature park, so there is enough to fill rest days without driving. Combine that with several provincial parks and two full-hookup private parks within easy reach, and Kimberley earns a multi-night stay rather than a quick overnight.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Kimberley?
The highest-rated station is Mount Baker RV Park with a rating of 4.3/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Kimberley?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Kimberley.
All Dump Stations Near Kimberley (16)
RV Park with Dump StationsKimberley Riverside Campground
RV ParkGp
RV ParkCranbrook / St. Eugene Koa Journey
RV ParkRegency Park RV Resort
RV ParkRocky Pine RV Park
RV Park with Dump StationsFort Steele Campground
RV ParkFort Steele Resort & RV Park
RV Park






