RV Parks In Burlington, Ontario
43.3862° N, 79.8371° W
Quick Overview
Burlington sits at the western tip of Lake Ontario where the Niagara Escarpment meets the shoreline, halfway between Toronto and Niagara. It is a comfortable, green city, and unlike a lot of urban stops it actually has a genuine provincial park inside its own limits. That makes it one of the better GTA-edge bases for RVers: you can camp in real woods, walk to trails and gardens, and still shoot down the QEW to Niagara Falls or up the 403 into Hamilton and the escarpment waterfalls.
The camping here leans public and natural. The anchor is Bronte Creek Provincial Park, right in the Burlington and Oakville area off Upper Middle Road, with four camping loops, electrical sites, a historic 1900s farm, trails, and a summer pool so big it feels like a water park. Book it through Ontario Parks. A short drive out you have conservation-area camping at Valens Lake Conservation Area to the northwest and Fifty Point Conservation Area on the lakeshore toward Grimsby, both with serviced sites, swimming, and water access.
For full sewer hookups and a more resort-style stay, the private parks are a quick hop north near Milton. Milton Heights Campground is clean and convenient right off Highway 401, and Toronto West KOA Holiday adds full-service amenities and pull-throughs about 20 to 30 minutes away. Between the provincial park, the conservation areas, and the private parks, you get a real public-versus-private range without driving far.
Big rigs need a little planning. The private parks and Bronte Creek's Prairie loop handle larger motorhomes and fifth wheels, but the rest of Bronte Creek, along with some conservation sites, suits rigs 32 feet and under. Whatever you drive, reserve ahead, because summer weekends and long weekends fill fast this close to Toronto. Below we break down the notable parks, booking windows, real nightly costs, when to come, and the day trips worth building around. Need to empty your tanks? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Burlington.
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Gear for Your Trip to Burlington
All Dump Stations Near Burlington
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anniversary Lodge - Camp Nemo | 2.7 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lost Forest Park | 3.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Association Of Atlantic RV Parks And Campgrounds | 4.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Bronte Creek Provincial Park (Camping Area) | 4.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Lawson Park | 8.4 mi | 4.3 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sun Retreats Flamborough | 9.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Gulliver's Lake RV Resort & Campground | 9.4 mi | 4.5 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Milton Heights Campground | 10.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Mcleod Park | 11.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Flamboro Valley Camping Resort Ltd. | 11.8 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
Anniversary Lodge - Camp Nemo
2.7 miLost Forest Park
3.2 miAssociation Of Atlantic RV Parks And Campgrounds
4.0 miBronte Creek Provincial Park (Camping Area)
4.2 miLawson Park
8.4 miSun Retreats Flamborough
9.4 miGulliver's Lake RV Resort & Campground
9.4 miMilton Heights Campground
10.7 miMcleod Park
11.7 miFlamboro Valley Camping Resort Ltd.
11.8 miTraveling to Burlington by RV
Burlington is easy to reach by RV and hard to get lost in. The QEW runs straight through the city along the lake, linking Toronto to the northeast and Niagara and the US border to the southwest, while Highway 403 and the 407 branch off toward Hamilton and the northern GTA. All are wide, big-rig-friendly freeways. The pinch points are the Burlington Skyway bridge and the QEW interchanges, which back up at rush hour and on summer Friday afternoons, so plan to travel midday or evening.
Bronte Creek Provincial Park sits right off the QEW at the Burloak exit with its entrance on Upper Middle Road West, so it is a simple approach even in a large rig. Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA are a short run up the 403 and 401 to the Milton exits. Valens Lake is northwest via Highway 6 and Regional Road 97, and Fifty Point is southwest along the QEW toward Grimsby. Once you are set up, day-trip Niagara Falls, about 90 km down the QEW, and Hamilton's escarpment waterfalls in a tow vehicle rather than moving the rig.
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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 Burlington, Ontario, 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 Burlington
Rates are in Canadian dollars. Because Burlington leans on public campgrounds, you can camp here for less than in a pure private-resort market. Bronte Creek Provincial Park electrical sites generally run about CAD $45 to $55 a night plus the Ontario Parks reservation fee, and the conservation-area parks, Valens Lake and Fifty Point, land in a similar range for serviced sites.
The private parks cost more but give you full hookups and more amenities. Expect roughly CAD $45 to $70 a night at Milton Heights Campground or Toronto West KOA Holiday in peak summer, with the KOA at the upper end. Weekly and seasonal rates lower the nightly cost if you are staying to explore Toronto, Hamilton, and Niagara. Budget a little extra for park day-use fees, Niagara attractions, and downtown parking on day trips. As everywhere in southern Ontario, shoulder-season nights in May, September, and early October run cheaper than the July and August peak.
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Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Burlington
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Best Time to Visit Burlington by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-8C - -1C
Crowds: Low
Bronte Creek and the conservation-area campgrounds close for the season. Cold and snowy, only a couple of private parks operate, so call ahead and expect winterized services.
Spring
Mar - May
3C - 12C
Crowds: Low
Bronte Creek opens around April into May as the ground dries. Cool, wet, and quiet, so it is cheap, but pack for chilly nights and muddy trails.
Summer
Jun - Aug
16C - 26C
Crowds: High
Peak season. Reserve Bronte Creek and private full-hookup sites weeks to months ahead for July and August weekends. Warm, humid, with lake-effect thunderstorms possible.
Fall
Sep - Oct
5C - 14C
Crowds: Medium
Crisp escarpment colour and the best value through Thanksgiving. Many parks close by mid-October, so confirm dates. Weekends still worth reserving, midweek easy.
Explore the Burlington Area
The move here is simple: book Bronte Creek Provincial Park early. It is a rare in-city provincial park, so it is popular, and the good electrical sites in the Prairie loop go fast for summer weekends. Get on ontarioparks.ca the moment the five-month reservation window opens for your dates, and request the Prairie loop if your rig is anywhere near 32 feet, since the Savannah, Woodlands, and Ravine loops are tighter.
If you need full sewer hookups or a bigger-rig-friendly pull-through, stay up the 401 at Milton Heights Campground or Toronto West KOA Holiday and treat Burlington as your day-trip hub. For a lakeside feel, Fifty Point Conservation Area and Valens Lake give you swimming and paddling with serviced sites at conservation-area prices.
Timing matters around here. Avoid the QEW and the Burlington Skyway during weekday rush hours and on summer Fridays, when traffic to Niagara backs up for miles. Fuel and propane are easy to find in the city, so top up before you settle. And do not overlook the free stuff: the Royal Botanical Gardens, the Spencer Smith Park waterfront, and the Bruce Trail along the escarpment are all worth a day. Come in September for pleasant weather, thinner crowds, and lower rates before the mid-October closings.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Burlington
What are the best RV parks near Burlington, Ontario?
The clear anchor is Bronte Creek Provincial Park, an Ontario Parks campground right in the Burlington and Oakville area with electrical sites, a historic farm, trails, and a massive summer pool. For lakeside camping, Fifty Point Conservation Area on Lake Ontario toward Grimsby and Valens Lake Conservation Area to the northwest both offer serviced sites and swimming. If you want full hookups and a resort feel, the private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, are a short drive up Highway 401. Together they give Burlington campers a strong mix of public nature and private convenience without a long haul.
Do RV parks near Burlington have full hookups?
Some do, some do not, so it pays to know the difference. The private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power, water, and sewer at the site. The public options are electrical-service parks: Bronte Creek Provincial Park provides 15, 30, and 50-amp electrical sites with water taps and a central sanitation station rather than sewer at each site, and the conservation-area parks are similar with serviced and unserviced sites plus a dump station. If you need full sewer hookups, book a private park; if electric plus a dump station works, the public parks are great value.
How much does RV camping cost near Burlington?
Rates are in Canadian dollars and, because Burlington leans on public campgrounds, you can camp for less than in a private-resort market. Bronte Creek Provincial Park electrical sites generally run about CAD $45 to $55 a night plus the Ontario Parks reservation fee, and the conservation-area parks, Valens Lake and Fifty Point, are in a similar range for serviced sites. The private parks cost more, roughly CAD $45 to $70 in peak summer, with Toronto West KOA at the top. Weekly and seasonal rates lower the nightly cost, and May, September, and early October run cheaper than midsummer.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Burlington?
For July and August, and especially long weekends, book weeks to months in advance. Bronte Creek Provincial Park uses the Ontario Parks reservation system with a five-month rolling window, and because it is a rare in-city provincial park it is popular, so the electrical sites in the Prairie loop sell out quickly for summer weekends. Reserve the day your window opens. The conservation-area parks and the private parks also fill their best sites early. In the shoulder seasons, May and September, midweek space is usually available with just a few days notice, but weekends still book up.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Burlington?
Late May through September is the core season, with warm, humid summers ideal for the lakefront and the escarpment. July and August are the busiest and hottest, so sites book out and the QEW jams on summer Fridays. Many RVers prefer September: pleasant weather, thinner crowds after Labour Day, and lower rates before the mid-October closings. Spring opens around April into May at Bronte Creek once the ground dries, though nights stay cool and trails can be muddy. Winter is quiet and cold with the public campgrounds closed and only a couple of private parks operating.
Can big rigs camp near Burlington?
Yes, with a bit of planning. The private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, take 40-foot motorhomes and large fifth wheels with full-hookup pull-throughs and easy 401 access. At Bronte Creek Provincial Park, the Prairie loop fits rigs up to 32 feet with a few longer sites, while the Savannah, Woodlands, and Ravine loops are tighter and better for smaller trailers. The QEW and 403 into Burlington are wide and big-rig friendly, though you will want to avoid the Skyway at rush hour. If you drive something large, base at a private park or Bronte Creek's Prairie loop and day-trip in a tow vehicle.
Is there a provincial park campground in Burlington?
Yes, and it is a real selling point. Bronte Creek Provincial Park sits right in the Burlington and Oakville area with its entrance off Upper Middle Road West near Bronte Road, just off the QEW. It has four camping loops with 15, 30, and 50-amp electrical sites, water taps, comfort stations with laundry, a sanitation station, hiking trails, a historic 1900s farm, and an enormous summer pool. It runs April through October and books through the Ontario Parks reservation system at ontarioparks.ca. Having a full provincial park inside the city is unusual for the GTA and makes Burlington a standout RV base.
Are there lakeside campgrounds near Burlington?
Yes. Fifty Point Conservation Area, run by the Hamilton Conservation Authority about 25 minutes southwest toward Grimsby, offers serviced camping right on Lake Ontario with a beach, marina, boat launch, and fishing. To the northwest, Valens Lake Conservation Area, run by Conservation Halton, gives you camping around a reservoir with swimming, paddling, and fishing in a more inland, family-oriented setting. Both are conservation-area parks with serviced and unserviced sites and dump stations, and both book through their respective conservation authorities online. If waterfront and swimming are priorities, these two beat the inland provincial and private parks for lake access.
Are there free or first-come RV sites near Burlington?
Not really. Burlington is fully built up along the Lake Ontario shore, so there is no dispersed camping, boondocking, or Crown land near the city, and casual overnight RV parking on streets or in lots is not permitted. Nearly every campsite in the area is reservation-based through Ontario Parks, the conservation authorities, or a private park. To find free or first-come camping you would have to drive well north toward cottage country and the Canadian Shield. Around Burlington, plan to reserve a serviced or electrical site in advance, especially for any summer weekend.
Can I use Burlington as a base to visit Niagara Falls and Toronto?
Definitely. Burlington sits almost exactly halfway between the two. Niagara Falls is about 90 km southwest down the QEW, an easy day trip, and downtown Toronto is roughly 45 minutes to an hour northeast depending on traffic, or a relaxed ride on the GO Train. Hamilton and its escarpment waterfalls are just minutes away up Highway 403. Rather than move your rig into any of these cities, leave it set up at the campground and explore in a tow vehicle or by GO Transit. That central location is one of the best reasons to camp around Burlington.
Are campgrounds near Burlington open in winter?
Mostly not. Bronte Creek Provincial Park and the conservation-area campgrounds are seasonal, typically April or May through October, and they close once the cold sets in. A couple of private parks operate year-round or run an extended season for hardy travelers, but services are limited, water systems are often winterized, and overnight lows drop well below freezing with snow. If you are passing through in the cold months, call ahead to confirm what is open and what services are running. For most RVers, the comfortable camping window around Burlington is May through early October.
Which is better near Burlington, a public or private campground?
It comes down to hookups and setting. The public options, led by Bronte Creek Provincial Park plus the conservation-area parks, give you a greener, more natural experience, trails and beaches, and better value, but generally electrical service and a shared dump station rather than sewer at the site, with size limits on the biggest rigs. The private parks near Milton cost more but deliver full hookups, resort amenities, and easy big-rig access off the 401. Our take: choose Bronte Creek for nature, value, and its in-city location if your rig fits, and a private park if you need full sewer hookups and maximum convenience.
Do I need a tow vehicle to camp near Burlington?
You do not need one, but it makes exploring far easier. All the campgrounds are reachable by RV on wide freeways and have parking, but you will not want to drive a 40-footer into downtown Toronto, through Niagara, or up narrow escarpment roads to the waterfalls. A tow vehicle lets you leave the rig set up and day-trip comfortably. If you are driving a motorhome without a toad, lean on the GO Train into Toronto and pick a campground with easy highway access so you can reach Niagara and Hamilton without threading the big rig through downtown traffic every day.
What are the best RV parks near Burlington, Ontario?
The clear anchor is Bronte Creek Provincial Park, an Ontario Parks campground right in the Burlington and Oakville area with electrical sites, a historic farm, trails, and a massive summer pool. For lakeside camping, Fifty Point Conservation Area on Lake Ontario toward Grimsby and Valens Lake Conservation Area to the northwest both offer serviced sites and swimming. If you want full hookups and a resort feel, the private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, are a short drive up Highway 401. Together they give Burlington campers a strong mix of public nature and private convenience without a long haul.
Do RV parks near Burlington have full hookups?
Some do, some do not, so it pays to know the difference. The private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, offer full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power, water, and sewer at the site. The public options are electrical-service parks: Bronte Creek Provincial Park provides 15, 30, and 50-amp electrical sites with water taps and a central sanitation station rather than sewer at each site, and the conservation-area parks are similar with serviced and unserviced sites plus a dump station. If you need full sewer hookups, book a private park; if electric plus a dump station works, the public parks are great value.
How much does RV camping cost near Burlington?
Rates are in Canadian dollars and, because Burlington leans on public campgrounds, you can camp for less than in a private-resort market. Bronte Creek Provincial Park electrical sites generally run about CAD $45 to $55 a night plus the Ontario Parks reservation fee, and the conservation-area parks, Valens Lake and Fifty Point, are in a similar range for serviced sites. The private parks cost more, roughly CAD $45 to $70 in peak summer, with Toronto West KOA at the top. Weekly and seasonal rates lower the nightly cost, and May, September, and early October run cheaper than midsummer.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite near Burlington?
For July and August, and especially long weekends, book weeks to months in advance. Bronte Creek Provincial Park uses the Ontario Parks reservation system with a five-month rolling window, and because it is a rare in-city provincial park it is popular, so the electrical sites in the Prairie loop sell out quickly for summer weekends. Reserve the day your window opens. The conservation-area parks and the private parks also fill their best sites early. In the shoulder seasons, May and September, midweek space is usually available with just a few days notice, but weekends still book up.
When is the best time to go RV camping near Burlington?
Late May through September is the core season, with warm, humid summers ideal for the lakefront and the escarpment. July and August are the busiest and hottest, so sites book out and the QEW jams on summer Fridays. Many RVers prefer September: pleasant weather, thinner crowds after Labour Day, and lower rates before the mid-October closings. Spring opens around April into May at Bronte Creek once the ground dries, though nights stay cool and trails can be muddy. Winter is quiet and cold with the public campgrounds closed and only a couple of private parks operating.
Can big rigs camp near Burlington?
Yes, with a bit of planning. The private parks near Milton, Milton Heights Campground and Toronto West KOA Holiday, take 40-foot motorhomes and large fifth wheels with full-hookup pull-throughs and easy 401 access. At Bronte Creek Provincial Park, the Prairie loop fits rigs up to 32 feet with a few longer sites, while the Savannah, Woodlands, and Ravine loops are tighter and better for smaller trailers. The QEW and 403 into Burlington are wide and big-rig friendly, though you will want to avoid the Skyway at rush hour. If you drive something large, base at a private park or Bronte Creek's Prairie loop and day-trip in a tow vehicle.
Is there a provincial park campground in Burlington?
Yes, and it is a real selling point. Bronte Creek Provincial Park sits right in the Burlington and Oakville area with its entrance off Upper Middle Road West near Bronte Road, just off the QEW. It has four camping loops with 15, 30, and 50-amp electrical sites, water taps, comfort stations with laundry, a sanitation station, hiking trails, a historic 1900s farm, and an enormous summer pool. It runs April through October and books through the Ontario Parks reservation system at ontarioparks.ca. Having a full provincial park inside the city is unusual for the GTA and makes Burlington a standout RV base.
Are there lakeside campgrounds near Burlington?
Yes. Fifty Point Conservation Area, run by the Hamilton Conservation Authority about 25 minutes southwest toward Grimsby, offers serviced camping right on Lake Ontario with a beach, marina, boat launch, and fishing. To the northwest, Valens Lake Conservation Area, run by Conservation Halton, gives you camping around a reservoir with swimming, paddling, and fishing in a more inland, family-oriented setting. Both are conservation-area parks with serviced and unserviced sites and dump stations, and both book through their respective conservation authorities online. If waterfront and swimming are priorities, these two beat the inland provincial and private parks for lake access.
Are there free or first-come RV sites near Burlington?
Not really. Burlington is fully built up along the Lake Ontario shore, so there is no dispersed camping, boondocking, or Crown land near the city, and casual overnight RV parking on streets or in lots is not permitted. Nearly every campsite in the area is reservation-based through Ontario Parks, the conservation authorities, or a private park. To find free or first-come camping you would have to drive well north toward cottage country and the Canadian Shield. Around Burlington, plan to reserve a serviced or electrical site in advance, especially for any summer weekend.
Can I use Burlington as a base to visit Niagara Falls and Toronto?
Definitely. Burlington sits almost exactly halfway between the two. Niagara Falls is about 90 km southwest down the QEW, an easy day trip, and downtown Toronto is roughly 45 minutes to an hour northeast depending on traffic, or a relaxed ride on the GO Train. Hamilton and its escarpment waterfalls are just minutes away up Highway 403. Rather than move your rig into any of these cities, leave it set up at the campground and explore in a tow vehicle or by GO Transit. That central location is one of the best reasons to camp around Burlington.
Are campgrounds near Burlington open in winter?
Mostly not. Bronte Creek Provincial Park and the conservation-area campgrounds are seasonal, typically April or May through October, and they close once the cold sets in. A couple of private parks operate year-round or run an extended season for hardy travelers, but services are limited, water systems are often winterized, and overnight lows drop well below freezing with snow. If you are passing through in the cold months, call ahead to confirm what is open and what services are running. For most RVers, the comfortable camping window around Burlington is May through early October.
Which is better near Burlington, a public or private campground?
It comes down to hookups and setting. The public options, led by Bronte Creek Provincial Park plus the conservation-area parks, give you a greener, more natural experience, trails and beaches, and better value, but generally electrical service and a shared dump station rather than sewer at the site, with size limits on the biggest rigs. The private parks near Milton cost more but deliver full hookups, resort amenities, and easy big-rig access off the 401. Our take: choose Bronte Creek for nature, value, and its in-city location if your rig fits, and a private park if you need full sewer hookups and maximum convenience.
Do I need a tow vehicle to camp near Burlington?
You do not need one, but it makes exploring far easier. All the campgrounds are reachable by RV on wide freeways and have parking, but you will not want to drive a 40-footer into downtown Toronto, through Niagara, or up narrow escarpment roads to the waterfalls. A tow vehicle lets you leave the rig set up and day-trip comfortably. If you are driving a motorhome without a toad, lean on the GO Train into Toronto and pick a campground with easy highway access so you can reach Niagara and Hamilton without threading the big rig through downtown traffic every day.
Are there free dump stations in Burlington?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Burlington.
All Dump Stations Near Burlington (91)
RV ParkAnniversary Lodge - Camp Nemo
RV ParkLost Forest Park
RV ParkAssociation Of Atlantic RV Parks And Campgrounds
RV ParkBronte Creek Provincial Park (Camping Area)
RV ParkLawson Park
RV ParkMilton Heights Campground
RV ParkMcleod Park
RV Park





