RV Parks In Grand Bend, Ontario
43.3170° N, 81.7500° W
Quick Overview
Grand Bend is a classic Lake Huron beach resort town in southwestern Ontario, about an hour northwest of London on Highway 21, beloved for its long sand beach, lively summer scene, and some of the most spectacular sunsets in the province. For RVers it is best known as the gateway to Pinery Provincial Park, one of Ontario's premier camping destinations, just south of town. The combination of a fun beach town and a world-class provincial park makes this a top summer draw, with families returning year after year for the sand, the warm shallow water, and the easy walkable village full of patios, shops, and ice cream. Most travelers come for the beach and Pinery, and the season is firmly summer, when everything is open and the lake is warm enough to enjoy.
The headline campground is Pinery Provincial Park, 9 km south, a huge park with 1,275 sites across three campgrounds, 404 of them with electrical hookups, plus a dump station at the entrance, 10 km of sand beach, rare oak savanna, hiking, and canoeing on the Old Ausable Channel. Note that Pinery has electrical but no water or sewer at the sites. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Silver Birches RV Resort near Port Franks, about 10 km south, has 143 full-hookup concrete-pad sites with pull-throughs and three pools, while Birch Bark Trailer Park northeast of town offers wooded sites. More family campgrounds line the shore toward Ipperwash. Together they cover every style from a busy resort to a quiet provincial-park loop.
Reservations are critical here. Pinery books through Ontario Parks five months ahead at 7 a.m. Eastern, and the electrical sites can vanish within minutes for prime summer weekends, so plan like it is a ticket sale. The private parks book directly. Most provincial sites are electrical-only, so use the dump station for tanks. The season runs June through September, with July and August the warmest and busiest. Between Pinery's beach and forest, the full-hookup private resorts, and the sunset-famous town beach, Grand Bend offers RVers one of the best beach-camping experiences in Ontario, if you book early.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Grand Bend
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Gear for Your Trip to Grand Bend
All Dump Stations Near Grand Bend
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birchbark Trailer Park | 2.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Klondyke Trailer Park | 4.4 mi | 4.3 | RV Park | Varies |
| Driftwood Park On Lake Huron | 7.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Harmony Woods Camp Ground | 7.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Oakridge Family Campground | 9.0 mi | 4.6 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Pinehurst Trailer Park | 9.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Sun Retreats Ipperwash | 13.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Elliott Park | 13.7 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Our Ponderosa | A Parkbridge Cottage & RV Resort | 14.6 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Kerr's Campground | 15.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Birchbark Trailer Park
2.7 miKlondyke Trailer Park
4.4 miDriftwood Park On Lake Huron
7.3 miHarmony Woods Camp Ground
7.9 miOakridge Family Campground
9.0 miPinehurst Trailer Park
9.1 miSun Retreats Ipperwash
13.0 miElliott Park
13.7 miOur Ponderosa | A Parkbridge Cottage & RV Resort
14.6 miKerr's Campground
15.6 miTraveling to Grand Bend by RV
Grand Bend is easy to reach by RV. Highway 21, the Bluewater Highway, runs north-south through town along the Lake Huron shore, with London about 65 km southeast and Sarnia roughly 60 km south, both connected by good regional highways. It is standard all-season driving with no special RV restrictions, so getting here and to Pinery, 9 km south on Highway 21, is straightforward for any rig. The one weather caveat is winter, when lake-effect snow squalls can blow up quickly near the shoreline with heavy snow and strong winds, but that is well outside the RV season. In summer, the main challenge is simply traffic and parking in the busy village on peak weekends.
The town and surrounding area cover RV needs. Fuel and groceries are available in Grand Bend, with a larger selection in nearby Strathroy or London, propane is sold at outlets like Canadian Tire, and RV dealers and repair are within reach in the region. Pinery Provincial Park has a dump station at its entrance, and the private parks have their own dump facilities. Plan your trip for June through September, when the parks are open and the lake is warm, and aim for midweek or the shoulder months if you want to avoid the heaviest crowds. You can check current road conditions through Ontario 511 before traveling, especially in shoulder season.
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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 Grand Bend, 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 Grand Bend
Grand Bend offers a clear split between value provincial camping and pricier full-hookup private resorts. Pinery Provincial Park charges standard Ontario Parks rates, with a modest premium for the electrical sites, which is excellent value given the 10 km of beach, the rare ecology, and the quality of the park, and it is the budget-friendly choice if you can manage with electric-only camping and the entrance dump station. The catch is availability rather than price: the best sites book out months ahead, so planning, not money, is the real currency at Pinery.
The private parks cost more but add full hookups and resort amenities. Silver Birches near Port Franks, with full-hookup concrete-pad sites and three pools, sits at the higher end of the local range and is worth it for families wanting sewer at the site and a pool, while smaller parks like Birch Bark offer simpler wooded sites. Area rates run roughly from the low end for basic sites to higher for deluxe full hookups, averaging in the mid range. There is no free camping in this developed beach area. Your other costs, fuel and groceries, are reasonable. A smart approach is an electrical site at Pinery for the beach and nature, with a private full-hookup night if you want a pool and sewer.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Grand Bend
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Best Time to Visit Grand Bend by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-8C - -2C
Crowds: Low
Cold with lake-effect snow squalls near the shoreline; the parks are closed and it is not an RV season.
Spring
Mar - May
3C - 12C
Crowds: Low
Cool and showery; the parks open and stay quiet before the summer rush.
Summer
Jun - Aug
15C - 26C
Crowds: High
Warm beach-town days; July and August weekends are very crowded, so book Pinery early.
Fall
Sep - Oct
5C - 14C
Crowds: Medium
Pleasant with fall foliage and far fewer crowds; an excellent shoulder season.
Explore the Grand Bend Area
Treat the Pinery reservation as the most important step of your trip. Ontario Parks opens bookings five months ahead at 7 a.m. Eastern, and Pinery is one of the busiest parks in the province, so its electrical and prime sites can sell out within minutes for July and August weekends. Have your dates and a few preferred sites chosen from the park map and log in right at opening. If you miss out, the private parks, Silver Birches near Port Franks with its full hookups and pools, or Birch Bark northeast of town, are good alternatives that book directly, and they offer the full hookups that Pinery lacks. Either way, do not count on finding summer space at the last minute.
Once you are settled, enjoy the beach-town magic. Grand Bend's Blue Flag main beach has soft sand, a boardwalk, a splash pad, and the famous west-facing sunsets that draw crowds to the shore every clear evening, so plan at least one sunset at the beach. Pinery itself has 10 km of quieter sand beach, rare oak savanna with great hiking, and canoe rentals on the Old Ausable Channel, easily filling several days. In town, the Huron Country Playhouse stages professional summer theatre, and the village is packed with patios and ice cream. Come midweek or in June and September for a calmer experience, and remember that Lake Huron, while warm by Great Lakes standards in late summer, still cools off quickly.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Grand Bend
What RV camping is available in Grand Bend, Ontario?
The headline option is Pinery Provincial Park, 9 km south of town, a huge public park with 1,275 sites across three campgrounds, 404 of them electrical, plus a dump station, 10 km of sand beach, and oak-savanna hiking. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Silver Birches RV Resort near Port Franks has 143 full-hookup concrete-pad sites with pull-throughs and three pools, and Birch Bark Trailer Park northeast of town offers wooded sites. More family campgrounds line the shore toward Ipperwash. Together they cover a major provincial park, full-hookup private resorts, and smaller campgrounds, so there is something for every style of RVer.
Does Pinery Provincial Park have hookups?
Pinery has electrical hookups but not full hookups. Across its three campgrounds, 404 of the 1,275 sites offer electrical service, while the rest are non-electrical, and there is no water or sewer at any individual site. Instead, the park provides water taps throughout and a dump station at the entrance for emptying tanks and filling fresh water. So you can have power at an electrical site, but you will use the dump station rather than sewer hookups. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site, choose a private RV park like Silver Birches near Port Franks. For Pinery, book an electrical site early and plan to use the dump station.
How do I get a campsite at Pinery Provincial Park?
Book early and book fast, because Pinery is one of Ontario's most popular parks. All sites are reserved through the Ontario Parks system, with the booking window opening five months in advance at 7 a.m. Eastern, and the electrical and prime beach-area sites can sell out within minutes for summer weekends. Have your exact dates and several preferred site numbers chosen from the park map before the window opens, and log in right at 7 a.m. If you cannot get the dates you want, try midweek, consider non-electrical sites, which are easier to get, or book a nearby private park like Silver Birches as a strong alternative.
When is the best time to RV in Grand Bend?
June through September is the season, with the choice depending on your priorities. July and August offer the warmest weather, the liveliest beach-town atmosphere, and the warmest Lake Huron water, but also the biggest crowds and the most competitive campsite bookings. June and September are quieter and still pleasant, ideal if you prefer calm, and September adds fall colour. Winter is cold with lake-effect snow squalls and the parks closed, so it is not an RV season. For the classic Grand Bend beach experience, come in July or August and book well ahead; for a more relaxed trip, target the June or September shoulders.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Grand Bend?
Yes. While Pinery Provincial Park offers electrical-only sites with a dump station, the private parks provide full hookups. Silver Birches RV Resort, about 10 km south near Port Franks, is the standout, with 143 full-hookup concrete-pad sites including pull-throughs up to 45 feet, 30 and 15-amp service, and three pools, making it a great family choice with sewer at the site. Birch Bark Trailer Park northeast of town and additional campgrounds toward Ipperwash round out the private options. So if you want full hookups rather than the electrical-only sites at Pinery, base at one of these private parks and day-trip to the beaches and the provincial park.
What is Grand Bend known for?
Grand Bend is famous as a Lake Huron beach resort town, and its two biggest draws are the beach and the sunsets. The main beach is a Blue Flag certified stretch of soft sand with a boardwalk, splash pad, and a lively village of patios, shops, and ice cream right behind it, and the west-facing shore delivers spectacular sunsets that draw crowds every clear evening. Just south, Pinery Provincial Park adds 10 km of quieter beach, rare oak savanna, and excellent hiking and paddling. The town also hosts the Huron Country Playhouse summer theatre. The mix of a fun beach town and a world-class park is what makes Grand Bend a top Ontario summer destination.
Can large RVs camp at Pinery Provincial Park?
They can, but with some planning around site type. Pinery accommodates RVs, but the official guidance notes that many electrical sites suit smaller rigs, so larger RVs may need to choose non-electrical sites or carefully check site dimensions when booking through Ontario Parks. The reservation system lets you filter and review individual site lengths and types, so confirm a site fits your rig before you book. For the largest setups wanting full hookups and easy maneuvering, a private park like Silver Birches near Port Franks, with full-hookup concrete pads and pull-throughs to 45 feet, is often a better fit. Check site details carefully either way.
Do I need reservations for Grand Bend campgrounds?
For summer, absolutely. Pinery Provincial Park is one of the busiest parks in Ontario and reserves through the Ontario Parks system five months ahead, with prime sites selling out within minutes for July and August weekends, so reserving is essential. The private parks, Silver Birches, Birch Bark, and others, also book directly and fill through the warm months in this popular beach town. Showing up without a reservation on a summer weekend is very risky. Midweek and in the June and September shoulders you have better odds, but the safe approach is to book your site as early as possible and have a backup park in mind.
How warm is the water at Grand Bend?
Lake Huron at Grand Bend is among the warmer Great Lakes swimming spots, but it is still a big, deep lake. The water warms through summer and is usually comfortable for swimming in July and August, when the shallow, sandy main beach heats up nicely and lifeguards are on duty in the peak season. Earlier in the summer the water can be bracing, and even in August an offshore wind can cool things quickly. For the warmest swimming, plan a mid-to-late summer visit. The gradual, sandy entry at both the town beach and Pinery makes it especially good for families with young children once the water warms up.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Grand Bend?
Pinery Provincial Park has a dump station at its entrance for emptying holding tanks and filling fresh water, which serves the many electrical and non-electrical sites that lack sewer hookups. The private parks, such as Silver Birches near Port Franks, have their own dump facilities, and full-hookup sites there let you dump right at your site. Because the area is a developed beach destination, dump access is good, but if you are staying at Pinery on an electrical-only site, plan to use the entrance dump station. There is no informal dumping in the village, so rely on the park facilities for servicing your rig.
Is Grand Bend good for families with an RV?
It is one of the best family beach destinations in Ontario. The main beach has soft, shallow, sandy water that is ideal for young children, with a splash pad, boardwalk, and lifeguards in summer, and the walkable village is full of ice cream, mini golf, and casual dining. Pinery Provincial Park adds 10 km of quieter beach, easy hiking trails, a visitor centre with nature programs, and canoe rentals on the calm Old Ausable Channel, perfect for families. The private parks like Silver Birches sweeten the deal with pools and playgrounds. Between the beaches, the village, and the park, families find more than enough to fill a week, especially in warm midsummer.
Can I camp for free near Grand Bend?
No, free camping is not available in this developed beach area. Grand Bend and the surrounding Lake Huron shore are built up and oriented around the provincial and private parks, with no Crown land or boondocking spots nearby. The camping options are Pinery Provincial Park, with its electrical and non-electrical sites at standard Ontario Parks rates, and the various private campgrounds, all of which charge fees. The good news is that Pinery offers genuine value for the quality of the park, and non-electrical provincial sites are the most economical choice. For budget travelers, an unserviced site at Pinery is the cheapest way to enjoy this stretch of Lake Huron.
What else can I do near Grand Bend besides the beach?
Plenty beyond the sand. Pinery Provincial Park, just south, offers excellent hiking through rare oak savanna and dune ecosystems, birdwatching, and canoeing or kayaking on the sheltered Old Ausable Channel, a lovely paddle. The Huron Country Playhouse stages professional summer theatre with Broadway musicals and comedies. The village itself has shopping, patios, and mini golf, and the surrounding Huron County countryside has farm stands, cycling routes, and other beach towns along the Lake Huron shore to explore. Anglers fish the lake and channel, and the famous sunsets are an evening event in themselves. Between nature, theatre, paddling, and the town, Grand Bend offers a well-rounded RV getaway.
What RV camping is available in Grand Bend, Ontario?
The headline option is Pinery Provincial Park, 9 km south of town, a huge public park with 1,275 sites across three campgrounds, 404 of them electrical, plus a dump station, 10 km of sand beach, and oak-savanna hiking. For full hookups, the private parks deliver: Silver Birches RV Resort near Port Franks has 143 full-hookup concrete-pad sites with pull-throughs and three pools, and Birch Bark Trailer Park northeast of town offers wooded sites. More family campgrounds line the shore toward Ipperwash. Together they cover a major provincial park, full-hookup private resorts, and smaller campgrounds, so there is something for every style of RVer.
Does Pinery Provincial Park have hookups?
Pinery has electrical hookups but not full hookups. Across its three campgrounds, 404 of the 1,275 sites offer electrical service, while the rest are non-electrical, and there is no water or sewer at any individual site. Instead, the park provides water taps throughout and a dump station at the entrance for emptying tanks and filling fresh water. So you can have power at an electrical site, but you will use the dump station rather than sewer hookups. If you want full hookups with sewer at your site, choose a private RV park like Silver Birches near Port Franks. For Pinery, book an electrical site early and plan to use the dump station.
How do I get a campsite at Pinery Provincial Park?
Book early and book fast, because Pinery is one of Ontario's most popular parks. All sites are reserved through the Ontario Parks system, with the booking window opening five months in advance at 7 a.m. Eastern, and the electrical and prime beach-area sites can sell out within minutes for summer weekends. Have your exact dates and several preferred site numbers chosen from the park map before the window opens, and log in right at 7 a.m. If you cannot get the dates you want, try midweek, consider non-electrical sites, which are easier to get, or book a nearby private park like Silver Birches as a strong alternative.
When is the best time to RV in Grand Bend?
June through September is the season, with the choice depending on your priorities. July and August offer the warmest weather, the liveliest beach-town atmosphere, and the warmest Lake Huron water, but also the biggest crowds and the most competitive campsite bookings. June and September are quieter and still pleasant, ideal if you prefer calm, and September adds fall colour. Winter is cold with lake-effect snow squalls and the parks closed, so it is not an RV season. For the classic Grand Bend beach experience, come in July or August and book well ahead; for a more relaxed trip, target the June or September shoulders.
Are there full-hookup RV parks near Grand Bend?
Yes. While Pinery Provincial Park offers electrical-only sites with a dump station, the private parks provide full hookups. Silver Birches RV Resort, about 10 km south near Port Franks, is the standout, with 143 full-hookup concrete-pad sites including pull-throughs up to 45 feet, 30 and 15-amp service, and three pools, making it a great family choice with sewer at the site. Birch Bark Trailer Park northeast of town and additional campgrounds toward Ipperwash round out the private options. So if you want full hookups rather than the electrical-only sites at Pinery, base at one of these private parks and day-trip to the beaches and the provincial park.
What is Grand Bend known for?
Grand Bend is famous as a Lake Huron beach resort town, and its two biggest draws are the beach and the sunsets. The main beach is a Blue Flag certified stretch of soft sand with a boardwalk, splash pad, and a lively village of patios, shops, and ice cream right behind it, and the west-facing shore delivers spectacular sunsets that draw crowds every clear evening. Just south, Pinery Provincial Park adds 10 km of quieter beach, rare oak savanna, and excellent hiking and paddling. The town also hosts the Huron Country Playhouse summer theatre. The mix of a fun beach town and a world-class park is what makes Grand Bend a top Ontario summer destination.
Can large RVs camp at Pinery Provincial Park?
They can, but with some planning around site type. Pinery accommodates RVs, but the official guidance notes that many electrical sites suit smaller rigs, so larger RVs may need to choose non-electrical sites or carefully check site dimensions when booking through Ontario Parks. The reservation system lets you filter and review individual site lengths and types, so confirm a site fits your rig before you book. For the largest setups wanting full hookups and easy maneuvering, a private park like Silver Birches near Port Franks, with full-hookup concrete pads and pull-throughs to 45 feet, is often a better fit. Check site details carefully either way.
Do I need reservations for Grand Bend campgrounds?
For summer, absolutely. Pinery Provincial Park is one of the busiest parks in Ontario and reserves through the Ontario Parks system five months ahead, with prime sites selling out within minutes for July and August weekends, so reserving is essential. The private parks, Silver Birches, Birch Bark, and others, also book directly and fill through the warm months in this popular beach town. Showing up without a reservation on a summer weekend is very risky. Midweek and in the June and September shoulders you have better odds, but the safe approach is to book your site as early as possible and have a backup park in mind.
How warm is the water at Grand Bend?
Lake Huron at Grand Bend is among the warmer Great Lakes swimming spots, but it is still a big, deep lake. The water warms through summer and is usually comfortable for swimming in July and August, when the shallow, sandy main beach heats up nicely and lifeguards are on duty in the peak season. Earlier in the summer the water can be bracing, and even in August an offshore wind can cool things quickly. For the warmest swimming, plan a mid-to-late summer visit. The gradual, sandy entry at both the town beach and Pinery makes it especially good for families with young children once the water warms up.
Where can I dump my RV tanks in Grand Bend?
Pinery Provincial Park has a dump station at its entrance for emptying holding tanks and filling fresh water, which serves the many electrical and non-electrical sites that lack sewer hookups. The private parks, such as Silver Birches near Port Franks, have their own dump facilities, and full-hookup sites there let you dump right at your site. Because the area is a developed beach destination, dump access is good, but if you are staying at Pinery on an electrical-only site, plan to use the entrance dump station. There is no informal dumping in the village, so rely on the park facilities for servicing your rig.
Is Grand Bend good for families with an RV?
It is one of the best family beach destinations in Ontario. The main beach has soft, shallow, sandy water that is ideal for young children, with a splash pad, boardwalk, and lifeguards in summer, and the walkable village is full of ice cream, mini golf, and casual dining. Pinery Provincial Park adds 10 km of quieter beach, easy hiking trails, a visitor centre with nature programs, and canoe rentals on the calm Old Ausable Channel, perfect for families. The private parks like Silver Birches sweeten the deal with pools and playgrounds. Between the beaches, the village, and the park, families find more than enough to fill a week, especially in warm midsummer.
Can I camp for free near Grand Bend?
No, free camping is not available in this developed beach area. Grand Bend and the surrounding Lake Huron shore are built up and oriented around the provincial and private parks, with no Crown land or boondocking spots nearby. The camping options are Pinery Provincial Park, with its electrical and non-electrical sites at standard Ontario Parks rates, and the various private campgrounds, all of which charge fees. The good news is that Pinery offers genuine value for the quality of the park, and non-electrical provincial sites are the most economical choice. For budget travelers, an unserviced site at Pinery is the cheapest way to enjoy this stretch of Lake Huron.
What else can I do near Grand Bend besides the beach?
Plenty beyond the sand. Pinery Provincial Park, just south, offers excellent hiking through rare oak savanna and dune ecosystems, birdwatching, and canoeing or kayaking on the sheltered Old Ausable Channel, a lovely paddle. The Huron Country Playhouse stages professional summer theatre with Broadway musicals and comedies. The village itself has shopping, patios, and mini golf, and the surrounding Huron County countryside has farm stands, cycling routes, and other beach towns along the Lake Huron shore to explore. Anglers fish the lake and channel, and the famous sunsets are an evening event in themselves. Between nature, theatre, paddling, and the town, Grand Bend offers a well-rounded RV getaway.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Grand Bend?
The highest-rated station is Lambton United Church Camp with a rating of 4.7/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Grand Bend?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Grand Bend.
All Dump Stations Near Grand Bend (72)
RV ParkBirchbark Trailer Park
RV Park with Dump StationsKlondyke Trailer Park
RV ParkDriftwood Park On Lake Huron
RV ParkHarmony Woods Camp Ground
RV ParkPinehurst Trailer Park
RV ParkOakridge Family Campground
RV ParkSun Retreats Ipperwash
RV Park with Dump Stations






