RV Parks In Granby, Quebec
45.4001° N, 72.7324° W
Quick Overview
Granby anchors the western Eastern Townships, an hour east of Montreal on Autoroute 10, and it is one of Quebec's best family RV destinations thanks to the famous Zoo de Granby and its Amazoo water park. But there is a lot more here for campers: a beautiful Sepaq national park minutes from town, the Mont Bromont resort area with its ski hill, mountain biking, and water park, and the Townships wine route rolling through the surrounding hills. For RVers this adds up to a base with genuine attractions, easy big-rig highway access, and a good mix of full-service private parks and public camping close by. Families in particular treat Granby as a destination rather than a stopover, settling in for several nights to work through the zoo, the water parks, and the surrounding trails and vineyards without ever moving the rig.
In town, Camping Granby is the closest option to the zoo, with serviced electric-and-water RV sites, and Camping Bon-Jour is a family-oriented park in the area. A short drive east toward the ski hill, the Granby / Bromont KOA Holiday offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, pull-through sites, and a pool. The public standout is Parc national de la Yamaska, a Sepaq park at Roxton Pond about 15 minutes from Granby, with serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites around Reservoir Choiniere, plus a swimming beach, a cycling network, and paddling. That gives you a clear choice between full-hookup private convenience near the attractions and a lake-and-beach national-park experience just outside town. Big rigs do well at the KOA and on the serviced Yamaska loops; confirm length on the smaller sites. Autoroute 10 reaches town on four-lane, so getting a big rig here is easy. Book national-park sites through Sepaq. Staying a while and need to dump? See our RV dump stations guide for Granby.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Granby
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Gear for Your Trip to Granby
All Dump Stations Near Granby
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camping St-alphonse | 6.9 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Koa Granby-bromont | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Lac-sources | 9.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping La Riviere Du Passant | 9.8 mi | 3.8 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Domaine Tournesol | 12.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Fairmount | 12.1 mi | 4.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Vallee Bleue | 14.0 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping de L'ile | 15.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping De L'ile | 15.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Domaine Des Iles Enchantees | 15.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Camping St-alphonse
6.9 miCamping Koa Granby-bromont
7.5 miCamping Lac-sources
9.0 miCamping La Riviere Du Passant
9.8 miCamping Domaine Tournesol
12.1 miCamping Fairmount
12.1 miCamping Vallee Bleue
14.0 miCamping de L'ile
15.3 miCamping De L'ile
15.3 miDomaine Des Iles Enchantees
15.6 miTraveling to Granby by RV
Granby is easy to reach and well placed. Autoroute 10, the main four-lane highway between Montreal and Sherbrooke, runs just south of town, so big-rig access is simple, and Route 139 connects locally. Montreal is about an hour west and Sherbrooke roughly 40 minutes east, which puts a big chunk of southern Quebec within day-trip range. In town you will find full services: fuel, propane, groceries, and RV supplies, with more in the surrounding Townships towns. Camping Granby is right by the zoo, the Bromont KOA is a short hop east toward the resort area, and Parc national de la Yamaska is a quick, well-signed drive to Roxton Pond. If you are touring the Eastern Townships wine route or the Bromont and Sutton mountain areas, Granby makes a comfortable, central, well-supplied base. Reserve national-park sites at sepaq.com, where popular serviced sites clear quickly for summer.
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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 Granby, Quebec, 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 Granby
Camping around Granby sits near the Quebec average. Serviced private sites at Camping Granby and Camping Bon-Jour generally run in the $35 to $55 CAD range, and full-service sites at the Bromont KOA typically land between $50 and $85 CAD depending on season, hookups, and site type, with pull-through and premium sites at the top. Parc national de la Yamaska sites run roughly in the $30s to mid $40s CAD plus a park access fee, with serviced sites at the upper end. The public-versus-private gap is moderate, and the choice comes down to full hookups near the attractions versus a beach-and-lake national-park setting. Weekly rates at the private parks lower the nightly cost for longer family stays. July and August, especially around the zoo, price highest, while June and September are softer and easier to book.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Granby
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Best Time to Visit Granby by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-16C (3F) - -6C (21F)
Crowds: Low
Cold, snowy ski country; campgrounds closed, though Bromont draws winter visitors. Plan camping May onward.
Spring
Mar - May
2C (36F) - 13C (55F)
Crowds: Low
Parks open mid-May; a green, quiet time before the summer family rush, with cool nights.
Summer
Jun - Aug
15C (59F) - 26C (79F)
Crowds: High
Warm and busy around the zoo and water parks; book Yamaska serviced sites and the KOA well ahead for July and August.
Fall
Sep - Oct
4C (39F) - 14C (57F)
Crowds: Medium
Superb Townships color and wine harvest; best value; many parks open into early October, then close.
Explore the Granby Area
If you have kids, Granby sells itself: the Zoo de Granby and the on-site Amazoo water park can fill a full day or two, so plan a multi-night stay and buy tickets ahead in peak summer. Camping Granby is the closest base to the zoo, while the Bromont KOA pairs well with the Bromont water park and mountain biking. For nature, Parc national de la Yamaska is the move, with a swimming beach on the reservoir and the flat, scenic Estriade bike path running from Granby, ideal for a family ride. Book Sepaq sites the moment inventory opens in early November for the following summer, because serviced sites at Yamaska go fast. The wine route through the Townships is a lovely afternoon drive, and fall brings both superb color and the grape harvest. Summers can turn stormy in the afternoon, so keep an eye on the forecast and pick a well-drained site.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Granby
What are the best RV parks in Granby, Quebec?
Camping Granby is the closest in-town option to the Zoo de Granby, with serviced electric-and-water RV sites, and Camping Bon-Jour is a family-oriented park nearby. A short drive east, the Granby / Bromont KOA Holiday offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, pull-through sites, and a pool. The public standout is Parc national de la Yamaska, a Sepaq park at Roxton Pond about 15 minutes out, with serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites around a reservoir, plus a swimming beach and bike paths. The mix of full-hookup private parks near the attractions and a lake-and-beach national park makes Granby a strong family base.
Do Granby RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks. The Granby / Bromont KOA offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer on pull-through and back-in sites, and Camping Granby and Camping Bon-Jour provide serviced sites with electric and water. Parc national de la Yamaska offers serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites, with fewer full hookups, so you dump at a station on the way out. If full hookups matter, book the Bromont KOA; if you want lake-and-beach camping, Yamaska trades some services for a national-park setting. Confirm exact service levels per site when you reserve, since they vary between and within parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Granby?
It sits near the Quebec average. Serviced private sites at Camping Granby and Camping Bon-Jour generally run $35 to $55 CAD per night, and full-service sites at the Bromont KOA typically run $50 to $85 CAD depending on season, hookups, and site type, with pull-through and premium sites at the top. Parc national de la Yamaska sites run roughly in the $30s to mid $40s CAD plus a park access fee. The public-versus-private gap is moderate, so you are choosing between full hookups near the attractions and a beach-and-lake national-park setting. Weekly rates at private parks lower the nightly cost for longer family stays, and June and September are cheaper than the midsummer peak.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Granby?
For July and August, book early, especially if the zoo is your draw. The Bromont KOA and the in-town parks fill for peak summer, so reserve months ahead. Sepaq typically releases the following summer's national-park inventory in early November, and popular serviced sites at Parc national de la Yamaska can clear within hours of opening, so mark that date if you want a serviced site there. Midweek and the June or September shoulder seasons are much more flexible. If your trip is locked around a summer weekend at the zoo or water parks, treat early booking as essential, since this is one of Quebec's busier family destinations.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Granby?
June through September is the season, with the warmest weather and everything open in July and August, which is also the busiest and priciest window around the zoo and water parks. Our value picks are June and September: comfortable temperatures, thinner crowds, and easier bookings, with September adding superb Eastern Townships fall color and the wine harvest. Spring opens the parks in mid-May and is quiet. Winters are cold and snowy ski country, and campgrounds close. Plan the main RV season from June through September, and if you can travel outside the July-August peak, the shoulder months give you the best mix of weather, value, and availability.
Can big rigs camp near Granby?
Yes. The Granby / Bromont KOA has full-hookup, 50-amp, pull-through sites built for larger rigs, and access is easy because Autoroute 10 runs four-lane just south of town, so you are not threading a big rig down narrow roads. The in-town parks handle larger rigs on serviced sites, and Parc national de la Yamaska has serviced loops that accommodate bigger RVs, though some sites run smaller, so filter for length when booking. Between the easy highway approach from Montreal and the full services in Granby, this is a comfortable big-rig base for touring the western Eastern Townships and the Bromont resort area.
Is Granby good for a family RV trip?
It is one of the best family RV destinations in Quebec. The Zoo de Granby is one of the province's largest, with the Amazoo water park and an amusement area on site, easily filling a day or two. Add the Bromont water park and mountain-bike trails a short drive east, the swimming beach and easy cycling at Parc national de la Yamaska, and the flat Estriade bike path from town, and there is plenty to keep kids busy. Camping Granby puts you closest to the zoo, and the Bromont KOA offers family amenities like a pool. For a base built around family attractions with real camping nearby, Granby is hard to beat.
What is Parc national de la Yamaska like for RVers?
Parc national de la Yamaska, a Sepaq park at Roxton Pond about 15 minutes from Granby, is built around Reservoir Choiniere and offers a swimming beach, an extensive cycling and walking network, and paddling on the reservoir. For camping it has serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites, so there are options for RVs, with the serviced sites best for those wanting hookups, though the setting is more nature-focused than the full-hookup private parks in town. Book through Sepaq well ahead, since serviced sites clear quickly for summer weekends. Many RVers pair the nature and beach at Yamaska with a day at the zoo, making it a well-rounded family base just outside Granby.
Are there free or first-come campsites near Granby?
Not really. The western Eastern Townships around Granby are developed and settled, so free and dispersed camping is not available nearby, and the private and national-park campgrounds all operate on reservations. You can occasionally find a first-come or last-minute site midweek in the shoulder season, but for a reliable summer weekend, especially around the zoo, you should book. If you specifically want free or backcountry camping, you will need to look at more remote parts of Quebec. Around Granby, the practical and pleasant approach is to reserve a serviced private site or a Sepaq site at Parc national de la Yamaska.
Can I camp on a lake near Granby?
Yes. Parc national de la Yamaska is set around Reservoir Choiniere with a swimming beach and paddling, giving you a genuine lake-and-beach camping experience about 15 minutes from town. It is the best option here for being on the water, and its serviced sites suit RVs, though waterfront and beach-adjacent sites book first, so reserve early through Sepaq. The private parks in and around Granby are more oriented toward the attractions than the water, so if a lakeside site is your priority, aim for Yamaska. Combining a night or two at the reservoir with the zoo and Bromont day trips is a popular way to round out a Granby stay.
Do Granby campgrounds stay open in winter?
No, essentially all close for the season. Granby and the surrounding Townships are cold, snowy ski country in winter, and the campgrounds generally run from mid-May through early October before shutting down water and services. The Bromont resort area draws plenty of winter visitors for skiing, but that is hotel-and-chalet territory rather than RV camping. For a typical trip, plan Granby as a spring-through-fall destination, roughly mid-May to early October. If you want winter recreation in the area, you will be looking at lodging rather than campgrounds, as year-round RV sites are not the norm here. Confirm opening and closing dates directly, since they shift with the season.
Where can I dump tanks and get propane near Granby?
The full-service private parks, especially the Granby / Bromont KOA, have sewer hookups and dump facilities, and Parc national de la Yamaska has a dump station for use on your way out. Granby is a real regional town, so propane, fuel, water, and groceries are easy to find, making it a good place to restock during a Townships tour. If you are staying at a serviced-but-not-full site or a semi-serviced Sepaq site, plan to use the dump station rather than expecting sewer at your pad. For a broader list of public dump options in the western Eastern Townships, see our RV dump stations guide for the Granby area.
What else is there to do around Granby?
Beyond the zoo and water parks, the western Eastern Townships are full of outings. Mont Bromont offers mountain biking, a water park, and summer chairlift rides, and the surrounding hills hold the Townships wine route, with vineyards open for tastings, especially lovely in the fall harvest. The Estriade and wider bike-path network makes for easy, scenic riding straight from Granby. Nearby towns like Bromont and Waterloo add markets, shops, and restaurants. Parc national de la Yamaska covers the swimming, paddling, and hiking. Between family attractions, cycling, wine country, and a national park, there is easily several days of exploring from a Granby base, which is why so many RVers settle in here.
What are the best RV parks in Granby, Quebec?
Camping Granby is the closest in-town option to the Zoo de Granby, with serviced electric-and-water RV sites, and Camping Bon-Jour is a family-oriented park nearby. A short drive east, the Granby / Bromont KOA Holiday offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, pull-through sites, and a pool. The public standout is Parc national de la Yamaska, a Sepaq park at Roxton Pond about 15 minutes out, with serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites around a reservoir, plus a swimming beach and bike paths. The mix of full-hookup private parks near the attractions and a lake-and-beach national park makes Granby a strong family base.
Do Granby RV parks have full hookups?
Yes, at the private parks. The Granby / Bromont KOA offers full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service, water, and sewer on pull-through and back-in sites, and Camping Granby and Camping Bon-Jour provide serviced sites with electric and water. Parc national de la Yamaska offers serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites, with fewer full hookups, so you dump at a station on the way out. If full hookups matter, book the Bromont KOA; if you want lake-and-beach camping, Yamaska trades some services for a national-park setting. Confirm exact service levels per site when you reserve, since they vary between and within parks.
How much does RV camping cost in Granby?
It sits near the Quebec average. Serviced private sites at Camping Granby and Camping Bon-Jour generally run $35 to $55 CAD per night, and full-service sites at the Bromont KOA typically run $50 to $85 CAD depending on season, hookups, and site type, with pull-through and premium sites at the top. Parc national de la Yamaska sites run roughly in the $30s to mid $40s CAD plus a park access fee. The public-versus-private gap is moderate, so you are choosing between full hookups near the attractions and a beach-and-lake national-park setting. Weekly rates at private parks lower the nightly cost for longer family stays, and June and September are cheaper than the midsummer peak.
How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Granby?
For July and August, book early, especially if the zoo is your draw. The Bromont KOA and the in-town parks fill for peak summer, so reserve months ahead. Sepaq typically releases the following summer's national-park inventory in early November, and popular serviced sites at Parc national de la Yamaska can clear within hours of opening, so mark that date if you want a serviced site there. Midweek and the June or September shoulder seasons are much more flexible. If your trip is locked around a summer weekend at the zoo or water parks, treat early booking as essential, since this is one of Quebec's busier family destinations.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Granby?
June through September is the season, with the warmest weather and everything open in July and August, which is also the busiest and priciest window around the zoo and water parks. Our value picks are June and September: comfortable temperatures, thinner crowds, and easier bookings, with September adding superb Eastern Townships fall color and the wine harvest. Spring opens the parks in mid-May and is quiet. Winters are cold and snowy ski country, and campgrounds close. Plan the main RV season from June through September, and if you can travel outside the July-August peak, the shoulder months give you the best mix of weather, value, and availability.
Can big rigs camp near Granby?
Yes. The Granby / Bromont KOA has full-hookup, 50-amp, pull-through sites built for larger rigs, and access is easy because Autoroute 10 runs four-lane just south of town, so you are not threading a big rig down narrow roads. The in-town parks handle larger rigs on serviced sites, and Parc national de la Yamaska has serviced loops that accommodate bigger RVs, though some sites run smaller, so filter for length when booking. Between the easy highway approach from Montreal and the full services in Granby, this is a comfortable big-rig base for touring the western Eastern Townships and the Bromont resort area.
Is Granby good for a family RV trip?
It is one of the best family RV destinations in Quebec. The Zoo de Granby is one of the province's largest, with the Amazoo water park and an amusement area on site, easily filling a day or two. Add the Bromont water park and mountain-bike trails a short drive east, the swimming beach and easy cycling at Parc national de la Yamaska, and the flat Estriade bike path from town, and there is plenty to keep kids busy. Camping Granby puts you closest to the zoo, and the Bromont KOA offers family amenities like a pool. For a base built around family attractions with real camping nearby, Granby is hard to beat.
What is Parc national de la Yamaska like for RVers?
Parc national de la Yamaska, a Sepaq park at Roxton Pond about 15 minutes from Granby, is built around Reservoir Choiniere and offers a swimming beach, an extensive cycling and walking network, and paddling on the reservoir. For camping it has serviced, semi-serviced, and unserviced sites, so there are options for RVs, with the serviced sites best for those wanting hookups, though the setting is more nature-focused than the full-hookup private parks in town. Book through Sepaq well ahead, since serviced sites clear quickly for summer weekends. Many RVers pair the nature and beach at Yamaska with a day at the zoo, making it a well-rounded family base just outside Granby.
Are there free or first-come campsites near Granby?
Not really. The western Eastern Townships around Granby are developed and settled, so free and dispersed camping is not available nearby, and the private and national-park campgrounds all operate on reservations. You can occasionally find a first-come or last-minute site midweek in the shoulder season, but for a reliable summer weekend, especially around the zoo, you should book. If you specifically want free or backcountry camping, you will need to look at more remote parts of Quebec. Around Granby, the practical and pleasant approach is to reserve a serviced private site or a Sepaq site at Parc national de la Yamaska.
Can I camp on a lake near Granby?
Yes. Parc national de la Yamaska is set around Reservoir Choiniere with a swimming beach and paddling, giving you a genuine lake-and-beach camping experience about 15 minutes from town. It is the best option here for being on the water, and its serviced sites suit RVs, though waterfront and beach-adjacent sites book first, so reserve early through Sepaq. The private parks in and around Granby are more oriented toward the attractions than the water, so if a lakeside site is your priority, aim for Yamaska. Combining a night or two at the reservoir with the zoo and Bromont day trips is a popular way to round out a Granby stay.
Do Granby campgrounds stay open in winter?
No, essentially all close for the season. Granby and the surrounding Townships are cold, snowy ski country in winter, and the campgrounds generally run from mid-May through early October before shutting down water and services. The Bromont resort area draws plenty of winter visitors for skiing, but that is hotel-and-chalet territory rather than RV camping. For a typical trip, plan Granby as a spring-through-fall destination, roughly mid-May to early October. If you want winter recreation in the area, you will be looking at lodging rather than campgrounds, as year-round RV sites are not the norm here. Confirm opening and closing dates directly, since they shift with the season.
Where can I dump tanks and get propane near Granby?
The full-service private parks, especially the Granby / Bromont KOA, have sewer hookups and dump facilities, and Parc national de la Yamaska has a dump station for use on your way out. Granby is a real regional town, so propane, fuel, water, and groceries are easy to find, making it a good place to restock during a Townships tour. If you are staying at a serviced-but-not-full site or a semi-serviced Sepaq site, plan to use the dump station rather than expecting sewer at your pad. For a broader list of public dump options in the western Eastern Townships, see our RV dump stations guide for the Granby area.
What else is there to do around Granby?
Beyond the zoo and water parks, the western Eastern Townships are full of outings. Mont Bromont offers mountain biking, a water park, and summer chairlift rides, and the surrounding hills hold the Townships wine route, with vineyards open for tastings, especially lovely in the fall harvest. The Estriade and wider bike-path network makes for easy, scenic riding straight from Granby. Nearby towns like Bromont and Waterloo add markets, shops, and restaurants. Parc national de la Yamaska covers the swimming, paddling, and hiking. Between family attractions, cycling, wine country, and a national park, there is easily several days of exploring from a Granby base, which is why so many RVers settle in here.
Are there free dump stations in Granby?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Granby.
All Dump Stations Near Granby (102)
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