RV Parks In Mont-Tremblant, Quebec
46.2127° N, 74.5844° W
Quick Overview
Mont-Tremblant is one of the best RV bases in the Laurentians, and the camping here splits cleanly between a big public park and a ring of private RV parks and resorts. The anchor is Parc national du Mont-Tremblant, Quebec’s oldest and largest national park, with over 600 sites spread across three sectors around Lac Monroe, Lac Chat, and Lac Escalier. Sites run from rustic tent pads to serviced spots with electric and water, and the La Diable sector is the one most mid-size rigs aim for.
On the private side, Camping de la Diable sits close to the resort with more than 300 sites, electric and water hookups, and its own dump station. If you want a lakeside spot with full hookups, Camping Domaine Lausanne fronts Lac Quenouille with a sandy beach, and Camping Boreal offers wooded pull-through full-hookup sites near Lac Jolicoeur. These private parks fill the gap the national park leaves for big rigs that need sewer.
The public park is the value play and the scenery, but its serviced sites are limited and go fast. A private resort wins if you tow a large fifth-wheel or want a pool and a shorter drive to the pedestrian village. Either way, this is a summer-and-fall destination: the season runs late May through mid-October, and only five no-service RV sites stay open through the ski winter.
Reservations are the whole game around Tremblant. Sépaq opens its season on a single February morning and the popular lakefront sites are gone within hours, so plan months out. Private campgrounds book direct and also sell out on summer long weekends. Get your dates locked early and you get one of the finest mountain-and-lake RV trips in eastern Canada.
Think about what kind of trip you want before you book. If your days revolve around swimming, paddling, and hiking straight from camp, the national park sectors put you on the water. If you want a pool, sewer at the site, and a short hop to the pedestrian village with its shops, gondola, and festival calendar, a private resort is the smarter base. Many RVers split the difference and mix a few park nights with a village night, using the free shuttle so the rig never has to fight for parking up top. However you build it, treat this as a multi-night stay rather than a quick stop, because the region rewards the time.
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All Dump Stations Near Mont-Tremblant
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Camping De La Diable | 5.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Lac-chat | 7.1 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping De La Montagne D'argent | 7.5 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Desjardins Enrg | 8.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Iroquois Falls Campground | 8.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Lake Monroe | 8.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping Secteur Lac-caché | Sépaq | Parc National De Mont-tremblant | 9.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping - Parc ÉCo Laurentides | 13.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Camping L'escapade Inc | 13.2 mi | 4.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Domaine Terego | 16.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Camping De La Diable
5.9 miCamping Lac-chat
7.1 miCamping De La Montagne D'argent
7.5 miCamping Desjardins Enrg
8.2 miIroquois Falls Campground
8.4 miCamping Lake Monroe
8.8 miCamping Secteur Lac-caché | Sépaq | Parc National De Mont-tremblant
9.9 miCamping - Parc ÉCo Laurentides
13.2 miCamping L'escapade Inc
13.2 miDomaine Terego
16.6 miTraveling to Mont-Tremblant by RV
Most RVers reach Tremblant on Autoroute 15 north from Montreal, then Route 117 into the Saint-Jovite side of town. Both roads handle big rigs well; the one spot to mind is Montée Ryan climbing toward the resort, which has a steady grade but no low bridges. From the U.S. border it is roughly two hours north of Montreal, an easy day’s drive for snowbirds heading the other way in reverse.
The resort village itself is a pedestrian zone with tight, expensive parking, so do not try to bring the rig up top. Stage at your campground and use the free resort shuttle or your tow vehicle. The national park’s three sectors have separate entrances that are a fair drive apart, so pick the sector near the lake you want before you arrive. Mont-Tremblant International Airport (YTM) sits nearby for anyone flying in to a rental.
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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 Mont-Tremblant, 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 Mont-Tremblant
Camping at the national park is the budget option: rustic Sépaq sites run around CA$30 a night, serviced sites climb toward CA$60, and everyone pays a daily park access fee of roughly CA$10 per adult on top. Reserve early and that access fee is the only surprise. Private resorts near the village sit higher, generally CA$50 to CA$75 for full-hookup pull-throughs in peak summer, with the lakeside spots at the top of that range.
Shoulder season is where you save. Prices ease and availability opens up in late May and again after Labour Day. Weekly rates at the private parks can knock down the nightly cost if you are staying to explore the park, and midweek is both cheaper and quieter than the summer weekend crush.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Mont-Tremblant
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Best Time to Visit Mont-Tremblant by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
-16°C - -6°C
Crowds: Medium
Ski season at the resort; only five no-service Sepaq RV sites stay open. Bring full winter gear.
Spring
Mar - May
2°C - 12°C
Crowds: Low
Mud season and blackflies in June; most campgrounds open late May. Lakes are cold.
Summer
Jun - Aug
13°C - 24°C
Crowds: High
Book Sepaq lakefront sites months out; private parks fill long weekends. Warm days, cool nights.
Fall
Sep - Oct
3°C - 13°C
Crowds: Medium
Best value and color; peak Laurentian foliage the last week of September. Many sites open to mid-October.
Explore the Mont-Tremblant Area
Set an alarm for the morning Sépaq’s reservation portal opens in early February. The waterfront serviced sites at Lac Monroe are the ones everyone wants, and they are booked within the same morning for July and August weekends. If you miss them, the private parks near the village are your backup and still put you minutes from the gondola.
Come in September if you can. The blackflies of June are gone, the crowds thin out after Labour Day, and the Laurentian maples turn in the last week of the month into one of the best foliage runs in Canada. Bring layers regardless of season, because mountain nights drop into the single digits Celsius even in midsummer. If you tow a big rig, call the private parks directly to confirm your site length rather than trusting the online map, and ask about the pull-through options at Camping Boreal.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Mont-Tremblant
What are the best RV parks in Mont-Tremblant?
The clear anchor is Parc national du Mont-Tremblant, a Sepaq-run public park with over 600 sites across three sectors and serviced options for mid-size rigs. For full hookups and big-rig space, the private parks win: Camping de la Diable sits close to the resort with 300-plus sites, Camping Domaine Lausanne fronts a sandy lake beach, and Camping Boreal has wooded pull-throughs. Pick the national park for scenery and value, a private resort for sewer hookups and a pool near the pedestrian village.
Do Mont-Tremblant campgrounds have full hookups?
It depends where you stay. The national park offers rustic sites and serviced sites with electric and water, but full sewer hookups are rare inside the park. For true full hookups with sewer, book one of the private RV parks: Camping Domaine Lausanne and Camping Boreal both have full-hookup pull-through sites, and Camping de la Diable has electric, water, and an on-site dump station. If your rig needs 50-amp service, call ahead to confirm, since some older private sites and most park sites are wired for 30 amp.
How much does RV camping cost in Mont-Tremblant?
Sepaq national park sites are the budget choice at roughly CA$30 a night rustic and up to about CA$60 serviced, plus a daily park access fee near CA$10 per adult. Private resorts near the resort village run higher, generally CA$50 to CA$75 for full-hookup pull-throughs in peak summer, with lakeside sites at the top of that band. Weekly rates and midweek stays cut the cost, and shoulder-season pricing in late May or after Labour Day is noticeably softer than July and August.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Mont-Tremblant?
As far ahead as you possibly can. Sepaq opens its entire season on a single morning in early February, and the popular lakefront serviced sites at Lac Monroe are booked within hours for July and August weekends. Set a reminder and be online when the portal opens. Private campgrounds take direct reservations and also sell out on summer long weekends, though they hold availability longer than the park. Midweek and shoulder-season dates are far easier to grab on short notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Mont-Tremblant?
Summer is peak for warm lake swimming and full services, but late September is the sweet spot. The blackflies of June are gone, crowds thin after Labour Day, and the Laurentian maples turn brilliant in the last week of the month. The camping season generally runs late May through mid-October. Winter is ski season at the resort, but only five no-service RV sites stay open, so most RVers treat this as a warm-weather destination and save the mountain for a summer or fall trip.
Can big rigs camp near Mont-Tremblant?
Yes, but choose your site carefully. The national park sectors were built for smaller units and mid-size rigs, so a 40-foot fifth-wheel is happier at a private park. Camping de la Diable, Camping Domaine Lausanne, and Camping Boreal all handle larger rigs and offer pull-through full-hookup sites. Call the park directly to confirm your length rather than trusting the online booking map, which does not always flag the tight interior sites. The roads in, Autoroute 15 and Route 117, are all big-rig friendly.
Are there free or first-come camping options in Mont-Tremblant?
Not close to the resort. The Mont-Tremblant area is developed for destination camping, so free boondocking near the village is limited. Crown-land and ZEC (controlled harvesting zone) camping exists farther north, but it is a real drive from the pedestrian core and better suited to self-contained rigs on a longer loop. If you want to be near the lifts, the lakes, and the national park trailheads, plan on a reserved site at the national park or a private RV park rather than a free spot.
Is Parc national du Mont-Tremblant good for RVs?
It is the reason many RVers come. The Sepaq park is Quebec’s oldest and largest, with over 600 sites spread across the La Diable, Pimbina, and L’Assomption sectors around a chain of clear lakes. The La Diable sector near Lac Monroe is the most RV-friendly, with serviced sites and easy access to swimming and the river. Sites range from rustic to electric-and-water serviced. Remember the sectors are a fair drive apart, so choose the one on the lake you want before booking.
What is there to do around Mont-Tremblant besides camp?
Plenty, which is why it earns multi-night stays. The national park has paddling on Lac Monroe, the La Diable river, and a web of hiking and mountain-biking trails. The resort village offers a gondola to the summit, a pedestrian zone of shops and restaurants, and a summer festival calendar. Fall brings some of eastern Canada’s best foliage. In winter the mountain is a major ski resort. Most RVers mix a couple of park days with a village day and a scenic drive on Route 117.
Are the campgrounds near Mont-Tremblant pet friendly?
Most are, with the usual rules. The private RV parks around Tremblant generally welcome leashed dogs on sites and common paths, and the national park allows pets in designated sectors though not on every trail or beach, so check the Sepaq rules for the sector you book. Bring proof of rabies vaccination when crossing into Canada with a pet. Summer heat is mild here, but never leave a dog in a closed rig on a warm afternoon, and pack out waste on the trails to keep access open.
Can I camp near Mont-Tremblant in the winter?
Only in a limited way. The resort is a full ski destination in winter, but RV camping nearly shuts down: the national park keeps just five no-service RV sites open near the Discovery Centre, reservable by phone, and private campgrounds close for the season. Anyone attempting it needs a true four-season rig, tank heaters, and a plan for water, since hookups are off. Most RVers visit Tremblant from late May through mid-October and leave the ski trips to a cabin or hotel stay.
How do I get to Mont-Tremblant with an RV?
From Montreal, take Autoroute 15 north and continue on Route 117 into the Saint-Jovite side of town, roughly two hours in normal traffic. Both highways handle big rigs comfortably, with no low bridges on the main route. The one grade to mind is Montée Ryan climbing toward the resort. Do not drive the rig into the pedestrian resort village, where parking is tight and pricey; stage at your campground and use the shuttle. Mont-Tremblant International Airport is nearby for fly-and-rent travelers.
Which Mont-Tremblant campground is closest to the ski resort?
Among the private options, Camping de la Diable is the closest to the resort core, which makes it the easy pick if you want to walk or shuttle to the village and gondola without a long drive. The national park sectors are farther out and oriented toward the lakes and trails rather than the lifts. If your trip is built around the pedestrian village and resort amenities, book a private park near town; if it is built around paddling and hiking, book the La Diable sector of the national park.
What are the best RV parks in Mont-Tremblant?
The clear anchor is Parc national du Mont-Tremblant, a Sepaq-run public park with over 600 sites across three sectors and serviced options for mid-size rigs. For full hookups and big-rig space, the private parks win: Camping de la Diable sits close to the resort with 300-plus sites, Camping Domaine Lausanne fronts a sandy lake beach, and Camping Boreal has wooded pull-throughs. Pick the national park for scenery and value, a private resort for sewer hookups and a pool near the pedestrian village.
Do Mont-Tremblant campgrounds have full hookups?
It depends where you stay. The national park offers rustic sites and serviced sites with electric and water, but full sewer hookups are rare inside the park. For true full hookups with sewer, book one of the private RV parks: Camping Domaine Lausanne and Camping Boreal both have full-hookup pull-through sites, and Camping de la Diable has electric, water, and an on-site dump station. If your rig needs 50-amp service, call ahead to confirm, since some older private sites and most park sites are wired for 30 amp.
How much does RV camping cost in Mont-Tremblant?
Sepaq national park sites are the budget choice at roughly CA$30 a night rustic and up to about CA$60 serviced, plus a daily park access fee near CA$10 per adult. Private resorts near the resort village run higher, generally CA$50 to CA$75 for full-hookup pull-throughs in peak summer, with lakeside sites at the top of that band. Weekly rates and midweek stays cut the cost, and shoulder-season pricing in late May or after Labour Day is noticeably softer than July and August.
How far ahead should I reserve a campsite in Mont-Tremblant?
As far ahead as you possibly can. Sepaq opens its entire season on a single morning in early February, and the popular lakefront serviced sites at Lac Monroe are booked within hours for July and August weekends. Set a reminder and be online when the portal opens. Private campgrounds take direct reservations and also sell out on summer long weekends, though they hold availability longer than the park. Midweek and shoulder-season dates are far easier to grab on short notice.
When is the best time to go RV camping in Mont-Tremblant?
Summer is peak for warm lake swimming and full services, but late September is the sweet spot. The blackflies of June are gone, crowds thin after Labour Day, and the Laurentian maples turn brilliant in the last week of the month. The camping season generally runs late May through mid-October. Winter is ski season at the resort, but only five no-service RV sites stay open, so most RVers treat this as a warm-weather destination and save the mountain for a summer or fall trip.
Can big rigs camp near Mont-Tremblant?
Yes, but choose your site carefully. The national park sectors were built for smaller units and mid-size rigs, so a 40-foot fifth-wheel is happier at a private park. Camping de la Diable, Camping Domaine Lausanne, and Camping Boreal all handle larger rigs and offer pull-through full-hookup sites. Call the park directly to confirm your length rather than trusting the online booking map, which does not always flag the tight interior sites. The roads in, Autoroute 15 and Route 117, are all big-rig friendly.
Are there free or first-come camping options in Mont-Tremblant?
Not close to the resort. The Mont-Tremblant area is developed for destination camping, so free boondocking near the village is limited. Crown-land and ZEC (controlled harvesting zone) camping exists farther north, but it is a real drive from the pedestrian core and better suited to self-contained rigs on a longer loop. If you want to be near the lifts, the lakes, and the national park trailheads, plan on a reserved site at the national park or a private RV park rather than a free spot.
Is Parc national du Mont-Tremblant good for RVs?
It is the reason many RVers come. The Sepaq park is Quebec’s oldest and largest, with over 600 sites spread across the La Diable, Pimbina, and L’Assomption sectors around a chain of clear lakes. The La Diable sector near Lac Monroe is the most RV-friendly, with serviced sites and easy access to swimming and the river. Sites range from rustic to electric-and-water serviced. Remember the sectors are a fair drive apart, so choose the one on the lake you want before booking.
What is there to do around Mont-Tremblant besides camp?
Plenty, which is why it earns multi-night stays. The national park has paddling on Lac Monroe, the La Diable river, and a web of hiking and mountain-biking trails. The resort village offers a gondola to the summit, a pedestrian zone of shops and restaurants, and a summer festival calendar. Fall brings some of eastern Canada’s best foliage. In winter the mountain is a major ski resort. Most RVers mix a couple of park days with a village day and a scenic drive on Route 117.
Are the campgrounds near Mont-Tremblant pet friendly?
Most are, with the usual rules. The private RV parks around Tremblant generally welcome leashed dogs on sites and common paths, and the national park allows pets in designated sectors though not on every trail or beach, so check the Sepaq rules for the sector you book. Bring proof of rabies vaccination when crossing into Canada with a pet. Summer heat is mild here, but never leave a dog in a closed rig on a warm afternoon, and pack out waste on the trails to keep access open.
Can I camp near Mont-Tremblant in the winter?
Only in a limited way. The resort is a full ski destination in winter, but RV camping nearly shuts down: the national park keeps just five no-service RV sites open near the Discovery Centre, reservable by phone, and private campgrounds close for the season. Anyone attempting it needs a true four-season rig, tank heaters, and a plan for water, since hookups are off. Most RVers visit Tremblant from late May through mid-October and leave the ski trips to a cabin or hotel stay.
How do I get to Mont-Tremblant with an RV?
From Montreal, take Autoroute 15 north and continue on Route 117 into the Saint-Jovite side of town, roughly two hours in normal traffic. Both highways handle big rigs comfortably, with no low bridges on the main route. The one grade to mind is Montée Ryan climbing toward the resort. Do not drive the rig into the pedestrian resort village, where parking is tight and pricey; stage at your campground and use the shuttle. Mont-Tremblant International Airport is nearby for fly-and-rent travelers.
Which Mont-Tremblant campground is closest to the ski resort?
Among the private options, Camping de la Diable is the closest to the resort core, which makes it the easy pick if you want to walk or shuttle to the village and gondola without a long drive. The national park sectors are farther out and oriented toward the lakes and trails rather than the lifts. If your trip is built around the pedestrian village and resort amenities, book a private park near town; if it is built around paddling and hiking, book the La Diable sector of the national park.
Are there free dump stations in Mont-Tremblant?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Mont-Tremblant.
All Dump Stations Near Mont-Tremblant (62)
RV ParkCamping De La Diable
RV ParkCamping Lac-chat
RV ParkCamping De La Montagne D'argent
RV ParkCamping Desjardins Enrg
RV ParkCamping Lake Monroe
RV ParkCamping Secteur Lac-caché | Sépaq | Parc National De Mont-tremblant
RV ParkIroquois Falls Campground
RV Park




