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RV Parks In Quebec

52.9399° N, 73.5491° W

Quick Overview

Quebec is one of the biggest, most varied RV destinations in Canada, and for trip planners that is both the appeal and the challenge. You can camp under the peaks of Mont-Tremblant, chase the St. Lawrence along the Gaspe coast, sit beside the Saguenay fjord, or base near the walls of Quebec City. The province pairs a deep public park network with one of the largest private campground industries in the country, so once you decide on a region, you will rarely struggle to find a place to park the rig.

The public backbone is Sepaq, which runs the national parks and wildlife reserves. Sepaq sites come with 1, 2, or 3 services, meaning electric only, electric and water, or full electric-water-sewer, with full-service sites available at select parks rather than everywhere. Flagships like Parc national du Mont-Tremblant, the Gaspesie, and the Saguenay parks deliver the scenery, and the newer Espace Nomade concept in the Reserve faunique des Laurentides is purpose-built for recreational vehicles. Alongside that sits a dense private network concentrated near Montreal, the Laurentians, Charlevoix, and the Gaspe coast, where full hookups with 30 and 50-amp service and big-rig pull-throughs are far more common.

Big rigs do best at the larger private resorts; many Sepaq mountain loops were built for smaller trailers, with tighter sites and narrower access roads, so confirm length and turning room before booking. Reservations drive the whole trip here. Sepaq booking opens about four months ahead and serviced sites go first, so you want a Sepaq account ready and to be online the morning popular parks release. Peak July and August private sites want two to three months of lead time, and the limited coastal camping on the Gaspe loop should be booked well ahead. The flip side of that pressure is choice: between the public and private systems, almost every region has serviced options, so the planning effort goes into timing and securing a site, not into finding one at all.

One practical note: Quebec is French-first. Signage and some smaller campgrounds operate primarily in French, though tourist regions like Mont-Tremblant, Quebec City, and the Gaspe are comfortable in English, and the Sepaq site has an English option. Our honest advice on timing is to aim for September into early October if you can, when the fall color is spectacular, the crowds thin, and rates ease, just pack for cold nights and confirm closing dates, since many parks shut by mid-October. Whichever season you choose, picking one or two regions per trip beats trying to circle the entire province, which is far larger than most visitors expect. Below you will find the standout parks, how to get your rig around, what it really costs, and exactly when to go.

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Browse RV Parks by City (267)

Albanel

Alma

Amos

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Arundel

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Blue Sea

Bolton-Est

Boucherville

Bromont

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Deschaillons-sur-Saint-Laurent

Dolbeau-Mistassini

Drummondville

Duhamel-Ouest

Eastman

Essipit

Fassett

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Franklin

Frelighsburg

Frontenac

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Grand-Remous

Ham-Sud

Hébertville

Henryville

Hope Town

Île-aux-Noix

Jonquière

Kiamika

Kinnear's Mills

Knowlton

La Baie

La Baleine

Labelle

Lac-aux-Sables

Lac-des-Écorces

La Conception

Lac Simon

La Macaza

La Malbaie

La Minerve

L'Ange-Gardien

La Pocatière

Laterrière

Leclercville

Les Escoumins

Lévis

L'Isle-aux-Grues

L'Islet

Longueuil

Louiseville

Lyster

Magog

Malartic

Mandeville

Mansfield-et-Pontefract

Mansonville

Marston

Mashteuiatsh

Massueville

Matane

Melbourne

Mercier

Messines

Métabetchouan–Lac-à-la-Croix

Métis-sur-Mer

Mille-Isles

Mirabel

Moisie

Mont-Blanc

Mont-Laurier

Montmagny

Montreal

Montréal

Mont-Tremblant

Morin-Heights

Neuville

New Carlisle

New Richmond

Nicolet

Nominingue

Normandin

Notre-Dame-des-Pins

Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel

Nouvelle

Oka

Orford

Pabos

Pabos Mills

Palmarolle

Pierreville

Pike River

Piopolis

Pointe-aux-Outardes

Pointe-Calumet

Pointe-des-Cascades

Pointe-Lebel

Pont-Rouge

Port-Cartier

Portneuf

Portneuf-sur-Mer

Princeville

Quebec

Québec

Quebec City

Racine

Ragueneau

Rigaud

Rimouski

Rivière-du-Loup

Rivière-Ouelle

Rivière-Rouge

Rouyn-Noranda

Roxton Falls

Sacré-Coeur-Saguenay

Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs

Saint-Alexandre-de-Kamouraska

Saint-Alphonse-de-Granby

Saint-André-Avellin

Saint-Anicet

Saint-Antoine-Abbé

Saint-Antonin

Saint-Apollinaire

Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures

Saint-Barthélemy

Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle

Saint-Bernard-sur-Mer

Saint-Calixte

Saint-Charles-Borromée

Saint-Charles-sur-Richelieu

Saint-Chrysostome

Saint-Claude

Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm

Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts

Sainte-Angèle-de-Monnoir

Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré

Sainte-Anne-des-Monts

Sainte-Anne-de-Sorel

Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines

Sainte-Béatrix

Sainte-Catherine

Sainte-Cécile-de-Masham

Sainte-Croix

Saint-Édouard-de-Maskinongé

Sainte-Flavie

Sainte-Gertrude-Manneville

Sainte-Jeanne-d'Arc

Sainte-Julienne

Saint-Élie-de-Caxton

Sainte-Madeleine

Sainte-Marcelline-de-Kildare

Sainte-Marthe

Sainte-Marthe-sur-le-Lac

Sainte-Sabine

Sainte-Séraphine

Sainte-Sophie

Sainte-Sophie-de-Lévrard

Sainte-Thérèse-de-la-Gatineau

Saint-Étienne-de-Bolton

Saint-Étienne-de-Lauzon

Saint-Eugène-de-Grantham

Saint-Eugène-de-Guigues

Sainte-Victoire-de-Sorel

Saint-Fabien

Saint-Félix-de-Kingsey

Saint-Félix-de-Valois

Saint-Ferdinand

Saint-Ferréol-les-Neiges

Saint-François-de-l'Île-d'Orléans

Saint-François-de-Sales

Saint-François-du-Lac

Saint-Gabriel-de-Brandon

Saint-Gabriel-de-Valcartier

Saint-Gédéon

Saint-Herménégilde

Saint-Honoré

Saint-Hyacinthe

Saint-Ignace-de-Stanbridge

Saint-Jean-Baptiste

Saint-Jean-Port-Joli

Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu

Saint-Jérôme

Saint-Joachim-de-Shefford

Saint-Joseph-de-Beauce

Saint-Lambert-de-Lauzon

Saint-Léonard-d'Aston

Saint-Liboire

Saint-Lin-Laurentides

Saint-Lucien

Saint-Majorique

Saint-Mathieu-De-Beloeil

Saint-Mathieu-D'Harricana

Saint-Michel-de-Bellechasse

Saint-Michel-des-Saints

Saint-Ours

Saint-Philippe

Saint-Philippe-de-La Prairie

Saint-Pierre-Baptiste

Saint-Placide

Saint-Raymond

Saint-René-de-Matane

Saint-Roch-de-l'Achigan

Saint-Roch-de-Richelieu

Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies

Saint-Rosaire

Saint-Siméon

Saint-Stanislas-de-Kostka

Saint-Sulpice

Saint-Tite

Saint-Urbain

Saint-Zotique

Scott

Senneterre

Sept-Îles

Shawinigan

Shefford

Sherbrooke

Sorel-Tracy

Stoneham-et-Tewkesbury

Stratford

Tadoussac

Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac

Terrebonne

Tourville

Trois-Rivières

Upton

Val-Brillant

Val-David

Val-d'Or

Val-Morin

Vaudreuil-Dorion

Ville-Marie

Waterville

Weedon

West Brome

Wickham

Windsor

Getting Around Quebec by RV

Quebec is big, and your route depends entirely on which region you are after. The autoroute network, especially the 20, 40, and 15, is easy, wide-laned driving for any rig and connects Montreal, Quebec City, and the Laurentians without drama. From there the character changes. The Gaspe loop on Route 132 is a stunning but long coastal drive, and some Sepaq mountain access roads narrow as you climb, so plan fuel and dump stops on the long stretches east of Quebec City where services thin out.

Montreal and Quebec City are the two main supply and airport hubs, useful if you are flying in to a rented rig or restocking mid-trip. Most RVers base in the Laurentians for mountain camping near Mont-Tremblant, along the Gaspe coast for the ocean touring loop, or near the Saguenay for the fjord. Distances between regions are real, so it pays to pick one or two areas per trip rather than trying to circle the whole province. Cell coverage and services drop off in the wildlife reserves and far-eastern Gaspe, so top up fuel, water, and groceries before you head into the remote stretches.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your Quebec trip, 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.

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RV Parks Costs in Quebec

Sepaq public sites are the value option, generally landing in the low-to-mid price range depending on how many services you book. Unserviced sites are cheapest, while full-service 3-service sites cost more, and across the board the provincial parks undercut the private resorts. Private parks in the Laurentians and the tourist corridors charge the premium rates, especially full-hookup pull-throughs in peak July and August near Mont-Tremblant. The pattern is familiar: a basic public site costs a fraction of a premium private full-hookup pad.

You can manage the budget by shifting dates and services. June and September nights run well below the summer peak, and many private parks offer weekly and seasonal rates that lower the per-night cost on a longer stay. If you do not need sewer at the site, booking a 1 or 2-service Sepaq site with a central dump station saves money over a full-hookup resort. Reserving the cheaper public sites early, before they sell out, is the most reliable way to keep a Quebec RV trip affordable.

Free: 540 stations (94%)
Paid: 36 stations (6%)

Contact station for pricing details.

Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.

What RVers Are Saying About Quebec

★★★★½

I believe the water is city water and is portable. I spoke to a mechanic working in an auto shop across the road. He said that it's city water. It should be drinkable. This place is located in an indu...

Xiaoping Li ·at Ville La Prairie Dump Station·July 9, 2026

Best Time to Visit Quebec by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

7F - 23F

Crowds: Low

Brutally cold across most of the province and essentially no standard RV camping; Sepaq and private parks close. Plan a winter Quebec trip in a cabin, not a rig.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

36F - 54F

Crowds: Low

Sepaq and private parks open from late May into June. Cool nights and some mud linger, but serviced sites are wide open before the summer rush.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

58F - 78F

Crowds: High

July and August are prime. Laurentian resorts and Sepaq serviced sites fill on weekends, so reserve months out, especially near Mont-Tremblant and on the Gaspe loop.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

40F - 58F

Crowds: Medium

September into early October brings outstanding fall color and thinner crowds. Many parks close by mid-October, so confirm dates and pack for cold nights.

Explore Quebec

Set up your Sepaq account before the booking window opens, because serviced sites at the popular parks vanish within the first hours of release roughly four months out. The single most useful habit for RVing Quebec is treating reservations like buying concert tickets: know your dates, be online when the window opens, and grab the full-service or pull-through site first. For peak summer in the Laurentians or on the Gaspe loop, two to three months of lead time on private parks is realistic.

Lean on private Laurentian resorts when you need true full hookups for a big rig, and save the Sepaq mountain parks for smaller, more flexible setups. Learn a few French camping words even though tourist areas handle English well; it smooths the smaller stops. And if your dates are flexible, go in September into early October. The fall color across Quebec is among the best anywhere, the crowds thin out, rates ease, and you trade only a little warmth for a lot of room. Just confirm closing dates, since many parks shut by mid-October.

Helpful Resources

Frequently Asked Questions About RV Parks in Quebec

What are the best RV parks in Quebec?

It depends on what you want. For public, scenic camping, Sepaq parks like Mont-Tremblant, the Gaspesie, and the Saguenay fjord are the standouts, with 1, 2, or 3-service sites. For full hookups and big-rig room, the private resorts in the Laurentians near Mont-Tremblant and the coastal campgrounds around the Gaspe loop are the easier bets. The newer Espace Nomade RV sites in the Reserve faunique des Laurentides are purpose-built for recreational vehicles. Match the park to your rig size and how much service you need.

Do Quebec RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Some do, but it is not universal. Sepaq parks sell sites with 1, 2, or 3 services, meaning electric only, electric and water, or full electric-water-sewer, and full-service sites exist at select parks rather than everywhere. The private resorts, especially in the Laurentians and around Montreal, are far more likely to offer true full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power. Many municipal and coastal Gaspe campgrounds also have full hookups. If you need sewer at the site, filter for 3-service Sepaq sites or book a private park and confirm.

How much does RV camping cost in Quebec?

Public Sepaq sites are the value play, generally landing in the low-to-mid range depending on how many services you book, with unserviced sites cheapest and full-service sites costing more. Private resorts in the Laurentians and tourist corridors charge more, especially full-hookup pull-throughs in peak July and August. Expect the usual pattern: a basic provincial site costs well under a premium private full-hookup site. Shoulder-season nights in June and September run cheaper, and many private parks offer weekly and seasonal rates that bring the per-night cost down on longer stays.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Quebec?

For Sepaq parks, booking opens roughly four months before your dates and you need a Sepaq account; serviced sites disappear fastest, so be online when the window opens for popular parks like Mont-Tremblant. Private resorts in peak July and August want two to three months of lead time, particularly for full-hookup pull-throughs near the resort villages. The Gaspe loop has limited coastal camping, so reserve that ahead too. In the shoulder seasons of June and September you can often book within a few weeks and still find good sites.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Quebec?

July and August deliver the warmest weather and every attraction open, but they are the most crowded and priciest, and you must book Sepaq and resort sites well ahead. Our pick is September into early October, when the fall color is spectacular, crowds thin, and rates ease, though you should pack for cold nights and confirm closing dates since many parks shut by mid-October. June is the other good shoulder window once parks open in late May. Winter is not a practical RV season here given the deep cold.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Quebec?

Yes, but choose carefully. Quebec's autoroutes are easy driving for big rigs, and the larger private resorts in the Laurentians and around Montreal offer full hookups and pull-throughs that handle 40 feet and up. The trade-off is that many Sepaq mountain parks have older, tighter loops and narrower access roads built for smaller trailers, so big-rig owners should confirm site length and turning room before booking, or lean toward the private parks. On the Gaspe loop, stick to the coastal road and larger campgrounds rather than narrow interior tracks.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Quebec?

There are some, but less than out west. A number of unserviced Sepaq sites and crown-land areas allow simpler camping, and some private parks keep first-come sites, but most serviced camping in Quebec is reservation-based, especially in peak season. Quebec also has a strong network of private parks and a few municipal options, so the practical plan is usually to reserve rather than count on finding free dispersed sites near the popular regions. If boondocking is your goal, research crown-land rules for the specific region before you rely on it.

Do I need to speak French to camp in Quebec?

No, but a little goes a long way. Quebec is French-first, and signage, reservation sites, and some smaller campground staff will operate primarily in French. In tourist regions like Mont-Tremblant, Quebec City, and the Gaspe, English is widely understood and most front desks can help you in English. The Sepaq website offers an English option. Learning a few camping words, terrain de camping for campground and VR for RV, smooths the experience and is appreciated by locals. Translation apps cover the rest in a pinch.

What is there to do while RV camping in Quebec?

A lot, across a huge province. The Laurentians and Mont-Tremblant offer mountain hiking, lakes, and a resort village. The Gaspe loop is a bucket-list coastal drive with Perce Rock, Forillon National Park, and whale watching on the St. Lawrence. The Saguenay fjord pairs dramatic scenery with a whale-rich estuary. And you are never far from Quebec City's walled Old Town or Montreal's food and festivals. Fall color season turns the whole province into a destination. Plan your camp bases around which region you most want to explore.

What is the camping season in Quebec?

Most parks run from late May to mid-October. Sepaq and private campgrounds open as the snow clears in late May, hit their stride through the summer, and largely close by mid-October once the fall color fades and overnight temperatures drop. The Gaspe and far-north regions have shorter windows than the Montreal and Laurentian corridor. Because the season is relatively short and the best weeks are popular, the calendar drives everything: book early for summer, and confirm closing dates if you are traveling late in the fall.

Are Quebec campgrounds pet-friendly?

Generally yes. Sepaq allows leashed pets in many of its campgrounds and on numerous trails, though rules vary by park and some areas restrict dogs to protect wildlife, so check the specific park before you go. Private resorts in the Laurentians and coastal Gaspe are mostly pet-friendly with leash requirements, but confirm when booking since a few sites and rental units are pet-free. Bring proof of vaccination, pick up after your dog, and keep pets out of the heat on warm summer afternoons. A shaded site makes a big difference in July.

Do Quebec parks have dump stations for my RV?

Yes. Sepaq parks with serviced loops and the larger private resorts have dump stations on site, and 3-service sites include sewer at the pad. Smaller and unserviced Sepaq sectors rely on a central dump station rather than per-site sewer, and the long touring stretches east of Quebec City mean you should plan tank dumps around your campground stops. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Quebec for the full list of where to dump across the province.

What are the best RV parks in Quebec?

It depends on what you want. For public, scenic camping, Sepaq parks like Mont-Tremblant, the Gaspesie, and the Saguenay fjord are the standouts, with 1, 2, or 3-service sites. For full hookups and big-rig room, the private resorts in the Laurentians near Mont-Tremblant and the coastal campgrounds around the Gaspe loop are the easier bets. The newer Espace Nomade RV sites in the Reserve faunique des Laurentides are purpose-built for recreational vehicles. Match the park to your rig size and how much service you need.

Do Quebec RV parks have full hookups (water, electric, sewer)?

Some do, but it is not universal. Sepaq parks sell sites with 1, 2, or 3 services, meaning electric only, electric and water, or full electric-water-sewer, and full-service sites exist at select parks rather than everywhere. The private resorts, especially in the Laurentians and around Montreal, are far more likely to offer true full hookups with 30 and 50-amp power. Many municipal and coastal Gaspe campgrounds also have full hookups. If you need sewer at the site, filter for 3-service Sepaq sites or book a private park and confirm.

How much does RV camping cost in Quebec?

Public Sepaq sites are the value play, generally landing in the low-to-mid range depending on how many services you book, with unserviced sites cheapest and full-service sites costing more. Private resorts in the Laurentians and tourist corridors charge more, especially full-hookup pull-throughs in peak July and August. Expect the usual pattern: a basic provincial site costs well under a premium private full-hookup site. Shoulder-season nights in June and September run cheaper, and many private parks offer weekly and seasonal rates that bring the per-night cost down on longer stays.

How far ahead do I need to reserve a campsite in Quebec?

For Sepaq parks, booking opens roughly four months before your dates and you need a Sepaq account; serviced sites disappear fastest, so be online when the window opens for popular parks like Mont-Tremblant. Private resorts in peak July and August want two to three months of lead time, particularly for full-hookup pull-throughs near the resort villages. The Gaspe loop has limited coastal camping, so reserve that ahead too. In the shoulder seasons of June and September you can often book within a few weeks and still find good sites.

When is the best time to go RV camping in Quebec?

July and August deliver the warmest weather and every attraction open, but they are the most crowded and priciest, and you must book Sepaq and resort sites well ahead. Our pick is September into early October, when the fall color is spectacular, crowds thin, and rates ease, though you should pack for cold nights and confirm closing dates since many parks shut by mid-October. June is the other good shoulder window once parks open in late May. Winter is not a practical RV season here given the deep cold.

Can big rigs (35 to 40 ft and up) camp in Quebec?

Yes, but choose carefully. Quebec's autoroutes are easy driving for big rigs, and the larger private resorts in the Laurentians and around Montreal offer full hookups and pull-throughs that handle 40 feet and up. The trade-off is that many Sepaq mountain parks have older, tighter loops and narrower access roads built for smaller trailers, so big-rig owners should confirm site length and turning room before booking, or lean toward the private parks. On the Gaspe loop, stick to the coastal road and larger campgrounds rather than narrow interior tracks.

Are there free or first-come (boondocking) options in Quebec?

There are some, but less than out west. A number of unserviced Sepaq sites and crown-land areas allow simpler camping, and some private parks keep first-come sites, but most serviced camping in Quebec is reservation-based, especially in peak season. Quebec also has a strong network of private parks and a few municipal options, so the practical plan is usually to reserve rather than count on finding free dispersed sites near the popular regions. If boondocking is your goal, research crown-land rules for the specific region before you rely on it.

Do I need to speak French to camp in Quebec?

No, but a little goes a long way. Quebec is French-first, and signage, reservation sites, and some smaller campground staff will operate primarily in French. In tourist regions like Mont-Tremblant, Quebec City, and the Gaspe, English is widely understood and most front desks can help you in English. The Sepaq website offers an English option. Learning a few camping words, terrain de camping for campground and VR for RV, smooths the experience and is appreciated by locals. Translation apps cover the rest in a pinch.

What is there to do while RV camping in Quebec?

A lot, across a huge province. The Laurentians and Mont-Tremblant offer mountain hiking, lakes, and a resort village. The Gaspe loop is a bucket-list coastal drive with Perce Rock, Forillon National Park, and whale watching on the St. Lawrence. The Saguenay fjord pairs dramatic scenery with a whale-rich estuary. And you are never far from Quebec City's walled Old Town or Montreal's food and festivals. Fall color season turns the whole province into a destination. Plan your camp bases around which region you most want to explore.

What is the camping season in Quebec?

Most parks run from late May to mid-October. Sepaq and private campgrounds open as the snow clears in late May, hit their stride through the summer, and largely close by mid-October once the fall color fades and overnight temperatures drop. The Gaspe and far-north regions have shorter windows than the Montreal and Laurentian corridor. Because the season is relatively short and the best weeks are popular, the calendar drives everything: book early for summer, and confirm closing dates if you are traveling late in the fall.

Are Quebec campgrounds pet-friendly?

Generally yes. Sepaq allows leashed pets in many of its campgrounds and on numerous trails, though rules vary by park and some areas restrict dogs to protect wildlife, so check the specific park before you go. Private resorts in the Laurentians and coastal Gaspe are mostly pet-friendly with leash requirements, but confirm when booking since a few sites and rental units are pet-free. Bring proof of vaccination, pick up after your dog, and keep pets out of the heat on warm summer afternoons. A shaded site makes a big difference in July.

Do Quebec parks have dump stations for my RV?

Yes. Sepaq parks with serviced loops and the larger private resorts have dump stations on site, and 3-service sites include sewer at the pad. Smaller and unserviced Sepaq sectors rely on a central dump station rather than per-site sewer, and the long touring stretches east of Quebec City mean you should plan tank dumps around your campground stops. Need to empty your tanks here? See our guide to RV dump stations in Quebec for the full list of where to dump across the province.

What is the highest-rated RV park in Quebec?

The highest-rated is Camping le Quatre Chemins with a rating of 4.8/5 stars.