Skip to main content
Formerly known as Sanidumps.
RVingLife.com

RV Parks In Prince Albert, Saskatchewan

53.2001° N, 105.7677° W

Quick Overview

Prince Albert is where the prairie hands you off to the boreal forest, and for RVers it's really two trips in one. The city itself sits at the top of Saskatchewan's grain country, the last full-service town before the trees close in, so it's the natural place to fuel up, fill the tanks, and grab groceries. Then about 90 km north, Prince Albert National Park opens up around Waskesiu Lake, and that's the reason most of us point the rig this direction in the first place.

You've got a clean split between public and private camping here. In town, private RV parks like the Prince Albert Exhibition RV Park give you roughly 80 full-hookup sites in a treed lot, which is exactly what you want for a resupply night with power, water, and sewer. Up in the park, the public campgrounds are run by Parks Canada. Red Deer Campground is the one full-hookup option inside the park, with 161 serviced pull-through sites handling rigs up to about 35 feet. Beaver Glen sits right on the edge of the Waskesiu townsite with around 200 electric sites, no water or sewer at the pad but a sani-dump and potable water close by. Sandy Lake gives you a quieter unserviced lakeside spot if you're set up to dry camp.

Reservations matter up here. Red Deer and Beaver Glen book through the Parks Canada reservation system, and July and August fill, so we'd lock in dates well ahead. The town parks you can usually book direct, and they're handier on short notice. The camping season is short and northern: most of these campgrounds open mid-to-late May and close somewhere between early September and mid-October. Summer days are warm and pleasant, the nights cool off fast, and once fall arrives you'll want the furnace working.

What earns the drive is the lake and the forest. Waskesiu Lake has a long sandy beach for swimming, boat launches, paddling, and the trailheads that lead deeper into the park, including the backcountry route to Grey Owl's cabin on Ajawaan Lake. Back in the city, Little Red River Park packs 30-plus kilometres of trails into the parkland-to-boreal transition right at the edge of town. It's a genuine gateway region, and an RV is the easiest way to work both ends of it.

The rhythm most of us settle into is simple: spend a night or two in the city to reset and resupply, then move north for the main stretch on the lake. Plan the season carefully, book the public sites ahead, and Prince Albert delivers one of the better boreal-lake RV trips on the prairies.

Top Rated Dump Stations in Prince Albert

No rated stations yet. Be the first to leave a review!

Traveling to Prince Albert by RV

Most of us roll into Prince Albert from the south on Highway 11, the divided four-lane that links Regina and Saskatoon up to the city. From Saskatoon it's about 140 km, roughly an hour and a half of easy, RV-friendly driving with no surprises for a big rig. Highway 3 runs east-west through town if you're coming from another direction, and Highway 2 is your route north toward the national park.

To reach Waskesiu and the park campgrounds, take Highway 2 north out of the city, then turn onto Highway 264, the 14 km spur that drops you into the townsite. Figure about 90 km and a bit over an hour from the city to the lake on good two-lane pavement. There's nothing technical about the route, but services get sparse once you leave Prince Albert, so top off fuel and water before you go. For full Parks Canada directions and current road notes, see the park's how-to-get-here page. Inside the park, watch site lengths: Red Deer takes rigs to about 35 feet, while some Beaver Glen sites cap nearer 27, so confirm when you book.

Before You Go: RV Trip Essentials

Dump stations are only one piece of the trip puzzle. Before you set out for your trip to Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, 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 Prince Albert

Camping costs split along the public-private line. The public Parks Canada campgrounds at Waskesiu charge a per-night site fee that scales with services, so Red Deer's full-hookup pull-throughs run higher than Beaver Glen's electric sites, and unserviced Sandy Lake is cheaper still. On top of the site fee, everyone entering Prince Albert National Park needs a valid park entry pass, daily or annual, so factor that in if you're basing inside the park for a stretch.

Private RV parks in the city of Prince Albert price their full-hookup sites competitively for the region, and an annual Parks Canada Discovery Pass usually pays for itself if you're going to spend a week or more around the park. Booking fees apply on the reservation system. Shoulder-season nights in late May, June, and September often come with smaller crowds and the same site rates, which is the value sweet spot if cool nights don't bother you. One easy way to keep costs down is to base in the city's private parks and day-trip into the park, since you only pay park entry on the days you actually go.

Free: 3 stations (100%)
Paid: 0 stations (0%)

Contact station for pricing details.

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

What RVers Are Saying About Prince Albert

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience!

Best Time to Visit Prince Albert by RV

❄️

Winter

Nov - Feb

-2F / -19C - 16F / -9C

Crowds: Medium

Frigid and snowy. Serviced campgrounds are closed, but Little Red River Park and the national park trails stay open for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing.

🌸

Spring

Mar - May

30F / -1C - 55F / 13C

Crowds: Medium

Campgrounds open mid-to-late May. Days warm up nicely but nights are still cold and the lake is icy. Quiet sites and easy reservations before the summer rush.

☀️

Summer

Jun - Aug

52F / 11C - 76F / 24C

Crowds: High

Peak season. Warm days, swimmable lake, and the busiest stretch by far. Book Red Deer and Beaver Glen well ahead for July and August.

🍂

Fall

Sep - Oct

32F / 0C - 55F / 13C

Crowds: Medium

Cooler and quieter with boreal color. Park campgrounds wind down between early September and mid-October, so confirm closing dates before you go.

Explore the Prince Albert Area

Treat the city of Prince Albert as your staging point. It's the last spot with full grocery, fuel, propane, and repair options before you head into the trees, and once you're at Waskesiu the choices shrink to townsite basics. Fill the fresh tank and dump before you leave town if you're headed to an unserviced or electric-only site.

If you need full hookups in the park, Red Deer is the only one that has them, so book it early. Beaver Glen is electric-only, but there's a sani-dump and potable water nearby, which covers most of us fine for a few nights. The paddle to Grey Owl's cabin is a real backcountry trip, normally an overnight with a portage, so register at the visitor centre before you launch and don't treat it as a casual afternoon. For day use, Little Red River Park right in the city is an easy stretch-the-legs stop with trails and a zipline park, and it works well on the day you roll in or out. And pack layers no matter the month, the nights up here get cold even in July, so warm bedding earns its space. One more thing worth knowing: cell coverage gets patchy north of the city, so download your reservations and directions before you lose signal.

National Parks Nearby

Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Prince Albert

Are there RV parks with full hookups in Prince Albert?

Yes. In the city itself, private RV parks like the Prince Albert Exhibition RV Park offer full-hookup sites, with around 80 serviced spots in a treed lot, which makes the city a comfortable resupply base. If you want full hookups inside Prince Albert National Park, the public Red Deer Campground is the one to target, with 161 fully serviced pull-through sites that include water, sewer, and electricity at every pad. Most other public campgrounds in the park are either electric-only or unserviced, so if full hookups are a must for you, plan around Red Deer in the park or one of the private parks in town.

How far is Prince Albert National Park from the city of Prince Albert?

It's about 90 km north of the city to the Waskesiu townsite, which works out to a bit over an hour of driving. You take Highway 2 north out of Prince Albert, then turn onto Highway 264, the 14 km spur road that drops you into Waskesiu and the lakeshore. The route is good two-lane pavement with nothing technical for a big rig, but services thin out once you leave the city. We always top off fuel, propane, and fresh water in Prince Albert before heading north, since the townsite up at the lake only has the basics. Budget a little over an hour each way and you can comfortably day-trip between the city and the park if you decide to base in town.

Do I need reservations to camp near Prince Albert?

For the popular public campgrounds in Prince Albert National Park, yes, we'd strongly recommend it. Red Deer and Beaver Glen both book through the Parks Canada reservation system at reservation.pc.gc.ca, and they fill up for July and August, so lock in your dates as far ahead as you can. Sandy Lake is also reservable. Private RV parks in the city are usually easier to book direct and can sometimes take you on shorter notice, which makes them a useful fallback if the park is full. During the shoulder months of late May, June, and September, availability is much better across the board.

When does the camping season run in the Prince Albert area?

The season is short and northern, so timing matters. In Prince Albert National Park, Beaver Glen runs from mid-May to mid-October, Red Deer is open roughly late May to early September, and Sandy Lake operates mid-May to mid-September. Exact dates shift a little year to year, so check the Parks Canada site before you commit your plans. July and August are the warm, busy core of the season and the easiest stretch for swimming and beach days. Late May, June, and September are noticeably quieter with cooler nights, which suits us fine if the rig is set up for cold mornings. The serviced campgrounds close for winter, though the city and park trails stay open for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing if you're equipped for it.

What are the biggest RV size limits at the park campgrounds?

It varies by campground and even by site, so this is worth checking when you book. Red Deer Campground is the most big-rig friendly inside Prince Albert National Park, with pull-through sites that handle RVs and trailers up to about 35 feet. At Beaver Glen, some sites cap closer to 27 feet, so larger rigs need to be choosy about which loop and pad they pick. The reservation system shows the maximum length for each individual site, which is the most reliable way to make sure your rig fits before you pay. If you're over 35 feet, the private parks in the city are a safer bet.

Is there a dump station and potable water if my site has no sewer?

Yes. Beaver Glen Campground offers electrical hookups but no water or sewer at the individual sites, and it has a sani-dump and potable water nearby to cover that. For the unserviced Sandy Lake Campground, potable water and a sanitation dump and fill are available at the Meridian station about 3 km south, plus the facilities at Beaver Glen in Waskesiu. So even if you book an electric-only or unserviced site, you can keep your tanks managed within the park. We'd still suggest arriving with a full fresh tank and empty waste tanks to give yourself the most flexibility on a multi-night stay.

Do I need a park pass on top of my campsite fee?

Yes. Prince Albert National Park is a national park, so anyone entering needs a valid Parks Canada entry pass in addition to the per-night camping fee. You can buy a daily pass or, if you're staying a week or longer or visiting more than one national park on your trip, an annual Discovery Pass usually works out cheaper. The camping fee and the park entry pass are separate charges, so budget for both. This only applies inside the national park. Private RV parks and city campgrounds in Prince Albert charge their own site rate with no park pass required, which is one reason some of us base in town and only buy day passes for the days we actually drive up to the lake.

Can I visit Grey Owl's cabin with my RV?

Not directly, no. Grey Owl's cabin sits on Ajawaan Lake deep in the backcountry of Prince Albert National Park, and you reach it on foot or by canoe from the Kingsmere area, roughly a 20 km trip one way that includes a portage around rapids. It's normally an overnight backcountry adventure, not a quick stop, and all campers have to register at the visitor centre before heading out. So you'd leave the RV at your campground or a trailhead parking area and make the trip self-propelled. It's a worthwhile pilgrimage for the history, but plan it as a real expedition with proper gear and time.

What is there to do around Prince Albert besides the national park?

Plenty close to the city. Little Red River Park on the northeast edge of Prince Albert covers about 500 hectares with more than 30 km of trails for hiking, cycling, and, in winter, cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. It also has a toboggan hill and a zipline and adventure park, so it's an easy family stop. The city sits on the parkland-to-boreal transition, so you get jack pine, white spruce, and good birdwatching right at the edge of town. The national park to the north is the headline draw, but the city gives you a relaxed day or two of trails and resupply on either side of your park stay.

How do I get to Prince Albert with an RV?

The main approach is Highway 11, the divided four-lane that connects Regina and Saskatoon to Prince Albert. From Saskatoon it's about 140 km, roughly an hour and a half of straightforward, RV-friendly driving with no tight spots for a big rig. Highway 11 reaches its northern end near Highway 2 just south of the city. If you're coming east or west, Highway 3 runs through town. From Prince Albert, Highway 2 north leads you toward the national park. None of these are technical roads, which makes the region an easy one to reach even with a large trailer or motorhome.

Is Waskesiu Lake good for swimming and paddling?

It is, and it's the heart of the summer scene in the park. Waskesiu Lake has a long sandy beach right at the townsite, about 600 metres of it, which is popular for swimming, sunbathing, and picnicking on warm days. There are boat launches for getting out on the water, and the lake and connected waterways are a favorite for canoeing and kayaking, including the paddle route that leads toward Grey Owl's cabin. The water warms up enough for swimming in the heart of summer, though this is a northern lake, so don't expect bath temperatures. It's a genuine draw for RVers basing at the nearby campgrounds.

Are the private campgrounds or the public park campgrounds a better base?

It depends on what your trip is built around. If you want to spend your days in Prince Albert National Park, on the lake, and on the trails, the public Parks Canada campgrounds at Waskesiu put you right there, with Red Deer for full hookups and Beaver Glen for electric sites walkable to the beach. If you're using Prince Albert as a stopover, want full hookups without booking far ahead, or have a rig over 35 feet, the private RV parks in the city are more flexible and closer to services. Many of us do both: a resupply night in town, then move up to the park for the main stay.

How cold does it get, and when should we plan our trip?

Prince Albert has a continental climate with warm summers and very cold winters. July is the warmest month, with highs in the mid-70s Fahrenheit, while January can drop well below zero Fahrenheit with deep snow. For RV camping, the sweet spot is mid-June through August when the days are warm and the campgrounds are fully open. Late May and September work too if you don't mind cold nights and you've got a furnace, and they reward you with smaller crowds. Even in midsummer the nights cool off sharply this far north, so pack layers and bedding warmer than you'd expect for the daytime highs.

Are there RV parks with full hookups in Prince Albert?

Yes. In the city itself, private RV parks like the Prince Albert Exhibition RV Park offer full-hookup sites, with around 80 serviced spots in a treed lot, which makes the city a comfortable resupply base. If you want full hookups inside Prince Albert National Park, the public Red Deer Campground is the one to target, with 161 fully serviced pull-through sites that include water, sewer, and electricity at every pad. Most other public campgrounds in the park are either electric-only or unserviced, so if full hookups are a must for you, plan around Red Deer in the park or one of the private parks in town.

How far is Prince Albert National Park from the city of Prince Albert?

It's about 90 km north of the city to the Waskesiu townsite, which works out to a bit over an hour of driving. You take Highway 2 north out of Prince Albert, then turn onto Highway 264, the 14 km spur road that drops you into Waskesiu and the lakeshore. The route is good two-lane pavement with nothing technical for a big rig, but services thin out once you leave the city. We always top off fuel, propane, and fresh water in Prince Albert before heading north, since the townsite up at the lake only has the basics. Budget a little over an hour each way and you can comfortably day-trip between the city and the park if you decide to base in town.

Do I need reservations to camp near Prince Albert?

For the popular public campgrounds in Prince Albert National Park, yes, we'd strongly recommend it. Red Deer and Beaver Glen both book through the Parks Canada reservation system at reservation.pc.gc.ca, and they fill up for July and August, so lock in your dates as far ahead as you can. Sandy Lake is also reservable. Private RV parks in the city are usually easier to book direct and can sometimes take you on shorter notice, which makes them a useful fallback if the park is full. During the shoulder months of late May, June, and September, availability is much better across the board.

When does the camping season run in the Prince Albert area?

The season is short and northern, so timing matters. In Prince Albert National Park, Beaver Glen runs from mid-May to mid-October, Red Deer is open roughly late May to early September, and Sandy Lake operates mid-May to mid-September. Exact dates shift a little year to year, so check the Parks Canada site before you commit your plans. July and August are the warm, busy core of the season and the easiest stretch for swimming and beach days. Late May, June, and September are noticeably quieter with cooler nights, which suits us fine if the rig is set up for cold mornings. The serviced campgrounds close for winter, though the city and park trails stay open for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing if you're equipped for it.

What are the biggest RV size limits at the park campgrounds?

It varies by campground and even by site, so this is worth checking when you book. Red Deer Campground is the most big-rig friendly inside Prince Albert National Park, with pull-through sites that handle RVs and trailers up to about 35 feet. At Beaver Glen, some sites cap closer to 27 feet, so larger rigs need to be choosy about which loop and pad they pick. The reservation system shows the maximum length for each individual site, which is the most reliable way to make sure your rig fits before you pay. If you're over 35 feet, the private parks in the city are a safer bet.

Is there a dump station and potable water if my site has no sewer?

Yes. Beaver Glen Campground offers electrical hookups but no water or sewer at the individual sites, and it has a sani-dump and potable water nearby to cover that. For the unserviced Sandy Lake Campground, potable water and a sanitation dump and fill are available at the Meridian station about 3 km south, plus the facilities at Beaver Glen in Waskesiu. So even if you book an electric-only or unserviced site, you can keep your tanks managed within the park. We'd still suggest arriving with a full fresh tank and empty waste tanks to give yourself the most flexibility on a multi-night stay.

Do I need a park pass on top of my campsite fee?

Yes. Prince Albert National Park is a national park, so anyone entering needs a valid Parks Canada entry pass in addition to the per-night camping fee. You can buy a daily pass or, if you're staying a week or longer or visiting more than one national park on your trip, an annual Discovery Pass usually works out cheaper. The camping fee and the park entry pass are separate charges, so budget for both. This only applies inside the national park. Private RV parks and city campgrounds in Prince Albert charge their own site rate with no park pass required, which is one reason some of us base in town and only buy day passes for the days we actually drive up to the lake.

Can I visit Grey Owl's cabin with my RV?

Not directly, no. Grey Owl's cabin sits on Ajawaan Lake deep in the backcountry of Prince Albert National Park, and you reach it on foot or by canoe from the Kingsmere area, roughly a 20 km trip one way that includes a portage around rapids. It's normally an overnight backcountry adventure, not a quick stop, and all campers have to register at the visitor centre before heading out. So you'd leave the RV at your campground or a trailhead parking area and make the trip self-propelled. It's a worthwhile pilgrimage for the history, but plan it as a real expedition with proper gear and time.

What is there to do around Prince Albert besides the national park?

Plenty close to the city. Little Red River Park on the northeast edge of Prince Albert covers about 500 hectares with more than 30 km of trails for hiking, cycling, and, in winter, cross-country skiing and snowshoeing. It also has a toboggan hill and a zipline and adventure park, so it's an easy family stop. The city sits on the parkland-to-boreal transition, so you get jack pine, white spruce, and good birdwatching right at the edge of town. The national park to the north is the headline draw, but the city gives you a relaxed day or two of trails and resupply on either side of your park stay.

How do I get to Prince Albert with an RV?

The main approach is Highway 11, the divided four-lane that connects Regina and Saskatoon to Prince Albert. From Saskatoon it's about 140 km, roughly an hour and a half of straightforward, RV-friendly driving with no tight spots for a big rig. Highway 11 reaches its northern end near Highway 2 just south of the city. If you're coming east or west, Highway 3 runs through town. From Prince Albert, Highway 2 north leads you toward the national park. None of these are technical roads, which makes the region an easy one to reach even with a large trailer or motorhome.

Is Waskesiu Lake good for swimming and paddling?

It is, and it's the heart of the summer scene in the park. Waskesiu Lake has a long sandy beach right at the townsite, about 600 metres of it, which is popular for swimming, sunbathing, and picnicking on warm days. There are boat launches for getting out on the water, and the lake and connected waterways are a favorite for canoeing and kayaking, including the paddle route that leads toward Grey Owl's cabin. The water warms up enough for swimming in the heart of summer, though this is a northern lake, so don't expect bath temperatures. It's a genuine draw for RVers basing at the nearby campgrounds.

Are the private campgrounds or the public park campgrounds a better base?

It depends on what your trip is built around. If you want to spend your days in Prince Albert National Park, on the lake, and on the trails, the public Parks Canada campgrounds at Waskesiu put you right there, with Red Deer for full hookups and Beaver Glen for electric sites walkable to the beach. If you're using Prince Albert as a stopover, want full hookups without booking far ahead, or have a rig over 35 feet, the private RV parks in the city are more flexible and closer to services. Many of us do both: a resupply night in town, then move up to the park for the main stay.

How cold does it get, and when should we plan our trip?

Prince Albert has a continental climate with warm summers and very cold winters. July is the warmest month, with highs in the mid-70s Fahrenheit, while January can drop well below zero Fahrenheit with deep snow. For RV camping, the sweet spot is mid-June through August when the days are warm and the campgrounds are fully open. Late May and September work too if you don't mind cold nights and you've got a furnace, and they reward you with smaller crowds. Even in midsummer the nights cool off sharply this far north, so pack layers and bedding warmer than you'd expect for the daytime highs.

Are there free dump stations in Prince Albert?

Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Prince Albert.