RV Parks In Blaine, Washington
48.9937° N, 122.7471° W
Quick Overview
Blaine sits at the very top of Washington, right where I-5 meets the Canadian border, and it makes a genuinely relaxing RV base if you want salt air, tidal flats, and quiet forested camping without fighting for a spot in a national park. Most of the good camping actually clusters a few miles south around Birch Bay and the Semiahmoo peninsula, so when RVers say they are camping in Blaine they usually mean this stretch of Whatcom County shoreline. It is flat, easy to drive, and close to both American and Canadian day trips.
The anchor public option is Birch Bay State Park, a forested state campground with 147 standard sites, 20 water-and-electric sites, 2 full-hookup sites, and an on-site trailer dump station. It reserves from May 15 through September 15 and runs first-come the rest of the year, accommodating rigs up to 60 feet. For sewer-at-the-site convenience, the private parks deliver: Beachside RV Park offers 50-amp electric, water, and sewer hookups right near the bay, and Thousand Trails Birch Bay has full-hookup pads for rigs up to about 52 feet with showers and WiFi.
Booking is the part to get right. Birch Bay State Park opens its nine-month reservation window online, and the two dozen powered sites disappear fast for summer weekends, so set a reminder for the day your dates open. The private resorts fill their waterfront full-hookup sites in July and August as well. Outside summer, the whole area loosens up: the state park shifts to first-come, private-park rates drop, and you can usually roll in midweek and find a shoreline site with nobody around. Have hookup expectations sorted before you commit.
Once you are settled, there is plenty to fill a few days. Semiahmoo Spit has beach walks and views across to British Columbia, Birch Bay is prime for low-tide clamming and crabbing, and Peace Arch Historical State Park marks the border with its gardens and monument. With a passport, White Rock and Vancouver are a short drive north. Need to empty your tanks before heading into the North Cascades? See our companion guide to RV dump stations in Blaine for the public and pay options across Whatcom County.
Top Rated Dump Stations in Blaine
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All Dump Stations Near Blaine
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pacific Border RV Park | 0.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Hazelmere RV | 2.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Thousand Trails Birch Bay | 3.3 mi | 3.9 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Ball Bay View RV Park | 5.8 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| Peace Arch RV Park | 6.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
| The Cedars RV Resort | 11.2 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| The Cedars RV Resort | 11.3 mi | N/A | RV Park | Varies |
| A A RV Park | 11.9 mi | 3.7 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Livingstone RV Park | 12.2 mi | 3.4 | Dump Station | Varies |
| Alderbrook RV Park | 12.2 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Varies |
Pacific Border RV Park
0.8 miHazelmere RV
2.6 miThousand Trails Birch Bay
3.3 miBall Bay View RV Park
5.8 miPeace Arch RV Park
6.4 miThe Cedars RV Resort
11.2 miThe Cedars RV Resort
11.3 miA A RV Park
11.9 miLivingstone RV Park
12.2 miAlderbrook RV Park
12.2 miTraveling to Blaine by RV
Getting to Blaine with a big rig is straightforward because it all runs off I-5, the main north-south corridor from Seattle to the border. The cleanest approach to the Birch Bay campgrounds is I-5 exit 270 onto Birch Bay-Lynden Road, then follow SR-548 west toward the shore; this keeps you out of the tighter downtown Blaine streets and off the commercial truck lanes. Exits 274 and 276 drop you into Blaine proper and the Peace Arch crossing. Avoid the SR-543 Pacific Highway exit unless you actually mean to cross into Canada, since it funnels straight into truck inspection.
Your nearest full-service hub is Bellingham, about 20 to 25 miles south on I-5, roughly a 25-minute drive, where you will find groceries, RV repair, propane, and big-box stores. Ferndale, 15 miles south, has fuel and basic services too. Blaine and Birch Bay have gas and small grocery, but stock up in Bellingham before you settle in. If you plan to cross into Canada, everyone in the rig needs a passport, and you should know the rules on firewood, produce, and propane; border waits at Peace Arch can be long on summer weekends, so cross early.
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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 Blaine, Washington, 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 Blaine
Camping around Blaine spans a wide price range depending on whether you go public or private. Birch Bay State Park is the value play: sites run from about $5 for primitive up to roughly $45 a night for the full-hookup spots, with water-and-electric sites in the middle, plus a Discover Pass if you come and go for day use. That gets you a forested state-park setting with a dump station but sewer at only two sites. The private resorts, Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay, sit higher, commonly $50 to $80 a night for full hookups on or near the water in peak summer.
The way to save is timing and length of stay. Shoulder and off-season rates from October through April drop noticeably at the private parks, and the state park is at its cheapest and least crowded then. Both private resorts offer weekly and monthly rates that pull the per-night cost down if you are settling in for a while. Reserving the state park midweek and a private park only for the nights you truly need sewer is a common way to balance cost against convenience across a longer stay.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
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Best Time to Visit Blaine by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
35 F - 45 F
Crowds: Low
Birch Bay State Park loops that stay open run first-come and nearly empty; private parks like Beachside RV Park keep full hookups on but expect rain and short daylight.
Spring
Mar - May
42 F - 55 F
Crowds: Medium
Reservations for Birch Bay State Park open the summer window; book powered sites now. Showery weather keeps crowds and rates down through May.
Summer
Jun - Aug
54 F - 70 F
Crowds: High
Prime dry season and the only time the state park is fully reservable; lock in July and August weekends months ahead, and expect the coastal parks to sell out.
Fall
Sep - Oct
44 F - 57 F
Crowds: Medium
Early September is a quiet sweet spot with warm days; after mid-October the rain returns and the state park drops to first-come.
Explore the Blaine Area
A few things we have learned camping this corner of Washington. First, treat Birch Bay State Park reservations like concert tickets: the powered sites open on a nine-month rolling window and the couple dozen of them vanish for summer weekends within minutes, so know your dates and be online when the window opens. Second, plan your beach time around the tide charts, not the clock. Birch Bay has huge tidal flats, and low tide is when the clamming, crabbing, and tidepooling happen, so check the WDFW seasons and the tide tables before you commit to an afternoon.
Third, keep a passport in the rig even if you are not sure you will cross; White Rock and its waterfront promenade are minutes away and make an easy dinner run. Fourth, early September is the quiet gem here: the weather still holds warm and dry, but the crowds evaporate after Labor Day and rates soften. Finally, if you want sewer at your site, book Beachside RV Park or Thousand Trails Birch Bay rather than the state park, and dump before you head east into the mountains where services thin out fast.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Blaine
What RV parks near Blaine, WA have full hookups?
Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay both offer full hookup sites with sewer, water, and 50-amp or 30-amp power near the Birch Bay shoreline. Birch Bay State Park is the public option, with two full-hookup sites plus twenty water-and-electric sites and an on-site dump station, though its remaining sites are standard forested spots without hookups. If you need sewer at the site, the two private resorts are your surest bet; if you can live with water and electric and dump on your way out, the state park puts you closest to the beach at a lower nightly rate. Book either well ahead for summer.
How do I reserve a campsite at Birch Bay State Park?
Birch Bay State Park takes reservations for arrival dates from May 15 through September 15 through the Washington State Parks portal at washington.goingtocamp.com, and you can book up to nine months in advance. Outside that window the campground runs first-come, first-served, which usually means you can roll in on a fall or winter weekday and find a spot. The park has 147 standard forested sites, 20 water-and-electric sites, and 2 full-hookup sites, so the powered sites are the scarce commodity. Grab the nine-month lead time for any summer weekend, because those two dozen powered spots book out fast.
Can big rigs and fifth wheels fit near Blaine?
Yes, with some planning. Birch Bay State Park accommodates RVs and combinations up to 60 feet, which covers most fifth wheels and toy haulers, though the forested sites vary in length so check the specific site map. Thousand Trails Birch Bay handles rigs up to about 52 feet on its full-hookup pads, and Beachside RV Park has pull-through style coastal sites. The cleanest big-rig route is I-5 exit 270 to Birch Bay-Lynden Road, which avoids the tighter downtown Blaine streets. Avoid the SR-543 commercial border crossing unless you actually intend to enter Canada, since it funnels into truck inspection lanes.
What does it cost to camp around Blaine?
Birch Bay State Park sites run from about $5 for primitive up to roughly $45 a night for the full-hookup spots, with water-and-electric sites landing in the middle, plus the Discover Pass day-use fee if you leave and return. Private resorts like Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay typically run higher, often $50 to $80 a night in peak summer for full hookups on the water, with weekly and monthly rates that bring the per-night cost down. Shoulder season from October through April drops private-park rates noticeably, and the state park is at its cheapest and quietest then.
When is the best time to RV camp in Blaine?
July through September is the sweet spot. The marine climate keeps summers dry and mild, with highs around 70 and cool comfortable nights, and it is the only stretch when Birch Bay State Park is fully reservable. Early September is a local favorite because the weather still holds but the crowds thin out after Labor Day. If you camp outside summer, expect gray skies and steady rain from November through April, though the private parks stay open and rates fall sharply. Spring showers keep May quiet and affordable if you do not mind packing rain gear.
Are there dump stations near Blaine?
Yes. Birch Bay State Park has a trailer dump station on-site that day-users and campers can access, and the private resorts including Thousand Trails Birch Bay have their own dump facilities for guests. If you are boondocking or staying somewhere without sewer, plan to dump before you leave the area since services thin out once you head into the North Cascades. Many travelers top off fresh water and dump on their way out via I-5. For a full rundown of options, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Blaine, which maps the public and pay stations in Whatcom County.
Is Birch Bay State Park open year-round?
The park is open year-round for day use, and the campground stays open through the seasons, but the experience changes a lot. From mid-May through mid-September you can reserve sites and the park is busy, especially on weekends. Outside that window the campground shifts to first-come, first-served, and while some loops may close or reduce services, you can generally find a quiet forested site on a fall or winter weekday. Restrooms and the dump station typically stay available. Just come prepared for rain and short daylight from November through February, and check the Washington State Parks page for any seasonal closures before you go.
What is there to do around Blaine with an RV?
Blaine sits right on the Canadian border with easy access to the water. Semiahmoo Spit is a favorite for beach walks, tidepooling, and views across to White Rock, British Columbia. Birch Bay State Park has tidal flats good for clamming and crabbing plus a shoreline trail. Peace Arch Historical State Park at the border has gardens and the famous arch monument. The Birch Bay Berm walking path runs along the shore for miles. If you have your passport, Vancouver and White Rock are a short drive north. Bring your bikes; the flat coastal roads around Birch Bay are easy and scenic riding.
Do I need reservations or can I show up first-come?
For summer, reserve. Birch Bay State Park only takes reservations from May 15 to September 15, and its powered sites fill months out for weekends, so showing up without one in July is risky. The private resorts also fill their waterfront full-hookup sites in peak season. Outside summer the calculus flips: from October through April the state park runs first-come and is rarely full on weekdays, and private parks usually have space. If you are traveling in the shoulder or off-season and are flexible, you can often skip booking. For any summer weekend, treat a reservation as mandatory.
What are the public versus private camping options?
Your main public option is Birch Bay State Park, run by Washington State Parks, which offers the lowest rates, a forested setting, an on-site dump station, and a mix of standard and powered sites. The private options include Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay, both of which offer full hookups with sewer at the site, more amenities like WiFi and showers, and locations right on or near the Birch Bay waterfront. Public wins on price and nature; private wins on full hookups and convenience. Many RVers split the difference by booking the state park midweek and a private park for a hookup night.
How far is Blaine from Bellingham and other services?
Blaine is about 20 to 25 miles north of Bellingham on I-5, roughly a 25-minute drive, which is your nearest full-service hub for groceries, RV repair, propane, and big-box stores. Blaine itself and neighboring Birch Bay have gas, small grocery, and basic supplies, but for anything major you will head to Bellingham. Ferndale, about 15 miles south, also has services and fuel. Plan to stock up in Bellingham before settling in, especially if you are staying at Birch Bay State Park where the nearest large stores are a short drive away. Propane is available in Ferndale and Bellingham.
Will marine weather affect my camping trip?
It can, so plan for it. Blaine has a mild marine climate, which means comfortable summers but a lot of rain the rest of the year. Summer camping is generally dry and pleasant, but morning marine fog can roll in off the Salish Sea even in July. From late fall through spring, expect frequent rain, gray skies, and occasional windstorms that can make coastal sites gusty. None of this is dangerous for a well-set-up rig, but bring rain gear, level on soft forested sites carefully after wet spells, and check the marine forecast if you plan to be out on the tidal flats at Birch Bay.
Can I cross into Canada from Blaine with my RV?
Yes, and many RVers use Blaine as a jumping-off point. There are two main crossings: the Peace Arch crossing on I-5 for passenger vehicles and RVs, and the Pacific Highway crossing on SR-543 that handles commercial trucks. You will need a valid passport for everyone in the rig, and you should know Canada's rules on firewood, produce, firearms, and propane before you cross. Vancouver is roughly an hour north and White Rock is minutes away. Border wait times can be long on summer weekends, so check current wait estimates before you go and consider crossing early in the morning to avoid the worst backups.
What RV parks near Blaine, WA have full hookups?
Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay both offer full hookup sites with sewer, water, and 50-amp or 30-amp power near the Birch Bay shoreline. Birch Bay State Park is the public option, with two full-hookup sites plus twenty water-and-electric sites and an on-site dump station, though its remaining sites are standard forested spots without hookups. If you need sewer at the site, the two private resorts are your surest bet; if you can live with water and electric and dump on your way out, the state park puts you closest to the beach at a lower nightly rate. Book either well ahead for summer.
How do I reserve a campsite at Birch Bay State Park?
Birch Bay State Park takes reservations for arrival dates from May 15 through September 15 through the Washington State Parks portal at washington.goingtocamp.com, and you can book up to nine months in advance. Outside that window the campground runs first-come, first-served, which usually means you can roll in on a fall or winter weekday and find a spot. The park has 147 standard forested sites, 20 water-and-electric sites, and 2 full-hookup sites, so the powered sites are the scarce commodity. Grab the nine-month lead time for any summer weekend, because those two dozen powered spots book out fast.
Can big rigs and fifth wheels fit near Blaine?
Yes, with some planning. Birch Bay State Park accommodates RVs and combinations up to 60 feet, which covers most fifth wheels and toy haulers, though the forested sites vary in length so check the specific site map. Thousand Trails Birch Bay handles rigs up to about 52 feet on its full-hookup pads, and Beachside RV Park has pull-through style coastal sites. The cleanest big-rig route is I-5 exit 270 to Birch Bay-Lynden Road, which avoids the tighter downtown Blaine streets. Avoid the SR-543 commercial border crossing unless you actually intend to enter Canada, since it funnels into truck inspection lanes.
What does it cost to camp around Blaine?
Birch Bay State Park sites run from about $5 for primitive up to roughly $45 a night for the full-hookup spots, with water-and-electric sites landing in the middle, plus the Discover Pass day-use fee if you leave and return. Private resorts like Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay typically run higher, often $50 to $80 a night in peak summer for full hookups on the water, with weekly and monthly rates that bring the per-night cost down. Shoulder season from October through April drops private-park rates noticeably, and the state park is at its cheapest and quietest then.
When is the best time to RV camp in Blaine?
July through September is the sweet spot. The marine climate keeps summers dry and mild, with highs around 70 and cool comfortable nights, and it is the only stretch when Birch Bay State Park is fully reservable. Early September is a local favorite because the weather still holds but the crowds thin out after Labor Day. If you camp outside summer, expect gray skies and steady rain from November through April, though the private parks stay open and rates fall sharply. Spring showers keep May quiet and affordable if you do not mind packing rain gear.
Are there dump stations near Blaine?
Yes. Birch Bay State Park has a trailer dump station on-site that day-users and campers can access, and the private resorts including Thousand Trails Birch Bay have their own dump facilities for guests. If you are boondocking or staying somewhere without sewer, plan to dump before you leave the area since services thin out once you head into the North Cascades. Many travelers top off fresh water and dump on their way out via I-5. For a full rundown of options, see our companion guide to RV dump stations in Blaine, which maps the public and pay stations in Whatcom County.
Is Birch Bay State Park open year-round?
The park is open year-round for day use, and the campground stays open through the seasons, but the experience changes a lot. From mid-May through mid-September you can reserve sites and the park is busy, especially on weekends. Outside that window the campground shifts to first-come, first-served, and while some loops may close or reduce services, you can generally find a quiet forested site on a fall or winter weekday. Restrooms and the dump station typically stay available. Just come prepared for rain and short daylight from November through February, and check the Washington State Parks page for any seasonal closures before you go.
What is there to do around Blaine with an RV?
Blaine sits right on the Canadian border with easy access to the water. Semiahmoo Spit is a favorite for beach walks, tidepooling, and views across to White Rock, British Columbia. Birch Bay State Park has tidal flats good for clamming and crabbing plus a shoreline trail. Peace Arch Historical State Park at the border has gardens and the famous arch monument. The Birch Bay Berm walking path runs along the shore for miles. If you have your passport, Vancouver and White Rock are a short drive north. Bring your bikes; the flat coastal roads around Birch Bay are easy and scenic riding.
Do I need reservations or can I show up first-come?
For summer, reserve. Birch Bay State Park only takes reservations from May 15 to September 15, and its powered sites fill months out for weekends, so showing up without one in July is risky. The private resorts also fill their waterfront full-hookup sites in peak season. Outside summer the calculus flips: from October through April the state park runs first-come and is rarely full on weekdays, and private parks usually have space. If you are traveling in the shoulder or off-season and are flexible, you can often skip booking. For any summer weekend, treat a reservation as mandatory.
What are the public versus private camping options?
Your main public option is Birch Bay State Park, run by Washington State Parks, which offers the lowest rates, a forested setting, an on-site dump station, and a mix of standard and powered sites. The private options include Beachside RV Park and Thousand Trails Birch Bay, both of which offer full hookups with sewer at the site, more amenities like WiFi and showers, and locations right on or near the Birch Bay waterfront. Public wins on price and nature; private wins on full hookups and convenience. Many RVers split the difference by booking the state park midweek and a private park for a hookup night.
How far is Blaine from Bellingham and other services?
Blaine is about 20 to 25 miles north of Bellingham on I-5, roughly a 25-minute drive, which is your nearest full-service hub for groceries, RV repair, propane, and big-box stores. Blaine itself and neighboring Birch Bay have gas, small grocery, and basic supplies, but for anything major you will head to Bellingham. Ferndale, about 15 miles south, also has services and fuel. Plan to stock up in Bellingham before settling in, especially if you are staying at Birch Bay State Park where the nearest large stores are a short drive away. Propane is available in Ferndale and Bellingham.
Will marine weather affect my camping trip?
It can, so plan for it. Blaine has a mild marine climate, which means comfortable summers but a lot of rain the rest of the year. Summer camping is generally dry and pleasant, but morning marine fog can roll in off the Salish Sea even in July. From late fall through spring, expect frequent rain, gray skies, and occasional windstorms that can make coastal sites gusty. None of this is dangerous for a well-set-up rig, but bring rain gear, level on soft forested sites carefully after wet spells, and check the marine forecast if you plan to be out on the tidal flats at Birch Bay.
Can I cross into Canada from Blaine with my RV?
Yes, and many RVers use Blaine as a jumping-off point. There are two main crossings: the Peace Arch crossing on I-5 for passenger vehicles and RVs, and the Pacific Highway crossing on SR-543 that handles commercial trucks. You will need a valid passport for everyone in the rig, and you should know Canada's rules on firewood, produce, firearms, and propane before you cross. Vancouver is roughly an hour north and White Rock is minutes away. Border wait times can be long on summer weekends, so check current wait estimates before you go and consider crossing early in the morning to avoid the worst backups.
What is the highest-rated dump station in Blaine?
The highest-rated station is The Cedars RV Park with a rating of 4.4/5 stars.
Are there free dump stations in Blaine?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Blaine.
All Dump Stations Near Blaine (91)
RV ParkPacific Border RV Park
RV ParkThousand Trails Birch Bay
RV ParkHazelmere RV
RV ParkBall Bay View RV Park
RV ParkPeace Arch RV Park
RV ParkTynehead RV Camp
RV Park with Dump StationsThe Cedars RV Resort
RV Park with Dump Stations





