Caravan Dump Points In Kununurra, Western Australia
15.7782° S, 128.7421° E
Quick Overview
Kununurra is the main service town of the East Kimberley, sitting on the Victoria Highway near the Ord River in the far northeast corner of Western Australia. For touring caravans and motorhomes it is a vital hub: this is where you empty tanks, fill fresh water, refuel, and stock up before heading into some of the most remote country in Australia. With several caravan parks, signed dump points, and full supermarkets, Kununurra makes the natural base for exploring Lake Argyle, the gorges, and the Bungle Bungles.
Dump points are easy to find here. Each of the main caravan parks provides one for guests, including Discovery Parks Lake Kununurra, Hidden Valley Kununurra Caravan Park on Weaber Plains Road beside Mirima National Park, and the central Town Caravan Park with its saltwater pool and laundry. There is a town caravan dump point as well, and the Agricultural Showground offers a dump point for a small maintenance fee. If you are travelling west and want a free option, the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km along the Victoria Highway has a free dump point. Always use signed dump points, never natural areas or waterways, and empty tanks at your caravan park before leaving town.
Timing is everything in the Kimberley. The dry season, from April to September and peaking May to August, brings warm sunny days in the low 30s Celsius, cool nights, and open roads, which is why touring caravans flood the region then and parks book out well ahead. The wet season, from November to March, is hot, humid, and stormy, with February near 217 mm of rain flooding gorges and closing unsealed tracks. Plan your visit for the dry, fill fuel and water in town because resupply gaps are long, and heed crocodile warnings around the Ord and Lake Argyle. Start close to town at Mirima National Park, the miniature Bungle Bungles on the edge of town, before venturing farther afield.
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All Dump Stations Near Kununurra
| Station Name | Distance | Rating | Category | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ord River Road House | 0.3 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Kununurra Town Caravan Park | 0.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Kununurra Lakeside Resort - Caravan Park | 0.4 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Kimberleyland Holiday Park | 0.6 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Ivanhoe Village Caravan Resort | 0.9 mi | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Hidden Valley Tourist Park | — | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
| Kununurra Showgrounds | — | N/A | Dump Station | Free |
Ord River Road House
0.3 miKununurra Town Caravan Park
0.4 miKununurra Lakeside Resort - Caravan Park
0.4 miKimberleyland Holiday Park
0.6 miIvanhoe Village Caravan Resort
0.9 miHidden Valley Tourist Park
Kununurra Showgrounds
Traveling to Kununurra by RV
Kununurra sits on the Victoria Highway, part of National Route 1, running east to the Northern Territory border about 40 km away and on toward Katherine and Darwin, and west toward Wyndham. The Great Northern Highway heads south toward Halls Creek and the Bungle Bungles turnoff. The sealed highways handle large vans and motorhomes well, but this is remote country with long fuel gaps, road trains, and single-lane bridges, so drive to the conditions and give the road trains plenty of room. Many side tracks to gorges are unsealed, 4WD-only, and closed during the wet, so check road status with Main Roads before towing off the bitumen.
As the East Kimberley service town, Kununurra has diesel and petrol at its service stations, gas bottle refills and swaps at stations and hardware suppliers, and full supermarkets including Coles and an IGA. Mechanical, tyre, and caravan repairs are available too. This is your last major resupply before long remote stretches in any direction, so fill fuel, water, and groceries here. The Purnululu National Park (Bungle Bungle Range) lies about 250 km south, but access is 4WD-only and closed in the wet, so many travellers tour it by scenic flight from Kununurra instead.
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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 Kununurra, Western Australia, 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 Kununurra
Dumping around Kununurra costs little. If you are staying at one of the caravan parks, the dump point comes with your powered or unpowered site at no extra charge. The Agricultural Showground dump point asks only a small maintenance fee, and the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area dump point about 45 km west is free. So most travellers pay nothing beyond their site fee to empty tanks, which is a genuine convenience given how remote the East Kimberley is. Powered site rates at the caravan parks sit in the usual range for a well-serviced Kimberley park, with peak dry-season prices higher and quieter shoulder months cheaper.
The bigger budget line up here is fuel and groceries, not dumping. Diesel and petrol run dearer than in the south because of the remoteness, so fill up in Kununurra rather than at isolated roadhouses where prices climb further. Supermarket groceries at Coles and the IGA are your most economical resupply before long stretches, and stocking up thoroughly saves money versus buying piecemeal on the road. Free-camping at designated highway rest areas cuts accommodation costs for self-sufficient travellers. Between included dump points, town supermarkets, and free rest-area stays, careful planning keeps a Kununurra visit reasonable despite the region's isolation.
Contact station for pricing details.
Prices may vary. Always confirm with the station before visiting.
What RVers Are Saying About Kununurra
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Best Time to Visit Kununurra by RV
Winter
Nov - Feb
15C - 32C
Crowds: High
Peak dry season (June to August) with warm sunny days and cool nights. Caravan parks fill and their dump points run busy, so book ahead; the free Cockburn Rest Area dump point about 45 km west eases the load for passing travellers.
Spring
Mar - May
22C - 38C
Crowds: Low
The build-up (October to November) turns hot and humid before the rains. Crowds thin and dump points at the town parks are quiet, but plan services around the heat and carry plenty of water.
Summer
Jun - Aug
25C - 39C
Crowds: Low
The wet season is stormy and humid with February near 217 mm of rain; gorges and unsealed tracks flood and close. Few caravans tour now, so town dump points are wide open, but access to bush sites is limited.
Fall
Sep - Oct
18C - 34C
Crowds: Medium
April and May open the dry with greener country, full waterfalls, and building crowds. Dump points at the caravan parks return to steady use as touring season ramps up across the East Kimberley.
Explore the Kununurra Area
A few things we would tell a mate heading to Kununurra. First, travel in the dry season from April to September. In the wet, roads flood, gorges close, and heat and humidity soar, so the dry is why the Kimberley draws touring caravans in the first place. Second, fill fuel, water, and groceries in town before heading bush. Kununurra is the main service town, and the next resupply can be hundreds of kilometres away with nothing in between.
Third, empty tanks only at signed dump points: the caravan parks, the town dump point, the Showground for a small fee, or the free Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km west. Never dump in natural areas, since this is fragile outback and croc country. Fourth, respect the crocodile warnings, because both freshwater and estuarine crocodiles live in the Ord River and Lake Argyle, so only swim where it is signed safe. Finally, book caravan parks well ahead for the peak dry season from June to August, as the good lakeside and central sites fill fast with touring vans.
National Parks Nearby
Frequently Asked Questions About Dump Stations in Kununurra
Where can I empty my caravan tanks in Kununurra?
Kununurra is well set up for touring caravans, so you have several signed dump points. The caravan parks each provide a dump point for guests, including Discovery Parks Lake Kununurra, Hidden Valley Kununurra Caravan Park on Weaber Plains Road, and the central Town Caravan Park. There is also a town caravan dump point, and the Agricultural Showground offers a dump point for a small fee to help with maintenance. If you are passing through and want a free option, the nearest is the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km west on the Victoria Highway. Always use signed dump points and never empty tanks into natural areas or waterways.
Is there a free dump point near Kununurra?
Yes. The nearest free dump point is at the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area, roughly 45 km west of Kununurra along the Victoria Highway toward Wyndham. It is a handy stop if you are travelling that direction and want to avoid a fee. Within town, the caravan parks include dump points with your stay, so that is effectively free once you have paid for a site, while the Showground dump point charges a small maintenance fee. For most travellers, the simplest approach is to dump at your caravan park before leaving town, then use the Cockburn Rest Area if you need to empty again on the road west.
What is the best time of year to visit Kununurra in a caravan?
The dry season, from April to September, is the clear answer, with the peak from May to August. During the dry, days are warm and sunny in the low 30s Celsius, nights are cool and comfortable, and the roads and national parks are at their most accessible, which is why touring caravans flood the East Kimberley then. The wet season, from November to March, is hot, humid, and stormy, with February the wettest month near 217 mm, and flooding closes many gorges and unsealed tracks. The build-up in October and November is uncomfortably hot before the rains. Plan your visit for the dry and book caravan parks well ahead.
Can I get potable water when I dump in Kununurra?
Yes, the caravan parks provide town potable water at their sites alongside the dump points, so you can empty tanks and refill fresh water in the one stop. Kununurra runs on treated town water, which is reliable. Because the East Kimberley is remote and the next resupply can be a long way off, always fill your fresh water tanks before heading bush toward Lake Argyle, the Gibb River Road, or the Bungle Bungles. If you are free-camping at highway rest areas, carry ample water and be fully self-sufficient, as taps are not guaranteed. Top up in town whenever you can rather than relying on remote sources.
How do I get to Kununurra with a caravan?
Kununurra sits on the Victoria Highway, part of National Route 1, in the far northeast of Western Australia. The sealed highway runs east to the Northern Territory border, about 40 km away, then on toward Katherine and Darwin, and west toward Wyndham. The Great Northern Highway heads south toward Halls Creek and the turnoff for the Bungle Bungles. The main highways are sealed and handle large vans and motorhomes, but this is remote country with long fuel gaps, road trains, and single-lane bridges, so drive to the conditions. Many side tracks to gorges are unsealed and closed in the wet, so check road status before towing off the bitumen.
Are there dump points at the Kununurra caravan parks?
Yes, all the main caravan parks have on-site dump points for guests. Discovery Parks Lake Kununurra offers powered sites with water and sullage connections plus a dump point in a lakeside setting with a pool. Hidden Valley Kununurra Caravan Park at 110 Weaber Plains Road, beside Mirima National Park, has shady powered and unpowered sites with an on-site dump point close to town. The central Town Caravan Park includes a dump point along with a saltwater pool, undercover BBQ area, and laundry within walking distance of the shops. Booking a powered site at any of these means you can empty tanks conveniently without hunting for a separate public dump point.
How much does it cost to dump tanks in Kununurra?
Costs are modest. If you are staying at one of the caravan parks, the dump point is included with your powered or unpowered site, so there is no separate charge. The Kununurra Agricultural Showground dump point charges a small fee that goes toward maintenance. The free Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area dump point about 45 km west costs nothing at all. So most travellers pay nothing extra to dump beyond their site fee, or a token amount at the Showground. Given the remoteness of the East Kimberley, having several affordable dump points concentrated around one town is a real convenience compared with the long stretches of road on either side.
Do I need to worry about crocodiles around Kununurra?
Yes, crocodiles are a genuine consideration here, and you should take the warnings seriously. Both freshwater crocodiles and the larger, dangerous estuarine (saltwater) crocodiles live in the Ord River, Lake Kununurra, and Lake Argyle. Only swim where signage confirms it is safe, such as designated swimming areas at some parks and Lake Argyle, and never assume a waterhole is croc-free. Keep children and pets well back from the water's edge, do not clean fish or leave food scraps at the bank, and heed all posted advice. Locals and tour operators know the safe spots, so follow their guidance rather than taking chances near any Kimberley waterway.
Where do I refuel and resupply near Kununurra?
Kununurra is the main service town for the entire East Kimberley, so this is where you sort everything out. Diesel and petrol are available at the town service stations, and you should fill up here because fuel gaps across the Kimberley are long and remote. Gas bottles for cooking can be refilled or swapped at service stations and hardware suppliers. For groceries you have full supermarkets including Coles and an IGA, which is your last major resupply before long stretches toward Halls Creek, the Gibb River Road, or the Territory. Caravan and mechanical repairs, plus tyres, are also available in town. Stock up thoroughly before heading bush in any direction.
Is Kununurra a good base for Lake Argyle and the Bungle Bungles?
It is the natural base for the East Kimberley. Lake Argyle, Australia's largest freshwater reservoir, is about 72 km by road, roughly 45 minutes, and offers boat cruises, freshwater swimming, and sunset views over a vast inland sea. Mirima National Park, the miniature Bungle Bungles known as Hidden Valley, sits right on the edge of town beside one of the caravan parks. Purnululu National Park with the famous striped Bungle Bungle domes lies about 250 km south, but access is 4WD-only and closed in the wet, so many visitors tour it by scenic flight from Kununurra. El Questro and the Gibb River Road head west. Kununurra gives you serviced sites and full resupply between these trips.
Can I free-camp near Kununurra?
Not in town, but yes at designated spots outside it. There is no camping on Kununurra town streets, and shire rules restrict roadside overnighting in the townsite, so use the caravan parks if you want to stay in town. For free-camping, head to designated rest areas along the Victoria and Great Northern Highways, and some station stays offer bush camping for a fee. The Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km west allows short free stays and has a dump point. If you free-camp, carry plenty of water, be fully self-sufficient, and use the signed dump points in town before you leave, since remote sites have no facilities and this is genuine outback country.
What are road conditions like around Kununurra for large vans?
The sealed main highways are good and handle large vans and motorhomes without trouble, but remote-area driving demands respect. The Victoria and Great Northern Highways carry road trains, so give them room, and you will meet single-lane bridges and long stretches with no services. Many of the tracks to gorges and to the Bungle Bungles are unsealed and 4WD-only, and they close entirely during the wet season when flooding cuts access. If you plan to leave the bitumen, check current road status with Main Roads or the visitor centre, carry recovery gear and extra water, and do not tow a road van onto rough unsealed tracks it is not built for. Stick to sealed roads for a big rig.
What happens to Kununurra dump points and roads in the wet season?
The wet season, roughly November to March, changes everything. Heavy monsoonal rain, with February averaging around 217 mm, floods rivers and closes many unsealed roads and gorge access tracks, sometimes cutting off attractions entirely for weeks. The town caravan parks and their dump points generally stay open and are quiet, since few caravans tour in the wet, so if you do visit you will find services uncrowded. The catch is heat, humidity, and limited access to the surrounding country. Most touring RVers avoid the wet and come in the dry from April to September, when roads are open, waterfalls flow, and conditions are comfortable. Always check road closures before travelling in the wet.
Where can I empty my caravan tanks in Kununurra?
Kununurra is well set up for touring caravans, so you have several signed dump points. The caravan parks each provide a dump point for guests, including Discovery Parks Lake Kununurra, Hidden Valley Kununurra Caravan Park on Weaber Plains Road, and the central Town Caravan Park. There is also a town caravan dump point, and the Agricultural Showground offers a dump point for a small fee to help with maintenance. If you are passing through and want a free option, the nearest is the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km west on the Victoria Highway. Always use signed dump points and never empty tanks into natural areas or waterways.
Is there a free dump point near Kununurra?
Yes. The nearest free dump point is at the Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area, roughly 45 km west of Kununurra along the Victoria Highway toward Wyndham. It is a handy stop if you are travelling that direction and want to avoid a fee. Within town, the caravan parks include dump points with your stay, so that is effectively free once you have paid for a site, while the Showground dump point charges a small maintenance fee. For most travellers, the simplest approach is to dump at your caravan park before leaving town, then use the Cockburn Rest Area if you need to empty again on the road west.
What is the best time of year to visit Kununurra in a caravan?
The dry season, from April to September, is the clear answer, with the peak from May to August. During the dry, days are warm and sunny in the low 30s Celsius, nights are cool and comfortable, and the roads and national parks are at their most accessible, which is why touring caravans flood the East Kimberley then. The wet season, from November to March, is hot, humid, and stormy, with February the wettest month near 217 mm, and flooding closes many gorges and unsealed tracks. The build-up in October and November is uncomfortably hot before the rains. Plan your visit for the dry and book caravan parks well ahead.
Can I get potable water when I dump in Kununurra?
Yes, the caravan parks provide town potable water at their sites alongside the dump points, so you can empty tanks and refill fresh water in the one stop. Kununurra runs on treated town water, which is reliable. Because the East Kimberley is remote and the next resupply can be a long way off, always fill your fresh water tanks before heading bush toward Lake Argyle, the Gibb River Road, or the Bungle Bungles. If you are free-camping at highway rest areas, carry ample water and be fully self-sufficient, as taps are not guaranteed. Top up in town whenever you can rather than relying on remote sources.
How do I get to Kununurra with a caravan?
Kununurra sits on the Victoria Highway, part of National Route 1, in the far northeast of Western Australia. The sealed highway runs east to the Northern Territory border, about 40 km away, then on toward Katherine and Darwin, and west toward Wyndham. The Great Northern Highway heads south toward Halls Creek and the turnoff for the Bungle Bungles. The main highways are sealed and handle large vans and motorhomes, but this is remote country with long fuel gaps, road trains, and single-lane bridges, so drive to the conditions. Many side tracks to gorges are unsealed and closed in the wet, so check road status before towing off the bitumen.
Are there dump points at the Kununurra caravan parks?
Yes, all the main caravan parks have on-site dump points for guests. Discovery Parks Lake Kununurra offers powered sites with water and sullage connections plus a dump point in a lakeside setting with a pool. Hidden Valley Kununurra Caravan Park at 110 Weaber Plains Road, beside Mirima National Park, has shady powered and unpowered sites with an on-site dump point close to town. The central Town Caravan Park includes a dump point along with a saltwater pool, undercover BBQ area, and laundry within walking distance of the shops. Booking a powered site at any of these means you can empty tanks conveniently without hunting for a separate public dump point.
How much does it cost to dump tanks in Kununurra?
Costs are modest. If you are staying at one of the caravan parks, the dump point is included with your powered or unpowered site, so there is no separate charge. The Kununurra Agricultural Showground dump point charges a small fee that goes toward maintenance. The free Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area dump point about 45 km west costs nothing at all. So most travellers pay nothing extra to dump beyond their site fee, or a token amount at the Showground. Given the remoteness of the East Kimberley, having several affordable dump points concentrated around one town is a real convenience compared with the long stretches of road on either side.
Do I need to worry about crocodiles around Kununurra?
Yes, crocodiles are a genuine consideration here, and you should take the warnings seriously. Both freshwater crocodiles and the larger, dangerous estuarine (saltwater) crocodiles live in the Ord River, Lake Kununurra, and Lake Argyle. Only swim where signage confirms it is safe, such as designated swimming areas at some parks and Lake Argyle, and never assume a waterhole is croc-free. Keep children and pets well back from the water's edge, do not clean fish or leave food scraps at the bank, and heed all posted advice. Locals and tour operators know the safe spots, so follow their guidance rather than taking chances near any Kimberley waterway.
Where do I refuel and resupply near Kununurra?
Kununurra is the main service town for the entire East Kimberley, so this is where you sort everything out. Diesel and petrol are available at the town service stations, and you should fill up here because fuel gaps across the Kimberley are long and remote. Gas bottles for cooking can be refilled or swapped at service stations and hardware suppliers. For groceries you have full supermarkets including Coles and an IGA, which is your last major resupply before long stretches toward Halls Creek, the Gibb River Road, or the Territory. Caravan and mechanical repairs, plus tyres, are also available in town. Stock up thoroughly before heading bush in any direction.
Is Kununurra a good base for Lake Argyle and the Bungle Bungles?
It is the natural base for the East Kimberley. Lake Argyle, Australia's largest freshwater reservoir, is about 72 km by road, roughly 45 minutes, and offers boat cruises, freshwater swimming, and sunset views over a vast inland sea. Mirima National Park, the miniature Bungle Bungles known as Hidden Valley, sits right on the edge of town beside one of the caravan parks. Purnululu National Park with the famous striped Bungle Bungle domes lies about 250 km south, but access is 4WD-only and closed in the wet, so many visitors tour it by scenic flight from Kununurra. El Questro and the Gibb River Road head west. Kununurra gives you serviced sites and full resupply between these trips.
Can I free-camp near Kununurra?
Not in town, but yes at designated spots outside it. There is no camping on Kununurra town streets, and shire rules restrict roadside overnighting in the townsite, so use the caravan parks if you want to stay in town. For free-camping, head to designated rest areas along the Victoria and Great Northern Highways, and some station stays offer bush camping for a fee. The Main Roads Cockburn Rest Area about 45 km west allows short free stays and has a dump point. If you free-camp, carry plenty of water, be fully self-sufficient, and use the signed dump points in town before you leave, since remote sites have no facilities and this is genuine outback country.
What are road conditions like around Kununurra for large vans?
The sealed main highways are good and handle large vans and motorhomes without trouble, but remote-area driving demands respect. The Victoria and Great Northern Highways carry road trains, so give them room, and you will meet single-lane bridges and long stretches with no services. Many of the tracks to gorges and to the Bungle Bungles are unsealed and 4WD-only, and they close entirely during the wet season when flooding cuts access. If you plan to leave the bitumen, check current road status with Main Roads or the visitor centre, carry recovery gear and extra water, and do not tow a road van onto rough unsealed tracks it is not built for. Stick to sealed roads for a big rig.
What happens to Kununurra dump points and roads in the wet season?
The wet season, roughly November to March, changes everything. Heavy monsoonal rain, with February averaging around 217 mm, floods rivers and closes many unsealed roads and gorge access tracks, sometimes cutting off attractions entirely for weeks. The town caravan parks and their dump points generally stay open and are quiet, since few caravans tour in the wet, so if you do visit you will find services uncrowded. The catch is heat, humidity, and limited access to the surrounding country. Most touring RVers avoid the wet and come in the dry from April to September, when roads are open, waterfalls flow, and conditions are comfortable. Always check road closures before travelling in the wet.
Are there free dump stations in Kununurra?
Yes — there are free RV waste disposal options available near Kununurra.
All Dump Stations Near Kununurra (7)
RV Dump StationsOrd River Road House
RV Dump StationsKununurra Town Caravan Park
RV Dump StationsKununurra Lakeside Resort - Caravan Park
RV Dump StationsKimberleyland Holiday Park
RV Dump StationsIvanhoe Village Caravan Resort
RV Dump Stations





