close
Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake)- Wikipedia
Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake)- Wikipedia

GET CANCELLATION ALERTS FOR Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake)

Our app helps you find canceled reservations at Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake)

Is Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake) sold out? Don’t sweat it! You could still reserve a campsite there. Many campers cancel reservations. When they do, parks re-release these campsites. Campnab scans parks for cancelations. Our app alerts you when campsites come available.

Create a Scan for Missinaibi Provincial Park (Lake)

Plans start at $10/month • Unlimited alerts • Cancel anytime!

WE PROVIDE CAMPSITE AVAILABILITY ALERTS

HOW CAMPNAB WORKS

People book campsites at popular parks months in advance. Sometimes their plans change and they cancel their reservations—leaving a campsite unused. Campnab monitors campgrounds for canceled reservations, and notifies you with a camp alert when a campsite opens up.

{"Create

Create a scan

Go to the top of this page and search for the park you want to camp at. Then choose your preferred campground, arrival date, number of nights, and how you’d like to pay. Once you have, your first campsite scan will start running. 🙌

{"Wait

Wait for an alert

Now’s the tough part… waiting. You never know when someone will cancel their campsite reservation. However, the longer you scan for, the better your odds. Not getting the results you want? Check out some of these tips for improving your chances.

{"Reserve

Reserve that spot!

If a suitable campsite opens up, we’ll send you a text message. If you receive one, act fast. Canceled reservations are often rebooked in minutes or seconds. So, go to your park’s website and if the spot is still available, reserve it! 💯

A MORE DETAILED INTRODUCTION

THE CAMPNAB VIDEO

 

GOT CAMPING QUESTIONS?

ANSWERS ABOUT CAMPNAB

WHAT IS A CAMPSITE ALERT?

A campsite alert is a text message that lets you know that a spot at a sold-out campsite is available.

HOW DOES CAMPNAB WORK?

You set your criteria (park, campground, arrival, duration). We send you a text message if a suitable campsite becomes available.

DOES CAMPNAB BOOK A CAMPSITE FOR ME?

No. We only provide notifications of openings at campsites. You still need to book through the respective park’s website.

HOW MUCH DOES CAMPNAB COST?

Pay-per-use scans range from $10 – $20 each. Memberships start at $10/month, and afford frequent campers more options.

DO YOU GUARANTEE SUCCESS?

Nope. We don’t know who will cancel their reservation or when. Our fees are to monitor campgrounds.

WHAT REGIONS DO YOU MONITOR?

Campnab scans parks throughout Canada and the United States. Visit our Parks page for a list of parks we monitor.

CAN I CANCEL MY CAMPNAB MEMBERSHIP?

Yes—you can cancel/change your plan at any time by visiting the Plan screen. To cancel, click “Cancel your plan”.

I RECEIVED AN ALERT BUT THE SPOT IS GONE. WHAT GIVES?

Odds are that someone already rebooked it. At popular parks, spots get rebooked in minutes (sometimes seconds).

HOW DO I IMPROVE MY ODDS OF GETTING A CAMPSITE?

Run shorter scans, mid-week, with plenty of lead time. Here are some more tips for getting a campsite reservation.

I NEED HELP! WHO DO I TALK TO?

Start a chat session with one of the Erics. (If we’re online, we’ll respond immediately. If not, leave your email when prompted to ensure you receive our replies.)

More FAQs

EXPLORE OUR MEMBERS’ FAVOURITE CAMPGROUNDS

Top-rated campgrounds in Ontario

11 Reviews

Killbear Provincial Park

Killbear Provincial Park is a provincial park located on Georgian Bay in the Parry Sound District of Ontario, near the town of Nobel. Killbear combines sandy beaches typical of the Great Lakes with the rock ridges and pines of the Canadian Shield. The park boundaries lie within the Georgian Bay Littoral UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.

More information
4 Reviews

Sandbanks Provincial Park

Sandbanks Provincial Park is a provincial park located on Lake Ontario in Prince Edward County near Picton, Ontario, Canada. The park is considered one of the best sandy beaches in Ontario and contains the largest bay-mouth barrier dune formation in the world. The 1,550.87-hectare (3,832.3-acre) park was established in 1970 and operates year round. Birdwatching, camping, cycling, fishing, and s...

More information
3 Reviews

Pinery Provincial Park

Pinery Provincial Park is a provincial park located on Lake Huron near Grand Bend, Ontario. It occupies an area of 25.32 square kilometres (6,260 acres). It is a natural environment-class Provincial Park created to help preserve oak savannah and the beach dune ecology. It has 1,275 sites of which 404 have electrical hookups. These include the yurt camping area and the group camping sites. The i...

More information

Bon Echo Provincial Park

Bon Echo Provincial Park is a provincial park in southeastern Ontario, Canada, approximately 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) north of Cloyne. The park is within township boundaries of both North Frontenac and Addington Highlands, roughly separated by Highway 41. Bon Echo features several lakes, including Bon Echo Lake; Joeperry Lake, along Rainey Creek; and part of Mazinaw Lake, the seventh-deepest lake ...

More information
2 Reviews

Killarney Provincial Park

Killarney Provincial Park is a provincial park in central Ontario, Canada, located approximately 90 km (56 mi) southwest of downtown Sudbury, Ontario. The park contains just one campground at the George Lake entrance as it is primarily a wilderness park. There are few facilities in order to allow visitors a chance to experience the solitude and beauty of its undisturbed natural setting. It has ...

More information
1 Reviews

Arrowhead Provincial Park

Arrowhead Provincial Park is located north of Huntsville, Ontario, Canada, and is part of the Ontario Parks system. A portion of the shoreline of Glacial Lake Algonquin is visible in the park. During the winter, a 1.3-kilometre (0.81 mi) man-made skating trail winds through the forest. Other winter activities at the park include cross-country skiing, snowshoeing and tubing.

More information
1 Reviews

Inverhuron Provincial Park

Inverhuron Provincial Park is a provincial park located on the shores of Lake Huron beside the small village of Inverhuron, Ontario, near Tiverton, Ontario, Canada. The park opened in 1956. With the construction of a heavy water "deuterium oxide" plant at the Bruce Nuclear Power Development, Ontario Hydro purchased the park from the Ministry of Natural Resources in 1973 for issues of safety an...

More information
8 Reviews

Grundy Lake Provincial Park

Grundy Lake Provincial Park is a natural environment park in Ontario, Canada, established in 1959, and part of the Ontario Parks system. The park is located near Britt, at the junction of Highway 69 and Highway 522. Walking trails include sections of boardwalk. Wildlife includes great blue herons and on the geology front there are rocks from the precambrian shield.

More information

UNABLE TO RESERVE A CAMPSITE?

Get notified when a sold-out campground has availability

Tell us when, where, and how long you want to camp for. We’ll notify you (via SMS) when a suitable spot opens up at that campground—so you can nab that sold-out campsite reservation!

Create a scan