Wolf Creek Campground

Wolf Creek

Yukon Parks
Yukon

what to expect

Situated in an old white spruce forest, along Wolf Creek, near Whitehorse, this campground and day-use area is popular with travellers and residents. The campground has a selection of campsites including RV and walk-in tenting sites. Two cook shelters are available and the day-use area offers two playgrounds, benches, picnic tables and fire pits for the whole family. The interpreted Tágà Shrō Trail begins at the campground and passes through the boreal forest to a scenic view of the Yukon River (Tágà Shäw / Chū Nii Kwän*). This section is wheelchair-accessible. The loop continues along Wolf Creek (Tsi Chua*), where Chinook Salmon spawn in late summer and early autumn. Visit the salmon fishway and interpretive site at the campground entrance. This is also a great place to spot forest birds.…

what to know

Updated each morning from provincial parks and Environment Canada.

No fire ban active
Last checked from the provincial fire-ban feed. Check at the gate before you light — conditions change.
Pet-friendly
Dogs are allowed on-leash. Pick up after them; some parks have leash-length rules at the trailheads.

what to bring

This list adapts to Wolf Creek. no showers means a travel towel;

common questions about Wolf Creek

can dogs camp at Wolf Creek?
Yes. Wolf Creek Campground allows dogs on-leash according to operator policy. Confirm specific site-level restrictions with the operator at booking time.
does Wolf Creek have electric hookups?
No. Wolf Creek Campground does not list electric hookups in its amenity profile. Plan for off-grid use.
how far is Wolf Creek from Vancouver?
Wolf Creek Campground is 1463 km from Vancouver. Use Google Maps for current drive times — they account for terrain, traffic, ferries, and closures we can't.
do you need reservations at Wolf Creek?
Yes. Wolf Creek Campground is operated by Yukon Parks and uses an online reservation system. Book direct via the operator link on this page.

nearby places

Within ~100 km of Wolf Creek.

Data last refreshed 2026-06-01 from Yukon Parks + open sources

Give back to this place

volunteer at Yukon Parks

Provincial parks rely on volunteer stewards for trail maintenance, beach clean-ups, and shoulder-season hosting. Most parks run programs through their park association.

See how to help →