
Fundy National Park is a Parks Canada national park on New Brunswick's Bay of Fundy coast, with its visitor centre listed at 8642 Route 114. The official page situates the park on the unceded territory of the Mi'gmaq people and frames the experience around the world's highest tides.
Parks Canada describes paddling through Bay of Fundy waters that rise up to 12 m or more, walking the ocean floor at low tide, and heading inland on trails that lead to waterfalls deep in Acadian forests.
Fundy is a strong New Brunswick national park choice because it combines a famous tide story with inland forest travel. The same visit can include coastal tide planning, low-tide exploring, waterfalls, trail time, camping, and Parks Canada programs.
The official page also gives the park a broader conservation and cultural context. Parks Canada highlights work with partners to recover Inner Bay of Fundy Atlantic Salmon and points visitors toward Mi'gmaw connections in Parks Canada places in New Brunswick.
Camping is a major reason to plan ahead. Parks Canada says Fundy has options for visitors who prefer tents, trailers, roofed accommodations, or backcountry camping, and the official page links to reservations, fees, maps, equipment rentals, winter information, and the trail network.
Plan around Bay of Fundy paddling, low-tide ocean-floor walks, hiking or biking, waterfall trails, camping, backcountry stays, equipment rentals, guided tours, programs, events, red chair stops, winter visits, and learning about salmon recovery.
Parks Canada lists park access as always open, while the information centre and campgrounds have separate operating details. Confirm tide timing, campground and accommodation reservations, trail conditions, maps, fees, permits, safety guidance, weather, winter services, and current bulletins through Parks Canada before travelling.