
The annual county regional park parking passes are $40 and valid from the date of purchase through the 2026 calendar year
VANCOUVER – The 2026 annual parking passes for county regional parks are now available for purchase. Daily parking fees are charged year-round at four county regional parks – Frenchman’s Bar, Lewisville, Klineline Pond at Salmon Creek and Vancouver Lake. Beginning Jan. 1, 2026, the parking fee will be $5 per day, regardless of vehicle type.
The annual county regional park parking passes are $40 and valid from the date of purchase through the 2026 calendar year. County regional parks parking passes are only valid for parking at the four county regional parks. Passes issued by other agencies, such as the Washington State Discover Pass and the city of Vancouver’s Marine Park parking pass, are not valid for parking at the four county regional parks where daily parking fees are charged.
Without an annual pass, the daily parking fee can be paid at the fee booth when fee collection staff are present, via the Flowbird mobile app, self-pay stations or by displaying a valid annual parking pass. Washington State Parks Disabled Veteran Lifetime Pass holders are exempt from the daily parking fee when they present their pass to fee collection staff and display the pass on their vehicle’s dashboard.
County regional parks parking passes can be purchased online at clark.wa.gov/public-works/parking-fees or by calling (564) 397-2285 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday. Additionally, passes will be available to purchase in person in the Bud Van Cleve community room at Luke Jensen Sports Park at 4000 NE 78th Street, 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Dec. 22, and 29, and Jan. 5 and 12. Passes purchased online or via phone will be sent via mail. Accepted methods of payment include Visa and Mastercard. Passes can be purchased via cash or card at fee booths when staff are present. Passes cannot be purchased via parking meters or with a check.
Parking fees help provide funding to support parks maintenance and impacts of use such as garbage/waste management, restroom cleaning and facilities upkeep. In fall 2025, the Clark County Council approved updated rates for parking fees and facility rentals, to be implemented in 2026.
For information about road and park projects, closures, opportunities for community input, and more, residents can follow Public Works on X (formerly known as Twitter), Facebook and Instagram and view information on Nextdoor. Residents can also visit clark.wa.gov/public-works to sign up for email notifications.
Go to clark.wa.gov/public-works/news to read this information in another language. Click the button in the top right of the page that says “Change language” next to a globe icon and choose your preferred language.
Information provided by Clark Co. WA Communications.
Also read:
- Vancouver bowlers make their marks at HBCU Alabama A&MFort Vancouver and Hudson’s Bay grads helped Alabama A&M win its first conference bowling title in 12 years.
- Letter: ‘Don’t take the deal’Camas resident Tony Teso calls Nancy Churchill’s column a partisan recruitment pitch disguised as personal awakening.
- Letter: ‘We need more WSP visibility and aggressive driving patrols’Bob Zak urges WSP to deploy more unmarked patrol units on I-5 and I-205 in Southwest Washington.
- Letter: ‘IBR I-5 Bridge space allocation grossly unfair’Camas resident Douglas Tweet argues IBR allocates half the bridge to modes used by just 2.3% of travelers.
- State Representative John Ley files for re-election to Washington House District 18, Position 2Rep. John Ley cites I-5 tolling, a 9.9% income tax, and a $4B pension raid among his top battles in Olympia.
- County’s Commission on Aging to discuss intergenerational housing alternativesBridge Meadows and Cathedral Park CoHousing professionals join Clark County’s Commission on Aging May 18.
- Plan for delays on southbound I-5 in Clark County for guardrail repairs May 13WSDOT crews will close the left lane of southbound I-5 near Exit 11 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday.








