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New Brunswick 511 Cameras Live Road Cameras & Map

All New Brunswick 511 cameras — interactive statewide map

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About this map

New Brunswick is the gateway between the rest of Canada and the Maritimes, and almost every long drive across it funnels onto a handful of numbered routes. The 511 New Brunswick camera network puts live highway images along those corridors in one place: the Trans-Canada Highway (Route 2) running the length of the province from the Quebec line at Edmundston, past the capital, Fredericton, to Moncton and the Nova Scotia border; Route 1 along the south from the Maine border at St. Stephen through Saint John toward Moncton; Route 7 connecting Fredericton and Saint John; and Route 11 up the eastern and Acadian coast through Miramichi, Bathurst and Campbellton. This page pulls those public feeds onto one fast, searchable map so you can look at the road before you commit to it.

A quick note on what these cameras are and are not. They are camera-only feeds: each one shows a recent still of the highway, refreshed roughly every 20 minutes, and that image is the signal. You can see snow cover, slush, blowing snow off the open Trans-Canada, ponding from freezing rain, or trucks backed up at an interchange, all directly from the picture. There is no on-road temperature or pavement-sensor readout attached to these cameras, and we do not show one. For the actual forecast, watch, and warning information, Environment Canada is the source, and 511 New Brunswick carries the official road-condition reports. Treat the camera as your eyes on the pavement and the forecast as a separate, deliberate check.

New Brunswick is officially bilingual, so place names and signage appear in both English and French, and coastal towns along Route 11 often go by their French names. Maritime winters are the real story here: Nor'easters can dump heavy wet snow on Moncton and Saint John, freezing rain glazes the southern routes, and wind off the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Bay of Fundy drives blowing snow across the exposed Trans-Canada and the coast. A storm hitting Moncton may leave Edmundston dry, and vice versa, which is exactly why scanning the camera nearest your stretch of road beats assuming the whole province looks the same.

New Brunswick regions covered

Tap an area chip on the map to jump straight to any of these regions.

Province-wide

The whole 511 New Brunswick network on one map, spanning the Trans-Canada Highway (Route 2) from the Quebec line at Edmundston through Grand Falls, Woodstock, Fredericton and Moncton to the Nova Scotia border, plus Route 1 along the south, Route 7 between Fredericton and Saint John, and Route 11 up the Acadian coast. Use this view for a long cross-province haul, or to compare conditions when a storm is hitting one end of New Brunswick and not the other. Each still refreshes roughly every 20 minutes.

Moncton

Moncton is the hub of southeastern New Brunswick, where the Trans-Canada Highway (Route 2) meets Route 1 near River Glade to the west, Route 15 runs east toward Shediac and the Confederation Bridge approaches, and Route 11 heads north up the coast. Cameras here cover the busy interchanges and the open stretches of the Trans-Canada that catch blowing snow and back up with trucks in a Nor'easter. Watch the images for snow cover, slush and queues before driving through the city or pushing on toward Nova Scotia.

Saint John

Saint John sits on the Bay of Fundy along Route 1, the four-lane corridor that runs from the Maine border at St. Stephen east toward Moncton, with Route 7 dropping in from Fredericton. The harbour and the Fundy coast mean fog, wind and freezing rain are common, and the live stills will show you wet, glazed or snow-covered pavement and any backups around the city. Check the camera nearest your direction of travel before committing to the Route 1 run east or west.

Fredericton

Fredericton, the provincial capital, sits on the Saint John River where the Trans-Canada Highway (Route 2) passes to the south and Route 7 branches off toward Saint John. It is the crossroads for traffic heading west toward Woodstock and Grand Falls, east toward Moncton, or south to the Bay of Fundy. Cameras around the city and the nearby Trans-Canada let you read snow, slush and freezing-rain conditions on the routes out of town before you pick a direction.

The North & Acadian Coast

This covers northern and eastern New Brunswick: the upper Trans-Canada (Route 2) through Edmundston and Grand Falls near the Quebec border, and Route 11 along the Acadian coast through Miramichi, Bathurst and up to Campbellton. These are the most wind-exposed and snow-prone parts of the province, where blowing snow off open ground and the Gulf of St. Lawrence can cut visibility fast. The camera stills are your best read on whether the coast or the northern Trans-Canada is drifting in before you head up.

Tips for using New Brunswick road cameras

  • Read the image, not a temperature. These are camera-only feeds with no on-road sensor readout, so judge conditions from what you can see in the still: bare and dark, snow-covered, slushy, glazed from freezing rain, or blowing. The picture is the data.
  • Pair the camera with the Environment Canada forecast. Our weather supplement is US-only, so for New Brunswick the forecast, watches and warnings come from Environment Canada. Use the camera for what the road looks like right now and the forecast for what is coming.
  • Watch the open Trans-Canada in wind. Route 2 runs across exposed ground between cities, and a Nor'easter can drive blowing snow across it long after the snowfall stops. If the nearest camera shows drifting or a white-out haze, expect worse between the dots.
  • Don't assume one end of the province matches the other. A storm can be burying Moncton while Edmundston stays clear. Check the camera closest to your actual stretch, and use the province-wide view to compare ends before a long haul.
  • Expect freezing rain on the southern routes. Route 1 along the Fundy coast and the Saint John area glaze up readily. A road that looks merely wet in the still can be iced near freezing, so slow your expectations when the forecast calls for ice.
  • Refresh before you read too much in. Stills update roughly every 20 minutes, so a clear-looking image may be 15 minutes old in a fast-moving storm. Reload the camera, and when in doubt confirm the official road status with 511 New Brunswick.

All New Brunswick 511 cameras by corridor

A complete directory of all 57 New Brunswick 511 traffic cameras, grouped by highway and corridor.

Route 2 cameras (13)

  • Aroostook River Route 2
  • Dieppe/Moncton Route 15 @ 2 E
  • Grand Falls Route 2
  • Longs Creek Route 2
  • Magnetic Hill Route 2
  • Meductic Route 2
  • Memramcook Route 2 W
  • Mill Cove
  • Mont Farlagne Route 2
  • Prince William Route 2
  • Quisibis Hill Route 2
  • Sackville Route 2 E
  • Scott Road Route 2

Route 11 cameras (10)

  • Bathurst Route 11 E
  • Blackland Route 11 E
  • Bouctouche Route 11 N
  • Caraquet Route 11 S
  • Miramichi Route 11 E
  • Shediac Bridge Route 11 S
  • Shediac Route 11 @ 15 W
  • St. Margarets Route 11 N
  • Stonehaven Route 11 S
  • Tracadie-Sheila Route 11 S

Route 1 cameras (6)

  • Lepreau-New River Route 1
  • Moosehorn Creek Route 1
  • Penobsquis Route 1
  • Rothesay Route 1
  • Saint John Route 1
  • Waweig Route 1

Route 8 cameras (5)

  • Blackville Route 8 S
  • Lavillette Route 8 N
  • McGivney Route 8 S
  • New Bandon Route 8 S
  • South Portage Route 8 S

Route 17 cameras (3)

  • Glenwood Route 17 W
  • Saint-Martin Route 17 S
  • Veneer Route 17 N

Route 7 cameras (3)

  • Camp Petersville Route 7 N
  • Grand Bay-Westfield Route 7 S
  • Welsford Route 7 N

Route 10 cameras (2)

  • Route 10 Grub Road
  • Upper Salmon Creek Route 10

Route 16 cameras (2)

  • Copp Loop Road Route 16 N
  • Upper Cape Road Route 16 N

Route 3 cameras (2)

  • Flume Ridge Road Route 3 S
  • Route 3 Thomaston Corner North

Gondola Point Ferry cameras (1)

  • Gondola Point Ferry

Grand Bay-Westfield Ferry cameras (1)

  • Grand Bay-Westfield Ferry

Hardings Point Ferry cameras (1)

  • Hardings Point Ferry

Reeds Point Ferry cameras (1)

  • Reeds Point Ferry

Route 113 cameras (1)

  • Shippagan Bridge Route 113 E

Route 148 cameras (1)

  • Durham Bridge Route 148 S

Route 15 cameras (1)

  • Cap Pelé Route 15 W

Route 175 cameras (1)

  • Pennfield Ridge Route 175 E

Route 4 cameras (1)

  • Route 4 Thomaston Corner South

Route 95 cameras (1)

  • Route 95/540

Welsford cameras (1)

  • Eagle Rock Road E

Live road cameras in other states

The same fast camera map for the other states we cover.

All Road Cameras — every state on one map
See every state we cover at once on a single nationwide map.
Utah UDOT Cameras
Live Utah traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Alabama ALGO Cameras
Live Alabama traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Alaska 511 Cameras
Live Alaska traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Alberta 511 Cameras
Live Alberta traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
DriveBC Cameras
Live British Columbia traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
California Caltrans Cameras
Live California traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Colorado CDOT Cameras
Live Colorado traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Georgia GDOT Cameras
Live Georgia traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Illinois IDOT Cameras
Live Illinois traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Iowa DOT Cameras
Live Iowa traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Kansas KDOT Cameras
Live Kansas traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Maine DOT Cameras
Live Maine traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Massachusetts MassDOT Cameras
Live Massachusetts traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Minnesota MnDOT Cameras
Live Minnesota traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Montana MDT Cameras
Live Montana traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Nebraska 511 Cameras
Live Nebraska traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Nevada NDOT Cameras
Live Nevada traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
New Hampshire NHDOT Cameras
Live New Hampshire traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Newfoundland 511 Cameras
Live Newfoundland and Labrador traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
North Carolina NCDOT Cameras
Live North Carolina traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
North Dakota NDDOT Cameras
Live North Dakota traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Nova Scotia 511 Cameras
Live Nova Scotia traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Ohio OHGO Cameras
Live Ohio traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Ontario 511 Cameras
Live Ontario traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Oregon ODOT Cameras
Live Oregon traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
PEI 511 Cameras
Live Prince Edward Island traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Québec 511 Cameras
Live Quebec traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Saskatchewan Hotline Cameras
Live Saskatchewan traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
South Dakota DOT Cameras
Live South Dakota traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Vermont VTrans Cameras
Live Vermont traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Virginia VDOT Cameras
Live Virginia traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Washington WSDOT Cameras
Live Washington traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Wisconsin WisDOT Cameras
Live Wisconsin traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Wyoming WYDOT Cameras
Live Wyoming traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.
Yukon 511 Cameras
Live Yukon traffic cameras on one interactive statewide map.

New Brunswick road camera guides

In-depth guides to the highways, passes and destinations we cover here.

Frequently asked questions

Do these New Brunswick cameras show road temperature or a weather sensor reading?
No. These are camera-only feeds. Each one shows a recent still image of the highway and nothing else, so you read conditions directly from the picture, such as snow cover, slush, blowing snow or backups. There is no pavement-temperature or road-sensor readout attached, and we do not display one.
Where does the forecast come from if the cameras have no weather data?
Environment Canada is the forecast source for New Brunswick, including watches and warnings. Our own weather supplement is US-only and does not cover Canadian provinces, so for temperatures, wind and storm timing you should check Environment Canada and use these cameras for the live look at the road.
How often do the camera images refresh?
The 511 New Brunswick highway cameras post still images at roughly 20-minute intervals. In a fast-moving storm a picture may already be several minutes old, so reload the camera before you rely on it and confirm anything critical with the official 511 road-condition report.
Which highways do the cameras cover?
The main corridors: the Trans-Canada Highway (Route 2) from the Quebec line at Edmundston through Grand Falls, Woodstock, Fredericton and Moncton to the Nova Scotia border; Route 1 from the Maine border at St. Stephen through Saint John toward Moncton; Route 7 between Fredericton and Saint John; and Route 11 up the eastern and Acadian coast through Miramichi, Bathurst and Campbellton.
Are the cameras and place names in French as well as English?
New Brunswick is officially bilingual, so signage and many place names appear in both English and French. Along the Acadian coast on Route 11, towns are often known primarily by their French names, such as Caraquet and Grande-Anse. The 511 New Brunswick site itself is available in both languages.
What winter hazards should I watch for on the camera images?
Maritime winters bring Nor'easters with heavy snow, freezing rain that glazes the southern routes, and strong wind that drives blowing snow across the open Trans-Canada and the wind-exposed coast. On the stills, look for snow cover, slushy lanes, a wet sheen that could be ice near freezing, hazy low visibility, and trucks backing up at interchanges.
Can I rely on a camera to tell me a highway is open or closed?
No. A camera only shows what one spot looked like at the last refresh. For the official open, closed or restricted status of a route, including storm closures on the Trans-Canada, check 511 New Brunswick directly. Use the camera to judge how the road looks and the official report to confirm whether it is passable.
I'm driving between New Brunswick and a neighbouring province or state. Can I check those too?
Yes. We carry the same kind of camera map for the neighbours: Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and the U.S. side in Maine. Check the corridor on both sides of the line before a cross-border or interprovincial trip, since conditions can change right at the boundary.